INDEX. 



second, 374; third, 378, fourth, 



381 ; fifth, 385 ; sixth, 391 ; 



seventh, 400. 

 History, part of the Empiric plan, 



i. 420. 



History of a disease, i. 440. 

 Hoffmann, (F.}, his doctrines, i. 



407. 



Hooping-cough, i. 309 ; ii. 455. 

 Horror in fevers, 500 ; horror 

 may produce syncope, ii. 366 ; 

 cause of epilepsy, 423. 



Hot stage of fever, i. 483. 



Human effluvia, i. 544. 



Humoristce, i. 400. 



Hunger, i. 173 ; arises from the 

 state of contraction of the mus- 

 cular fibres of the stomach, 

 ibid. 



Huxham, the first who gave a full 

 account of typhus fever, i. 522. 



Hydrocele, i. 326. 



Hydrocephalus, i. 294, 324. 



Hydrometra, i. 326. 



Hydrophobia, i. 315 ; ii. 507- 



Hydropic swellings, i. 323 ; ii. 

 581. 



Hydrorachitis, i. 324. 



Hydrothorax, i. 324. ii. 611, 



Hygiene, i. 4. ^ 



Hyoscyamus, in colic, ii. 473. 



Hyper catharsis, ii. 482. 



Hypochondria, fulness of, symp- 

 tom in fever, i. 569. 



Hypochondriasis, i. 300 ; ii. 388; 

 distinguished from melancho- 

 lia, 533 ; produces dyspepsia, 

 384. 



Hysteria, i. 314 ; ii. 494 ; dis- 

 tinguished from hypodhondri- 

 asis, 497 ; may be renewed at 

 pleasure, 499. 



Hysteritis, i. 272 ; ii. 83. 



Hysterocele, i. 356. 



Hysteroloxia, i. 357- 



Hysteroptosis, i. 358. 



Hysterostaphyle, i. 358. 



Hydarthrus, i. 355. 



Hydatis, i. 355. Hydatids in 

 dropsies, ii. 587 ; in hydro- 

 thorax, 611. 



Icterus, i. 331 ; ii. 655. 



Ideas defined, i. 24, 46; com- 

 plex, 46. 



, association of, in delirium, 



ii. 511. 



Idiosyncrasies, i. 53, 221. 



Ileus, ii. 468. 



Imagination, \. 46 ; may depend 

 upon a constitution of the sen- 

 tient extremities of the organ, 

 50, 52. 



Imitation, causes the action of the 

 brain, i. 108. 



Impetigines, i. 329 ; ii. 629. 



Impression, sensations of, i. 28 ; 

 force of, 32 ; union of impres- 

 sions, 37 ; new impressions 

 strongest, ibid ; their effects 

 in producing sensations differ- 

 ent, ibid; former impressions 

 modify sensibility, 40 ; quality 

 of impressions, 33, 49, 140 ; 

 impressions acting on the nerv- 

 ous system without producing 

 sensation, 50, 110 ; absence of, 

 a cause of sleep, 121 ; anal- 

 ogous to those which produce 

 sensation, causes of waking, 

 127. 



of pleasure and pain, causes 



of excitement, and of epilepsy, 

 ii. 420. 

 , external, to be avoided in 



continued fevers, i. 601. 

 Indigestion, ii. 368. 

 Inflammations, ii. 1, arranged as 

 they are cutaneous^ visceral, 

 or articular, ii. 23. 

 Inflammation, phenomena of, ii. 

 1 ; proximate cause of, ii, 2 ; 

 terminations of, 8 ; peculiar 

 termination in the lungs 

 13 ; remote, ca.us.es of, 14 - y 

 cure of, 15. 



, cutaneous, ii. 25 ; of the 



eye, 25; brain 31 ; of the lungs, 

 46 ; of the heart and pericar- 

 dium, 69 ; of the stomach, 70 ; 

 of the intestines, 76 ; of the 



