XVI 



INDEX. 



St. Vitus's Dance, ii. 439. 



Saliva, i. 187- 



Salted meats, cause scurvy, ii. 

 649. 



Salts, neutral, their use in fevers, 

 i. 608, 620; act as diuretics, 

 ii. 603. 



Sarcoma, i. 354. 



Satyriasis, i. 339. 



Sauvage* (F. B. de) gave the 

 first methodicNosology, i. 230 ; 

 his genera of continued fevers. 

 517. 



Savin, supposed to be an em- 

 menagogue, ii. 296. 



Scale of the force of impression, 

 33. 



Scarlatina, i. 278 ; ii. 174 ; rea- 

 sons for treating of it separate- 

 ly from the Cynanche maligna, 

 175. 



Schwediauer on syphilis, ii. 647. 



Sciatica, ii. 87- 



Scirrhus, i.354; erroneously sup- 

 posed to be a termination of 

 inflammation, ii. 13. 



Scorbutus,i. 330; ii. 649. 



Scotomia, ii. 542. 



Scrofula, ii. 329 ; ii. 629 ; the 

 cause of tubercles in the lungs, 

 ii. 249, 251. 



Scurvy, i. 330 ; ii. 648. 



Sensation, i. 24, 28; want of, 

 uneasy, 48; laws or general 

 circumstances of, 31; limits of 

 force, 33 ; duration necessary, 

 35 ; remains for some time, 

 ibid.; only one attended to at 

 one time, 35. 



of impression, i. 28; different, 



the impression being given, 

 37 ; causes of waking, 126. 



, its force different, i. 137. 



, of consciousness, i. 30 ; re- 

 ferred to the encephalon, 46. 



3 referred to our own bodies, 

 i. 43 ; of relation, 46 ; pleasant 

 and painful, agreeable and dis- 

 agreeable, uneasy, 48, 49. 



, vitiated in fever, i. 576. 



Sense, errors or depravities of, i. 

 50, 139. 



Sense, symptoms referred to the 

 function of sense, i. 54. 



Senses, five, i. 28 ; characters of 

 sight, hearing, smell, and taste, 

 are common, ibid. ; characters 

 of touch, ibid. 



Sensibility, its different states, as 

 depending on the nervous ex- 

 tremities, i. 37 43 ; as de- 

 pending on the state of the 

 brain, 138 ; a cause of increased 

 mobility of muscular fibres, 99. 



, erroneous or depraved, i. 



50, 139. 



, affected in fever, i. 485. 



Sensorium commune, i. 25. 



Sentient extremities, i. 15 ; their 

 state modifies sensation, 38. 



Secretion, i. 206 ; all secretions, 

 except sweat and perspiration, 

 increased only by stimulants 

 applied to the organs, 207 j se- 

 cretions affect each other mu- 

 tually, 208. 



Secretions, state of, in fever, i. 

 484. 



Sedative powers,!. 66 ; producing 

 syncope, ii. 366. 



, sensations and impressions, 



causes of sleep, i. 123. 



Sedatives, causes of dyspepsia, ii. 

 374. 



Semeiotics, i. 4. 



Serapion, i. 368, 379. 



Serosity, i. 195. 



Serpentaria, employed in the cure 

 of fever, i. 643. 



Serum of the blood, i. 194. 



Sextos Empiricus, i. 381. 



Sinapisms, in the cure of fevers, 

 i. 635. 



Skin, generally dry in diabetes, 

 ii. 492. 



Sleep, ii. 515, 516; does not 

 arise from the exhaustion of a 

 secretion, i. 118; nor from com- 

 pression, 119; interrupted a 

 symptom of irritation in fever, 

 589 ; causes of, 120 ; how to 

 be managed in gout, ii. 129; 

 disturbed in hydrothorax, 612. 



Smallpox, i. 276; ii. 149; con- 



