220 
Dr. Currie's 
Immediately on 
immersion 
heat 
- 98 ° 
1 minute after 
- 97 i 
2 minutes 
- 97 
3 
- 98 
4 
97 i 
5 
- 96 
6 
9 6 
7,8 - 
96 
9 
97 
10 -■ 
97 
11, 12, 13 
- 
Account of the 
14, min. after, 
heat 
15 
- 
96 
16, 17, 18, 19, 
20 
9 s 
21, 22, 23, 24 
25 — 
- 
95 
2 6 — 
- 
94 
27 
- 
93 i 
28, 29 
94 
30 
- 
93 
3 1 ’ 3 2 
94 
33 > 34 
- 
92 4 
He now got out into the air very slowly, and stood in it three 
minutes, the wind not blowing on him. He lost one degree 
of heat at first, which he recovered. He was then put into a 
warm bath at 90°, which at first he felt warm, and his feet and 
hands were pained : but in two minutes he fell into a very 
violent shiver, and his heat fell two degrees. The bath was 
then heated to 95 and g6°, but still he felt cold. It was heated 
to 99 0 : he continued in it five minutes, and his heat was 91 0 . 
The heat was gradually raised to 106°, when the sense of cold- 
ness of which he had complained at the pit of the stomach 
gradually went off 7 . Before this I had usually kept him in the 
warm bath till his natural heat was nearly recovered, but after 
being half an hour in the heat of 106°, his own heat was still 
93 0 . He now became sick and very languid, a cold sweat co- 
vering his face, his pulse very quick and feeble. He was 
removed into bed, but passed a feverish night, and next day 
had wandering pains over his body, with great debility, re- 
sembling the beginning stage of a fever. By cordials and rest 
this went off. 
