[ 803 ] 
INDEX to the Article PATHOLOGY. 
A BERNETHY’s claflification of tu- 
-cl- mours, 86; his diredtions for diet and 
exercife, 104, 5 ; his blue-pill, 146. 
Abfceffes, 230. 
Abforbents, 96, 
Abforption, how increafed or diminifhed, 
99 - ... 
Achilles, Bulled in medicine, 4. 
Acids forming calculi, 34?. 
Acron of Agrigentum, 4. 
Acrotica, diforders affedting the furface of 
the flcin, 350. 
Adluarius, his era doubtful, 17. 
FEfculapius, or Afclepias, and his defen¬ 
dants, 3; when firft worfhippedat Rome, 9. 
Aefthetica, difeafes affedting fenfation, 
299. 
Aetius, his practice in gout and palfy, 13. 
Agathinus, founder of the Ecledtic fedl, 12. 
Agenefia, impotence, 331. 
Agrypnia, wakefulnefs, 310. 
Ague, cured by pepper, 55. 
Air, an important agent in the cure of indi- 
geftion, 141 : cautions about expofure to, 
141, 2. 
Albinos, 289, 364. 
Albucafis, an Arabian furgeon, 19. 
Alcmaeon of Crotona, 4. 
Alexander Trallianus, 15. 
Alexandrian fchool, 9. 
Alphofis, white leprofy, 289. 
Alufia, illufion, 299. 
Anatomical Mufeum of Hunter, 36 j at 
Strafliurg, 72. 
Anatomy, early cultivated, 1 ; improve¬ 
ment of, by Vefalius, 21 ; by Fallopius 
and Euftachius, 22; modern fyftem by 
Bichat, 39, 43 ; prefent ftate o‘, in Eng¬ 
land, 45 ; in France, 45, 6. 
Anetus, intermittent fever, or ague, 224. 
Aneurifm, le Roux’s method of operating, 
47 ; various fpecies of, 297, 8. 
Angina pedtoris, 190; caufes and treat¬ 
ment, 192. 
Anthelmintics, 96. 
Anthracia, the plague, 279, 
Antidote of Mithridates king of Pontus, 8 ; 
the ingredients, 25; of the theriaca, 
25, 6. 
Antipathia, antipathies, 310. 
Antifpafmodics, 96. 
Antyllus, an eye-dodtor, 12. 
Apalotica, diforders of the foft parts, 365. 
Aphexia, reverie, 299. 
Aphonia, dumbnefs, 178. 
Aphoria, fterility, 331. 
Apoplexy, nervous, 136 ; fanguine and fe- 
rous, 319 ; general fymptoms, 320 ; treat¬ 
ment, 321. 
Apoftema, or deep-feated abfeefs, 230. 
Appetite, wonderfully great, 119 ; depraved, 
122, 3. 
Arabians, or Saracens, preferved the know¬ 
ledge of phyfic and furgery in the dark 
ages, 18 ; exclufively, 19. 
Arachnoiditis, charadters of, 47 ; the pro- 
grefs of the diforder fully detailed, 236, 7; 
appearance on difledtion, and treatment, 
Archagathus, the Arft pradlitioner at Rome, 
10. 
Archigenes and Aretaeus, 12. 
Ariftasus, king of Arcadia, 4. 
-of Cilicia, founder of the pneuma¬ 
tic fedl, 12. 
Yot. XIX, No. 1345, 
Ariftotle, his univerfal knowledge, 8 ; not 
acquainted with the circulation of the 
blood, 29. 
Armftrong’s fyftem of congeftion in fever, 
211, 213. 
Arteries, contradlility of, 192 ; inflamma¬ 
tion, 246, 7. 
Arthrofia, the gout, rheumatifm, &c. 268. 
Afclepiades, an eminent phyfician of ancient 
Rome, 10. 
-— Pharmacion, II. 
Apellius, his difeoveries, 33. 
Afthma, the theory of Dr. Bree, 185 ; dry, 
186; moift,i89; treatment, 187, 189.J 
Aftringents, 96. 
Aftrology connedled with medicine by the 
Arab phyficians, 18. 
Attalus, king of Pergamus, 8. 
Avenzoar and Avicenna, 19. 
Authors quoted, 372. 
Bancroft’s defeription of the yellow fever, 
216, 17. 
Barrennefs from various caufes, 331. 
Bateman on Cutaneous Difeafes, 86. 
Bathing recommended by Hippocrates, 6 ; 
for indigeftion, 146, 7. 
Beer, an eminent German ledlurer on the 
eye, 67. 
Bell, a very eminent writer on furgery, 37. 
Berengar, 22. 
Beriberia, a term for two diforders, 310. 
Bevan, Mifs, without legs or arms, 367. 
Bex, cough, 181. 
Bezoar of the inteftines, 162. 
Bichat, his excellent fyftem of anatomy, 
39 - 45 - 
Black vomit, 216. 
Bladder, inflammation of, 263 ; protrufion 
of. .3 34- 
Bleeding, the chief remedy in fever, 209, 
10; in inflammation, 236. 
Blenorrhoea, clap and gleet, 327. 
Blood, adtion of, how accounted for by Hip¬ 
pocrates, 13 ; by Galen, 14; by Nemefius, 
16; circulation of, 22; fteps which led 
to the difeovery, 28; morbid changes in, 
94; difeafes of, 191 ; from quantity, 192; 
from quality, 194. 
Blumenbach and his mufeum, 59, 60 ; a 
colledlor of Ikulls, but not a craniologift, 
60. 
Boer, profeflbr of midwifery at Vienna, 68 ; 
his pradtice, 69. 
Boerhaave, 34; his high reputation, 35. 
Borelti, his mechanical calculations, 33. 
Bougies, firft invention of, 22 j their ufe, 
329 - 
Brain, particularly the objedt of attention 
at prefent in France, 46, 7 ; how it adts 
on the ftomach, 106 ; and the ftomach 
upon it, 132; principally affedted in fe¬ 
ver, according to Dr. Clutterbuck, 195 ; 
not at all, according to Dr. Lind, 196. 
Bremfer (Dr.), and his cabinet of worms, 
6 3 - 
Briflot of Poitou, 21. 
Bronchitis, 266. 
Bronchocele, two kinds, 288. 
Brouffais, his theory of inflammatory difeafe, 
43 ; examined a la Moliere, 46 ; a la 
Rabelais, 50; his theory of fever, 197, 
205 ; followed by Harrifon, 198, 
Brown’s fyftem of difeafed adtion, 40; exa¬ 
mined and refuted, 41; improved by 
Darwin, 43. 
Bucnemia, Barbadoes leg, 292. 
Cachexies, whence they arife, 280. 
Caelius Aurelianus, n. 
Caefalpinus, 22 ; approached very near to 
the difeovery of the circulation, 30. 
Calculus of the inteftines, 161 ; compofi- 
tion of, 162; of the kidney, 346; bladder, 
347 ; compofition of, 348, 9 ; treatment, 
348, 350 ; how to be extradted from wo¬ 
men, and occafionally from men, 350. 
Calomel, adtion of, 156. 
Campfis, a bent bone of cartilage, 366. 
Canine madnefs, 311. 
Carcinus, cancer, 291; treatment, 292. 
Carditis, or inflammation of the heart, 243, 
4; howto be diftinguiflied from pericar¬ 
ditis; 244, 5; chronic carditis, 247. 
Carlifle (Mr. A.) his remarks on cathartic 
medicines, 96, 7. 
Carpotica, difeafes affedting impregnation, 
335 - 
Carus, fufpended animation, 318. 
Caflius the Iatrofophift, 12. 
Catacaufis, internal burning, 292; curious 
cafes, 293. 
Catagma, fradtures, 365, 6. 
Catalepfy, or trance, 319. 
Catarrh, 264; common, 265; as diftin- 
guilhed from pneumonia, 266 ; treatment 
of, 267; epidemic, 267, 8. 
Cathartics, 96. 
Catotica, internal diforders of the fluids, 338. 
Caufes of difeafe, 90 ; proximate or local 
caufes, 91. 
Cauteries, bold ufe of by Oribafius, 15. 
Celfus, improves upon Hippocrates, 12; his 
enlightened pradtice, 13 ; remarks on the 
pulfe, 93. 
Cenotica, diforders affedting the fluids, 322. 
Cephalaea, head-ache, 315. 
Cephalitis, or phrenitis, 2t8 ; caufes and 
cure, 239. 
Chamberlaine’s remedy for worms, 166. 
Charlemagne, founds the celebrated fchool 
of Salerno, 19. 
Charms for the ague, 226. 
Chemical fyftem of Sylvius, 31. 
Chicken-pox, 276 ; perhaps a modified 
fmall-pox, 277. 
Chilblains, treatment of, 235. 
Children, difeafes of, 89, 90. 
China, degraded ftate of medicine, there, 3. 
Chiron the centaur, 3, 4. 
Chlorofis when proceeding from indigeftion, 
139; two fpecies of, 330. 
Cholera morbus, 159; Indian, 159, 60; ex¬ 
tremely fatal, 161. 
Chololithus, gall-ftones, 160. 
Chordee, 328. 
Chryfippus, fonder of cabbage than of phy¬ 
fic, 8 
Cinetica, diforders of the mufcles, 303. 
Clap, not followed by fecondary fymptoms, 
327; but degenerates into gleet, 328. 
Clark’s account of the remittent fever of 
Bengal, 220. 
Claflification of difeafes, 10r. 
Clergy, at firft phyficians, afterwards had 
dominion over the phyficians, 20. 
Clinical ledtures at Vienna, 64. 
Clonus, hiccough, fneezing, &c. 309. 
Clutterbuck’s theory of fever, 195; op- 
pofed by Dr. Bateman, and Dr. Lind, 
196. 
Clyfters, their ufe, 97. 
9T 
Creliaca 
