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Book
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CONTENTS |
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CONTENTS:-
Vol.1: 1. Domestic Materia Medica, containing an account of the principal medicines now in use. 2. Collection of prescriptions. 3. Mineral waters. 4. Cold and warm bathing. 5. Diet. 6. Cookery. 7. Regimen. 8. Blood-letting. 9. Suspended animation from drowning, & c. 10. Intoxication. 11. Of preventing contagion. 12. Poisons. 13. Dislocations. 14. Fractures. 15. Substances lodged in the Gullet. 16. Management of Children. 17. Dentition or teething.
Vol.2: 18. Abscess. 19. Ague. 20. Amaurosis. 21. Angina Pectoris. 22. Apoplexy. 23. Asthma. 24. Barrenness. 25. Bilious complaints. 26. Bladder, disease of. 27. Bleeding from the nose. 28. Bleeding from the bladder. 29. Bleeding from the bowels. 30. Bleeding from incised wounds. 31. Blindness. 32. Bloody flux. 33. Boils. 34. Brain fever. 35. Breast-pang. 36. Bright’s disease. 37. Bronchitis. 38. Bronchocele. 39. Bronze disease. 40. Bruises and sprains. 41. Burns and scalds. 42. Calculi. 43. Cancer. 44. Carbuncle. 45. Catalepsy. 46. Cataract. 47. Catarrh. 48. Chicken-pox. 49. Chilblains. 50. Cholera Morbus. 51. Cold in the head or chest. 52. Cold water system. 53. Colic. 54. Consumption. 55. Convulsions. 56. Corns. 57. Corpulence. 58. Costiveness. 59. Cough. 60. Cow-pox. 61. Cramp. 62. Croup. 63. Cuts. 64. Deafness. 65. Derbyshire neck. 66. Delirium tremens. 67. Diabetes. 68. Diarrhoea, or Looseness. 69. Diphtheria. 70. Dropsy. 71. General Dropsy. 72. Dropsy of the belly. 73. Dropsy of the chest. 74. Dropsy of the head, &c. 75. Dysentery. 76. Dyspepsia. 77. Ear-ache. 78. Epilepsy. 79. Eruptions on the skin. 80. Erysipelas. 81. Excoriations. 82. Fainting. 83. Falling fits. 84. Fever. 85. Films on the eye. 86. Flatulency. 87. Flooding. 88. Gall stones. 89. Gastric fever. 90. General principles. 91. Gout. 92. Gravel and stone. 93. Green-Sickness. 94. Gum boils. 95. Head, injuries of the. 96. Head-ache. 97. Heart burn, 98. Heart diseases of the. 99. Hiccup, or Hiccough. 100. Hooping cough. 101. Hypochondriasis, or low spirits. 102. Hysterics. 103. Incontinence of urine. 104. Indigestion. 105. Inflammation. 106. Inflammation of the brain. 107. Inflammation of the ear. 108. Inflammation of the eye. 109. Inflammation of the stomach. 110. Inflammation of the intestines. 111. Inflammation of the kidneys. 112. Inflammation of the larynx. 113. Inflammation of the peritoneum. 114. Inflammation of the throat. 115. Inflammation of the liver. 116. Inflammation of the lungs. 117. Insanity. 118. Itch. 119. Jaundice. 120. Leprosy. 121. Liver complaint. 122. Locked jaw. 123. Low spirits. 124. Lumbago. 125. Madness. 126. Measles. 127. Melancholy. 128. Menstruation. 129. Miscarriage. 130. Mortification. 131. Mumps. 132. Nervous disorder in general. 133. Nettle rash. 134. Neuralgia, or violent pain. 135. Night mare. 136. Ophthalmia. 137. Pain in the stomach. 138. Pain in the nerves. 139. Palpitation. 140. Palsy. 141. Periosteal disease. 142. Piles. 143. Pleurisy. 144. Polypus. 145. Putrid sore throat. 146. Putrid fever. 147. Quinsy. 148. Rectum, disease of. 149. Rheumatic fever. 150. Rheumatism, chronic. 151. Rheumatic Gout. 152. Rickets. 153. Ringworm. 154. Rupture. 155. Saint Anthony’s fire. 156. Saint Vitus’s dance. 157. Scald head. 158. Scarlet fever. 159. Sciatica. 160. Scrophula. 161. Scurvy. 162. Shaking Palsy. 163. Shingles. 164. Small-pox. 165. Spinal disease. 166. Spitting of blood. 167. Spleen. 168. Sprains. 169. Strangury. 170. Stitch in the side. 171. Stricture. 172. Stye. 173. Sun stroke. 174. Suppression of the Menses. 175. Tenesmus. 176. Tetanus. 177. Thrush. 178. Tic Douloureux. 179. Tooth-ache. 180. Trance. 181. Tumours. 182. Typhous fever. 183. Ulcers. 184. Uvula. 185. Urinary irritation. 186. Vomiting. 187. Vomiting of blood. 188. Water-brash, or vomiting of water. 189. Warts. 190. Water in the head. 191. Wen. 192. Whites. 193. White-swelling. 194. Whitlow. 195. Worms. 196. Wounds. 197. Yellow fever. Table of doses of medicines. Appendix of prescriptions. Appendix on cold water. |
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DESCRIPTION |
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The treatise present to reader with a clear and correct description of the nature, symptoms, causes, distinction, and most approved treatment of the diseases to which the human frame is liable. The author tries to lay before his readers a just and clear view of the nature of the different maladies treated of, and the best and most manageable remedies for the relief of pain and irritation, and the cure of disease. In every case, the Head of Treatment has received the greatest attention, because it is the most important; and under this division the plan or plans of management which are generally applicable to the particular malady treated of, and which are the most certain of success, in the majority of cases, have in general been first laid down, and afterwards almost every other useful remedy has been described separately so that the user will, find a determinate mode of treatment, of general and superior efficacy detailed under each malady for which he may be desirous of prescribing. |
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