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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53728 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53728)
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-Project Gutenberg's Asiatic Cholera, by Elijah Whitney and A. B. Whitney
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Asiatic Cholera
- A treatise on its origin, pathology, treatment, and cure
-
-Author: Elijah Whitney
- A. B. Whitney
-
-Release Date: December 14, 2016 [EBook #53728]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ASIATIC CHOLERA ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Iris Schröder-Gehring and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- ASIATIC CHOLERA
-
-
- _A TREATISE_
- ON ITS
- _ORIGIN, PATHOLOGY, TREATMENT,
- AND CURE_.
-
-
- BY
-
-
- E. WHITNEY, M. D.,
- AND
- A. B. WHITNEY, A. M., M. D.,
-
- LATE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON
-
- To Diseases of Women in the North-Western Dispensary,
- Visiting Physician, Etc.
-
-
-
-
- NEW YORK:
- M. W. DODD, PUBLISHER,
- NO. 506 BROADWAY.
- 1866.
-
-
-
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1866, by
-
- A. B. WHITNEY, A. M., M. D.,
-
- In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States,
- for the Southern District of New York.
-
-
-
- E. O. JENKINS, STEREOTYPER AND PRINTER,
- 20 NORTH WILLIAM ST., N. Y.
-
-
-
-
-DEDICATION.
-
-TO PROFESSORS POST, VAN BUREN, METCALF, AND BEDFORD.
-
-
-For those lucid Clinic illustrations and faithful instructions during
-a three-years' course in the New York Medical University, particularly
-the critical Pathological knowledge there inculcated, and consequent
-professional success, the youthful author is indebted.
-
-Knowing they will agree with him, that his appreciation of their valued
-services, and his gratitude for the same, can be best acknowledged
-in his attempt to benefit suffering humanity, he would here publicly
-acknowledge the pleasure and benefit received from their instructions
-during his College course, and beg their acceptance of his sincerest
-gratitude and affection.
-
-TO THESE ABLE INSTRUCTORS THIS VOLUME IS CORDIALLY DEDICATED BY THE
-JUNIOR AUTHOR.
-
- A. B. WHITNEY, M. D.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-The following pages are the result of investigations and the collection
-of facts and arguments from a great variety of sources, originally made
-and presented in aid of the discussions on the subject during the past
-six or eight months.
-
-The most eminent and reliable authorities for nearly half a century,
-that is, from 1832 to 1865, including the late reports from India,
-have been carefully examined, and such late discoveries, facts, and
-arguments collected, as seemed to throw light upon the subject, or in
-any degree to indicate or direct to a general principle of practice.
-
-The various experiments instituted for the cure of the disease have
-been carefully investigated, and the principle evolved explained
-whenever any advantage was derived from the same.
-
-In all these we have diligently searched for the cause of the failure
-of "remedial agents," so uniformly admitted, and have endeavored to
-present the results clearly and fully in the body of the work.
-
-Our statistics are collected from reliable sources, are very brief,
-and introduced in aid of the main object,--the establishment of a
-general principle of practice.
-
-The different modes of practice are from the most distinguished authors
-of the different Schools of Medicine, and non-professional gentlemen;
-condensed and exhibited mainly in their own language, to show their
-conformity or non-conformity to the Pathology of the disease.
-
-In all we have kept constantly in view the pathology of the disease,
-whose "dictates" have governed us in the exhibition and establishment
-of a general principle of rational practice, confirmed by observation
-and experience, which, if accepted and carried out by the profession,
-we hope and trust will save a very large proportion of those attacked
-by "this most acute of acute diseases."
-
- AUTHORS.
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- CHAPTER I.
-
- SEC. I. ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT. 7
-
- SEC. II. PROGRESS AND FATALITY. 20
-
- SEC. III. CAUSES--PROPAGATION. 34
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- SEC. I. PATHOLOGY. 45
-
- SEC. II. PHENOMENA, OR SYMPTOMS. 55
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- SEC. I. UNSUCCESSFUL MODES OF TREATMENT.--VENOUS
- TRANSFUSION EXPLAINED. 64
-
- SEC. II. PHYSIOLOGICAL CONDITION OF THE BLOOD, ITS
- NON-AERATION, OR NON-OXYDATION.
- MAXIMS OF RATIONAL PRACTICE SUGGESTED. 91
-
- SEC. III. DIFFERENT MODES OF TREATMENT. 130
-
- SEC. IV. STATISTICS. PERCENTAGE OF LOSS. VARIABLE
- RESULTS--THEIR CAUSE. 166
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- SEC. I. GENERAL PRINCIPLE OF RATIONAL PRACTICE,
- DICTATED BY THE PATHOLOGY OF THE DISEASE,
- CONFIRMED BY OBSERVATION AND EXPERIENCE. 178
-
- SEC. II. REMEDIES, RECIPES, ETC. 188
-
- SEC. III. PROPHYLAXIS, OR MEANS OF PREVENTION. 203
-
- SEC. IV. FORMULĘ--PREPARATIONS, ETC. 213
-
-
-
-
-ASIATIC CHOLERA.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-SECTION I.--ORIGIN AND DEVELOPMENT.
-
-
-Epidemics have occasionally prevailed in all ages. Sometimes they
-have been circumscribed in their influence, and limited to particular
-localities; while at other periods they have taken a wider range and
-extended over larger sections, inflicting the most lamentable results,
-and augmenting the bills of mortality to an incredible degree.
-
-The earlier writers have given some account of these diseases, which
-have occasionally prevailed as very fatal and devastating epidemics;
-surpassing all other diseases in their mysterious origin, in their
-rapid extension, and in the duration of their prevalence. In the
-East,--in Egypt, and on the eastern border of the Mediterranean,
-fearful epidemics have prevailed from time immemorial. They have often
-proved very destructive, especially in the Middle Ages, and as late
-as the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. During the prevalence of
-the "Pestis," which raged throughout Europe between the years 1347
-and 1350, according to computation, a fourth part of the inhabitants
-of this part of the globe was carried off. The estimates of the vast
-numbers swept away by its repeated occurrence and prevalence appear
-quite incredible.
-
-During the time it raged at Marseilles in 1720, it is reported that in
-the Charity Hospital there were admitted from October 3d to February
-28th, 1,013 patients, of whom 585 died; and during the same period, in
-another hospital, there were admitted from October to July 3d, 1,512
-patients, of whom 820 died. The population of Marseilles previous to
-the occurrence of the disease was estimated at about 90,000, of whom
-40,000 died; leaving only about 10,000 of the whole population who had
-not been attacked or in any way affected; so that the record shows the
-appalling mortality of fifty per cent. of those who were attacked.
-
-The bills of mortality in 1770 and 1771 were as appalling as any
-arising from epidemics of a later day. A very extended notice of
-the "Pestis" as it raged in Moscow in the year 1771 is given by M.
-Gerardin, who, quoting from the published statistics, observes: "In
-April, the deaths were 744; May, 851; June, 1,099; July, 1,708; August,
-7,268; September, 21,401; October, 17,561; November, 5,235; December,
-805"; making a total in nine months of 56,672, which is considerably
-less than the estimate given by De Mertens, who thinks the whole
-number carried off by this pestilence, from the city alone, cannot
-be less than 80,000. These statistics bear a striking resemblance to
-those of the Epidemic Cholera, whose fatality is materially varied by
-the seasons of the year; the greatest being usually at the close of
-Summer or the beginning of Autumn. There are, in short, many points of
-resemblance in this and former epidemics to that of the Cholera, which
-naturally lead to the supposition that all have had a common origin,
-if, indeed, they be in many respects dissimilar.
-
-Their pestilential character, their extended influence, and their great
-fatality, rendered their appearance and progress a special terror to
-physicians, and melancholy apprehension to the people. They seem to
-have been regarded as the manifestation of an invisible power, which
-directed and guided "the pestilence that walketh in darkness" and "the
-destruction that wasteth at noon-day;" a visitation or chastisement
-over which human ingenuity and medical skill had little control. Under
-these impressions, the earlier physicians labored and endeavored to
-satisfy the great mass of mind that these occasional and special
-developments of disease arose from natural causes, and were subject to
-certain natural laws. They ascribed their origin to the commingling of
-some specific poison in the food, and drink, and air, which, through
-these "media," was received into the system.
-
-Subsequently, they seem to have made some advance on this theory, and
-considered the extreme Summer heat--especially the intense heat of the
-sun in a dry season--the emanations from stagnant waters, and the miasm
-exhaled from the soil, and from putrid bodies of animals, as the chief
-causes of all epidemics. These views prevailed for a very long period,
-and have undergone no very remarkable change from the observations and
-discoveries of centuries.
-
-Modern and quite recent writers have advanced nearly the
-same doctrines, embracing, however, the principal sources of
-insalubrity--the malarious and miasmatic influences; and have assigned
-as the cause of epidemics, especially that of Cholera, a peculiar
-constitution of the atmosphere, and certain predisposing causes
-combining with each other, so that an association or union of these two
-independent and individual causes are necessary and essential to the
-production of the disease.
-
-Eminent scholars and pathologists have, during the century last past,
-patiently searched for its final cause, without arriving at any better,
-wiser, or more satisfactory conclusion than the earlier writers, who
-regarded it a poison, commingled with the food they ate, the water they
-drank, and the air they breathed. The modern writers, according to the
-more popular views, almost universally adopt the hypothesis that the
-remote or final cause of the Cholera is a specific poison; for at no
-period has a person in good health in this or any other country been
-known in a few minutes to be shriveled up, his face and extremities to
-turn purple, his whole body to become of an icy coldness, and with or
-without vomiting a peculiar fluid, like rice-water, to die in a few
-hours, except under the influence of poison. That this disease, so
-appalling and destructive in its effects, and so mysterious in its
-wanderings, should spread over countries in respect to climate, soil,
-geological formations, and as to the moral and physical habits of the
-population, so utterly opposite to those where it first originated, is
-only explicable on the hypothesis of its propagation on the principle
-of a specific disease-poison.
-
-How and in what manner it travels has not been satisfactorily
-determined. Whether independent of any and all human agency, or
-absolutely dependent on ordinary communication and intercourse of
-tribes, and peoples, and nations, is as yet unsettled. It is, however,
-a matter not of so much consequence as the fact that, in all its
-nomadic life, it retains unchanged its youthful disposition, vigor and
-energy. It seldom shows any inclination to associate, or coalesce, or
-even adopt the milder habits and manners of others.
-
-Perhaps some idea of its character may be obtained from a microscopic
-view of its birthplace and its surroundings. Whether the locality
-of its irruption in 1629, or that of 1817, whence it spread over the
-greater part of the globe, be entitled to the unenviable distinction
-of fostering its gestation, concealing and protecting its birth, and
-nursing its infancy, is immaterial;--since the similarity of these
-localities strikingly illustrates its cause and ultimate development.
-
-On the north side of the island of Java, about 6° S. lat. and 107° E.
-long., near the mouth of the river Jacatra, is situated Batavia, in
-the midst of swamps and marshes, surrounded by trees and jungle, which
-prevent the exhalations from being carried off by a free circulation
-of the air, and render the town peculiarly obnoxious to marsh
-miasmata. Besides this, all the principal streets are traversed by
-canals, planted on each side with rows of trees, over which there are
-bridges at the end of almost every street. These canals are the common
-receptacles for all the filth of the town. In the dry season their
-stagnant and diminished waters emit a most intolerable stench, while
-in the wet season they overflow their banks and leave a quantity of
-offensive slime. From these united causes, it is not surprising that
-Batavia has been considered the most unhealthy spot in the world, and
-has been designated the store-house of disease. According to Raynal,
-the number of sailors and soldiers alone who died in the hospitals
-averaged 1,400 annually for sixty years, and the total amount of deaths
-in twenty-two years exceeded a million of souls. The city was inclosed
-by a wall of coral rock, with a stream of water on each side within
-and without. Few Europeans, however, sleep within the town, as the
-night air is considered very baneful. The inhabitants, possibly, as
-an antidote against the noxious effluvia arising from the swamps and
-canals, continually burn aromatic woods and resins, and scatter about
-a profusion of odoriferous flowers, of which there are great abundance
-and variety. During the prosperity of the Dutch East India Company,
-Batavia obtained the title of Queen of the East, as the resources of
-all other districts were sacrificed to its exclusive commerce. Here,
-in this noted locality, was the Cholera bred and reared in 1629, under
-circumstances of great significance, admirably adapted to convey some
-idea of its cause and character.
-
-A learned professor, speaking of the diseases of India, observes:
-"CHOLERA is the most acute of acute diseases. It seems to have existed
-in Batavia as far back as 1629; and it has been known to prevail as an
-occasional epidemic in India at different years and places from 1774
-to 1817. Since then it has been endemic, and is a disease whose germs
-are essentially maintained in, or upon the soil. It annually recurs at
-many of our large stations, commencing generally at the beginning of
-the hot season, but sometimes occurring in the rainy and cold season.
-Its greatest proclivity to propagation is amongst populations living
-in low, damp, crowded, and ill-ventilated situations, especially if
-the water supply is impure. Nearly all the diseases fatal in India are
-accompanied by profuse discharges, with which the air, water, linen,
-bedding, closets, walls of hospitals, and barracks become more or less
-infected; so that the 'Materies Morbi' come into contact with all the
-inmates of buildings where the disease prevails."
-
-Its origin, or reappearance in 1817, is not in any respect essentially
-different from its earlier development on the Jacatra. The River
-Ganges, in India, like the Nile in Egypt, flows for a long distance
-through a low, level country, which it annually inundates. Dividing its
-waters about 200 miles from the sea, the Delta of the Ganges commences
-and continues its variegated and checkered surface, till, approaching
-the borders of the sea, it presents a peculiar aspect, being composed
-of a labyrinth of creeks and rivers, called "The Sunderbunds," with
-numerous islands, covered with the profuse and rank vegetation called
-"jungle," affording haunts to numerous tigers and other beasts of prey.
-This large river, "a Deity of the Hindoo," is subject to an annual
-freshet, often rising to the height of 32 feet in the month of July;
-when all the lower parts of the country adjoining the Ganges, as
-well as the Burrumpooter, are overflowed for a width of one hundred
-miles; nothing appearing but villages, trees, and sites of some places
-that have been deserted. Here in this vast pest-house, where every
-conceivable vegetable and animal substance is left upon the soil by
-the retiring inundation, exposed to the heat and dews of a tropical
-climate--where, too, noisome and infectious diseases have prevailed for
-centuries, the Epidemic Cholera is said to have arisen and acquired its
-strength and full development. A fit origin for a fatal and devastating
-pestilence.
-
-To this low, insalubrious, and festering locality, this vast
-pest-house, where so many noxious and noisome diseases are generated,
-and where so many epidemics have arisen and so often swept over the
-surrounding regions with most fatal and desolating effects, is ascribed
-the birthplace of the Epidemic Cholera of 1817. Here it is said to have
-first made its appearance at Jessore--a populous town in the centre of
-the Delta of the Ganges; whence attaining its growth and power, it has
-extended its influence as from a common centre, and marked its progress
-with hecatombs of victims in the direction of almost every point of the
-compass.
-
-Here we may remark, that it is not our intention to travel over the
-whole ground embraced by the subject under consideration; but, on
-the contrary, to present in this treatise only a cursory view of a
-few prominent features which may interest and aid in the important
-object of deducing from the pathology and the varied phenomena of the
-Cholera some general principle of practice. For this, and to this,
-our labor and our investigations are directed. Availing ourselves of
-every source of information within our reach, and relying in part on
-the observations and experience of others, we shall aim to present
-such facts and arguments as will shed light upon the subject, and aid
-in the accomplishment of this desirable object. However difficult this
-may appear, it is nevertheless believed to be within the province of
-science and unbiased reason.
-
-
-SECTION II.--PROGRESS AND FATALITY.
-
-The disease in 1817 appeared on the Delta of the Ganges, and gradually
-extending its influence, swept over various countries with terrible
-severity. Having here acquired its full development, and manifesting
-an indomitable determination to itinerate, it starts upon its lethean
-errand, and soon shows a capacity and power to overcome every obstacle
-opposed to its progress, and to pursue its course unchecked and even
-unretarded by any natural or artificial barrier. It soon traversed
-India, and in the succeeding season spread over adjacent countries,
-visiting in 1818 the Indian Peninsula, the Burmese Empire, the Kingdom
-of Aracan, and the Peninsula of Malacca. In 1819 it reached Sumatra,
-Singapore, and various other islands situated along the coast on either
-border of this vast peninsula.
-
-During the year 1820, pursuing steadily its progress eastward, it
-reached Tonquin, Southern China, Canton, the Philippine, and numerous
-other places and islands in that direction. In 1821 it visited
-Java--the place of its earlier nativity--Madura, Borneo, and many other
-places in the Indian Archipelago. During the years 1822, 1823 and 1824,
-it continued to spread over the vast and populous regions of Central
-and Northern China and the numerous islands upon the coast, and in 1827
-prevailed in Chinese Tartary, leaving few places in all these different
-countries on the continent, or even on the islands bordering on the
-eastern coast, unscathed by its terrible ravages and depopulating
-influence.
-
-During the same period, its progress westward has been uninterrupted,
-and attended with results no less remarkable. It has baffled all
-attempts to check or even retard its onward course, or mitigate its
-appalling effects. In July, 1821, it had reached Muscat in Arabia, and
-thence extended its influence to the populous cities and villages along
-the Persian Gulf. During the same season it appeared in Persia, and
-continued to ravage the principal cities and towns of that empire for
-four successive years. At Bassorah and Bagdad it broke out in July,
-1821, and thence extended its desolating influence westward to the Red
-and Mediterranean Seas, carrying off vast numbers of the inhabitants of
-the populous cities of Mesopotamia, Syria, and Judea.
-
-In 1822 it prevailed among the nomadic and Tartar tribes in Central
-Asia and in the northern Persian Provinces, and in 1823 broke out on
-the Georgian frontiers of Russia, at Orenburg on the River Ural, and
-at Astrachan on the Volga. Here its western course was apparently
-interrupted. There was, for a short period, an interval of complete
-immunity from its presence. Along the border of the Russian Provinces
-the disease had entirely disappeared, and seemed inclined to retrace
-its course and return to the home of its birth. But the fond
-anticipations of Europeans were disappointed; the destroyer was not to
-be arrested and turned back in his progress over the earth; his march
-was onward, his demands imperative.
-
-Hence, in the month of June, 1830, the disease reappeared in a Persian
-province on the southern shore of the Caspian, and again at Astrachan,
-on the Volga, in July, where it prevailed with such unwonted violence
-that, before the close of August, more than 4,000 persons had died
-of it in the city, and 21,270 in the province. From its interval of
-repose, it would seem to have recuperated its strength and vigor for
-the lethean work awaiting its progress. Ascending the Volga, it reached
-Moscow, became prevalent there in September, and continued with great
-severity till February, 1831. Here it attacked, in the city, about
-9,000 persons, of whom more than one-half died. Continuing its advance,
-it reached Riga about the middle of May, and St. Petersburg on the 26th
-June.
-
-From Astrachan it also directed its course towards the northern coast
-of the Black Sea, and thence along the course of the rivers into
-the central parts of Russia. It reached Poland in January, 1831,
-accompanied the Russian army in its various marches and encampments
-during the subjugation of that country, and proved very destructive
-in Warsaw and many other places during April and May. It appeared at
-Dantzic in May, and in June at Lemburg, Cracow, and various other
-places and sections of country, extending through Gallicia, Hungary,
-and reaching Berlin and Hamburg in August and September, and Vienna
-about the same time.
-
-Smyrna was visited in September, and Constantinople soon afterwards. It
-is reported that the pestilence was conveyed by a caravan from Mecca
-to Cairo in August, 1831, some thousands having died on the road;
-and, by the middle of September, 10,400 Mohammedans, besides Jews and
-Christians, had died of it in this latter city.
-
-Passing from the western coast of the continent, on nearly the same
-parallels of latitude, it found its way over the Northern Sea to the
-British Isles, and made a lodgment, first, on the northeastern coast
-of England, in October, 1831, at Sunderland, situated in latitude
-55° north, whence it prevailed and extended its influence over this
-section, evincing the same malignant and lethean character it had
-manifested in its progress over the continent. Its course thus far has
-been marked with unparalleled fatality.
-
-It made its first appearance in Scotland, at Haddington, in December,
-1831, and at Edinburgh in January. In these and various other places it
-prevailed for some months, and, as warm weather came on, increased in
-severity, and carried off a large percentage of those attacked. After
-spreading thus over the northern section, and rioting for months in the
-more populous cities and towns, it made its appearance in London on
-the 14th February, 1832, where it found an abundance of material for
-recuperating its strength and multiplying its forces, and soon after
-spread over various other places in the United Kingdom, inflicting
-the most appalling bills of mortality. In short, its progress over
-this country has been attended with the same destructive influence
-and the same lamentable consequences as on the continent. No change,
-modification, or softening of its disposition or character has arisen
-from its passage over the Northern Sea, nor from the refreshing
-influences of a purer atmosphere.
-
-It appeared in Calais on the 12th, and at Paris on the 26th of March,
-1832, where it continued in these and other cities and villages for
-some months with its accustomed severity. During the season it raged
-throughout the vast empire, and swept away an immense number of its
-inhabitants. During the succeeding years, 1833 and 1834, it traversed
-Spain, and proved very destructive in many of its larger cities and
-villages.
-
-In the mean time, continuing its course from the British Isles
-westward, unchecked by the prevailing western winds and the broad
-expanse of the Atlantic Ocean, over which it passes a distance of
-nearly three thousand miles, and makes its first appearance on the
-American continent at Quebec, Lower Canada, on the 8th June, 1832, and
-reaches Montreal on the 10th of the same month. From these cities it
-rapidly spread in all directions, prevailing in the towns and villages
-on the St. Lawrence and its tributaries, and soon extended along the
-chain of lakes, dividing the Provinces from the United States, visiting
-the principal ports on either shore. It exhibited in all these places
-its peculiar epidemic character, and proved excessively violent and
-fatal wherever it appeared.
-
-Its first irruption in New York was on the 24th June, 1832, sixteen
-days after its appearance at Quebec, and at Albany, midway between
-the two former cities, on the 3d July. From New York it extended its
-influence to Flatbush and Gravesend, Long Island, where it appeared on
-the 5th July, and on the same day and date at the city of Philadelphia.
-It broke out at Rochester on the 12th and at Buffalo--July.
-
-Thus, while it was making its way westward along the great chain of
-lakes, towards the arteries of the Great West, it was, at the same
-time, steadily pursuing its uninterrupted course along the coast,
-visiting the main cities, and spreading from these as from common
-centres over the intermediate towns and villages. In its progress it
-reached Baltimore on the 22d August, and the City of Washington on the
-28th of the same month.
-
-Thence it continued its course to Richmond, Norfolk, Edenton, and
-various other cities along the Atlantic and Gulf coast.
-
-It appeared at New Orleans in the Autumn of 1832, during the existence
-of a severe epidemic of yellow fever, and apparently subsided on the
-disappearance of the fever. Sporadic cases, however, occurred during
-the Winter, and in the opening of Spring it broke out with unwonted
-vigor and severity, and thence spread, according to its accustomed
-laws of itineracy, along the rivers into the interior of the States
-bordering upon the Mississippi and the Gulf coast, and raged throughout
-Louisiana and Texas with unusual violence and fatality.
-
-In 1832, 1833, and 1834 it prevailed throughout the Mississippi Valley
-with great fatality, especially in the principal cities, villages and
-towns situated upon its navigable waters. Here, after intervals of
-entire immunity from its presence, it occasionally reappeared in some
-of the larger cities with renewed vigor and power, and swept off vast
-numbers of the inhabitants. In no section of the States have greater
-numbers, compared with the whole population, fallen victims to it than
-in the fertile and sparsely settled prairies of the South and West.
-
-Thus, from the North, and at a later date from the South, extending
-its influence along the principal rivers into the interior, it swept
-over the States, prevailing in some places in the Valley of the
-Mississippi as late as 1836. In short, it reappeared in 1834 in many
-cities and places where it had before prevailed, and again spread over
-a considerable portion of the country with unprecedented fatality.
-
-In 1833, the disease appeared at Havana and Matanzas, and prevailed on
-the island for several months with great fatality, especially among
-the colored people. During the same season it appeared in August
-at Tampico, Campeachy, Vera Cruz, and the city of Mexico, proving
-especially violent and destructive in these and other cities of the
-Republic. In Central America it is said to have attacked the army, and
-in a very short period to have swept away a very large proportion of
-its officers and men.
-
-Thus, it appears that the epidemic or Asiatic Cholera, from its first
-irruption on the northern coast, spread over the greater part of the
-North American Continent in the space of two years, and has several
-times reappeared in different sections in its peculiar malignant
-character, spreading on each occasion over a greater or less extent
-of territory with the same uniform and destructive influence. Neither
-time, nor science, nor professional skill has thus far appeared to
-soften its character, or mitigate its severity.
-
-When the disease had fully assumed its epidemic or malignant type in
-India, in 1817, its rate of mortality was everywhere in that vast
-territory excessively high.
-
-According to the most reliable reports, the cases occurring in the
-earlier period of an irruption were generally fatal, few only surviving
-the attack; while of those occurring when the disease was on the
-decline, a greater proportion recovered. We read of numerous instances
-where one-third, one-half, two-thirds, and even nine-tenths of those
-seized with Cholera perished, and again of some places where one-fifth,
-one-fourth, and in some instances one-third of entire populations were
-cut off in a very short period by this disease. But without attempting
-to give the statistics of cholera in this part of the world, or even in
-Europe or America, we may present a few instances of mortality, going
-to show the great percentage of loss by this singular disease during
-its ravages from 1817 to 1837.
-
-In Siam, it is said 20,000 persons fell victims to it in twelve days.
-The inhabitants are remarkable for their uncleanly habits, and crowded,
-ill-ventilated tenements.
-
-In Sicily, 16,000 died of cholera in 1832, at Catania; in Palermo,
-40,000. These cities are represented as being filthy in the extreme,
-and the personal habits of the people so uncleanly, and the houses so
-crowded, that it is a matter of surprise the mortality was not greater.
-
-In Bassorah and Bagdad, situated in low, unhealthy localities, and
-exposed to a damp, insalubrious atmosphere, which, in the warmer
-season, is often essentially impregnated with miasmata and offensive
-exhalations from animal and vegetable decomposition, both within and
-without their inclosures, it is affirmed that more than one-third of
-their entire populations were carried off in less than one month.
-
-In the Province of Caucasus, out of 16,000 attacked by the disease,
-10,000 died. In Russia, out of 54,000 attacked in 1830, it is said more
-than 31,000 died.
-
-In Hungary, it is reported that the whole number affected by the
-disease was about 400,000, of whom more than one-half died.
-
-It is officially stated that the total number--the military
-excepted--of those affected with cholera in France, from its first
-appearance at Calais, March 15, 1832, to January 1st, 1833, is 230,000,
-and the deaths 95,000.
-
-In England, the whole number of cases of Cholera is reported to be
-49,594, and the number of deaths 14,807. In London there were 11,020
-cases, of which 5,274 were fatal. In Wales there were 1,436 cases, of
-which 498 proved fatal. In Ireland, from its first irruption in 1832
-to March, 1833, there had occurred 54,552 cases of cholera, of which
-21,171 were fatal.
-
-In Quebec, from June 9th to September 2d, 1832, there had occurred in
-that city alone no less than 5,783 cases of cholera, of which 2,218
-were fatal. In Montreal, from June 10th to September 21st, there were
-4,440 cases, and 1,904 deaths reported.
-
-In New York, from July 4th to August 28th, in 1832, there had occurred
-5,814 cases of cholera, and 2,935 deaths by the same disease. In
-Philadelphia, from July 4th to August 28th, 1832, there were reported
-2,314 cases of cholera, of which 935 were fatal.
-
-In many of our Southern and Western cities and villages the percentage
-of loss from the prevalence of cholera is considerably higher than the
-general average, compared with the data given above. The mortality
-varies materially in different localities, and, indeed, becomes very
-much augmented by the prevalence of those influences which particularly
-favor the vegetation, and are especially concerned in the production of
-zymotic diseases, whether in the lower or higher latitudes.
-
-
-SECTION III.--CAUSES--PROPAGATION.
-
-The remote or final cause is essentially of miasmatic origin, developed
-under certain atmospheric and terrestrial local conditions, not well
-defined or fully understood. In its nature and essence, it constitutes
-a peculiar disease-poison, which is now generally admitted to be, in
-one way or another, absorbed, and infects the blood, inducing a primary
-disease of this vital fluid, and directly depressing and deranging
-the ganglionic system of nerves. To its general character, and the
-circumstances under which it is generated and in which it operates in
-producing the disease, we have alluded in speaking of its origin.
-
-The predisposing causes are as numerous as the varied influences
-which operate to depress the general health. The insalubrity of the
-atmosphere may be regarded as a general, and, perhaps, the most
-extensive predisposing cause. In this state, its vital element becomes
-diminished or impaired to such an extent as to render it incapable of
-sustaining the normal and healthy functions of the system in their
-most vigorous condition. Hence, the foul and noisome air of close,
-ill-ventilated apartments becomes very depressing and baneful; a direct
-and effective element, often, in constant operation in generating and
-producing the cholera, typhoid fever, or other deadly maladies. This
-is not unfrequently the case on board some of our emigrant ships,
-when hundreds of human beings are stowed away between decks without
-the means of efficient ventilation, disinfection, or other mode of
-expelling the noxious principle. Though the germ of disease may be
-ever on board, it does not vegetate and come forth and rapidly acquire
-its activity, vigor and power, unless the localizing influence vivify,
-foster and nurture its development. This is fully confirmed by the
-recent arrival of two steamers with cholera on board.
-
-The _England_, and a few days later the _Virginia_, with crews and
-passengers all in perfect health, departing from a healthy port where
-no cases of cholera were known to exist, and after being out at sea six
-or eight days under the influence of a cool, invigorating atmosphere,
-were surprised by the sudden irruption of cholera on board. It breaks
-out among the steerage passengers who are crowded and packed together
-between decks like sheep for the slaughter, in a confined atmosphere,
-daily becoming more noisome, without the means of ventilation or
-disinfection. Can any sane man say the disease--the cholera--was not
-here, on board these ships, generated and produced?
-
-This is also confirmed by the occurrence of an isolated case on
-Ninety-third Street, near Third Avenue, the first case in this city
-this season. Though the cholera exists at Quarantine, the patient had
-not been in any way exposed to the disease, except to the exhalations
-from the overflowing and drainage of a privy and the foul atmosphere
-arising from the cellar of her own tenement. On Monday, it is said,
-she partook of her dinner, feeling a little indisposed; at 4 P.M. she
-called in her physician, and died the next morning, May 1st, at 11
-A.M., in a state of collapse.
-
-Take another instance: the second case in this city occurred in one
-of the tenement dwellings of the Sixth Ward, No. 117 Mulberry Street.
-The patient was a woman about thirty years of age, who had not
-been exposed, except to the noisome atmosphere of her own dwelling
-and its surroundings, which must be regarded, under the peculiar
-circumstances, as a true, genuine cholera atmosphere. In these cases
-the evidence is conclusive that the disease was generated and produced
-within, and on these premises.
-
-The exhalations from low, moist, and marshy localities, from
-the offensive cesspools, water-closets, sinks, sewers, and the
-decomposition of animal and vegetable substances, from the refuse or
-garbage which so often befouls the sidewalks and gutters of streets,
-are all effective, predisposing causes, that directly facilitate the
-production of the cholera. Whatever tends to depress the vital powers,
-impair normal action, or relax in any degree the tone of the nervous
-system, favors the operation of the final cause. So, too, the low,
-underground, damp, unventilated apartments, the crowded and uncleanly
-tenement houses, in which multitudes of the poorer class live, in a
-confined, foul, and noisome atmosphere, not only favor, but actually
-invite, the active operation of the infecting agent.
-
-Habits of intemperance, profligacy, impurity, and late hours, have a
-powerful influence to depress and prepare the system for an invasion
-of the disease in its most malignant form. In a neighborhood of this
-description, when the cholera in 1832 was raging in the adjacent city,
-from which it was separated by a very small creek, the uncleanly
-multitude escaped entirely, not a case occurring there at that time;
-but when, after an interval of several weeks, all danger seemed to have
-passed, and the people were rejoicing and congratulating themselves
-on their good fortune, the fearful disease suddenly appeared in their
-midst with greatly intensified effect, and in a very few days swept the
-place so clean that few were left to tell the sad story of its ravages.
-
-There are some other predisposing causes of no inconsiderable
-influence, which not only favor the operation of the infecting agent in
-the production of the disease, but even awaken its latent power, and
-stimulate its activity and development in the system, once exposed to
-its invasion. Among these, excessive fear of an attack, great anxiety
-and depression of mind, constitutional debility, deranged condition
-of the digestive organs, accompanied with a relaxed state of the
-bowels, exhaustion arising from fatigue or disease, semi-starvation
-and unwholesome diet, neglect of personal and domestic cleanliness,
-irregular habits, and excesses of every description, are all direct
-incentives and stimulating agents in the production of the cholera. Any
-one of these may be sufficient to induce an attack; but when a number
-unite and act conjointly the danger is vastly greater, as the infecting
-agent or disease-poison becomes thereby more intensified.
-
-When the cholera first appeared in Europe and in this country in
-its epidemic form, the majority of medical men, as well as the
-people, believed it to be contagious, and to be propagated solely
-on this principle. But when the disease appeared in 1848 a decided
-change of opinion occurred, which led to a full discussion of the
-subject, without any definite result; and the great question as to
-its contagious character and its mode of propagation remains still
-unsettled. The higher authorities, says an eminent author, concurred in
-the opinion of the Board of Health, "that the disease was not in any
-way contagious, and that no danger was incurred by attendance on the
-sick."
-
-A large body of evidence, however, has been exhibited, going to show
-that human intercourse has, at least, a share in the propagation of the
-disease, and that it, under some circumstances, is the most important,
-if not the sole means of effecting its diffusion. On the other hand, it
-is affirmed that though it may be communicated, in some cases, by the
-agency of human intercourse, it does not follow that the material cause
-spreads by true contagion, that is, by reproducing itself in the bodies
-of men, and there only.
-
-The disease may be carried by healthy persons in their clothing,
-in their ships, and in their caravans. That instances of this kind
-have occurred there can be no question, for numerous records present
-some undoubted instances of the occasional communication of the
-cholera-poison through human intercourse; still it is no less certain
-that its general extension over the world cannot be accounted for on
-this principle alone. "Its propagation by this means seems to be the
-rare exception, its spread over the earth from other causes being the
-common rule."
-
-Dr. Hamlin, writing from Constantinople, in reference to the recent
-irruption and prevalence of the cholera in that city, observes, "The
-idea of contagion should be abandoned. All the missionaries who have
-been most with the most malignant cases, day after day, are fully
-convinced of the non-contagiousness of the cholera. The incipient
-attacks which all have suffered from are to be attributed to great
-fatigue, making the constitution liable to an attack."
-
-It is a very singular fact, that the medical profession in India,
-the birthplace and home of the cholera, almost universally reject
-the doctrine of contagion. If those most observant and familiar
-with its history, its prevalence, and its annual recurrence as an
-endemic disease, which they are called to treat in all its varied
-phases, have discovered no contagious character by which it can be
-propagated, it may be safely inferred that it is not contagious in the
-common acceptation of the term, and that its extension over the earth
-is governed by some other principle, and that the predisposing and
-localized causes which are always in operation in India exercise no
-small share in its diffusion, in directing its course, aggravating its
-severity, increasing or diminishing its fatality, and determining the
-duration of its prevalence in particular localities. When its infecting
-germs have gained a lodgment in any city, section, or country, they may
-be stimulated and become exceedingly active in the production of the
-disease through these influences.
-
-As to its introduction into different countries, it is quite evident
-that the germ, or latent principle of the cholera-poison, exists in
-such a state as to be capable of transportation, and may in this way
-be diffused to almost any extent when the localizing influences are
-sufficient to develop its energies.
-
-In this, as in all other zymotic diseases, some persons are more
-susceptible of an impression and more liable to an attack than others.
-Though no class can be considered exempt, yet there are some whose
-organization, or innate protective principle, seems to render them
-impervious to its influence. The cholera, however, is no respecter of
-persons, or rank, or condition. The anęmic and cowardly in all ranks
-and conditions are peculiarly liable, and are the most defenceless and
-unresisting when invaded. In Europe, the probable numbers attacked in
-that part of the world appear from statistics to be, in France, as 1
-in 300; Russia, as 1 in 20; Austria, as 1 in 30; Poland, as 1 in 32;
-Holland, as 1 in 144; Germany, as 1 in 700. "The circumstance of one
-attack by no means protected the individual from a second in the same,
-or any subsequent year; still a repetition of the disease in the same
-person in the same year was rare."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-SECTION I.--PATHOLOGY.
-
-
-The doctrine now universally accepted and prevailing regarding its
-Pathology is, that a poison, virulent, subtle, and unknown, has been
-absorbed, and primarily infects the blood, so that, after a longer or
-a shorter time, a primary disease of this vital fluid is produced, and
-that the poison undergoes an enormous process of multiplication in
-the living body of the cholera patient, as the direct result of this
-morbific process so established, and that changes are induced in the
-function of respiration directly consequent on this alteration of the
-blood.
-
-This altered condition and rapid change in the life-sustaining
-principle of the blood, the loss of nerve-power, the impaired
-circulation and tendency to congestion, are the proper and
-distinguishing features of the disease; and the term "Algide," first
-used by the French Pathologists, very happily describes one of the
-most remarkable and constant symptoms, namely, the diminution of animal
-heat. The loss of temperature and its consequent effects upon the
-circulation, depressing and prostrating the nervous power, impairing
-and paralyzing the respiratory organs, suspending the functions of the
-liver and kidneys, enfeebling the action of the heart, and causing
-the capillary vessels of the mucous tissues to expand and pour off
-the serous fluid from the blood and every muscle and tissue of the
-system, with great rapidity, essentially constitute the phenomena of
-the Cholera. The constantly increasing augmentation of the poison and
-its intensified effects measure the malignity, the violence, and the
-rapidity of the disease.
-
-It is this multiplication, and the disturbance which attaches to it,
-that in each case constitutes the disease and destroys life. Of this
-fact the circumstantial evidence is abundant and conclusive, and may
-account in part for the violence of the disease in its first irruption
-in any particular locality. The vomiting, purging, and cramps are now
-generally considered as secondary and non-essential phenomena, for
-numerous cases of cholera have occurred in every section where it has
-prevailed in its more violent and malignant form without exhibiting
-these symptoms. The poison was so potent, and its progress so rapid,
-that life was extinguished in a very short time. In its first irruption
-at Muscat, cases are reported in which only ten minutes elapsed from
-the first apparent seizure before life was extinct. Dr. Milroy,
-speaking of the violence and rapidity of the disease as it occurred in
-1817, and again in 1845 and '6, at Kurrachee, observes, that "within
-little more than five minutes hale and hearty men were seized, cramped,
-collapsed, and dead." Instances of death taking place in two or three
-hours are extremely common. When it broke out at Teheran, in May, 1846,
-Dr. Milroy observes, that "those who were attacked dropped suddenly
-down in a state of lethargy, and at the end of two or three hours
-expired, without any convulsions or vomitings, but from a complete
-stagnation of the blood." In many places during its prevalence in
-1832, and subsequently in 1834, and in 1848 and '9, the rapid fatal
-character of the earlier cases was observed and reported as the most
-severe and hopeless. In various cities and villages in our own country,
-cases of this description were not unfrequent. In all these the
-destructive nature and rapid process of the disease was so depressing
-and overwhelming as to prevent any effort of the "vis naturę" to resist
-its progress.
-
-Hence, from the autopsy of those who have fallen victims to its baneful
-influence in the first stage, or within forty-eight hours of the
-attack, no alteration of structure in any organ or tissue has been
-discovered. But in those cases where death has occurred at a later
-period, some lesions and slight changes in the appearance of some
-tissues have been traced. The more important of these, illustrative
-of the characteristic effects of the disease, are, in brief, the
-following:
-
-The follicular structure of the intestinal canal has been found
-slightly swollen, and the intestine partially filled with a
-turbid, inodorous, semi-diaphanous fluid, resembling thin starch,
-or rice-water, and is supposed to be the remains of that peculiar
-secretion which had taken place during life. This fluid is sometimes
-acid, and sometimes alkaline. In the small intestines it is found in an
-unmixed condition. It consists of two liquids of different consistency;
-the one thick, the other thin. The latter constitutes the rice-water
-stools, and may be passed off without admixture with the thicker
-substance. The colon has been found generally much contracted, and the
-mucous membrane and the sub-mucous cellular tissue of the digestive
-canal presenting evident marks of congestion, in some cases approaching
-to a sub-inflammatory state, generally in spots or patches of various
-sizes, the color of these varying from a very dark congestion to a more
-roseate hue. The glands of Brunner and Peyer, as well as the solitary
-glands, are greatly enlarged. The stomach and bowels are frequently of
-a paler color than natural, both in their inner and outer surfaces. The
-liver, the spleen, and the kidneys have been found engorged with blood.
-The urinary bladder is always contracted, and empty. The gall-ducts
-are sometimes contracted, at other times not. The vena porta and all
-the other abdominal veins are loaded with black blood, resembling tar
-in its color and consistency. The membranes of the brain and cord are
-generally found congested, and the substance of the brain more or less
-dotted with small points or specks of blood than usual.
-
-"The most common appearances in the lungs," says an eminent
-pathologist, "are the presence of blood in the large vessels, chiefly
-or solely; the collapse and the deficient crepitation arising from
-the more or less complete absence of air and blood, and from the
-approximation of the molecular parts of the pulmonary substance.
-In other cases there is more blood in the minute structure, a
-corresponding dark color of the lung, and a variable amount of frothy
-serum. The right side of the heart and the pulmonary arteries were
-generally filled, and in some cases distended with blood; the left side
-and aorta were generally empty, or contained only a very small quantity
-of dark blood; the left side evidently had received little or no blood,
-but had continued to contract, in some cases even violently, on the
-last drop of blood which had entered it."
-
-Such are some of the prominent appearances which the body has presented
-when the patient has died in the first, or pulseless stage of the
-disease. But in other cases, where the premonitory stage has been
-definitely marked, and attended with diarrhoea or other depressing
-disorder affecting the alimentary canal, and where the patient has
-continued under the influence of the disease for a longer period, and
-has passed through the usual successive stages of it, other additional
-appearances have been noticed, which are here omitted, as they are of
-a secondary importance, and belong especially to the more protracted
-cases.
-
-The _post-mortem_ appearances, the phenomena of the disease, the
-Algide, or diminished animal heat, and the loss of nervous power, all
-tend to show an obstructed circulation and consequent embarrassment
-of respiration resulting in the non-aeration and non-oxydation of the
-blood, from which a long train of secondary and non-essential symptoms
-arise. For it is affirmed that the mechanical part of respiration
-remains in a good degree perfect, and that the heart evidently
-continues to beat in many cases till stopped by the want of blood in
-the left side and by its accumulation in the right side. Hence, for the
-cause of this arrest of the circulation of the blood through the lungs,
-we are forced to look to the condition of the blood itself, and the
-deranged action of the ganglionic nerves.
-
-Attempts have been made to trace out from analysis the exact chemical
-changes in the order of their occurrence which attend the period of
-transudation from the blood into the intestinal canal. "The most
-prominent phenomena of cholera," says Dr. Aiken, "during this period
-of transudation, consists in separation of the water and of the salts
-of the intercellular fluid (of the blood) through the mucous membrane
-of the intestinal canal, and the retention in the blood of an important
-excess of albumen and of blood-cells, with apparently less, but in
-reality with great diminution of the salts and fibrin."
-
-"The inorganic constituents," continues the same author, "if compared
-to the water, are during the first four hours increased, because at
-this time the water is passing off with great rapidity; afterwards, as
-the salts pass off, the disproportion is lessened, and after eighteen
-hours or so, the proportion of salts is greatly diminished, and, if
-compared with the organic constituents, the diminution is enormous.
-With respect to the individual salts, there is in the blood a relative
-preponderance of phosphates over chlorides, and of potash salts over
-soda salts. By the end of eighteen hours or so, the blood-corpuscles
-are left in a most abnormal condition; the great loss of water and
-of salts, especially of the chloride of potassium--a most important
-constituent of the blood-cells--at once leads to the conclusion that
-their functions must have been greatly impaired. Accordingly, Dr.
-Schmidt found that the amount of oxygen contained in them was lessened
-by one-half." Dr. Robertson affirms that the "fibrin of the blood is
-usually in large amount and coagulable with great firmness;" while
-Dr. Parkes, speaking of the same condition of the blood, and relying
-on the accuracy of his analysis, observes, "The presence of fibrin
-in the blood was not indicated by any coagulation either in or out
-of the body; and whether coagulated or not, the blood has usually a
-dark color; but it generally acquired an arterial tint when brought
-into contact with the air in thin layers." * * * "When we remember
-the great share taken by the blood-globules in the respiratory and
-heat-furnishing processes, it is scarcely possible to avoid concluding
-that their loss of salts is connected with the characteristic cyanosis
-and lowered temperature in cholera." "The diarrhoea coincides with
-the first chemical changes in the blood--the transudation of some of
-the constituents of the serum." Hence the phenomena of the disease
-may thus be traced from this process as the starting-point. All other
-chemical changes in the blood, and the most marked symptoms, such as
-the abnormal respiratory process, follow as a matter of course. Such
-is the theory of the nature of cholera, now advanced and sustained by
-the most eminent pathologists, which embraces the doctrine previously
-advanced that the blood is the primary seat of the disease, and becomes
-contaminated by the absorption of a specific poison.
-
-
-SECTION II.--PHENOMENA, OR SYMPTOMS.
-
-The attack of this fearful disease is most generally sudden, the
-patient being at the time apparently unconscious of any depressing
-influence, or derangement of the system. It is not unfrequent, however,
-that some slight irregularity of the bowels, loss of animation
-and general vigor, or other apparently trifling indisposition,
-have preceded it. In some instances there are definite and decided
-premonitory symptoms which continue for a longer or shorter time
-prior to the attack, commencing usually with a pallor or collapse of
-the countenance, depression of spirits, slight pain in the forehead,
-noise in the ears, occasional or transient turns of vertigo, slight
-nausea, heat and pain in the epigastrium, oppression at the chest,
-with frequent sighing, nervous agitation, some loss of muscular power,
-general uneasiness, flatulence, with slight diarrhoea, sickness at
-the stomach, occasional twinges of the nerves, or cramps in the
-extremities, oppressed, small, feeble, and sometimes intermitting
-pulse, coldness, clamminess, or humidity of the surface, and general
-lethargy. Such are some of the premonitory symptoms which more
-frequently occur in the lower latitudes, where the general vigor
-becomes depressed by the long-continued and excessive heat of the
-climate. Their duration, whenever any of them do occur, varies
-materially; sometimes one, two, or three days--sometimes longer but not
-often.
-
-According to the observations and descriptions given by those who have
-had the best opportunities for becoming familiar with all its various
-phases, the symptoms attending its invasion and general course are
-too distinctly marked to be ever mistaken for any other disease. In
-the minds of many who have been called to witness the developments of
-cholera, they undoubtedly exist with such distinctness and vividness
-as to render the most labored and accurate description tame. In this
-treatise, however, a description of the leading and more prominent
-phenomena will be given, and so far as a general principle of practice
-is concerned, this might be very appropriately limited to its first or
-cold stage.
-
-The commencement of the disease is often so insidious as to pass
-unnoticed till the system is fully prepared for the sudden and violent
-attack. The slight, painless diarrhoea, depression of the nervous
-power, and occasional vertigo may all pass unheeded, and the patient
-be apparently in perfect health. He may retire to rest entirely
-unconscious of approaching danger, and after enjoying a sound and
-undisturbed sleep for hours, be, on awakening from his slumbers, seized
-with a remarkable sickness, perhaps vomiting, accompanied with most
-remarkable and profuse discharges from the bowels. These inordinate
-evacuations are usually attended with severe pains, extending down the
-thighs, and a sense of complete and almost perfect exhaustion. The
-physical powers and vital energies are immediately prostrated. The
-temperature rapidly sinks below the normal standard--the body becomes
-benumbed with an icy coldness--the skin becomes shriveled up, and
-almost insensible to hot and stimulating fomentations--the breath,
-too, as it comes from the lungs, appears to partake of the same icy
-coldness, indicating the rapid elimination of heat, or caloric, from
-the body. The patient complains of being greatly oppressed, throws off
-his clothing--calls for cold water, which he eagerly and copiously
-drinks; though it afford no relief to his insatiate thirst, it ought
-not to be withheld. This peculiar icy coldness and loss of temperature
-is also further shown by the livid, blue, or purple appearance of
-the hands and feet, extending sometimes over the greater part of the
-body. The skin becomes, even in a few minutes after the seizure, not
-only shriveled up, but often curiously wrinkled, as in extreme old
-age. Severe spasms in the fingers, toes, legs, and abdomen, cause the
-patient to groan and writhe under their influence, and to call on
-his attendants, if fortunate enough to have any around him, for aid
-and relief from his agonies. As the disease proceeds, there may be
-noticed a peculiar, sharp and contracted state of the features, and
-a wild and terrified expression of the countenance, arising from the
-impression and fearful apprehension of rapidly approaching dissolution.
-These important changes may all take place in a very few minutes. To
-these most obvious and singular symptoms there is superadded constant
-vomiting--incessant purging--low, feeble pulse, though occasionally
-natural and sometimes rapid, yet in some instances, from the very
-first moment of attack, cannot be discovered either in the large
-superficial arteries or at the wrist. The voice is altered, becomes
-low, feeble, unnatural in tone, or sinks even to a whisper. Respiration
-becomes quick, irregular, laborious and imperfect. The inspiratory
-act being performed with difficulty, and expiration being quick and
-convulsive. The flow of bile into the intestines is suspended, the
-urinary secretion and micturition entirely suppressed. Almost the
-only organ which seems to preserve in any good degree its powers is
-the brain--the mental faculties in some cases being retained till
-the close of life;--in other cases feeble, weak, and much impaired.
-On the accession of the spasms, the vomiting--and the purging--the
-disease may be considered as being fully developed, and the crisis at
-hand, which, in a few hours, must decide the fate of the patient. Its
-progress is now rapid, and must speedily terminate either favorably
-or unfavorably. If the result be unfavorable, the patient may die with
-all these symptoms distinctly and strongly marked. If the termination,
-however, be favorable, these violent symptoms soon yield, and seem
-to be materially relieved; yet, though these indications favor the
-return of normal power--the weakness, the cessation of the pulse, the
-coldness and blueness of the surface, and the sepulchral expression of
-the countenance, clearly show that a few hours must close the scene. To
-many death thus often comes calmly and quietly, without any struggle to
-mark the precise time of this life's departure.
-
-"If the patient," says an eminent author, "should happily survive the
-cold stage, the disease may terminate by a rapid recovery, or it may
-pass into the second or febrile stage." The former is the more usual
-course in India, the latter in Europe. The first symptom of returning
-health is shown by the patient falling into a sleep of unusual
-soundness, during which the respiration becomes light and easy,
-the pulse freer, while a gentle, warm perspiration bedews the whole
-body. This grateful pause in the disease appears to be the result of
-the returning powers of life, uninfluenced by medicine, for it often
-occurs where none has been given. After this balmy slumber the patient
-awakes refreshed, and often recovers so rapidly, that in the natives
-of India it almost resembles a restoration after syncope. In all the
-Presidencies, indeed, and especially in Bengal, the recovery of the
-European has, in general, been followed by a stage of reaction, usually
-slight, but in some cases assuming the form of the bilious remittent
-fever of the country, which has occasionally terminated fatally.
-In most cases, however, the reaction is more considerable, and the
-patient, in a few hours after the subsidence of the cold stage, labors
-under a severe form of fever, resembling the typhoid. During the first
-few hours after the febrile reaction commences the tongue is white,
-but it quickly becomes brown and dry, while black sordes incrust the
-teeth and lips. The eye becomes deeply injected and red, the cheek pale
-or flushed, the pulse rapid, and the temperature of the body a little
-above the natural standard. The patient, either delirious or comatose,
-then lies in a state resembling the last stage of the severest typhoid
-fever of this country. This struggle usually lasts from four to eight
-days, when the symptoms either gradually yield, or death ensues. In a
-few mild cases the fever assumes an intermittent type, or sometimes a
-quotidian, sometimes a tertian form: all these cases usually recover.
-Such is, in brief, a summary of the more important symptoms of the
-Epidemic, or Asiatic Cholera, especially in its earlier or cold stage.
-The phenomena, especially developed in, and belonging to, the stage
-of reaction, being of minor importance, they have received only a
-very brief consideration; sufficient, however, to show the general
-character and tendency of the disease in this stage of its progress and
-termination.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-SECTION I.--UNSUCCESSFUL MODES OF TREATMENT--VENOUS TRANSFUSION
-EXPLAINED.
-
-
-In this discussion we shall avail ourselves of the researches and
-investigations of eminent Professors, whose observations, experience,
-and position give their views the highest authority. The latest and
-most deserving record on this subject is from the pen of Professor
-Aiken, of Edinburgh, who observes, "There are few diseases for the cure
-of which so many different remedies and modes of treatment have been
-employed as in Cholera, and, unfortunately, without our discovering an
-antidote to the poison. In Moscow it is said that the mortality was
-not greater among the destitute of medical aid than among those who
-had every care and attention shown them. It may be fairly inferred,
-therefore, that in the severer forms of the disease, the action of
-this poison is so potent as to render the constitution insensible to
-the influence of our most powerful remedial agents. When, however,
-the disease is mild, or on the decline, much may be done by obviating
-symptoms to promote the recovery of the patient."
-
-"The heroic remedies that have been employed in Cholera are bleeding,
-and calomel and opium, either separately or conjointly. With respect
-to bleeding, it may be stated, that in every country the patients
-bore bleeding badly in any stage, and that the practice in Europe was
-at length limited to a few leeches occasionally to the head. As to
-calomel, that medicine was used to the greater part of an ounce in the
-twenty-four hours, but with so little success that many patients have
-been seized and have died under the full influence of mercury. On the
-appearance of cholera in Europe, opium was administered in the doses
-recommended by the Indian practitioners to the greater part even of an
-ounce of laudanum; but it was soon seen that in the cold stage it was
-inefficient in controlling the vomiting or purging; that it did not
-allay the spasms, and, moreover, hardly produced any narcotic effect.
-The action of the accumulated doses of opium, however, though suspended
-during the cold stage, was often fully developed in the last stage,
-and occasioned so much affection of the head that most practitioners
-either abandoned its use or limited it to a mere fractional dose of
-that usually given in India, namely, from three to twelve minims of the
-tincture of opium, or half a grain to a grain of solid opium every four
-or six hours."
-
-Let us now turn to a paper by the justly celebrated Professor Maclean,
-whose observations and experiences have been more extensive than
-perhaps those of any other professional gentleman either in Europe or
-America. Unlike many of his brethren, he holds on this subject the
-safer doctrines of practice, and very frankly and earnestly expresses
-the same in the following language: "Opium in cholera should be given
-only in the premonitory diarrhoea. At this stage, in combination with
-a stimulant, it is of the highest value. If persevered in, particularly
-in the strong doses (justly reprobated), it is a dangerous remedy,
-inducing fatal narcotism, or, at the least, interfering with the
-functions of the kidneys, and so leading directly to uręmic poisoning."
-
-"Urgent thirst is one of the most distressing symptoms in cholera;
-there is incessant craving for cold water, doubtless instinctive, to
-correct the inspissated condition of the blood, due to the rapid escape
-of the liquor sanguinis. It was formerly the practice to withhold
-water--a practice as cruel as it is mischievous. Water in abundance,
-pure and cold, should be given to the patient, and he should be
-encouraged to drink it, even should a large portion of it be rejected
-by the stomach; and when the purging has ceased, some may, with much
-advantage, be thrown into the bowel from time to time.
-
-In the stage of reaction, the fever may be moderated by cold sponging,
-or by the wet sheet; the secretion of urine may be promoted by dry
-cupping over the loins by the use of chlorate of potash, and the like.
-But suppression of this secretion is most to be dreaded where opium has
-been too freely used in the treatment. In men of intemperate habits, we
-often see, during the stage of reaction, obstinate vomiting of thick,
-tenacious, green, paint-looking matter, probably bile pigment, acted
-on by some acid in the stomach or alimentary canal. It is a symptom
-of evil omen, and often goes on uncontrolled until the patient dies
-exhausted, and this although all other symptoms may promise a favorable
-issue. I have known it last for a week, resisting all remedies, and
-proving fatal when the urinary secretion had been restored and all
-cerebral symptoms had subsided. Alkalies in the effervescing form, free
-stimulation of the surface, and chloroform in small doses offer the
-best hope of relief. The patient should be nourished more by the bowel
-than the stomach when vomiting is present. Ice should be not only to
-dissolve in the mouth, but to swallow in pieces of convenient size."
-
-"Another heroic plan," says Dr. Aiken, "peculiar, perhaps, to this
-country, which was practiced when the inefficiency of medicines was
-generally admitted, was an injection of a solution of half an ounce of
-muriate of soda, and four scruples of sesquicarbonate of soda in ten
-pints of water, of a temperature varying from 105 to 120 Fah., into the
-veins of the suffering patient. The solution was injected slowly; half
-an hour being spent in the gradual introduction of the ten pints, and
-the immediate effects of this treatment were very striking. The good
-effects were rapid in proportion to the heat of the solution, but a
-higher temperature than what is stated could not be borne. After the
-introduction of a few ounces, the pulse, which had ceased to be felt
-at the wrist, became perceptible, and the heat of the body returned.
-By the time three or four pints had been injected the pulse was good,
-the cramps had ceased, the body, that could not be heated, had become
-warm, and instead of cold exudation on the surface, there was a
-general moisture; the voice, before hoarse and almost extinct, was now
-natural, the hollowness of the eye, the shrunken state of the features,
-the leaden hue of the face and body had disappeared, the expression
-had become animated, the mind cheerful, the restlessness and uneasy
-feelings had vanished, the vertigo and noises of the ear, the sense
-of oppression at the precordia had given way to comfortable feelings;
-the thirst, however urgent before the operation, was assuaged, and the
-secretion of urine restored, though by no means constantly so. But
-these promising appearances were not lasting; the vomiting continued,
-the evacuations became more profuse, and the patient soon relapsed into
-his former state, from which he might again be aroused by a repetition
-of the injections; but the amendment was transient, and the fatal
-period not long deferred. Of 156 patients thus treated at Drummond
-Street Hospital, Edinburgh, under the direction of Dr. Macintosh, only
-25 recovered; a lamentably small proportion; and, small as it is, it
-seems doubtful if the recoveries were final or complete."
-
- * * * * *
-
-But let us turn to another page, whose beauty is especially marred by
-unreasonable expedients: "The warm bath," says the writer, "was at
-first tried, but discontinued from the uncontrollable nature of the
-vomiting and purging, and the oppressive sensation of heat it produced
-on the patient's feelings. Mr. Dalton's vapor bath and Turkish baths in
-the Hospital at Scutari have been used, but without benefit, and to the
-disappointment of the hopes which had been entertained of them."
-
-"Other methods of restoring warmth were had recourse to, such as
-frictions with the hand or by the flesh-brush, or rubbing the body with
-some strong stimulant embrocation, compounded of garlic, capsicum,
-camphor, cantharides, or other powerful irritants. Mustard poultices
-also were often applied to the feet and abdomen, blisters with or
-without an addition of oil of turpentine, the part having been
-previously rubbed with hot sand; and in cases supposed to be urgent,
-the mineral acids, and even boiling water, were employed for the
-purpose of producing instant vesication."
-
-"And, again, we read of those who tried to stimulate the waning powers
-of life by galvanism, acupuncture of the heart, issues, setons, moxas,
-actual cautery along the spine, and, lastly, by small pieces of linen
-dipped in alcohol distributed over the body and then set fire to!!!"
-Such are some of the means which have been used in the treatment and
-cure of cholera.
-
-"The failure of such powerful means at length caused most practitioners
-to confine themselves to checking the diarrhoea, which so frequently
-precedes cholera, and subsequently, to obviating symptoms as they
-arose," and for this purpose, returned to and adopted a very simple
-stimulating mixture, recommended by the Board of Health:
-
- Rx. Pulveris Aromat., dram iij.
- Tinc. Catechu, " x.
- Tinc. Cardamom, C., " vj.
- Tinc. Opii, " j.
- Mixt. Cretę Preparat., ounce xx.
- M.----S., j ounce, as necessary.
-
-Tinc. Kino, or the decoctum Hęmatoxyli, were sometimes added.
-
-These remedies, it is said, frequently arrested the attack altogether.
-If, however, the disease proceeded and the cold stage of cholera
-formed, the same remedies were prescribed in an effervescing draught.
-"To promote reaction in cholera and diarrhoea, the following formula
-has met with most universal approval in this country and in India. So
-highly is it valued, indeed, that it is ordered to be always in store,
-and in readiness in the _Medical Field Companion_ of the army when on
-the march:
-
- Rx. Ol. Anisi, }
- Ol. Cajeput, } [=a][=a]. dram ss.
- Ol. Juniper, }
- Ęther, ounce ss.
- Liquor Acid. Haleri,[I.] dram ss.
- Tinc. Cinnam., ounce ij.
-
-M.----S.: ten drops every fifteen minutes, in a table-spoonful of water.
-An opiate may be given with the first and second dose, but should not
-be continued."
-
-The learned author to whom we have referred, after detailing some of
-the various expedients employed in the treatment and cure of cholera,
-sums up the whole under the common term--failure--and, in effect,
-declares the most powerful remedial agents ineffective and useless in
-controlling and subduing this disease.
-
-This declaration is made in reference to the general result of the
-remedies and the various expedients adopted mainly by one class of
-physicians, to which special reference has been made. It is therefore
-partial, and confined solely to what is erroneously termed the regular
-practice. In declaring all remedial agents a failure, does not the
-author himself commit a greater failure in omitting to survey the whole
-subject of treatment, and to trace out and to show from the application
-of the pathology of the disease the probable cause of such failure?
-
-However formidable this disease may appear, on account of its rapidity
-and its firm, unyielding grasp upon the vital powers, the forbidding
-and almost hopeless prospect of relief, and the lamentable results
-which have attended some modes of treatment, it seems particularly
-unfortunate for the profession that there should have been a
-disposition on the part of this learned author to abandon all remedial
-agents as comparatively useless, without a more thorough investigation
-into the cause of failure. On this point no effort or inquiry even is
-made. This is the more remarkable and surprising after dwelling at
-length on the pathology of the disease. It would seem as if all the
-light and science derived from this source for nearly half a century
-had been overlooked, or the pathology of the disease, from some cause
-not satisfactorily explained, had been deemed unworthy at least in
-this instance to dictate the course of treatment. This should govern
-in cases of cholera as in all other forms of disease, or else all
-our efforts and remedies will prove abortive. Now, had the doctor
-carefully investigated the various modes of treatment and compared
-the results of each, he might have come to a different conclusion.
-But, being confined and limited in his investigations, he is unable
-to discover anything reliable or worthy his commendation, except the
-formulas above and the recommendation of Dr. Maclean. Among all the
-remedies and expedients named, there is only one tending to fulfil,
-the indications required, and that one, though prompt and magical in
-its effects, has been unequivocally condemned, without looking beyond
-the transient result for any light it might shed upon the subject. How
-it should have escaped his notice and passed so long unobserved by the
-numerous professional gentlemen who had often witnessed the effect, and
-were anxiously searching for light and the means of affording relief
-to the suffering patient, is a most singular circumstance which can
-only be accounted for on the principle that they all were anticipating
-some strange phenomenon, or development of cure as mysterious as the
-disease itself, which led them to overlook the simple and effective
-means of relief so clearly represented and shown in their numerous
-experiments for something more heroic and powerful than as yet the
-imagination ever conceived.
-
-If we trace the action of calomel, the use of opium, the effect of
-cupping, bleeding, blistering, etc., etc., we shall obtain no very
-desirable information; nothing valuable tending to indicate a correct
-principle of practice. If we go still further, and examine the tendency
-and effects of the various baths exhibited at Scutari, the use of the
-flesh-brush, the bare hand, the heated sand, the embrocations, the
-turpentine and other irritants, the boiling water, or the burning
-alcohol, skinning and cooking the patient alive, we shall be shocked
-at the enormous cruelty and barbarity that have been pursued, and turn
-from the repulsive exhibition, without discovering one ray of light
-to guide us in the right direction. Disappointed and baffled in our
-inquiries, shall we here abandon our investigations and dismiss the
-whole subject, because our course is involved in difficulties? Would
-intelligence and reason justify the neglect to improve the means at
-command? We think not; but rather induce us to advance in search of
-truth if the elements of success are not quite exhausted. Let us be
-encouraged and stimulated to untiring perseverance so long as there
-remains any experiment untraced and uninvestigated in its bearing upon
-the direct action of the disease. Had Dr. Aiken, or those other eminent
-surgeons who took part in those numberless experiments, instituted
-on the Continent and in England, especially those who initiated the
-process of injecting into the veins a solution of soda raised to a
-temperature from 105° to 120° Fahr., continued their investigations
-patiently and assiduously, they might probably have discovered long ago
-the correct theory of practice for the treatment and cure of cholera.
-
-But they failed to see, or, if they saw at all, rejected the feeble
-ray of light struck out by the experiments in which they had themselves
-participated, and like the celebrated Dr. Hunter, who refused to listen
-to the discoveries made by his pupil, the indefatigable Jenner, who
-traced the identity of the variola with the common disease affecting
-the kine; and thence extracted the vaccine lymph and established a
-principle by which that loathsome disease and often recurring epidemic
-has been nearly banished from the earth. Though they have thus failed,
-they have nevertheless left on record, in unmistakable language,
-the result of their bold experiments, which we may investigate, and
-appropriate the instruction drawn thence for our own and the advantage
-of our fellow-men.
-
-What, then, are these results, regarded as shedding light on this
-intricate subject? We refer only to one the most obvious which we have
-already cited above. Let us repeat and analyze, and, if practicable,
-show the principle evolved. There was, on various occasions, the
-solution of soda injected into the veins at the temperature from 105°
-to 120° Fahr.: a higher temperature could not be borne. This process
-was performed slowly, thirty minutes being occupied in injecting the
-ten pints. Now mark the result as the operation proceeds. Says Dr.
-Aiken, "After the introduction of a few ounces, the pulse, which had
-ceased to be felt at the wrist, became perceptible, and the heat
-of the body returned." Mark the language: "only a few ounces" were
-required to arrest for the time being, the progress of the disease
-and restore warmth to the body; a very remarkable fact, replete with
-instruction, as will appear as we proceed. Again says the Dr., "by
-the time three or four pints had been injected the pulse was _good_,
-the cramps had ceased, the body, that could not be heated, had become
-warm, and instead of cold exudation on the surface, there was a general
-moisture. The voice, before hoarse and almost extinct, was now natural;
-the hollowness of the eye, the shrunken state of the features, the
-leaden hue of the face and body had disappeared; the expression
-had become animated, the mind cheerful, the restlessness and uneasy
-feelings had vanished; the vertigo and noises of the ear, the sense of
-oppression at the precordia, had given way to comfortable feelings;
-the thirst, however urgent before the operation, was assuaged, and
-the secretion of urine restored, though by no means constantly so."
-Such is the astonishing result obtained by this experiment, and this,
-too, when only three or four ounces had been injected--all the urgent
-symptoms mitigated and relieved. What, we ask, could have been more
-satisfactory, or better calculated to aid the discovery of an important
-truth? Every distinctive and fatal symptom for the time is relieved,
-and the normal condition and functions of the system restored; a result
-which could only have been obtained by the evolution of a principle of
-sufficient promptness and power and diffusibility to arrest and utterly
-suspend for a time the force of this disease.
-
-What, then, was the principle evolved in this experiment, which gave
-immediate relief? Did it consist in the half ounce of muriate of soda
-alone, or in the four scruples of sesquicarbonate of soda alone, or
-in the ten pints of water alone, or in the whole combined, or more
-especially in the high temperature to which the solution was raised? It
-is a well-established fact that, in order to raise the temperature of
-cold water to blood heat and above, a large amount of free caloric must
-necessarily be absorbed, and exist mechanically in the fluid; and, in
-this condition, the solution was introduced into the veins, and there
-evolved its vast amount of free caloric, which immediately permeated
-every organ of the system, arresting disease, raising the temperature
-of the body, and restoring its normal functions. Of this there can be
-little doubt. For free caloric is one of the most prompt, effective and
-diffusive stimulants known, and was evidently in this case the remedial
-agent which produced the result. True, it may be said the effect was
-transitory, and passed off as soon as the caloric became eliminated.
-This, however, cannot alter the nature, character, or influence of
-the principle on which it was produced. It is usually admitted that a
-remedy that has power to control disease, will, by its continued action
-and influence, restore the normal condition of the system permanently,
-or at least aid Nature to repair her own work. By this we would
-not be understood as advising a repetition of the experiment under
-consideration, even under the most urgent circumstances; far otherwise
-would be our advice. We are arguing for the purpose of evolving and
-establishing a general principle of practice.
-
-The great question, then, is, Did the principle evolved fulfill the
-indications required? and if so, is it available and consistent with
-the pathology and the peculiar phenomena, or symptoms of the disease?
-To settle this point, we need only turn to the law and the testimony,
-the very highest authority on the subject. The doctrine now universally
-accepted and prevailing regarding its pathology is, that a poison,
-virulent, and subtle, and unknown, has been absorbed and infects the
-blood, so that, after a longer or shorter time, a primary disease of
-this vital fluid is produced, by which the vital energy is impaired,
-and all other morbific changes induced. The term "Algide," first used
-by the French Pathologists, very accurately describes one of the most
-remarkable and constant symptoms, viz., the diminution of animal heat.
-On this depend the altered condition of the blood, the depression of
-the nervous power, the impaired functions of the respiratory and all
-the vital organs which are essentially involved by the disease. The icy
-coldness of the surface, the breath, the extremities and general loss
-of temperature, all show the character of the disease and the wants of
-the system.
-
-Did, then, the principle evolved accord with the pathology and
-phenomena of disease? And did it fulfill the indications required?
-If not, we ask by what means was the disease arrested, and all the
-urgent symptoms mitigated and relieved, or by what were the good
-effects produced, and the normal action for a time restored? Can the
-result be reasonably accounted for on any other principle than the one
-assigned--the stimulating power of the free caloric? We think not; for
-it accords most perfectly with the pathology and the peculiar phenomena
-of the disease. It assuaged the more urgent symptoms, answered the
-imperious demand of the waning powers, revivified and reinvigorated
-the vital energies, and restored for the time the normal tone of
-the system. What more could be desired in any single agent than the
-result here obtained? That it accomplished all this, there can be no
-question, according to the statement of the learned professors who have
-repeatedly witnessed and described the results.
-
-The question, however, will arise, Can this principle be rendered
-available? Most certainly it can; and though it may not be convenient
-to introduce free caloric into the stomach, we can, by combination,
-introduce a stimulant of equal potency which shall be equally
-as prompt, effective and diffusive in its action, similar in its
-influence, and similar in its results. It is the principle--not the
-precise element for which we contend.
-
-It is universally admitted that in many instances we may learn much
-from observing the manner of death which, in a majority of these cases
-of cholera, may be described by the term asthenia--a death similar to
-that which occurs in congestive fevers, and in some cases of accidental
-poisoning. Perhaps the most striking fact observed in these cases is
-the perfect exhaustion attending the last moments of existence, and
-the quiet, undisturbed manner in which life terminates. This very
-clearly shows the exhausting nature and congestive character of the
-disease, and gives us an idea of the course of treatment necessary to
-be pursued. If, then, there is anything to be learned from this source
-relative to its treatment, it does most certainly corroborate and
-strengthen the position we have here taken.
-
-Another feature of the case in aid of our position consists in its
-entire accordance with the modes of treatment which have been most
-successful in the cure of cholera. The two formulas cited above, and
-now most universally adopted in Europe and India, are based on a
-similar principle. So in this country 1832,-33 and 34, the successful
-modes of treatment consisted in the adoption of a principle essentially
-similar. Hence we infer from the teachings of this experiment, and from
-all the collateral facts on the subject, that the general principle to
-be observed in the treatment of this disease is a prompt and diffusive
-stimulant; and hence we deduce the doctrine already apparent, that
-every form of treatment, to be successful, must be based on a prompt
-and effective stimulant of sufficient power to meet as speedily the
-indications required, as did the free caloric in the experiment to
-which we have referred.
-
-Here we might pause for a moment and examine the suggestion and
-doctrines advanced by the learned Drs. Bell, Johnson, and many
-other eminent practitioners in India and Europe. We might further
-investigate the principles and trace the practical philosophy of such
-eminent surgeons, as Drs. Mackintosh, Thompson, Wallis Maxwell, Massy,
-Hill and Brady, all of whom have had opportunity of investigating the
-nature and character of the disease and extensive experience in its
-treatment.
-
-We might also, in a further examination of the subject, embrace a host
-of American authors whose works teem with every shade of doctrine,
-and almost every variety and description of practice, some evincing a
-degree of skepticism on the subject more wonderful and marvelous than
-is becoming the great apostles of medicine. It would seem as if the
-guiding light of science and experience had forsaken them in this, the
-hour of their need; that facts and arguments had failed to illumine
-their minds, or direct their inquiries in the proper course for the
-discovery of "the truth." Their conclusions on this subject are,
-therefore, marvelously inconsistent and conflicting. Over this mass
-of specious and conflicting testimony we might long ponder, without
-deriving any very valuable information worthy an elaborate effort, or
-making any discovery to aid in the establishment of a general principle
-of practice for the cure of cholera. But this investigation must be
-deferred to another occasion, when time may permit a more thorough
-and critical examination of their doctrines and practice than can be
-presented in this brief essay. We would, however, remark in passing,
-that in some instances their philosophy, doctrines, and results may
-lead us to the same conclusion to which we have arrived from other
-sources as above, and from our regard and belief in the progress of
-science, feel compelled to advocate the same, as offering the best hope
-of success in the treatment of this disease.
-
-In the employment of an anti-miasmatic principle and remedial agent,
-we feel ourselves abundantly sustained, by the concurrent testimony,
-of those English surgeons connected with the Medical Bureau in the
-department of India, whose numerous experiments and carefully detailed
-clinic cases occurring in the recent irruption and prevalence of
-the disease in that section, exhibit its utility in such a striking
-contrast with all former practice, as to leave no doubt as to its
-direct and specific action in the cure of cholera. It is in allusion to
-these experiments, and in answer to the question, what is deemed the
-most successful mode of treatment, that the learned Professor Maclean
-unhesitatingly observes, "Alkalies in the effervescing form, free
-stimulation of the surface, and chloroform in small doses, offer the
-best hope of relief." As this opinion comes from such high authority,
-and is compatible with the pathology of the disease, we may, without
-fear of controversy, add in conclusion, in any and every form of
-medication for the cure of cholera, we must not forget that chloroform
-is our sheet-anchor; and must be so combined and administered as to
-meet promptly the indications required.
-
-
-SECTION II.--PHYSIOLOGICAL CONDITION OF THE BLOOD.
-
-ITS NON-AERATION--NON-OXYDATION.
-
-In the preceding section we alluded to the suggestions and doctrines
-advanced by the learned Dr. C. W. Bell, Physician to the Manchester
-Infirmary, and late Physician to H. M. Embassy in Persia--and also
-to Dr. George Johnson, of Kings College, whose views and doctrines,
-relative to the Pathology, illustrative of the congestive character
-and non-aeration of the blood, coincide with those of Dr. Bell. A
-brief examination of their philosophy and doctrines will show very
-conclusively the first direct impression of the poison--the gradually
-altered condition of the blood, and the corresponding loss of nerve
-power--the impeded arterial circulation and the general tendency to
-congestion, as well as the altered condition and stagnation of the
-blood, especially during the stage of collapse.
-
-The question is asked, "What is the pathological explanation of this
-remarkable train of symptoms?" and the answer is given, "The one great
-central fact is this, that during the stage of collapse, the passage of
-blood through the lungs, from the right to the left side of the heart,
-is in a greater or less degree impeded." Very conclusive evidence as to
-the existence of impeded pulmonary circulation during life is afforded
-by the appearances observed in the heart, blood-vessels, and lungs
-after death.
-
-After adducing the evidence of this impediment from _post-mortem_
-examinations, and affirming that the blood does not flow freely
-through the lungs and pulmonary arteries, which are often filled and
-much distended with blood, it is observed--"The most interesting and
-conclusive evidence that arrest of blood in the lungs is the true key
-to the pathology of choleraic collapse, is to be found in the simple
-yet complete explanation which it affords of all the most striking
-chemical phenomena of the disease, the imperfect aeration of the
-blood, and the suppression of bile and urine."
-
-And again, says the learned author, "It is obvious that the stream of
-blood from the pulmonary capillaries to the left side of the heart
-is the channel by which the supply of oxygen is introduced into the
-system. One necessary consequence, then, of a great diminution in the
-volume of blood transmitted to the left side of the heart must be,
-that the supply of oxygen is lessened in a corresponding degree. This
-position, probably, will not be disputed by any one who will give the
-subject a moment's consideration. Nor, again, can it be denied or
-doubted that certain results must of necessity follow this limited
-supply of oxygen." * * *
-
-"The blood in cholera is black and thick only during the stage of
-collapse; in other words, during the stage of pulmonary obstruction and
-defective aeration."
-
-Again, in his explanation of the injection of the solution of soda
-into the veins of the suffering patient, it is affirmed, "The benefit,
-however, is of but short duration, for the primary cause of the
-impeded circulation, namely, the poisoned condition of the blood,
-being still in operation, * * * the stream of blood through the lungs
-will soon again be obstructed, and the patient thus passes into a
-state of collapse as profound as, and more hopeless than, before. It
-appears, therefore, that the hot saline injection into the veins and
-the operation of venesection, when it rapidly relieves, as it often has
-done, the symptoms of collapse, have this effect in common, that they
-facilitate the passage of the blood through the lungs, and thus lessen
-that embarrassment of the pulmonary circulation which is the essential
-cause of choleraic collapse. But whereas the _hot injections act_ by
-removing the impediment which results from spasmodic contraction of the
-arteries; _venesection acts_ by relieving over-distension of the right
-cavities of the heart, and thus increasing the contractile power of
-their walls."
-
-Such are, in brief, the views of the learned Drs. Johnson and Bell,
-whose works are very highly commended by their American editor to
-the notice of the profession. These views, coming as they do from
-the highest authority, fully sustain the doctrine that the earliest
-impression of the disease is made upon the blood, and hence it becomes
-altered and changed in its most essential life-sustaining principle;
-for its oxygen becomes diminished, its consistency augmented, and its
-flow through the lungs impeded. Through this channel the effect of
-the poison soon makes an impression on the ganglionic mechanism, and
-the nerve-power becomes correspondingly diminished, and the action
-of the ganglionic nerves essentially deranged. But this is not all:
-they exhibit in the clearest manner the congestive character of the
-disease, and show the necessity of prompt and decided means to arrest
-this tendency. Hence, they urge, in the strongest terms, the importance
-of observing carefully this essential feature, and endeavor to exhibit
-fully the condition of this vital fluid at a particular stage of
-the disease, when bleeding, as recommended in their practice, is
-required, and may be performed to the best advantage for the relief
-of the partially congested blood-vessels, and to stimulate and give
-freedom to the circulation. The passage of the blood, they affirm, is
-impeded, clogged, and partially suspended. To remove this obstruction,
-relieve spasm, and secure the prompt aeration of the blood, in hope
-of arresting the progress of this disease, is ostensibly the object.
-However, they seem studiously to avoid the most logical conclusions of
-their explanations, and justify a practice that can give no hope of
-permanent relief, while every fact and symptom is ominously suggestive
-of the wants of the system, which imperiously demands the aid of
-electrified oxygen, ozone, or free caloric, for the oxydation of the
-blood.
-
-Says Dr. Reid, "I believe the true explanation of the arrest of blood
-in the lungs to be this: The blood contains a poison, whose irritant
-action upon the muscular tissue is shown by the painful cramps which it
-occasions. The blood thus poisoned excites contraction of the muscular
-walls of the minute pulmonary arteries, the effect of which is to
-diminish, and, in fatal cases, entirely to arrest the flow of blood
-through the lungs."
-
-Says Dr. Wallis, "The phenomena which are exhibited when the
-deleterious air has been drawn into the lungs are these: the great
-gastro-pulmonary nerve is either wholly or partially paralyzed; the
-consequences are the cessation of all its functions, either wholly or
-partially. This great nerve is a nerve of function, and performs the
-functions of digestion and respiration, and influences all secretions."
-
-Dr. Maxwell, of Calcutta, uses the following language: "The development
-of the stages of fever entirely depends on the changes the _leaven
-has effected_. If this change has been such that the blood has become
-too thick to flow through the lungs, then, as a matter of course,
-the collapse stage is developed in excess; in other words, _cholera
-asphyxia_ is exhibited. The blood, unable to pass through the middle
-passage into the arteries, collects and swells out the veins, giving
-that deadly or blue color to the skin. When the vomiting and spasms
-come on, this mass of blood in the veins is squeezed with great force,
-and hence the clammy moisture that is forced from every part during
-these fits. There is no pulse, because there is no blood in the
-arteries." "There are also lethargy and languor, and oppression in
-breathing, caused by the blood being collected in the veins. These make
-up the principal links in the chain of mechanical symptoms."
-
-Dr. Bell, dwelling on this congestive character of the blood, and
-endeavoring to point out the best mode of relief, observes, "When this
-has reached to such a point as to oppress the action of the heart,
-yawning first and then shivering, or a sense of suffocation and pain
-in the precordia, are the indications of oppressed circulation, and
-of the commencing effort of the heart to overcome the mass of blood
-which is stifling it. If, by the application of tourniquets to the
-limbs, or by _bleeding_, part of the blood which is rushing from the
-extremities to increase this congestion is prevented from reaching the
-great veins, the heart, excited to increased action, is enabled, by
-this relief, more quickly to overcome the obstruction and restore the
-balance of the circulation, and the paroxysm passes off. If not thus
-mechanically aided, the heart, after a severe struggle to maintain the
-circulation during the period of constriction, is at length relieved
-by this nervous disturbance or spasm of the capillary circulation
-passing off of itself, and then the heart and arteries, so long excited
-by the struggle, maintain for a time their increased action after
-the obstruction in the capillaries is removed, and produce apparent
-febrile action. Presently this excitement subsides, the vessels become
-relaxed, and sweat succeeds. The vessels continue in this state for
-a longer or shorter period, according to circumstances, till they at
-length recover their ordinary tone and action in the intermission. This
-fever, however, is not fever properly so called, but reaction; and the
-sweating not critical, or essential, but relaxation. The cold stage
-is alone essential, and is the physiological cause of the subsequent
-stages."
-
-From the passages we have cited, it is quite evident that Drs. Johnson,
-Bell, Parkes, Reid, Wallis, Maxwell, Massy, and many others, admit this
-congestive character and impeded circulation of the blood to be the
-result, or consequent of a primary affection of the blood, as we have
-already observed in a former paper. The _term_ "Algide" is peculiarly
-expressive of the diminished animal heat, and, as Dr. Bell represents,
-it is the cold stage which is alone essential, and is the physiological
-cause of the subsequent stages. It is the specific disease-poison, so
-often referred to, that has been inhaled, the leaven that has effected
-such obvious changes in the blood. The poison, virulent, and subtle,
-and unknown, so marvelously active in its operations, that is exhibited
-so prominently in all the works we have perused as the one great,
-mysterious, and efficient cause which produces the disease called
-cholera, and all the phenomena of its development. To its direct and
-specific action, therefore, must be attributed all the phenomena of
-the disease as the resulting subsequent consequences.
-
-It is also further evident, from the pathological facts and arguments
-adduced in support of this theory of congestion, that the abnormal
-condition or state of the blood-vessels is the result and the product
-of the activity of the primary or final cause, and must be regarded
-in relation to it as cause and effect. On this principle alone, the
-thickening of the blood, the contraction of the left ventricle of the
-heart, and of the capillary and pulmonary arteries, assigned by some as
-the cause of choleraic collapse, must be accounted for. These effects
-are not and cannot be from a process independent and outside of the
-primary disease action, but are the result of such primary action.
-
-Again, it is evident, from the views and doctrines cited above, that
-the disease is decidedly congestive in its tendency and character from
-its very commencement. The impeded flow of the blood--the comparative
-emptiness of the left ventricle of the heart and arteries--and
-the excessive loss of temperature, all indicate a rapid process of
-congestion attending the progress of disease. This is one of the
-peculiar and prominent features of cholera, and is strikingly exhibited
-in the morbid appearances observed in all those instances where death
-has occurred within a few minutes from the first indications of attack.
-
-When the attack is violent, the process is rapid; when mild, it is
-slow; and even in the collapse stage progresses tardily. In either case
-it is the direct resulting consequent of the primary cause. How else
-can the violent attacks, suddenly terminating in death, be accounted
-for? To what other principle can this altered condition and stagnation
-of the blood be attributed? The evidence confirmatory of this position
-is abundant and conclusive. Many instances of the apparently rapid
-action of the cholera poison are related by Dr. Milroy, in a historical
-sketch of the epidemic of 1817; and at Kurrachee in 1855 and 6, it is
-said, that within little more than five minutes, hale and hearty men
-are seized, cramped, collapsed, and dead!!
-
-When the disease broke out at Teheran, in May, 1846, Dr. Milroy states
-that those who were attacked dropped suddenly down in a state of
-lethargy, and at the end of two or three hours expired, without any
-convulsions or vomitings, but from a complete stagnation of the blood.
-
-In the paper before us, it is stated, that "in a great majority of
-cases in which death has occurred during the stage of collapse, the
-right side of the heart and the pulmonary arteries are filled, and
-sometimes distended with blood; the auricle being partially, and the
-ventricle completely and firmly contracted. The tissue of the lungs is,
-in most cases, of pale color, dense in texture, and contains less than
-the usual amount of blood and air. There is something surprising in
-the contrast between the almost constant occurrence of this extremely
-anęmic condition of the lung, from which scarcely even a few drops
-of blood flow when the tissue is cut, and the hyperęmia of most
-of the other viscera." This impeded flow of the blood through the
-lungs, resulting, as it must, in a very scanty supply of blood to the
-arteries, in connection with the corresponding fact of the increased
-expansion of the veins, filled with black, and thick, and stagnant
-blood which, by the action of a powerful poison, or malignant disease,
-has become disorganized and unfitted for circulation, furnishes
-indubitable evidence of one prominent and characteristic feature of
-cholera which we term congestion, and to which we alluded in our
-remarks when the question under consideration was first introduced;
-in this view we are happy to find ourselves, on a more thorough
-examination of the subject, ably sustained by eminent pathologists
-and authors, who have arisen during the half century last past, and
-whose works are said to embrace all that is known and reliable on the
-character and treatment of Epidemic Cholera.
-
-It is worthy of notice, before passing from this part of our subject,
-that according to Dr. Bell's _views_, the blood is forcibly sent into
-the great central veins, and there stopped in its course without any
-attempt to account satisfactorily for its singular arrest, at that
-point--Dr. Johnson comes to his relief, lifts the veil, and explains
-why it is kept there and cannot get any further. If the road, he tells
-us, had been clear and uninterrupted through the lungs, the blood would
-easily have got round to the left ventricle, and have again gone its
-round, but it is stopped by the spasmodic contraction of the minute
-branches of the pulmonary artery, which will not even allow the blood
-to enter the pulmonary capillaries, as shown by the remarkable anęmia
-of the texture of the lungs.
-
-In this connection may be introduced an opinion as to the cause of
-the disease and some of its phenomena, which has obtained at least
-some celebrity, and attracted the attention, if not the careful
-consideration of the profession. It will account, in part, if founded
-in fact, for the physiological condition under consideration.
-
-It is said, some have observed a chemical change in the constitution
-of the atmosphere, and have attributed the cause of the cholera to
-the loss or diminution of its ozone--a principle which is understood
-to represent what is very properly termed electrified oxygen. Ozone
-is, therefore, the vital element of the air. It is said that oxygen
-cannot be assimilated or combined with the blood except when it is
-in an electrified state constituting the peculiar property or state
-of ozone. In this state it produces vital electricity of the blood,
-_which is the life_. The brain is considered and represented as the
-reservoir of this vital electricity, and the nerves are the telegraphic
-wires or conductors of it. As a necessary consequence, all acts of
-material and intellectual life depend upon this double cause. The
-absence, then, it is affirmed, of this principle, termed ozone--or
-electrified oxygen--from the atmospheric air in certain localities
-and the consequent non-aeration or non-oxydation of the blood, may be
-considered as an efficient cause which will account for some of the
-most striking phenomena of the cholera.
-
-Whether this electrified oxygen, or ozone, is identical with free
-caloric, it is unnecessary for our purpose at present to determine. It
-will be admitted that oxygen is the source of animal heat, and when
-introduced into the system generates its free caloric, which is an
-essential life-sustaining principle.
-
-Dr. Massy, after describing a severe and advanced stage of cholera,
-observes, "The treatment of this case depends in the first instance
-on bleeding, and largely, if the patient's pulse is good, giving at
-the same time twenty grains of calomel with one of opium. This, he
-thinks, will be found the best practice. After twenty minutes, he gives
-ten grains more of calomel and half a grain of opium. He considers,
-however, a reliance on opium in this form of cholera most faulty--but
-observes, as you draw blood, stimulate, give punch, brandy, or wine
-and water, or carbonate of ammonia. Apply friction, with stimulating
-and hot liniments to the extremities, warm sand-bags to the feet,
-sinapisms to the calves of the legs and pit of the stomach; for, if
-you can once raise the pulse, the chances in favor of recovery will be
-vastly increased." The practice of bleeding and stimulating at the same
-time is deemed of vast importance. Dr. Bell coincides in this view, and
-devotes much space to the necessary instruction as to the time when and
-under what circumstances to bleed and to what extent, endeavoring to
-show the advantages arising from a strict observance of certain rules
-in carrying out this practice.
-
-We have thus traced, _in extenso_, the views and doctrines of eminent
-surgeons and authors on the changes of the blood, and especially of
-the impeded circulation, to show, if practicable, the inconsistency of
-the more common and prevailing practice, and its utter inadaptation
-to the pathology and phenomena of disease. On the latter there seems
-to be little or no discrepancy--on the former there is a great
-diversity--as there has been no general principle established and
-laid down as the basis of treatment and cure of cholera. It has
-often been observed there is no disease on which so many different
-modes of practice have prevailed, some purely experimental, others
-empirical--and all without discovering an antidote to the poison, or
-any efficient mode of relief. The cause, or the poison producing the
-disease, still remains undiscovered. The direct mode of suspending
-and removing it, or counteracting its power and neutralizing its
-effect, and subsequently eliminating _it_ from the system, remains
-still in doubt. What course, then, should the epidemic cholera again
-prevail in our midst, shall we pursue? Shall we rest satisfied with
-the diversified modes of treatment now prevailing? Or guided by the
-light of reason, science and experience, endeavor to adopt a general
-principle of practice, and exhibit and establish an efficient and
-judicious system, consistent with the pathology and the phenomena of
-the disease? Does then the practice, the prominent features of which
-are given above, accord with the indications required? In short, does
-the exhibition of bleeding and calomel and opium, accompanied with
-sinapisms, and hot, stimulating applications to the surface, meet
-the pathological condition and the phenomena of the disease? We have
-seen that the rapid changes in the blood, and the consequent direct
-tendency to congestion, are the proper and distinguishing features of
-the disease;--and hence the diminution of animal heat and general loss
-of temperature and their consequent effect, impeding the circulation,
-depressing and prostrating the nervous power--impairing and paralyzing
-the respiratory organs--suspending the functions of the liver and
-kidneys--enfeebling the action of the heart, and causing the capillary
-vessels of the mucous surfaces to pour off the serous fluid from the
-blood, and every muscle and tissue of the system with great rapidity,
-essentially constitute the phenomena of the cholera;--and that the
-constantly increasing augmentation of the poison and its intensified
-effects, measure the malignity, the violence, and the rapidity of the
-disease. Is there, then, any tendency in bleeding to arrest this rapid
-process of disease so disorganizing, depreciating, and enfeebling to
-the vital life-sustaining fluid, the blood? Can abstracting a portion
-of it, however large, suspend the poison, or its activity, or even
-check its progress in its rapid course and fatal termination? Can it
-have, under its depressing and depleting process, any tendency or
-power to relieve the congestion that is taking place, or change in any
-good degree the poisonous principle which is now generally admitted
-to exist in the blood, and to be the sole and efficient cause of its
-altered character and condition? The poison, once introduced into the
-blood, like the leaven hid in three measures of meal, will continue
-its activity, increasing its energy, and multiplying its forces, till
-the whole circulation becomes affected, and its life-sustaining power
-is destroyed and utterly lost, unless, by the exhibition of some
-remedial agent, it shall be promptly arrested in its progress, and
-suspended and eliminated. Again we ask, Will calomel fulfill any of
-the indications required? Has it any influence or power to arrest this
-disease, to quiet the nervous system, relieve the cramps, or restore
-warmth to the body? Its specific action, so far as known, can have no
-tendency whatever to relieve the system in any essential particular,
-or stay the progress of disease, or delay its inevitable result, if it
-remain unsubdued by the action of other remedies. Its action upon the
-liver, however prompt it may be, is only of a secondary importance. The
-primary cause must be overcome, its activity and energy suspended and
-the system generally relieved, or there is little hope in the case.
-
-Here we may ask, Will opium aid, or give the relief so urgently
-demanded? However serviceable as an astringent and anodyne in the
-premonitory stage of the disease, it cannot be exhibited in the second
-stage to so good an advantage, as its direct influence is to aid and
-promote congestion in those cases, where a tendency of this kind is
-already in existence. Hence, its continuance in the true or collapse
-stage of cholera is now generally considered faulty.
-
-Once more: The auxiliaries employed in aid of the leading remedies
-already noticed may be summed up in the language of the celebrated
-Dr. Massy, in his instructions and directions on the subject of the
-treatment now under consideration. He observes, "But, as you draw
-blood, stimulate, give punch, brandy, or wine and water, or carbonate
-of ammonia. Apply friction, with stimulating and hot liniments to the
-extremities; warm sand-bags to the feet, sinapisms to the calves of the
-legs and pit of the stomach; for, if you can once raise the pulse, the
-chances in favor of recovery will be vastly increased."
-
-To these directions there can be no special objections, except in the
-first instance in which he, indirectly, commends the use of means
-tending to deplete and depress the system, already brought by disease
-to the very verge of utter exhaustion. Remedies of this tendency
-are contra-indicated, and cannot, to say the least, be employed to
-advantage.
-
-Depressing remedies generally, instead of checking, or counteracting
-the disease, will inevitably aid and hasten its fatal termination.
-Stimulants, such as are prompt and diffusive in their character, must
-be regarded as essential, and may be employed to great advantage. It
-will be found, however, exceedingly difficult in most cases, even
-where there is no depletion from bleeding, to keep up the waning
-powers, and carry the patient, through this formidable disease, to
-a favorable termination. Of the utility of warm applications to the
-surface generally, there can be no question; yet, our main reliance is
-on internal remedies, as has been already shown: the lost temperature
-of the body must be restored, the production and diffusion of heat, or
-caloric, must be internal through the administration of remedies, that
-will promptly and kindly produce this result.
-
-What are, then, the remedies? We have ventured in this discussion
-to recommend the internal use of chloroform, and believe it will be
-found in combination with other prompt and diffusive stimulants,
-specially adapted to meet this condition. In this recommendation, we
-feel ourselves fully sustained by the result of various experiments
-heretofore made, and the recent trials of its use, as an internal
-remedy in the various stages of the disease.
-
-The earliest record of the use of chloroform in cholera is probably
-to be found in the London _Lancet_ for November, 1848, in which Dr.
-Hill reports a case of its successful use by inhalation. He placed
-the patient in bed, covered with warm blankets, and applied friction,
-stimulant liniments, and heated bags of bran to the surface, and kept
-the patient under the gentle influence of chloroform, till the more
-urgent symptoms entirely subsided. At intervals brandy-and-water, and
-thin arrow-root or milk was given. All other medicines were avoided.
-Though the urgent symptoms returned at first, as the effects of the
-chloroform passed off, they were easily controlled by the repetition
-of the inhalation. By persevering in its use, reaction set in, and the
-patient became convalescent.
-
-Other cases, afterwards, were treated in the same way, with a similar
-result. Some, however, required the gentle use of chloroform by
-inhalation, at intervals, for twenty-four hours; after which, none
-seems to have been administered. For aught that appears these cases all
-recovered.
-
-Another very interesting case is related by Mr. Brady, who observes
-that an elderly lady was seized with slight diarrhoea, which, on
-the following morning, had become very profuse: excessive vomiting
-supervened, accompanied by spasms in the calves of the legs, fingers
-and toes. Under these urgent symptoms, the usual remedy, brandy, was
-administered without avail; the dejections became incessant, and the
-spasms increased in intensity, presenting the features of a decided
-case of malignant cholera. In this condition, the physician was called
-in haste, as it was believed and affirmed the patient was dying.
-In describing this case, the physician observes: "On my arrival, I
-found the patient presenting all the symptoms of malignant Asiatic
-cholera, in an advanced stage; the features collapsed and ghastly;
-extremities and tongue cold; burning sensation in the stomach and
-oesophagus; pulse rapid and scarcely perceptible; voice diminished
-to a whisper; stomach exceedingly irritable, and the dejections from
-the bowels presenting the characteristic rice-water appearance; and
-all the voluntary muscles of the body were affected by spasm, so that
-the patient actually writhed in agony." Ordered the following: Rx.
-Chloroform dram j; Ol. Terebinth. ounce j; aq. Dist. dram iij. M. And
-gave immediately a large tea-spoonful, in a wine-glass, of dilute
-brandy; and applied sinapisms to the calves of the legs and abdominal
-and thoracic surfaces. Thirst was relieved by drinking plentifully of
-water nearly cold. Though the stomach was irritable, the chloroform was
-retained, as well as the fluid drank after it, and was followed by no
-dejection. Half an hour after, two pills were administered, composed
-according to the following: Rx. Calomel gr. v; fellis. bov. inspis.
-gr. x; Ft. Pil. ij. Half an hour after these were given, vomiting
-ensued, but soon subsided; the diarrhoea had apparently ceased; the
-cramps had diminished in frequency and severity. A second dose of
-chloroform, now one hour after the first, was administered, and soon
-after this two more of the pills, both of which were retained, and gave
-decided relief. The pulse rose in power and became slower, the spasms
-less frequent, and, in an hour after the second dose, the patient was
-bathed from head to foot in a warm perspiration, and expressed herself
-comparatively free from all uneasy sensations. The attack had been
-completely subdued, leaving behind a good deal of pyrexia and debility,
-from which she rapidly recovered.
-
-Here it is worthy of notice, that in this case, severe as it was, only
-two doses of the chloroform mixture were administered, each containing
-about six minims of chloroform and forty of turpentine; the pills
-would naturally tend to perpetuate rather than relieve the nausea and
-vomiting, and in one hour after the administration of the second dose,
-all the urgent symptoms were assuaged.
-
-In another case, the attending physician reports that, after giving
-calomel, combined with opium, which was immediately rejected, the
-following mixture was ordered: Rx. Chloroform vj minims; brandy dram
-iij; water ounce iijss, one-third of which was given immediately,
-and was thrown up in half an hour; a second dose was then given, and
-was retained. The vomiting and diarrhoea ceased; the spasms became
-less severe. In two hours after, gave the remaining third part; and
-during the next six hours, administered in two doses six minims more
-of the chloroform, with the most decided benefit, and the patient soon
-became convalescent. To the extreme tenderness over the region of the
-epigastrium flannel soaked in spirits of turpentine was applied; and
-as no urine was secreted, I am firmly of the opinion that the usual
-remedies would not have met this case. "I candidly confess," says the
-physician, "I had no hope of success from its severity; and, but for
-a knowledge of Mr. Brady's case, I believe I should have lost my
-patient."
-
-Dr. Davies reports a case in which he used chloroform fifteen hours
-after the seizure with relief, but not with success, and observes that,
-in a number of cases occurring in the hospital, there were 22 cases in
-which, as severe symptoms came on, the chief remedy was chloroform,
-administered internally, in doses of from seven to ten minims every
-hour, half hour, or quarter of an hour, according to the severity of
-the symptoms. Of these 22 cases, 8 terminated fatally, and 14 recovered.
-
-Again: "Out of 9 cases of cholera, and 13 of the worst cases of
-diarrhoea occurring in my own practice, and treated with chloroform,
-_one died_. All these were in the better ranks of life. In some of
-them, the warm bath (salt water) was used as an auxiliary, and the
-diet consisted of nothing but cold milk and water, with some carbonate
-of soda, _ad libitum_. The fatal case was that of a drunkard, who,
-probably, did not take the remedy. These cases varied in severity,
-from sickness and diarrhoea, and mild collapse, to sickness,
-diarrhoea, severe cramps, and great collapse, with almost clear watery
-evacuations, passing away involuntarily * * * Of 14 cases of cholera
-treated by Mr. Towers, Medical Resident of the Infirmary, many of
-them under my own observation, _one died_. The fatal case was that
-of a woman aged 63, who was previously suffering great depression,
-consequent on extreme destitution."
-
-Again, says Dr. Davies, "It will probably be remembered that, in my
-second report, I expressed a very favorable opinion of chloroform in
-this deadly malady. I considered I had strong grounds for so doing,
-after observing the large proportion of cases which recovered under
-its administration. From the history of this last visitation in the
-county prison, however, the fact turns out, that, under some uncertain
-circumstances, the use of chloroform will not prevent the proportion of
-deaths being considerable. I have reason to believe that it was, from
-over-anxiety, given in too frequent doses in some cases, and that it
-thus rather added to the coma, which is one of the characteristics of
-the malady.
-
-At the commencement of the outbreak, the doses were repeated every
-hour, or every two hours, and it is to be noted that the first seven
-cases _recovered_.
-
-As the cases multiplied, the remedy was given every half hour, and, in
-some instances, every quarter of an hour; the result was that the next
-six cases died. Whether these cases had anything in them inherently
-more fatal, it is difficult to tell. The symptoms at first were about
-equal, and the differences did not show themselves until towards the
-end. There was next a recovery of seven cases in succession; in these
-the remedy was administered less frequently, but subsequently two
-deaths occurred under the less frequent administration.
-
-The chloroform was administered also by inhalation, in some of the
-more severe cases of cramps, with the effect of affording relief in
-every instance. The inhalation was not carried so far as to produce
-insensibility. Although I am still of the opinion that chloroform
-properly regulated is the remedy of all others hitherto tried to be
-depended on, yet it cannot be considered a specific for cholera."
-
-Mr. Steadman reports a very interesting case treated by chloroform.
-He observes, "The spasms were universal and extremely violent, as if
-knots were being tied in the bowels, countenance livid and cold, voice
-feeble, and all medicines rejected. In this condition gave chloroform
-combined with 'aquę vitę' and distilled water. The first dose had
-a partial but most satisfactory effect. In two hours after, as the
-symptoms manifested a disposition to return, gave a second dose, which
-entirely controlled all spasms, vomiting and purging. The patient was
-ordered cold rice and mucilaginous drinks, and had the chalk mixture
-with nitric ether prescribed. A dose of oxgall (gr. x) was given in
-course of the day, which produced the desired effect. In two days the
-patient was declared convalescent." The daughter, who had nursed the
-mother in this case, was seized soon after in a similar manner, except
-the dejections were more abundant and frequent. The mother having some
-of the chloroform mixture left, gave it to the daughter without advice
-or hesitancy, and obtained the same magic results. The first dose was
-only partial in its effect, but the second completely subdued the
-disease.
-
-Such are the results of some of the experiments which have been made
-by the administration of chloroform; and, so far as appears, the first
-cases treated by inhalation were severe malignant cholera in the
-advanced stage, all of which recovered. So, also, those treated by the
-remedy used internally, combined with a prompt and decided stimulant
-like the spirits of turpentine, or aquę vitę and brandy, recovered.
-In all these cases the remedy appeared to meet the urgent demand, to
-remove the impediment to the circulation, to relieve the nausea and
-vomiting, and purging and cramps, and restore, in a very short time,
-the general action and normal tone of the system. Still we must admit,
-that some cases, treated by its internal administration, and also by
-inhalation, proved, on some accounts not satisfactorily explained,
-unsuccessful. Were these cases given in detail, it would be much easier
-to detect the cause of failure, or its questionable use in such cases;
-but we have only the bare fact that they were thus treated, without the
-manner or character of the combination, if any were made, being given.
-
-Hence Dr. Davies, under whose direction these cases occurred,
-remarks, in view of this result, "that _no reliance_ could be placed
-on chloroform alone." The correctness of this opinion cannot be
-questioned, for the experiments we have cited all show the necessity
-of a prompt and diffusive stimulant in aid of its action, to render it
-sufficiently prompt and powerful to meet and overcome the disease in
-the more rapid and severe cases. Chloroform, properly combined, offers
-the best hope of relief, and is, without doubt, the most perfectly
-adapted of any remedy known to the pathology and phenomena of the
-disease. There is no remedy, when properly combined, so capable of
-meeting all the indications required as this, and none that can be
-administered with more certainty of success.
-
-In conclusion, we may, with much propriety, refer again to the
-pathology suggested by the authors cited above, and inquire whether
-the action of chloroform as a remedy in these cases be consistent? and
-whether as such it has that curative influence, or direct controlling
-power, to arrest, suspend, and cure the disease, so imperiously
-demanded? We have seen that, according to the opinion generally
-prevailing, the first impression of the poison is made upon the
-blood, and through it upon the nerves, especially those which, from
-their anatomical position, bear the most intimate relation to the
-blood-vessels. Through this channel the first invasion appears to be
-made on the ganglionic, the nerves of circulation. These nerves are
-distributed chiefly to the viscera and blood-vessels, and are at least
-very early involved and essentially disturbed, for their healthful
-action depends in no small degree on the aeration or oxydation of
-the blood. Says an eminent author, "The action of every ganglionic
-mechanism depends on the existence of certain physical conditions,
-among which the most prominent and important is the due supply of
-arterialized blood. If this be stopped but for a moment the nerve
-mechanism loses its power, or, if diminished, the display of its
-characteristic phenomena correspondingly declines." Hence the loss
-of power in these nerves, and their deranged action, the contraction
-of the capillary and pulmonary arteries, the impaired and impeded
-circulation and all the phenomena arising therefrom.
-
-Again, the great pneumogastric nerve, which is composed of both motor
-and sensitive filaments, has a very extensive distribution in the
-upper part of the abdominal cavity. It supplies the organs of voice
-and respiration with motor and sensitive fibres, and the pharynx,
-oesophagus, stomach and heart with motor influence. This very important
-nerve, through the primary action and deteriorating process of the
-cholera poison, becomes early involved, and its functions greatly, and,
-in fatal cases, permanently deranged. The evidence of this disturbance
-and loss of nerve-power is too obvious to be overlooked or disregarded
-in the treatment of this disease.
-
-In confirmation of this, we may, with great propriety, adduce the
-testimony of Dr. Wallis on the loss of nerve-power, and the process
-through which the result is produced, who observes, that "the phenomena
-which are exhibited when the deleterious air has been drawn into the
-lungs are these: the great gastro-pulmonary nerve is either wholly or
-partially paralyzed, the consequences are the cessation of all its
-functions either wholly or partially. This great nerve is a nerve of
-function, and performs the functions of digestion and respiration, and
-influences all secretions."
-
-Hence it appears the nervous power generally, as before observed, is
-very early and essentially impaired, and to such an extent that there
-can be no rational hope of relief, unless some remedial agent can be
-found that will exercise such a controlling influence and power, as
-shall be adequate to restore the tone of the nervous system.
-
-Hence, we are forced to the conclusion that the prominent, leading,
-and most urgent symptoms requiring special attention, are "the Algide"
-or loss of temperature, the loss of nerve-power in the ganglionic and
-pneumogastric nerves and their branches, the altered or disorganized
-condition of the blood, the impaired or obstructed circulation, and
-the early and direct tendency to congestion. These are the prominent
-and essential features to be observed in the treatment. They are too
-intimate, dependent and inseparable, to warrant any attempt to mark the
-precise order of their development. They are the essential phenomena,
-proceeding equally and directly together from the primary cause and
-disease action, and strictly constitute the complex character of the
-cholera, and exhibit its main, distinguishing features, which must
-necessarily govern and dictate the maxims of rational practice in
-the treatment of this disease. The object, then, of first importance
-is to restore the lost temperature, the caloric already eliminated,
-and prevent its further depression; to restore, at the same time,
-the lost nerve-power to the nerves again; to arrest the process of
-disorganization of the blood, and equalize the circulation; to relieve
-and suspend the congestion; and then, according to all the experiments
-which have been made, the consequent and dependent phenomena of the
-cramps and the vomiting and the purging will disappear.
-
-
-SECTION III.--DIFFERENT MODES OF TREATMENT.
-
-After speaking of the various expedients resorted to for the cure of
-cholera, says Dr. Watson: "I believe that each, in some cases, did
-good, or _seemed_ to do so; but I cannot doubt that some of them did
-sometimes do harm. I had not more than six severe cases under my
-own charge, and I congratulated myself that the mortality among them
-was not greater than the average mortality. Three died, and three,
-I will not say were cured, but recovered, * * * under large and
-repeated doses of calomel. Yet, as I said before, I do not venture
-to affirm that the calomel cured them." It seems that Dr. Latham
-commenced the treatment and Dr. Watson followed it up, repeating the
-half-drachm doses of calomel many times, as the patients seemed to
-rally after its administration. Again, he observes: "It was remarked
-of those who recovered, that some got well rapidly and at once, while
-others fell into a state of continued fever, which frequently proved
-fatal, some time after the violent and peculiar symptoms ceased.
-Some, after the vomiting and purging and cramps had departed, died
-comatose--_over-drugged_--sometimes, it is to be feared, by opium. The
-rude discipline to which they were subjected might account for some
-of the cases of fever." * * * "Never, certainly, was the artillery
-of medicine more vigorously plied, never were her troops, regular and
-volunteer, more meritoriously active. To many patients, no doubt, this
-busy interference made all the difference between life and death. But
-if the balance could be fairly struck and the exact truth ascertained,
-I question whether we should find that the aggregate mortality from
-cholera in this country was any way disturbed by our craft."
-
-In a report by the acting physician to the Bellevue Hospital, made to
-then "Special Medical Council," August 2d, 1832, while the Epidemic
-Cholera was still prevailing there and in the city, the physician
-says: "The treatment I have divided into two kinds--the pathological
-and the mixed. The first having been determined on, after the careful
-examination of twenty-three persons dead of cholera; since then, ten
-more have been examined, which serve to confirm the conclusions first
-formed.
-
-PATHOLOGICAL TREATMENT--_First Stage._--This consisted in the
-administration of blue pill and opium with absolute diet. If pain was
-present, leeches to the epigastrium and arms, and when these could not
-be procured, cups to the epigastrium. This plan never failed to arrest
-the disease in the hands of those who diligently pursued it, where
-the mucous membrane of the gastrointestinal canal was not previously
-diseased.
-
-_Second Stage._--First, Blood-letting; second, diligent frictions
-with the ointment alluded to above, when persons could be procured to
-perform the duty; third, ice to allay the thirst; fourth, small doses
-of brandy and laudanum, if the vomiting continues; fifth, cups to the
-epigastrium, if there was pain and the brandy omitted.
-
-_Third Stage._--First, ice to allay the thirst, which is now, indeed,
-unquenchable; second, external heat; third, a continuation of the
-frictions; fourth, no opium, and, frequently, no brandy, especially
-among the children.
-
-MIXED TREATMENT--_First Stage._--Besides the above treatment, calomel
-and Dover's powders was a very frequent prescription; also scruple
-doses of calomel, and calomel and opium in small doses, and all with
-success. Nevertheless, I believe they occasionally did harm.
-
-_Second Stage._--First, blood-letting less frequent than above; second,
-calomel and Dover's powders continued; third, calomel and opium;
-fourth, calomel, capsicum and opium; fifth, soda powders; sixth,
-scruple doses of calomel every half hour; seventh, ice.
-
-_Third Stage._--Calomel and Dover's powder; calomel and opium; calomel,
-capsicum and opium; carbonate of ammonia and capsicum; scruple doses
-of calomel every half hour. External heat in various ways; ice, etc.
-Severe shocks of electricity along the course of the muscles to allay
-the cramps; also, the burning of alcohol on the skin. The first was the
-practice of Dr. Devan, the second, that of Dr. Gardner, and both lay
-claims to having been the first to use these means."
-
-The ointment alluded to above is composed of mercurial ointment, one
-pound, camphor finely pulverized, seven ounces, and the same quantity
-of capsicum. With this, the patient was rubbed briskly from head to
-foot and repeated at short intervals. The result was, that mercury
-generally showed its specific effects upon the gums in from five to ten
-hours from the commencement of reaction. The success of this external
-application of mercury, conjoined with its internal administration and
-frequent blood-letting, may be learned from the cholera statistics of
-this and other institutions.
-
-Dr. Pereira employed sixty-grain doses of calomel, it is said, with
-success, and Dr. Barton of New Orleans, in 1849, gave in ten cases from
-120 to 150 and even to 180 grains of calomel at a dose, and, in one
-case, gave 220 grains, intending, it is said, to have weight sufficient
-to keep it down. This brave and heroic practice did not afford relief
-in a single instance; the cramps, and vomiting, and purging continued,
-and a few hours closed the scene--all died.
-
-The treatment recommended in the American Practice of Medicine, by
-Dr. W. Beach, which was fully tested by the author himself while in
-discharge of his official duties as physician of the Tenth Ward, city
-of New York, during the prevalence of cholera in 1832, is worthy of
-consideration on account of its simplicity, its great efficiency and
-wonderful success. "Among all the medicines," says the author, "ever
-given or proposed in the incipient or premonitory stage, none will
-be found so efficacious as our neutralizing mixture, made of genuine
-materials and given very strong. Occasionally, it may be proper to add
-fifteen or twenty drops of laudanum; this, however, is very seldom
-necessary. A vast number of medicines are recommended in this stage
-of cholera, but there are none, I am convinced, so efficacious as the
-above."
-
-In the second, or confirmed stage, the same medicine was continued in
-larger and more frequent doses, with hot fomentations to the abdomen,
-stimulating lotions, sinapisms and injections. The cholera drops were
-also administered, composed according to the following formula:
-
- Rx. Tincture of Capsicum,
- Tincture of Opium,
- Spirits of Camphor,
- Essence of Peppermint.
- Equal parts--mix.
-
-Give a tea-spoonful every hour or half hour, according to the severity
-of the symptoms.
-
-In the third, or collapsed stage, he directed a tea-spoonful of
-pulverized black pepper to be mixed and given in a tumblerful of hot
-gin-sling; also, the same to be prepared and applied hot to the bowels
-and extremities. Also, to two tea-spoonfuls of either pulverized red
-or black pepper, pour on a sufficient quantity of hot water, let it
-stand till nearly cold; strain and inject the whole up the bowel. This
-would often arouse the patient in the collapsed stage when there was
-little or no hope of recovery. Such are in brief the remedies which
-were used so successfully in the Tenth Ward of this city, in 1832. Here
-it will be noticed that the general principal evolved in this treatment
-consists in its prompt and diffusive stimulant, its antispasmodic and
-corrective power so combined as to act gently and kindly, yet promptly
-and successfully, as the records show, to which we shall refer in the
-sequel.
-
-Another mode worthy of a passing notice is one analogous to this,
-adopted and recommended by the eminent Dr. G. S. Hawthorne, of
-Liverpool, England, who observes: "Of the medicinal remedies, the chief
-is opium. This, I have explained, should be given in combination with
-medicines of a cordial, stimulating and antispasmodic character, of
-which the most efficient are camphor, capsicum, ether and aromatic
-spirits of ammonia. The following formulę present the combination of
-the medicines which I would prefer:"
-
- Rx. Powdered Opium, gr. xij.
- Camphor, gr. xxx.
- Capsicum, gr. ix.
-
-Spirits of wine and conserve of roses Q. S.--mix--divide into twelve
-pills. Each of these pills, it will be observed, contains one grain of
-powdered opium. These are accompanied with the following:
-
- Rx. Chloric Ęther,
- Aromatic Spirits Ammonia,
- Camphorated Spirits,
- Tincture of Capsicum.
- Of each, one drachm.
- Cinnamon water, two ounces--mix.
-
-"Cholera," observes Dr. H., "presents itself in four distinct degrees
-of malignity. All the modifications of the disease require to be
-treated on the same principles, the only difference being that, in the
-detail, the milder forms require less powerful doses of the medicines.
-The mode of treating the most malignant form of the disease, will
-serve as a model on which all the others are to be treated. This most
-malignant form has, by all writers on the subject hitherto, been
-pronounced incurable. They say it never was cured in a single instance,
-and never can be cured by the power of medicine. I shall, however,
-point out a mode of treating it which will prove itself infallibly
-successful where my directions are followed with sufficient promptness,
-boldness and skill." In detailing the mode of procedure, the doctor
-observes: "Place the patient immediately in the horizontal posture in
-bed, and give him on the instant, as this is an extreme case, ten of
-the antispasmodic pills, and two ounces of the antispasmodic mixture,
-and wash the whole down with a glass of undiluted brandy or whisky,
-flavored strongly with cloves, essence of ginger, or some such warm
-aromatic spice. In the mean time, have him covered with an additional
-blanket, and let the usual means of communicating heat, such as jars
-or bottles of hot water, bags of hot salt or sand, hot bricks, or
-whatever can be most readily procured, be applied without delay to the
-feet and different parts of the body, so as to restore the temperature
-and produce perspiration as quickly as possible. As soon as the
-perspiration has begun to flow freely, superadded to the medicines and
-cordials already administered, a glass of brandy-punch should be given,
-the punch to be made strong and to be swallowed hot as possible. After
-this, no drink should be given until the perspiration has flowed freely
-for a few minutes. The stomach will then retain it, and the patient
-should be indulged freely with copious draughts of rennet whey, warm
-toast-water, flavored with some agreeable spice, mint, or balm-tea,
-or any such mild beverage. The necessity of attending to this is most
-important. When the discharges from the bowels cease, and when the
-pulse becomes full and bounding, the body is covered with a copious,
-warm perspiration, which will not fail to be the case under such
-treatment; the danger is over. The perspiration, if the patient can
-bear it, should be kept up for twelve hours, and may, with advantage,
-be continued moderately even longer. Its duration, however, must be
-regulated according to the strength of the patient and the state of the
-pulse. After the first four or six hours, more heat need not be applied
-than is perfectly agreeable to the feelings of the patient. It is
-remarkable how suddenly the precordial oppression, etc., are relieved
-on the breaking out of a free perspiration, and, what is of greater
-importance still, the vomiting, where it exists, immediately ceases."
-In short, all the urgent symptoms soon subside, and the patient becomes
-convalescent.
-
-Such is Dr. Hawthorne's treatment, which is affirmed to have been
-invariably successful. It is based on the same general principle as the
-preceding--a prompt and diffusive stimulant. Here we might ask, What
-constitutes the chief reliance in the formulę? Was it the opium that so
-promptly met and arrested the disease? or the combination of the other
-powerful stimulants with which it was united? Dr. H. places his main
-reliance on this drug, and yet affirms that it produced no narcotism or
-other sensible effect whatever, except as a diaphoretic, and even in
-this its influence may be questioned. The prognosis becomes favorable
-from the fact of a sudden rise in the temperature of the body, for
-the icy-coldness disappeared, the heat of the surface returned, the
-circulation was equalized and a profuse perspiration set in, and,
-as these conditions appeared, the urgent symptoms subsided. Not the
-excessive doses of opium, but the remedies in combination as a whole,
-produced by its prompt stimulating power these results, and the patient
-was thus relieved.
-
-Mr. Forward, while superintending some of the public works in the State
-of Kentucky, in 1832, had in his employ more than two hundred laborers,
-among whom the Cholera Epidemic of that year appeared about a week
-before its irruption in Louisville. The first case was that of a young,
-sober, industrious white laborer, who was at the time vigorous and
-apparently healthy. It was a sudden and severe case and occurred about
-eleven o'clock at night. The physicians who usually attended these men
-were at a distance, and could not be obtained without considerable
-delay. Under these circumstances, Mr. Forward, after visiting the
-patient, becoming acquainted with the symptoms, and believing it a
-genuine case of cholera, commenced treatment at once, fearing, as he
-states, the patient could not live till a physician could be obtained.
-It was, indeed, a desperate case; violent spasms, with constant
-vomiting and severe purging, attended with that livid appearance and
-peculiar coldness so characteristic of the disease. "Of the treatment,"
-says Mr. Forward, "I gave him first a quick, stimulating emetic
-prepared from the lobelia seed, which checked the vomiting and purging,
-but had little effect upon the spasms. I then applied the steam bath,
-having his feet and legs at the same time immersed in water as warm as
-he could bear, which was made strong with salt and wood ashes. I then
-sweetened a tumbler of warm water and put into it a tea-spoonful of
-"number six," and about the fourth part of a tea-spoonful of Cayenne
-pepper, and gave him one-third of it when I commenced sweating him, and
-the balance at intervals while he was sweating. By the time he had been
-sweated ten minutes, he was free from spasms and pain, but I continued
-the sweating ten or fifteen minutes longer, then wiped dry, after which
-the patient laid down and went to sleep--being thus relieved and cured."
-
-Another case of a colored man who was strictly temperate and healthful
-occurred an hour or two later the same night. His attack, too, was
-sudden, and still more severe; cramps very violent, vomiting and
-purging equally as severe, though he had not been awakened from his
-slumbers more than fifteen minutes. This case was treated the same
-as the former, with the emetic, sweating, and when the sweating had
-subsided, administered a table-spoonful of spirits of turpentine, which
-relieved him entirely, and he soon went to sleep. The next morning
-both were comfortable, and went to work and remained well. During the
-prevalence of cholera at that time, Mr. Forward had thirteen cases in
-his own family, and, on one day when the epidemic was at its height,
-seven cases among the laborers. All these and many others that occurred
-were treated in the same manner, with the same undeviating success.
-Not a single instance of death from cholera in his own family, or
-among the hands on the road. When the epidemic cholera reappeared in
-1835, the same course of treatment was pursued, with the same uniform
-success. Such results, considering the malignant character of the
-disease, are truly astonishing. Whatever may be said of the general
-principle of practice in these cases, its success must be admitted
-as equaling, if not surpassing, the treatment of any equal number of
-cases on record. Though conducted by an unpretending and unprofessional
-gentleman, yet, out of the whole number attacked during the continuance
-of the epidemic, not a single case was lost.
-
-In a report of a case of cholera treated successfully by rectified oil
-of turpentine, administered internally as a specific, by Richard Brown,
-Esq., Surgeon, Cobham, Surrey, November, 1848, it is stated that the
-patient, "aged fourteen, having suffered from severe bowel complaint,
-presented all the symptoms of cholera in the stage of collapse. The
-bowels acted incessantly, and anything taken into the stomach was
-immediately rejected; the pain around the umbilicus was intense,
-attended with severe cramps of the legs; the pulse exceedingly small,
-and scarcely perceptible; tongue coated in the centre, and flabby; the
-surface of the body much below the natural standard; the countenance
-of a blue cast, and expressive of the greatest anxiety. So decided,
-indeed, was the symptom that the case was considered almost without
-hope." "But I had determined," says the physician "to treat the first
-case of cholera that occurred in my practice with rectified oil of
-turpentine, given internally, the active principle of which, camphogen,
-possesses stimulating, diuretic, diaphoretic, sedative, antispasmodic,
-antiputrescent properties. I administered immediately one drachm of it
-combined with mucilage and aromatics, directing it to be repeated every
-two hours, the patient to be kept warm and to take meal broth with
-excess of salt."
-
-Now mark the result of this simple, uncombined remedy. In the evening
-of the same day all the urgent symptoms were assuaged, the purging and
-vomiting had ceased, the pulse was raised, the surface of the body had
-become warm and moist with perspiration, the pain around the umbilicus
-diminished, and the cramps less violent, but the countenance still bore
-the appearance of great anxiety. Such were the immediate results of
-the administration of this remedy, which appear, from the subsequent
-history of the case, to have been permanent and unattended with any
-constitutional derangement, or other serious and unpleasant effect. On
-the morning of the next day the patient was steadily improving; much of
-the anxiety of countenance had vanished, but the pain in the belly and
-cramps of the legs still remained, though much relieved. On the second
-morning after the attack the patient was very much better; no pain in
-the belly, and does not feel sick from the turpentine. On the third
-morning the patient was up, and, though exceedingly weak, there was no
-trace of any alarming symptom remaining. The bowels had moved from
-the effects of a previous dose of calomel (two grains) given the next
-morning after the attack, and the evacuation was much more healthful. A
-mild tonic and alterative plan of treatment was all that was necessary
-to restore the patient to her usual health, and she is now well. The
-remedy was given at first every two hours, then every four, and lastly
-every six hours. This treatment commenced on the 26th and terminated
-on the morning of the 29th. Its duration about sixty hours, when the
-patient is declared convalescent and comparatively well. Here we might
-ask, What experiment with any single remedy has been more important
-and satisfactory in indicating and directly pointing out a general
-principle of practice for the successful treatment and cure of this
-formidable disease? We say single remedy, for it is doubtful whether
-the two grains of calomel exercised any curative influence whatever,
-or in any way varied the result. It is, therefore, to the use of the
-rectified oil of turpentine that the favorable termination and cure of
-the disease is to be attributed.
-
-There is another mode of practice which has been exhibited to some
-extent in almost every part of the world, claiming to be more
-efficacious and successful than any other in the cure of epidemic
-cholera. It is the general principle which is the great and important
-consideration with which we are concerned in presenting it among the
-various modes adopted for the cure of this disease. This is found
-clearly defined and ably presented by Dr. Joslin in his lecture on
-cholera, in which, after exhibiting the views and doctrines governing
-the practice, and contrasting its results with those of other modes,
-he observes, in relation to the treatment of cholera in its early
-stages, that "whatever may be the form of attack, give one drop of the
-tincture of camphor dropped on a lump of sugar, and then dissolved in
-a table-spoonful of cold water. Repeat this every five minutes until
-there is a decided mitigation of the symptoms. This will usually be
-after five or six doses. If the disease be taken in time, ten or
-twelve doses are ordinarily sufficient. There is abundant testimony
-of the efficacy of this camphor treatment from all parts of Europe."
-Again, speaking of the first variety, in which the most prominent
-symptom is diarrhoea, the Dr. observes, "If camphor does not soon give
-relief, we are to resort to phosphorus, or to phosphoric acid. Dr.
-Quinn has employed both with equal success. Phosphoric acid is to be
-preferred when there is a gluey matter on the tongue. In some cases,
-veratrum, chamomilla, mercurius, or secale may be indicated. However,
-phosphorus and phosphoric acid rarely fail to cure; and some high
-authorities are in favor of giving one of them at first, in preference
-to the administration of camphor in this form of cholera."
-
-Again, in the second variety, cholera gastrica, Dr. Joslin observes,
-that "the remedies are generally ipecacuanha or veratrum, sometimes nux
-vomica. Camphor is to be given at the outset. Put two or three globules
-of the third of ipecac. in a little sugar of milk and place them on
-the tongue. This may be repeated, if necessary, in half an hour, an
-hour, or an hour and a half. But if the disease is not checked, give
-veratrum or other medicines according to the different indications."
-Again, in the third variety, cholera spasmodica, "the remedies are
-camphor, cuprum metallicum, and veratrum. If camphor has not relieved,
-give cuprum, and repeat it many times, at intervals of half an hour or
-an hour, if its salutary effect is not manifested. If necessary, then
-give veratrum in repeated doses, or other medicines, according to the
-different indications." In the fourth variety, cholera sicca, "there
-is no diarrhoea or vomiting; there is sudden prostration of the vital
-powers," etc. "The first remedy, as in other varieties, is camphor.
-If the patient is cold, blue, pulseless, that is, collapsed, carbo
-vegetabilis; some recommend hydrocyanic acid." In the fifth variety,
-cholera acuta, veratrum is named as the main remedy.
-
-Such is, in brief, the treatment so highly extolled and recommended
-by some in the cure of cholera. It is, in substance, the same as
-was originally suggested when the disease first appeared in Europe,
-nearly half a century ago, and will probably continue unchanged for
-generations to come. Of its general principle and its adaptation to the
-pathology of the disease we shall speak more at length in the sequel.
-
-After referring to the pathology of the epidemic cholera, showing its
-strong analogy to congestive fever, from the fact that in both diseases
-the blood recedes from the surface, and collects upon the internal
-organs, inducing a state of congestion, and showing the necessity of
-adopting prompt and efficient means to promote reaction, Dr. Massie
-observes, "I am not so bigoted, or so wedded to any system of medicine,
-as to be its champion to the exclusion of others. I consider I have a
-perfect right to investigate all of the different systems, and avail
-myself of any information which I may deem important and true, and I
-will premise by saying that the treatment I now adopt for cholera
-has been attended with more success than when I treated it under a
-different system."
-
-"If I am called at an early period of the disease, even when there is
-nausea, vomiting, and diarrhoea, I commence the treatment by giving
-equal parts of rhubarb root pulverized, saleratus, and peppermint plant
-powdered; one pint of boiling water being added to half an ounce of
-this compound. After simmering it for half an hour, sweeten with loaf
-sugar and strain, and, when nearly cold, two or three table-spoonsful
-of good French brandy should be added. Give two table-spoonsful of
-this, taken warm, in connection with the following preparation, viz.:
-Rx. Pulverized cinnamon, cloves, and gum guaiacum, each one ounce, good
-brandy one quart, given in two tea-spoonsful to a table-spoonful every
-fifteen or twenty minutes to an adult."
-
-"The patient should be well covered with warm clothing, and bottles of
-hot water, bricks and stones placed around his body. This course is
-almost sure to be followed by a moderate moisture of the skin, which
-should be kept up for eight or ten hours; to do which, I give ptisans
-of catnip or spearmint, and apply hot tincture of Cayenne by flannel
-cloths over the abdomen; if this fails to keep up the perspiration,
-I administer the following: Rx. Camphor, grs. x.; Ipecac., grs. v.;
-Opium, grs. ijss; Supercarbonate of soda, scruple ij. Mix, and divide
-into two, three, or more powders; give one every hour, or oftener."
-
-"In very urgent cases, I have used tincture of camphor, ounce iv;
-essence of peppermint, ounce iv; syrup of ginger, ounce ss; tincture of
-Cayenne, dram j. A table-spoonful, from one to four in an hour. I have
-given the saturated tincture of prickly ash, with the compound tincture
-of guaiacum, with good effect, in doses from a tea-spoonful to a
-table-spoonful every fifteen or twenty minutes. When there is excessive
-irritability of the stomach, the following injection should be given
-after every discharge: Rx. Saturated tincture of prickly ash, ounce
-ss; water, ounce j; tincture opii, dram ss. Mix." Such are the views
-of Dr. Massie, as presented in his Treatise on the Eclectic Southern
-Practice of Medicine. They are confirmatory of the observations and
-experience of many other eminent practitioners, and strictly accord
-with his views of the pathology and essential phenomena of the disease.
-
-We find in a very valuable work, entitled the Eclectic Practice of
-Medicine, published at Cincinnati by Professors Powel and Newton, a
-full account of the mode of practice generally adopted and pursued by
-the great body of physicians in the West, the substance of which we
-are induced here to present, preserving, as far as practicable, the
-language of the authors. For our inquiries are, What are the modes of
-practice? and what modes, if any, are consistent with the pathology and
-the essential phenomena of the disease? Each mode, however prominent or
-however obscure, is entitled to a fair representation in our inquiries,
-and should be held responsible for its deviations from the strict and
-generally received principles of science, and the consequences arising
-from any such deviations, or departure therefrom.
-
-"When called upon," say these eminent professors, "to treat a patient
-in the early stage of the disease, he should at once be placed in a
-recumbent position, and everything should be avoided which will have a
-tendency to disturb the mind, as well as the stomach and bowels. In the
-greater part of cases in this early stage, the administration of the
-compound pills of camphor, made according to the following formula, is
-sufficient to prevent a further development of the disease:
-
- Rx. Camphor, }
- Opium, } [=a][=a]., gr. xxxv.
- Kino, }
- Capsicum, gr. v.
- Conserve of roses, Q. S.--Mix.
-
-Divide into thirty pills, and give one after each discharge from
-the bowels, or oftener, if the urgency of the case requires it.
-Occasionally, however, there may be applied a large sinapism over the
-whole abdomen with advantage. Greenhow's aromatized brandy,[II.] the
-aromatic tincture of guaiacum,[III.] may sometimes be beneficially
-alternated with this pill. Should there be an overloaded condition of
-the alimentary canal, the fluid extract of rhubarb and potassa,[IV.]
-three parts, with saturated tincture of prickly-ash berries, one
-part, may be administered in table-spoonful doses every hour, and
-continued until the bowels are properly evacuated, after which the
-above astringents may be given; but where the diarrhoea is excessive,
-it would be imprudent to wait for catharsis, as the discharge should be
-checked as speedily as possible.
-
-In the second stage, when nausea, vomiting, and cramps are present,
-more active means should be pursued. To overcome the nausea or
-vomiting, the preparation of Dr. O. E. Newton, termed in the American
-Dispensatory compound mixture of camphor,[V.] may be used with
-excellent effect; it is prepared as follows:
-
- Rx. Camphor water, }
- Peppermint water, } [=a][=a]., f ounce j.
- Spearmint water, }
- Paregoric, f dram ij.
- Mix.
-
-From a tea-spoonful to a table-spoonful may be given every five or ten
-minutes; and in cases where this does not act sufficiently prompt, the
-following may be administered:
-
- Rx. Common salt, dram j.
- Black pepper, dram j.
- Vinegar, f dram v.
- Hot water, f ounce iv.
- Mix.
-
-Of this a table-spoonful may be given every ten or twenty minutes, and
-continued until the nausea ceases.
-
-To remove the cramps, hot bricks, or bottles of hot water, etc., should
-be kept applied to the feet, legs and arms, and cloths wet in water
-as hot as can be borne, must be applied over the abdomen and changed
-every few minutes; this should be perseveringly pursued until relief
-is obtained. Sometimes advantage will ensue from stimulant applications
-along the whole length of the spine. Cramps of the muscles of the limbs
-may be overcome by bathing with the compound cajeput mixture,[VI.]
-either alone or in combination with chloroform, and applying friction
-at the same time. This course usually checks the further progress of
-the disease, and the patient is saved; however, should it fail and
-the stage of collapse come on, in addition to the above treatment
-energetically pursued, the patient should be enveloped in blankets, wet
-with water as hot as can be borne, which should be renewed every ten
-or twenty minutes, and stimulants may likewise be given; the saturated
-tincture of prickly-ash berries will here be found beneficial, both by
-mouth and enema."
-
-Dr. Morrow observes, that "to fulfill the most prominent indication,
-the production of an equilibrium in the circulation, and excitability,
-the compound tincture of guaiac[VII.] may be given." This is prepared
-by adding gum guaiacum, cinnamon and cloves--each, one ounce to a quart
-of best brandy, and is administered in tea-spoonful doses in hot,
-sweetened water and brandy, every fifteen or twenty minutes till relief
-is obtained. As a general remedy, its exhibition is most salutary.
-In some cases where excessive nausea is the most prominent symptom,
-it may be advisable to administer an emetic to relieve the gastric
-irritability, to equalize the circulation and check the spasms. For
-this purpose, the acetous tincture of lobelia and sanguinaria,[VIII.]
-with the addition of one-third spirituous tincture of aralia
-spinosa,[IX.] is preferred. This is given in doses from a tea-spoonful
-to a table-spoonful every ten minutes in warm catnip-tea, sweetened.
-In very urgent cases, it may be given in larger doses and frequently
-repeated.
-
-In most cases, the saturated tincture of xanthoxylum fraxinifolium
-bac. may be used with great advantage. It is a reliable, excellent and
-prompt remedy. When given in the early stages, it will frequently
-relieve in from ten to twenty minutes. In combination with the fluid
-extract of rhubarb and potassa,[X.] it has generally proved very prompt
-and efficient. In cases of partial collapse, when the patient is
-suffering from severe cramps, Hunn's Antispasmodic Mixture[XI.] is an
-excellent remedy. In cases of violent spasms, it has been administered
-every ten minutes in doses of from one to two tea-spoonsful in hot
-brandy-and-water sweetened, with great advantage, and it is peculiarly
-applicable in such cases where there is not too great irritability of
-the stomach. In many cases, camphor is very beneficially prepared, by
-adding one drachm of camphorated spirits to a half-pint of cold water
-and the mixture given in tea-spoonful doses every three or four minutes.
-
-Dr. King states that in the early stage he has used very extensively
-the following preparation:
-
- Rx. Ox Gall, ounce j.
- Capsicum, }
- Gum Guaiac, } [=a][=a]., scruple iv.
- Leptandrin, dram iv.--Mix.
-
-This was given in doses of one grain, and repeated two or three times
-a day. He had also succeeded in some cases with a mixture composed as
-follows:
-
- Rx. Sulphur Sub., grs. iv.
- Gum Guaiac, grs. ij.
- Charcoal, grs. ij.
- Camphor, gr. j.
- Opium, grs. ss.--Mix.
-
-Dose, one to ten grains, repeated every ten minutes until relief is
-obtained. In some cases, however, this compound did not appear to
-exercise any beneficial influence. In cases of excessive irritability
-of the stomach, oat-meal cake coffee was given, for the purpose of
-allaying its irritability, with admirable effect. The saturated
-tincture of prickly-ash berries,[XII.] combined with tincture of opium,
-was used in some cases as an injection, with very good effect.
-
-Dr. R. S. Newton observes that he had also used a preparation composed
-of equal parts tannin, capsicum, camphor and kino, with considerable
-success, to be given in doses of four grains, and repeated at short
-intervals until the discharges were checked.
-
-He considered the saturated tincture of xanthoxylum fraxinifolium
-bac.[XIII.] the most valuable of all the remedies for the cholera which
-he had tested. When the stomach would not retain it, he gave it as an
-injection. It had a peculiar influence on the system, and having taken
-the remedy, he could speak from experience of its effects. When given
-as an injection, the effect produced was almost instantaneous; the
-sensation was as if he had received an electric shock; its use was very
-soon followed by a copious perspiration. He had more confidence in this
-than any other one remedy with which he was acquainted.
-
-Dr. Wright observes that he had also used the neutralizing extract,
-saturated tinc. xanthox. fraxi. bac., and the compound tincture of
-guaiac.[XIV.] He had succeeded best with a mixture of equal parts
-tincture of prickly-ash berries and neutralizing extract.[XV.]
-
-He had always found it necessary to attend strictly to the surface. The
-best external application he found was equal parts of capsicum, salt
-and mustard.
-
-Dr. Chase states that, "in the early period of the disease, he had
-used the leptandrin, combined with neutralizing extract,[XVI.] very
-successfully. He thinks opium can be dispensed with in the treatment of
-cholera altogether. In typhoid cases, he pursued an entirely different
-course, and remarked that many cholera cases presented symptoms similar
-to those described in Wood's Practice, as belonging to pernicious
-fever, which must be treated according to their peculiar character."
-
-Such, it is said, is the more general and successful practice in the
-Mississippi Valley, where the disease has several times prevailed in
-its most malignant form. For its curative efficiency much is claimed.
-Its utility, however, must be measured, as in all other cases, by the
-unerring rule, the actual results sustained by incontrovertible facts.
-The nearer any mode of practice accords with the general principle
-of pathology, the greater must necessarily be its success, for it is
-not in this disease, or in any other, that the bold, energetic and
-heroic practice, which is inconsistent and incompatible with this
-principle, cures, however extensively adopted and rigidly pursued. For
-this principle must direct and govern the practice, or else it becomes
-necessarily experimental or empirical, and must be inevitably attended
-with the most lamentable results.
-
-
-SECTION IV.--STATISTICS--PERCENTAGE OF LOSS--VARIABLE RESULTS--THEIR
-CAUSE.
-
-The results of the different modes of practice which we have briefly
-noticed will aid materially our effort to discover and establish some
-general principle for the successful treatment and cure of cholera.
-For all modes, whatever be their merits or demerits, are supposed to
-be founded on the pathology of the disease. To treat any disease
-successfully, its pathology must be observed, and so applied in the
-arrangement and adoption of a mode of practice as to secure not only
-entire harmony, but a complete and perfect adaptation of the treatment
-to its pathological character. The nearer any mode approaches to an
-exact conformity to this principle the greater will be its success.
-The neglect to conform, in the treatment of the epidemic cholera, to
-this acknowledged and universal law, has, no doubt, been the prolific
-cause of the sacrifice of thousands of valuable lives. For this
-principle is the key to unlock the mystery of disease, unfold the
-process of diseased action, and, as an unfailing and definite rule,
-must govern all correct theories as well as all rational practice of
-medicine, under whatever name it may be conducted. All practice, then,
-deviating from, opposed, or contrary to, this principle must be purely
-empirical, and unworthy the confidence of an intelligent community.
-Hence we may refer to statistics rather than argument on the subject,
-to ascertain how far and to what extent each of the different modes of
-practice conform to the general principle; and on the other hand, to
-show what modes may be at fault, being deficient in the application
-of science, opposed to the established laws of practice, and contrary
-to observation and experience, and therefore utterly and hopelessly
-empirical.
-
-The statistics collected from the most reliable sources, and here
-presented, may be regarded as a fair representation of the general
-average of loss by the different modes of practice. In a report now
-before us, it is stated, "The average proportion of deaths in Paris
-from cholera, treated under the allopathic practice, was 49 per cent.;
-while that under the homoeopathic was only 7-1/4 per cent." "In
-Vienna, (Aus.,) under the former, the deaths are reported at 31 per
-cent.; while under the latter it was only 8 per cent. In Bordeaux,
-death occurred under allopathic treatment at the rate of 67 per cent.,
-and under homoeopathic, 17 per cent. only. The general average in
-the places last mentioned will stand thus: Allopathic, 49 per cent.;
-homoeopathic, 10-1/4 per cent." The record of mortality in twenty-one
-hospitals in Europe shows the average deaths under allopathic treatment
-to be 65-1/8 per cent., while in ten hospitals where the cholera
-patients were under homoeopathic treatment, the average deaths from
-that disease was 11-3/4 only. In a report "published by the authorities
-of Pischnowitz (in Prussia), it will be seen that 680 cases were
-treated as follows: 278 treated homoeopathically, of which 27 died; 381
-treated allopathically, of which 102 died."
-
-In St. Louis, during the prevalence of cholera in 1849, the number
-treated by three homoeopathic doctors, to July 13th, was 1,567, of
-which 51 died--a loss of 3-1/4 per cent.
-
-In Cincinnati, during the month of May, there were treated by the
-eclectic physicians 330 cases of cholera and 198 cases of cholerine, of
-which only five died.
-
-In the same city, during the same time, there were treated by the
-allopathic physicians 432 cases of cholera, of which 116 died.
-
-Again, during the month of June there were treated by the eclectic
-physicians, when the disease had reached its maximum intensity, and
-many of the patients being reached by the physicians only in the
-collapsed stage, 764 cases of cholera, with a large number of choleroid
-diseases not fully reported. During this month, the mortality with all
-physicians was necessarily greater than either in the preceding or
-subsequent month. Including then the month of May, the aggregate to
-July 1st is 1,094 cases, with a loss of only 36, which is considerably
-less than four per cent. (being 3.28); while the mortality of the old
-school cholera practice being 26 per cent. in May, must have risen to
-at least 50 per cent. in June, when the ratio of mortality was more
-than doubled with all physicians. The _Western Lancet_ for July, 1849,
-issued while the cholera was still raging, and speaking in behalf
-of the allopathic physicians, observes, "that of the cases of true
-cholera, with rice-water discharges, at least one-half the cases in
-this city, as everywhere else, proved fatal." This confession of the
-_Lancet_, edited by a thoroughgoing allopathic physician, advocating
-the interests of that school, must be regarded below rather than above
-the actual allopathic loss. Now, admitting the _Lancet's_ correctness,
-and taking into account the aggregate loss of only 36 by the eclectic
-physicians in treating 1,094 cases of "true cholera," we ask what
-must have been the loss by the allopathic school of practice to have
-brought the average percentage of all schools up to 50 per cent., as
-affirmed by the _Western Lancet_? If the cholera hospitals be included
-in exhibiting the results of the different modes of practice, it will
-appear from the reports that the total number of deaths, compared to
-the admissions, was, under the eclectic treatment, 23-1/3 per cent.;
-under the allopathic treatment, 60 per cent. This percentage is
-confined exclusively to the three cholera hospitals reported.
-
-In the report of 1832, by Dr. Atkins, it appears "that the total number
-of cases" of cholera in this city, New York, "including those in the
-hospitals, as well as those reported to the Board of Health, had been
-5,835 on the 1st of September. The total number of deaths by cholera to
-September 1st was 2,996." More than one-half died. "Dr. Buell reports
-the success," says Professor Clark, "of sixty-grain doses of calomel
-in one of the New York hospitals, as 93 deaths in 100 cases;" very
-remarkable success! the largest mortality in the city.
-
-As like causes produce like effects, we need not be surprised at
-this high rate of mortality, for, says Professor Aikin, "taking
-the whole number attacked, it is said that the number of deaths in
-Astrakan were _as one to three_; in that of Nizhni Novgorod, _as one
-to two_; in Moscow and Kazan, _as three to five_; and in Penza, in
-the country of the Don Cossacks, _as two to three_. In the summer
-of 1831 the mortality at Riga, St. Petersburg, Mittan, Limburg, and
-Brody, according to the _Berlin Gazette_, was _about one-half_,
-while at Dantzic, Elbing, and Posen it was _about two-thirds_ of the
-whole number attacked. The period of the epidemic, however, greatly
-influenced the mortality; for on the first onset, _nine-tenths_ of
-all those attacked perished, then _seven-eighths_; and the proportion
-of deaths forms a gradually decreasing series of _five-sixths_,
-_three-fourths_, _one-half_, _one-third_, till, towards the close, a
-large proportion of those attacked recovered. The uniformity of this
-law in every country affected with cholera, whether Europe, America,
-India, or China, is extremely remarkable." This high rate of mortality
-is truly and peculiarly illustrative of the inadaptation of the general
-mode of the so-called regular practice to the pathology of the disease.
-This, no doubt, is the main cause of its failure, and justly exposes it
-to the unenviable distinction of being empirical.
-
-The practice of Dr. Beach, the physician of the Tenth Ward of this
-city, during the prevalence of the cholera in 1832, embraced about
-one thousand cases, of which only a small percentage was lost. One of
-his associates, Dr. Hopkins, reported 157 cases, of which only 6 died,
-being less than 4 per cent., which probably is not much below the
-general average of the other districts in that ward at that time.
-
-Mr. Forward, an unprofessional gentleman of Kentucky, treated a large
-number of cases, during the prevalence of the disease among his
-employees, numbering over two hundred, without the occurrence of a
-single death. Another instance similar in principle is that of Dr.
-Browne, who reports a case treated by rectified oil of turpentine,
-with the most satisfactory and happy result. So, too, the late Dr.
-Sharp, of Paris, Ky., adopted a similar principle of practice, and
-became, thereby, eminently distinguished for the cure of cholera; his
-percentage of loss being very small indeed.
-
-We might extend these statistics and references, and quote from the
-reports of many other distinguished physicians who have been very
-successful in the treatment of this disease; but these are sufficient
-for the purpose of directing our inquiries as to the utility and
-success of different modes of practice. It is immensely important to
-ascertain, if practicable, the general principle which has been most
-successful in the treatment of this disease, before it shall again make
-its appearance among us as a prevailing and fatal epidemic; especially
-when we realize and duly appreciate its vast mortality, as represented
-in the report now before us, that prior to its recent irruption and
-prevalence in India and Europe, nearly fifty millions of the earth's
-inhabitants have been swept away by this terrible scourge alone.
-
-This estimate may, however, appear excessive and unworthy belief.
-Yet the general average for the forty-three years included is only a
-little over one million per annum, truly a vast number to be carried
-off by the prevalence of one disease alone. But, if we reduce this
-estimate within more reasonable limits, and take only two-fifths of
-it, or twenty millions, as an approximation to the truth, it would
-still be appalling, and imperatively demand, on account of the vast
-interests involved, the most rigid and thorough investigation as to
-both the direct and indirect cause of this vast sacrifice. It will
-also furnish us a sufficient apology for attempting a brief review
-and critical examination of the principles involved in the different
-modes of practice noticed above, in order to ascertain any failures or
-errors that may have, in some degree, operated as the indirect cause,
-in procuring this immense loss of life. All must admit that there are,
-in respect to the treatment of the cholera, great and palpable failures
-and errors which, though they have continued for nearly half a century,
-and have been sanctioned by high authority, as well as by long usage,
-ought nevertheless to be fully shown and exposed, so that they may
-henceforth be avoided. In our examination, there is but one rule to be
-observed, and one criterion of ultimate appeal by which to try each
-and every principle on which any mode of practice may be conducted.
-This universal and acknowledged rule is Pathology, the science which
-unfolds and exhibits the nature and character of disease, and "dictates
-the maxims of rational practice." It is the foundation and only base of
-rational medicine, which proceeds on the assumption that the nature and
-character of disease is fully known and appreciated. This knowledge is
-not only rational, but indispensable, in order to understand and apply
-the principles which ought to govern in the medication and cure of
-disease.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-SECTION I.--GENERAL PRINCIPLE OF RATIONAL PRACTICE--DICTATED BY THE
-PATHOLOGY OF THE DISEASE--CONFIRMED BY OBSERVATION AND EXPERIENCE.
-
-
-It has been observed that the essential characteristic, the leading
-and most prominent indications requiring special attention and
-permanent relief, are the "Algide," or loss of temperature; the loss
-of nerve-power in the ganglionic and pneumogastric nerves and their
-branches; the altered or disorganized condition of the blood; the
-impaired or obstructed circulation, and the early and direct tendency
-to congestion; and that these prominent and essential features are
-correspondingly developed, and in their relation to each other are
-too intimate and dependent to admit the idea of priority and regular
-order of succession. The primary impression being on the blood, these
-proceeding, _pari passu_, together constitute the complex character of
-the disease, and suggest the general principle of rational practice.
-If our pathology be correct, it must be regarded as the foundation
-and only base for a successful mode of treatment, and must be allowed
-to dictate the maxims of rational practice in the prevention and cure
-of this singular disease. The neglect to apply to the treatment of
-the cholera the science of its peculiar and established pathology
-and phenomena, or to give heed to its teachings, has no doubt led to
-the errors and failures in practice, which, from their too general
-occurrence, induced the learned and celebrated Dr. Velpeau to declare,
-before the Academy of Medicine in Paris, that "we know nothing more of
-the treatment of cholera now, than on its first appearance in 1832. All
-our remedies and modes of practice have failed."
-
-By observing the fundamental principles of the science of medicine,
-and adopting a mode of practice suggested by the pathology and
-phenomena of the cholera, these errors and failures, which have justly
-brought odium upon the so-called regular profession, will probably
-result in saving nine-tenths of those attacked, instead of losing that
-appalling proportion, as has been the case in some instances in years
-past.
-
-What, then, is the principle which, for nearly half a century, has
-been strangely overlooked, and utterly disregarded by the so-called
-regular profession, so far as the maxims of rational practice are
-concerned in the treatment of this disease? We unhesitatingly affirm
-the principle suggested by the pathology of the disease is, and
-must be, one that will reproduce and resupply the lost caloric, or
-restore warmth to the body; one that will restore promptly the lost
-nerve-power to the ganglionic nerves especially; one that will arrest
-and remove the tendency to congestion, equalize the circulation and
-relieve the oppressed respiration, and thus mitigate the long train of
-dependent symptoms. For this purpose, a prompt and diffusive stimulant
-is required of sufficient power to meet these urgent demands, and
-suspend promptly any further depressing influence or action of the
-cholera poison. A stimulant, essentially different from alcohol in any
-of its forms, is required. Alcohol, except so far as it necessarily
-enters into the composition of medicines, is inadmissible. So, too,
-are all those stimulants whose action is violent, or tends to induce
-constitutional derangement, or impairs in any way the subsequent
-health of the patient. It must be one prompt, kind and diffusive in
-its nature, and peculiarly adapted to meet and relieve the essential
-urgent symptoms on which the whole train of _non-essential symptoms_
-depend. In short, it must be one possessing the singular properties of
-a stimulant, sedative and astringent, especially an arterial stimulant
-and antispasmodic.
-
-In confirmation of this doctrine, we may refer to the general principle
-exhibited in the most successful modes of practice. During the
-prevalence of the cholera in 1832, the physician having charge of the
-Tenth Ward in this city, in which more than a thousand cases occurred,
-adopted as the principle of general practice in that ward a prompt and
-diffusive stimulant, which was, at that early day, regarded by him as
-based on the pathology of the disease. This principle was strictly
-observed and fully carried out in practice by all his assistants.
-The result, embracing the different stages of the disease, and some
-of the most malignant cases, was the curing and saving of more than
-nine-tenths of those attacked.
-
-Another instance directly in point is the course pursued by Mr.
-Forward, an unprofessional gentleman, who had over two hundred laborers
-in his employ, among whom the cholera prevailed in 1832 with its
-accustomed severity. On its first appearance, Mr. Forward, unadvised,
-and depending on ordinary domestic remedies, adopted as the base of
-practice in the emergency a prompt and diffusive stimulant, which
-proved perfectly successful. Being advised to continue the same
-course, should any more cases occur, the result was, in treating a
-large number of cases, including thirteen in his own family, that all
-were cured. Again, on the reappearance of the cholera in 1835, the
-same practice was pursued, with the same uniform success. Can anything
-be more satisfactory or more conclusive as to the adaptation of a
-principle of practice to the pathology of the disease, or furnish
-better evidence of the correctness of the doctrine we have advanced?
-
-Richard Brown, Esq., surgeon, Cobham, Surrey, November, 1848, reports
-a case treated successfully by rectified oil of turpentine, the
-therapeutic character of which is unquestionable.
-
-Dr. Massie, of Texas, adopted a similar principle of practice, and
-highly commended the same to his professional brethren, as the safest,
-best, and most efficient in the treatment of the cholera. He affirms,
-that of all the modes devised for the prevention and cure of this
-disease, none is so simple and efficacious as the one exhibited in his
-practice.
-
-The homoeopathic treatment, which claims to be a complete and perfect
-system, arranged and adopted by its originator and all his disciples,
-confirms the correctness of the doctrine we have advanced. Its
-curative principle in the treatment of cholera is based on a prompt
-and diffusive stimulant, peculiarly adapted, so far as it has any
-power, to meet and relieve the essential symptoms of this disease.
-Hence its success and favorable results, which show a saving of nearly
-nine-tenths of all the cases treated.
-
-Again, the eclectic physicians, who now, including all of the reform
-school, constitute a majority of the practitioners of medicine in
-this country, adopted a principle essentially similar, which has
-governed their practice in the treatment of this disease from its
-first appearance in 1832. Their system seems to have been more
-strictly conformed to the pathology of the cholera than that of any
-other school. Hence, their unparalleled success furnishes the most
-substantial and conclusive evidence, sustaining the correctness of
-the doctrine we have adduced, and the general principle of rational
-practice suggested and imperatively demanded by the pathology of
-the disease. Their treatment, directed mainly to the relief of the
-essential symptoms, has been based on a prompt and diffusive stimulant,
-which, fulfilling to some extent the indications required, has enabled
-them to meet the disease on each occasion of its reappearance with some
-assurance of success, and more generally to arrest its progress or
-subdue its power as exhibited in its several stages, and even in many
-instances to restore the patient and save life in the last stage of the
-almost hopeless collapse. This is clearly shown in the actual results
-which fully exhibit the incomparable fact that in private practice
-considerably more than nine-tenths of the cases of "true cholera"
-are cured, and the constitution and health of their patients saved
-unimpaired.
-
-Again, this doctrine is substantially confirmed by the results of
-the experiments made by Drs. Hill and Davies, in the exhibition of
-chloroform, either alone or combined with other stimulants. In the
-carefully detailed account of its exhibition in the various stages of
-the disease, it is clearly shown that its direct action tends to arrest
-and suspend the depressing influence of the primary cause, and when
-properly combined with other stimulants, affords very prompt relief.
-The favorable results thus obtained encourage the hope that it may
-prove a successful remedy and lead to the adoption of a more consistent
-mode of practice in the treatment of epidemic cholera. In India, in
-Europe, and in America, it is now regarded as a very important remedy,
-and especially indicated in this disease. As an antidote to miasmatic
-poison, and as a prompt and diffusive stimulant when properly combined,
-it is admirably calculated to meet and suspend the most urgent
-symptoms. In short, it may be considered, in relation to this disease,
-an excellent therapeutic agent, and well calculated to form the base
-of the principle for which we contend.
-
-But again, our doctrine is confirmed by the experiment usually
-termed "venous transfusion." The solution of soda, when raised to
-a temperature from 105° to 120° Fahr., and injected into the veins
-of the suffering patient, gave _temporarily_ prompt and immediate
-relief; but, when injected at a lower temperature, failed. In this
-experiment, the sole and only agent contributing to the result was,
-as before explained, the free caloric which immediately permeated
-every tissue, supplied warmth to the body, relieved the depressed
-nerve-power, equalized the circulation, and restored generally the
-normal action of the system. Of this result, and of the diffusive and
-prompt stimulating power of free caloric, there can be no question.
-The principle here evolved, which answered so perfectly the imperious
-demand and so immediately suspended the power of the disease, is the
-very principle dictated by its pathology. Stronger and better evidence
-of the utility of a prompt and diffusive stimulant, permanent in its
-character and influence, cannot be furnished; one that will act kindly,
-without violence and without any disturbance to any organ or tissue, to
-injure or delay the return of immediate and perfect health after the
-disease is subdued. Such we affirm to be the principle demanded in the
-successful treatment of the epidemic cholera.
-
-
-SECTION II.--REMEDIES, RECIPES, ETC.
-
-Considering the general principle of treatment, and the nature of the
-remedy so clearly suggested by the pathology of the disease to be fully
-established, it now remains for us to point out some of those curative
-agents which may be employed to advantage. It may be here observed,
-that among the few that can be confidently recommended, there is no
-single remedy yet discovered which seems to possess all the properties
-necessary to meet the complex condition presented in a malignant
-case of cholera. Yet it is believed we have simple remedies, which,
-when properly combined, will prove successful. Among the number that
-seem best adapted to meet and fulfill the indications, may be named
-chloroform, as the leading remedy on which we may reasonably hope for
-success. This may be united with spirits of camphor, the tincture of
-xanthoxyli fraxinifolii bacca, the compound fluid extract of rhubarb
-and potassa,[XVII.] and the oil of monarda punctata, and a very
-valuable and reliable remedy obtained. The following formula exhibits
-the mode of combination, which may be varied and adapted to suit any
-emergency:
-
- Rx. Chloroform, (sq.,) dram ij.
- Spirits Camph., dram j.
- Ol. Monarda, gtts. x.
- M. et adde--
- Tinc. Xanthox. Frax. Bac., ounce ij.
- Fluid Ext. Rhei et Potas., ounce iv.
-
-M.--S.--From dram j. to ounce ss. every half-hour, hour or two hours,
-according to the urgency of the symptoms and the stage of the disease.
-As soon as relief is obtained, it should be given in minimum doses and
-less frequently. This is admirably adapted to the cold stage, and will
-give prompt relief in a great majority of cases.
-
-In the premonitory stage, it can be administered to good advantage
-in small and less frequent doses. In some instances, an additional
-astringent may be necessary. The deceptive and painless diarrhoea
-should receive prompt attention, and be regarded and treated as the
-incipient form of the disease. According to the best authorities, the
-diarrhoea commences with the first chemical change or alteration of
-the blood, and proceeds gradually, in most cases, for some hours, and
-even in some instances, though rarely, for days. It is not sufficient
-to check the diarrhoea merely; the cause must be removed, which is
-essentially of miasmatic origin. When the cholera is prevailing, and
-the diarrhoea is essentially choleraic, or the result of a depressing
-miasmatic influence, it should be treated with chloroform, aided, if
-required, by appropriate astringents.
-
-In the fully developed stage, and even in the stage of collapse,
-perhaps no combination is better adapted to meet promptly all the
-necessities and wants of the system, and suspend the action of the
-cholera-poison, than the one named above. It is a simple, prompt and
-diffusive stimulant, approximating the principle indicated. This
-peculiar remedy is essentially required, and should be continued
-through all the stages of the disease till relief be obtained, varying
-its administration according to the urgency of the symptoms. When the
-stomach is too irritable to retain medicine, it should be given by
-the bowel. Take of the above mixture, one-half ounce, of the tincture
-of prickly-ash berries one-half ounce, of the tincture of opium ten
-drops, of warm water one ounce and a half--mix and inject. This may
-be repeated after every evacuation three or four times, unless relief
-be obtained earlier. Thus, it should be administered perseveringly by
-stomach and by bowel, aided by due employment of all necessary external
-means for furnishing warmth and giving relief. Opium, however, should
-be omitted after two or three injections. Its continued use to check
-the movement of the bowels is decidedly injurious.
-
-The vomiting and irritability of the stomach may often be allayed by a
-strong decoction of spearmint and horse-peppermint (monarda punctata),
-equal parts, alternated with camphor water in small repeated doses
-every five minutes. This will often succeed when all other means fail.
-
-The compound cajeput mixture[XVIII.] is a very excellent and prompt
-stimulant, and may be alternated with other remedies with good effect.
-It is particularly useful in allaying violent cramps, and restoring
-warmth to the body, and may be given in doses of one tea-spoonful every
-ten or twenty minutes in mucilage, simple syrup, or, better still, in
-hot brandy-and-water sweetened.
-
-The aromatic tincture of guaiac[XIX.] will be found very useful in some
-cases, and may be united with chloroform according to the following:
-
- Rx. Chloroform, (sq.) dram ij.
- Spirits Camphor, dram j.
- Ol. Monarda, gts. v.
- M. et adde--
- Tinc. Guaiac. Arom., ounce iv.
- M.
-
-S.--From one-half to one tea-spoonful every half hour, or, if
-necessary, in violent cases every twenty minutes, in a little sweetened
-water. This may be alternated with some other remedy to great advantage.
-
-Chloric ether has been with some a very favorite remedy, and, in
-combination with other diffusive stimulants, may serve a good
-purpose. So, too, the spirits of turpentine, and the rectified oil of
-turpentine, have proved very beneficial, the former in combination,
-the latter administered alone. These agents, however, can be rendered
-more prompt and effective by combination. It is the promptness, the
-instantaneous or electric action like that of oxygen, ozone, and
-caloric that gives value to the combination, and renders it peculiarly
-efficacious when it possesses the other peculiar properties required.
-
-In the early stage, sulphuric acid, in the form of elixir vitriol, has
-given very prompt relief, and is very highly recommended as a curative
-agent in the treatment of this disease. The following formula presents
-the mode of its exhibition:
-
- Rx. Elixir Vitriol, ounce j.
- Tinc. Xanthox. Frax. Bac. ounce ij.
- Ess. Lemon, dram j.
-
-M.--S.--Tea-spoonful in a gill of sweetened cold water every two or
-three hours.
-
-This recipe was used in the incipient stage quite extensively in the
-epidemic of 1849, with decided advantage. It generally removed the
-symptoms speedily, without any other treatment. In the more advanced
-stage it was thought not so reliable as other means named above.
-
-Dr. Fuller, of this city, advocates the use of sulphuric acid as
-a prompt and efficient remedy, and affirms that according to his
-experience, a great majority of cases may be cured by this mode of
-treatment.
-
-Dr. Cox, of England, has also spoken in its favor, and recommended
-its use as an infallible remedy. The eclectic physicians are entitled
-to the credit of its first introduction as a curative agent in the
-treatment of the Asiatic cholera, combined with the tincture of
-prickly-ash berries and the essence of lemon, as noticed above. In our
-estimation it may be rendered more effective, combined according to the
-following:
-
- Rx. Elixir Vitriol, }
- Chloric Ether, } [=a][=a]., ounce j.
- Tinc. Xanthox. Frax. Bac. ounce ij.
- Ess. Lemon, dram j.
- M.
-
-S.--A tea-spoonful in a gill of sweetened cold water every two or three
-hours. Thus combined, it forms a very prompt and diffusive stimulant,
-and is well adapted to meet the indications in the earlier stage of
-the disease. In the last stage perhaps no remedy will be found so
-prompt and decided in its action as the injection named above, with the
-internal use of chloroform as combined in the recipe on page 189.
-
-In cases of excessive irritability of the stomach, the following
-combination was administered with good effect, and was especially
-beneficial in cases attended with stupor from the commencement of the
-disease:
-
- Rx. Common Salt, dram j.
- Black Pepper, dram j.
- Vinegar, f. dram v.
- Hot Water, f. ounce iv.
- M.
-
-Of this, when settled, or strained, a table-spoonful may be given every
-ten or twenty minutes. It seldom failed to quiet the stomach and check
-the motion of the bowels. In this condition the injection should be
-also administered, and repeated as occasion may require.
-
-Some advocate the use of the spirits of ammonia and tincture of
-capsicum, properly combined with other diffusive stimulants, as a very
-efficient and successful remedy. The following is, perhaps, the most
-desirable formula:
-
- Rx. Chloroform, (sq.) }
- Spts. Camph., } [=a][=a]., dram iij.
- Spts. Ammonia Aromat., }
- Tinc. Capsicum, }
- Elix. Opii (McMunn's), dram ss.
- Syr. Zingiberis, ounce ij.
-
-M.--S.--Tea-spoonful in water every thirty minutes till relieved. Then
-less frequently, according to circumstances. This is said to give
-very prompt relief in the earlier stage of the disease. With some
-practitioners the following has been quite a favorite remedy:
-
- Rx. Ęther Chloric., ounce j.
- Tinc. Cardamom., ounce ij.
- Spts. Camph., ounce ss.
- Elix. Opii (McMunn's), dram ss.
- Syr. Zingib., ounce ij.
- M.
-
-S.--Two tea-spoonsful in water every 10 or 30 minutes till relieved,
-then continued less frequently and in less doses every one, two, three,
-or four hours, according to circumstances.
-
-For the purpose of promoting reaction in cholera and diarrhoea, the
-following formula has been extensively used and most universally
-approved. It is, indeed, so highly valued in England and in India, that
-it is ordered to be always in store and in readiness in the Medical
-Field Companion of the army when on the march:
-
- Rx. Ol. Anisi, }
- Ol. Cajeput, } [=a][=a]., dram ss.
- Ol. Juniper, }
- Ęther Chloric, ounce ss.
- Liquor Acid. Haleri,[XX.] dram ss.
- Tinc. Cinnamon, ounce ij.
- M.
-
-S.--Ten drops every fifteen minutes, in a table-spoonful of water. An
-opiate may be given with the first and second dose, but should not be
-continued.
-
-Another recipe which has been used with some success in private
-practice, illustrative of the use of chloroform as a diffusive
-stimulant and sedative, is the following:
-
- Rx. Chloroform (sq.) }
- Spts. Camph., }
- Tinc. Capsicum, } [=a][=a]., dram ij.
- Tinc. Zingib., }
- Tinc. Cardamom., }
- Syr. Simplex, ounce ij.
- M.
-
-S.--Tea-spoonful in a little water every half hour, hour, or two hours,
-according to circumstances. An opiate may be given with the first and
-second dose, but should not be continued. Should the first dose be
-ejected, give another immediately after the vomiting.
-
-In collapse, which is simply a more advanced stage of the disease,
-indicating the gradual failing of all the powers of life, our main
-reliance is on enemata, as noticed above, often repeated, and continued
-as occasion may require.
-
-Rev. Dr. Hamlin, of Constantinople, observes, "It is difficult to say
-when a cure has become hopeless. The blue color, the cold extremities,
-the deeply sunken eye, the vanishing pulse, are no signs that the
-case is hopeless. Scores of such cases in the recent epidemic have
-recovered."
-
-Here it may be proper to add, that a cure, even with the most efficient
-remedies, cannot be easily effected without placing the patient at
-the commencement in a recumbent position. This appears indispensable.
-The patient should be placed in bed and kept there in the horizontal
-position, comfortably covered with blankets, and with warm applications
-to the feet. Every necessary convenience should be at once provided to
-prevent, if possible, the patient from rising to, or standing upon,
-his feet, for the erect posture, before relief is fully obtained,
-will inevitably hasten the unfavorable termination of the disease. On
-this direction, therefore, the physician must insist if he would save
-his patient. Says an eminent physician, perfectly familiar with the
-disease, "This direction faithfully observed, and good nursing, will
-save very many patients even without medicine."
-
-Of the auxiliary aids, consisting of various external applications, we
-cannot speak in very flattering terms. To the mind of the practitioner
-the more important are readily suggested, and are promptly employed by
-nurses in the earlier stages of the disease. It is impossible for any
-person to attend on a case of true cholera without being instinctively
-moved to apply heat friction, and warm stimulants to the surface for
-the relief of the suffering patient. Any attempt to prevent these kind
-offices and apparently beneficial appliances would be unwise, and most
-certainly, in private practice, unavailing. It becomes, therefore,
-necessary to direct the use of those which are most agreeable to the
-patient and tend to preserve and sustain the recuperative power; those
-which tend to weaken and depress the system are the most objectionable.
-Among the number that seem to do good, we may mention bottles of hot
-water to the feet and calves of the legs, hot bricks dipped in water
-and wrapped in flannel and applied to different parts of the body;
-blankets wet in water as hot as can be borne, and wrung out so as
-not to drip, and applied to the whole surface, and changed at short
-intervals, so as to keep up a steady and permanent temperature of
-the surface; flannels moistened with spirits of turpentine, or other
-stimulant embrocation, and laid over the stomach and bowels, may be
-employed, as these all, in some instances, seemed to be beneficial.
-Their necessity and use, however, must be governed by circumstances.
-As we have before said, our main reliance is on a prompt and diffusive
-stimulant internally; other means, at best, are very uncertain.
-
-Such are some of the remedies evidently suggested by the pathology
-and phenomena of the disease, and adapted to meet and remove the more
-urgent, essential symptoms. They are not entirely new. They have been
-employed to some extent in former epidemics of cholera, and have
-sustained a good reputation as useful and curative agents in the
-treatment of this disease. The combinations here suggested are the
-result of observation and experience, and are intended to present the
-form in which these remedies can be exhibited to the best advantage.
-They are simple, prompt, and reliable, such as will leave the system,
-when the disease is subdued, in its ordinary condition, without any
-injury whatever to prevent its immediate return to its normal state
-of health. Let them be employed, and their utility thoroughly tested.
-They will bear the strictest scrutiny, and sustain their reputation
-untarnished under the most trying circumstances. Should the cholera
-appear again in our midst in its epidemic form, and these remedies be
-generally employed and properly administered, we venture to predict
-their efficacy will be abundantly proved in the successful result of
-saving more than nine-tenths of those attacked.
-
-
-SECTION III.--PROPHYLAXIS--OR MEANS OF PREVENTION.
-
-In presenting a course of preventive treatment consistent with the
-origin and general character of the disease, we are necessarily limited
-to the means of sustaining the _normal_ action of the system, and
-suppressing the operation of those causes which, by reducing the
-general health, tend to generate, foster, and develop the cholera. Of
-the former so much has been written and published, inculcating the
-general principles of hygiene, that it seems quite unnecessary to dwell
-on a subject so familiar to the great mass of community; yet, there
-are occasions when the most familiar truths have to be impressed upon
-the mind, by constant repetition, to prevent threatened dangers, and
-obviate the most serious consequences. In no instance is this more
-important than in time of prevailing epidemics; for it is an undeniable
-fact, that multitudes _will_ neglect the most obvious principles of
-hygiene, and tolerate, with utter indifference, the most offensive
-nuisance, in and around their dwellings, and if attacked by disease,
-will often wonder why _they_, more than _others_, should be visited by
-a malignant disease, or become the victims of a prevailing epidemic.
-Hence the necessity of urging the observance of some of the most
-obvious principles of hygiene, in the preventive treatment of Asiatic
-cholera.
-
-Pure air, pure water, and a frugal nutritious diet are Nature's
-great preventives for the thousand ills of life. These are the great
-essentials in sustaining the healthful and normal condition of the
-system, always of primary importance in preserving its tone and energy,
-and rendering it impervious to any miasmatic or epidemic influences.
-Therefore, the tone of the system should, more especially when
-epidemics are prevailing, be kept fully up to its normal standard.
-This cannot be accomplished without pure air,--whether our dwellings
-be located in the city or in the country; free ventilation of all
-apartments is of the first importance. Kitchens, sitting-rooms,
-dressing-rooms, and especially sleeping-rooms, should be kept
-constantly and thoroughly ventilated; cellars and vaults, too, should
-receive attention, and be kept free from a deteriorated or foul
-atmosphere. Everything within and without our dwellings, tending to
-impregnate the atmosphere with noxious effluvia, should be removed, and
-the foul air promptly purified by the use of appropriate disinfectants.
-
-Pure water for drinking and culinary purposes is another preventive
-remedy, whose employment cannot be safely omitted. It is a well-known
-fact that, in various localities, wells only a few feet deep, which are
-mainly supplied by drainage or surface water, have proved a fruitful
-source, and in some instances a direct and efficient cause of epidemic
-cholera.
-
-The water from rivers flowing past large cities and villages is often
-so impure as to render its use decidedly deleterious, if not an actual
-source of disease. In some cases they have been literally so filled
-with portions of fish, and other animal matter, that all city supplies
-were made endurable only by long-continued filtration. The waters of
-many of our Southern and Western rivers are rendered impure from the
-lime and surface drainage with which they are so highly impregnated
-that they often become a direct source of diarrhoea and cholera. Pure
-water, free from the impregnation of vegetable, animal and mineral
-substances, should be sought and obtained for domestic use.
-
-A good nutritious diet is an indispensable requisite in the prevention
-of disease. The system in comparative health requires, and should
-regularly receive, its proper aliment. Its daily recurring demands
-should be judiciously met with pure and wholesome food, in such
-quantity as can be readily digested, assimilated and duly appropriated
-for the supply of its wants. Due regard, however, must be had to the
-existing and peculiar condition of the digestive organs, on which
-mainly depends the process of supporting and perpetuating the general
-health.
-
-It is not the profuse variety and the incongruous mass composed of
-baked, roasted, boiled and fried meats, fish and fowl, oyster, lobster,
-frog and turtle, with puddings, tarts, jellies, cakes and creams from
-the pastry room--fruits and salads, native and foreign, rich and
-rare--alcoholic stimulants, and cooling ices, but the simple, plain
-and frugal diet, properly cooked and particularly nutritious, that
-conduces to the most vigorous health.
-
-Regular, temperate habits in all things, are especially commended;
-excesses of all kinds are reprehensible. Great and sudden changes in
-the habits of living are always deleterious, and must be particularly
-so, when an appalling and fatal epidemic is prevailing. Temperance,
-sobriety and cheerfulness, regular hours for meals, for rest and for
-business, repeated ablutions and perfect cleanliness, moderate exercise
-and avoidance of irregularities, persevering self-government and duly
-subjected passions, all contribute to health, to happiness, and the
-prevention of disease.
-
-Exposure to the extremes of heat and cold should be avoided, and
-the clothing properly adapted to the climate--to the season and its
-variable temperature. Constant vigilance is necessary to guard against
-the numberless causes tending to produce an abnormal condition,
-resulting in the derangement of the stomach and bowels, or in
-depressing the nervous power, thus enfeebling and prostrating the
-general health. The neglect of these hygienic principles and essential
-preventives of cholera may induce the condition which temptingly
-invites the disease. Some are vastly more susceptible than others, and
-may not be able, with all their watchfulness and care, to avoid an
-attack, should the disease extensively prevail among us.
-
-The premonitory symptoms requiring special attention, when the epidemic
-cholera is prevailing, are definitely presented in Chap. II., Sec.
-2, page 56, to which special reference is made. Whenever any of
-these do occur, though generally supposed to present no particular
-characteristic of the cholera, they should, however, receive prompt
-attention. The loss of animation, the depression of nerve-power, the
-pain in the forehead and slight vertigo, the nervous agitation and
-oppression at the chest, with slight nausea, may in most instances be
-promptly removed. They should be at once patiently and perseveringly
-treated by the use of camphor water, prepared as follows: Take spirits
-of camphor, one tea-spoonful, and put it into a half-pint of cold
-water, and give of the mixture two tea-spoonfuls every half-hour, hour,
-or two hours, according to the severity of the symptoms. A strong
-decoction, or tea of horsemint (monarda punctata), is an excellent
-remedy even in this early stage. The essence of monarda, or horsemint,
-in doses of eight or ten drops in a little water, and repeated every
-hour or two, will often give prompt relief. Where the horsemint
-cannot be obtained, the spearmint, and the peppermint also, may prove
-serviceable.
-
-Keith's concentrated Tincture of Veratrum Viride is also an excellent
-remedy in these premonitory symptoms. Put three or four drops into a
-tumblerful of cold water, and give of the mixture a tea-spoonful every
-hour or two hours, as occasion may require. This may be alternated with
-the essence, or tea of horsemint.
-
-But another more general symptom, which may be properly termed the
-incipient stage of the disease, is the slight diarrhoea, usually
-termed painless, though it is by no means always so, but frequently
-the very reverse, severe and painful. This at first may be slight, but
-gradually increasing, soon becomes obstinate, painful, and exceedingly
-difficult to control. It therefore should receive attention at its
-very commencement, for it is in reality the stealthy invasion of
-the citadel--it is the cholera. The loss of life becomes imminent;
-treatment becomes indispensable; send at once for your physician. And,
-in the meantime, continue the camphor mixture, the horsemint tea, and
-give of the fluid extract of rhubarb and potassa, prepared according
-to the formula in the American Dispensatory, one or two tea-spoonfuls
-every hour, and, if necessary, add four or five drops of laudanum, or
-its equivalent in paregoric, to each dose, till relieved. In this early
-stage, opium in small doses may be given four or five times, but should
-not be continued. These remedies, properly administered, will control
-the great majority of cases.
-
-If, however, the diarrhoea be uncontrolled and vomiting ensue, the
-recipe on page 189 will be found very efficient, and should be
-perseveringly administered till relief is obtained. It is prepared
-as follows: Chloroform, two drachms; spirits of camphor, one
-drachm; essence of monarda (or horsemint), three drachms; tincture
-of prickly-ash berries, two ounces; fluid extract of rhubarb and
-potassa, four ounces--mix. Give from one-half to one table-spoonful
-every half-hour, hour, or two hours, according to the urgency of the
-symptoms and the stage of the disease. This remedy is well adapted to
-every stage, and may be used in collapse as an injection, combined as
-follows: Take of the above mixture _two table-spoonfuls_, and add to
-it tincture of prickly-ash berries, _two table-spoonfuls_; laudanum
-_ten drops_; warm water, _six table-spoonfuls_--mix, _and inject up the
-bowel_. This injection should be repeated as often as required. In some
-desperate cases it has been repeated many times and the patients saved.
-
-Wherever the disease prevails, all discharges from cholera patients
-should be promptly disinfected and disposed of. Bedding, linen,
-water-closets, cesspools, etc., should be thoroughly disinfected and
-renovated, so that no germ may remain to propagate the disease.
-
-
-
-
-FORMULĘ
-
-FOR SOME OF THE PREPARATIONS USED IN THE ABOVE RECIPES.
-
-
- GREENHOW'S AROMATIC TINCTURE OF GUAIACUM.--Take of guaiacum, cloves
- and cinnamon, each, in powder, _one ounce_; best brandy, _two pints_.
- Macerate for fourteen days and filter.
-
- Dose.--From a tea-spoonful to a table-spoonful, in sweetened water,
- every fifteen or twenty minutes.--_Am. Dis._
-
-
- COMPOUND CAJEPUT MIXTURE--HUNN'S DROPS.--Take of oils of cajeput,
- cloves, peppermint, and anise, each, _one fluid ounce_; rectified
- alcohol, _four ounces_. Dissolve the oils in the alcohol.
-
- The ordinary dose is from ten drops to half a tea-spoonful; to be
- given in simple syrup, mucilage of slippery-elm, or in hot brandy and
- water _sweetened_.--_Am. Dis._
-
-
- FLUID EXTRACT OF RHUBARB AND POTASSA.--Take of the root of the best
- India rhubarb, in powder, and bicarbonate of potassa, of each, _one
- ounce_; cassia or cinnamon, and golden seal, in powder, of each,
- _half an ounce_; boiling water, one-half pint. Macerate the roots and
- seeds for an hour; strain and dissolve the potassa in the strained
- liquor when nearly cold, and add one gill best brandy; essence of
- peppermint, one tea-spoonful, and refined sugar, _two ounces_.
-
- Dose.--From one to two tea-spoonfuls as often as necessary.--_Am.
- Dis_.
-
-
- TINC. XANTHOXYLI, or Tincture of Prickly-ash Berries.--Take of
- prickly-ash berries _eight ounces_; diluted alcohol, _two pints_.
- Form into a tincture by maceration, or displacement, and make two
- pints of tincture.
-
- The ordinary dose is twenty or thirty drops. In cholera, from
- a tea-spoonful to one or two table-spoonfuls, according to
- circumstances.--_Am. Dis._
-
-
- TINCTURE OF OIL OF MONARDA--Essence of Monarda, or Horsemint.--Take
- of oil of horsemint _one fluid ounce_; alcohol, _nine fluid ounces_,
- Imp. Meas. Mix with agitation.
-
- Dose.--From ten to twenty drops on sugar, or in sweetened
- water.--_Am. Dis._
-
-
- ELIXIR OF OPIUM, prepared on the base of Dupuy's formula is less
- objectionable as an ingredient in recipes for an advanced stage of
- cholera than other preparations of that drug.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-
-[I.] Sulphuric acid, one part; Rectified Spirit, three parts.
-
-[II.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[III.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[IV.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[V.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[VI.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[VII.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[VIII.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[IX.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[X.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[XI.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[XII.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[XIII.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[XIV.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[XV.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[XVI.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[XVII.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[XVIII.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[XIX.] See American Dispensatory.
-
-[XX.] Sulphuric acid, one part; rectified spirit, three parts.
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's Notes:
-
-
-Passages in italics are indicated by _underscore_.
-
-The tables have been equalized as good as possible.
-
-Rx. is used for Prescription.
-
-There are diacritical marks in the text, they are marked as [=a] which
-represents a marcron (straight line) above the a.
-
-Fractions are displayed as follows: 1/4 correlates with one-fourth, 1/2
-correlates with on-half, 1-1/2 correlates with one and a half....
-
-The following words have been retained in both versions:
-
- formula (pages 73, 136, 157, 189, 194, 196, 198, 211 and 214),
- formulas (pages 76 and 87) and formulę (pages 8, 138, 142 and 213)
-
- ether (pages 123, 138, 193 and 195) and ęther (pages 73, 139, 197 and
- 199)
-
- spoonful and spoonsful (various occurrences in the text)
-
-Other than the corrections listed below, printer's inconsistencies
-in spelling, punctuation, hyphenation, and ligature usage have been
-retained.
-
-The following misprints have been corrected:
-
- changed "December, 805; making a total in"
- into "December, 805"; making a total in"
- (page 9)
-
- changed "principle of a specific disease--poison."
- into "principle of a specific disease-poison."
- (page 13)
-
- changed "violent and fatal whereever it appeared."
- into "violent and fatal wherever it appeared."
- (page 27)
-
- changed "cholera in 1832, at Cataria; in Palermo, 40,000."
- into "cholera in 1832, at Catania; in Palermo, 40,000."
- (page 32)
-
- changed "In Bassorah and Bagdad, situate in low, unhealthy"
- into "In Bassorah and Bagdad, situated in low, unhealthy"
- (page 32)
-
- changed "In the Province of Caucassus, out of"
- into "In the Province of Caucassus, out of"
- (page 32)
-
- changed "phenomena, for numorous cases of"
- into "phenomena, for numerous cases of"
- (page 47)
-
- changed "The slight, painless diarrhoeea, depression of"
- into "The slight, painless diarrhoea, depression of"
- (page 57)
-
- changed "be withheld. This pecnliar icy coldness"
- into "be withheld. This peculiar icy coldness"
- (page 59)
-
- changed "urinary secretion and micturation entirely"
- into "urinary secretion and micturition entirely"
- (page 60)
-
- changed "the second or febrile stage. The former is"
- into "the second or febrile stage." The former is"
- (page 61)
-
- changed "spent in the gradual introducion of the"
- into "spent in the gradual introduction of the"
- (page 69)
-
- changed "Other methods of restoring warmth were had"
- into ""Other methods of restoring warmth were had"
- (page 71)
-
- changed "when on the march:""
- into "when on the march:"
- (page 73)
-
- changed "philosophy of such eminent surgeon, as"
- into "philosophy of such eminent surgeons, as"
- (page 88)
-
- changed "Medical Bureau in the departmnet of India, whose"
- into "Medical Bureau in the department of India, whose"
- (page 89)
-
- changed "opium, accompanied with sinipisms, and hot, stimulating"
- into "opium, accompanied with sinapisms, and hot, stimulating"
- (page 110)
-
- changed "if it remainun subdued by"
- into "if it remain unsubdued by"
- (page 112)
-
- changed "PATHOLOGICAL TREATMENT--_First Stage_: This consisted"
- into "PATHOLOGICAL TREATMENT--_First Stage._--This consisted"
- (page 132)
-
- changed "the medicines which I would prefer:"
- into "the medicines which I would prefer:""
- (page 138)
-
- changed "Aromatic Spirits Amomnia,"
- into "Aromatic Spirits Ammonia,"
- (page 139)
-
- changed "It was a sudden and severe, case and"
- into "It was a sudden and severe case and"
- (page 143)
-
- changed "are camphor, cuprum metalicum, and veratrum."
- into "are camphor, cuprum metallicum, and veratrum."
- (page 152)
-
- changed "may be given. This is prepared"
- into "may be given." This is prepared"
- (page 161)
-
- changed "administered in tea-spoonful does in hot, sweetened"
- into "administered in tea-spoonful doses in hot, sweetened"
- (page 161)
-
- changed "unfold the process of d seased action, and, as"
- into "unfold the process of diseased action, and, as"
- (page 167)
-
- changed "in that of Mishni Novogorod,"
- into "in that of Nizhni Novgorod,"
- (page 172)
-
- changed "in Moscow and Kasan,"
- into "in Moscow and Kazan,"
- (page 172)
-
- changed "During the prevalence of the cholora in 1832, the physician"
- into "During the prevalence of the cholera in 1832, the physician"
- (page 182)
-
- changed "Rx Chloroform, (sq.,)"
- into "Rx. Chloroform, (sq.,)"
- (page 189)
-
- changed "M. S.--From dram j. to ounce ss. every half-hour,"
- into "M.--S.--From dram j. to ounce ss. every half-hour,"
- (page 189)
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Asiatic Cholera, by
-Elijah Whitney and A. B. Whitney
-
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-
-Title: Asiatic Cholera
- A treatise on its origin, pathology, treatment, and cure
-
-Author: Elijah Whitney
- A. B. Whitney
-
-Release Date: December 14, 2016 [EBook #53728]
-
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-
-<h1><span class="pagenum1"><a id="page1a"></a>[p.1a]</span> ASIATIC CHOLERA</h1>
-
-
-<div class="center">
- <p class="ftsize120"><i>A TREATISE</i></p>
-
- <p class="ftsize65">ON ITS</p>
-
- <p class="ftsize95"><i>ORIGIN, PATHOLOGY, TREATMENT,
- AND CURE</i>.</p>
-
- <p class="ftsize65 martop4">BY</p>
-
- <p>E. WHITNEY, M. D.,</p>
-
- <p class="ftsize65">AND</p>
-
- <p>A. B. WHITNEY, A. M., M. D.,</p>
-
- <p class="ftsize50">LATE PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON<br/>
- To Diseases of Women in the North-Western Dispensary, Visiting Physician, Etc.</p>
-
- <p class="martop5"><span class="smcap fextra4">New York</span>:<br/>
- <span class="fextra3">M. W. DODD, PUBLISHER,</span><br/>
- <span class="smcap fextra4">No. 506 Broadway</span>.<br/>
- 1866.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="center">
- <p class="martop8"><span class="pagenum1"><a id="page2a"></a>[p.2a]</span> Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1866, by</p>
-
- <p class="ftsize105">A. B. WHITNEY, A. M., M. D.,</p>
-
- <p>In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States,<br/>
- for the Southern District of New York.</p>
-
- <p class="martop6 ftsize65">E. O. JENKINS, STEREOTYPER AND PRINTER,<br/>
- 20 NORTH WILLIAM ST., N. Y.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="lihei1"><span class="pagenum1"><a id="page3a"></a>[p.3a]</span> DEDICATION.<br/>
-
-<span class="ftsize85">TO PROFESSORS POST, VAN BUREN, METCALF, AND BEDFORD.</span></h2>
-
-
-<p>For those lucid Clinic illustrations and faithful instructions during
-a three-years' course in the New York Medical University, particularly
-the critical Pathological knowledge there inculcated, and consequent
-professional success, the youthful author is indebted.</p>
-
-<p>Knowing they will agree with him, that his appreciation of their valued
-services, and his gratitude for the same, can be best acknowledged
-in his attempt to benefit suffering humanity, he would here publicly
-acknowledge the pleasure and benefit received from their instructions
-during his College course, and beg their acceptance of his sincerest
-gratitude and affection.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">To these able Instructors this Volume is cordially Dedicated by the
-Junior Author.</span></p>
-
- <p class="ralign2">A. B. WHITNEY, M. D.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><span class="pagenum1"><a id="page5a"></a>[p.5a]</span> PREFACE.</h2>
-
-
-<p>The following pages are the result of investigations and the collection
-of facts and arguments from a great variety of sources, originally made
-and presented in aid of the discussions on the subject during the past
-six or eight months.</p>
-
-<p>The most eminent and reliable authorities for nearly half a century,
-that is, from 1832 to 1865, including the late reports from India,
-have been carefully examined, and such late discoveries, facts, and
-arguments collected, as seemed to throw light upon the subject, or in
-any degree to indicate or direct to a general principle of practice.</p>
-
-<p>The various experiments instituted for the cure of the disease have
-been carefully investigated, and the principle evolved explained
-whenever any advantage was derived from the same.</p>
-
-<p>In all these we have diligently searched for the cause of the failure
-of "remedial agents," so uniformly admitted, and have endeavored to
-present the results clearly and fully in the body of the work.</p>
-
-<p>Our statistics are collected from reliable sources, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page6"></a>[p.6a]</span> are very
-brief, and introduced in aid of the main object,&mdash;the establishment of
-a general principle of practice.</p>
-
-<p>The different modes of practice are from the most distinguished authors
-of the different Schools of Medicine, and non-professional gentlemen;
-condensed and exhibited mainly in their own language, to show their
-conformity or non-conformity to the Pathology of the disease.</p>
-
-<p>In all we have kept constantly in view the pathology of the disease,
-whose "dictates" have governed us in the exhibition and establishment
-of a general principle of rational practice, confirmed by observation
-and experience, which, if accepted and carried out by the profession,
-we hope and trust will save a very large proportion of those attacked
-by "this most acute of acute diseases."</p>
-
-<p class="ralign2">AUTHORS.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page7a"></a>[p.7]</span> CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-
-<div class="toc lihei1">
-<ul>
- <li class="center martop4">CHAPTER I.</li>
-
- <li class="martop1h"><span class="smcap">Sec. I.</span> <span class="smcap">Origin and Development.</span> <span class="ralign1"><a href="#page7">7</a></span></li>
- <li><span class="smcap">Sec. II.</span> <span class="smcap">Progress and Fatality.</span> <span class="ralign1"><a href="#page20">20</a></span></li>
- <li><span class="smcap">Sec. III.</span> <span class="smcap">Causes&mdash;Propagation.</span> <span class="ralign1"><a href="#page34">34</a></span></li>
-
-
- <li class="center martop2">CHAPTER II.</li>
-
- <li class="martop1h"><span class="smcap">Sec. I.</span> <span class="smcap">Pathology.</span> <span class="ralign1"><a href="#page45">45</a></span></li>
- <li><span class="smcap">Sec. II.</span> <span class="smcap">Phenomena, or Symptoms.</span> <span class="ralign1"><a href="#page55">55</a></span></li>
-
-
- <li class="center martop2">CHAPTER III.</li>
-
- <li class="martop1h"><span class="smcap">Sec. I.</span> <span class="smcap">Unsuccessful Modes of Treatment.&mdash;Venous
- Transfusion Explained.</span> <span class="ralign1"><a href="#page64">64</a></span></li>
- <li><span class="smcap">Sec. II.</span> <span class="smcap">Physiological Condition of the Blood,
- Its Non-Aeration, or Non-Oxydation.
- Maxims of Rational Practice Suggested.</span><span class="ralign1"><a href="#page91">91</a></span></li>
- <li><span class="smcap">Sec. III.</span> <span class="smcap">Different Modes of Treatment.</span><span class="ralign1"><a href="#page130">130</a></span></li>
- <li><span class="smcap">Sec. IV.</span> <span class="smcap">Statistics. Percentage of Loss. Variable
- Results&mdash;their Cause.</span> <span class="ralign1"><a href="#page166">166</a></span></li>
-
-
- <li class="center martop2"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page8a"></a>[p.8]</span> CHAPTER IV.</li>
-
- <li class="martop1h"><span class="smcap">Sec. I.</span> <span class="smcap">General Principle of Rational Practice,
- Dictated by the Pathology of
- the Disease, Confirmed by Observation
- and Experience.</span> <span class="ralign1"><a href="#page178">178</a></span></li>
- <li><span class="smcap">Sec. II.</span> <span class="smcap">Remedies, Recipes, Etc.</span> <span class="ralign1"><a href="#page188">188</a></span></li>
- <li><span class="smcap">Sec. III.</span> <span class="smcap">Prophylaxis, or Means of Prevention.</span> <span class="ralign1"><a href="#page203">203</a></span></li>
- <li><span class="smcap">Sec. IV.</span> <span class="smcap">Formulę&mdash;Preparations, Etc.</span> <span class="ralign1"><a href="#page213">213</a></span></li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<h1><span class="pagenum"><a id="page7"></a>[p.7]</span> ASIATIC CHOLERA.</h1>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Section I.&mdash;Origin and Development.</span></h3>
-
-
-<p>Epidemics have occasionally prevailed in all ages. Sometimes they
-have been circumscribed in their influence, and limited to particular
-localities; while at other periods they have taken a wider range and
-extended over larger sections, inflicting the most lamentable results,
-and augmenting the bills of mortality to an incredible degree.</p>
-
-<p>The earlier writers have given some account of these diseases, which
-have occasionally prevailed as very fatal and devastating epidemics;
-surpassing all other diseases in their mysterious origin, in their
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page8"></a>[p.8]</span> rapid extension, and in the duration of their prevalence. In
-the East,&mdash;in Egypt, and on the eastern border of the Mediterranean,
-fearful epidemics have prevailed from time immemorial. They have often
-proved very destructive, especially in the Middle Ages, and as late
-as the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. During the prevalence of
-the "Pestis," which raged throughout Europe between the years 1347
-and 1350, according to computation, a fourth part of the inhabitants
-of this part of the globe was carried off. The estimates of the vast
-numbers swept away by its repeated occurrence and prevalence appear
-quite incredible.</p>
-
-<p>During the time it raged at Marseilles in 1720, it is reported that in
-the Charity Hospital there were admitted from October 3d to February
-28th, 1,013 patients, of whom 585 died; and during the same period, in
-another hospital, there were admitted from October to July 3d, 1,512
-patients, of whom 820 died. The population of Marseilles previous to
-the occurrence <span class="pagenum"><a id="page9"></a>[p.9]</span> of the disease was estimated at about 90,000, of
-whom 40,000 died; leaving only about 10,000 of the whole population who
-had not been attacked or in any way affected; so that the record shows
-the appalling mortality of fifty per cent. of those who were attacked.</p>
-
-<p>The bills of mortality in 1770 and 1771 were as appalling as any
-arising from epidemics of a later day. A very extended notice of
-the "Pestis" as it raged in Moscow in the year 1771 is given by M.
-Gerardin, who, quoting from the published statistics, observes: "In
-April, the deaths were 744; May, 851; June, 1,099; July, 1,708; August,
-7,268; September, 21,401; October, 17,561; November, 5,235; December,
-805"; making a total in nine months of 56,672, which is considerably
-less than the estimate given by De Mertens, who thinks the whole number
-carried off by this pestilence, from the city alone, cannot be less
-than 80,000. These statistics bear a striking resemblance to those of
-the Epidemic Cholera, whose fatality is materially <span class="pagenum"><a id="page10"></a>[p.10]</span> varied by
-the seasons of the year; the greatest being usually at the close of
-Summer or the beginning of Autumn. There are, in short, many points of
-resemblance in this and former epidemics to that of the Cholera, which
-naturally lead to the supposition that all have had a common origin,
-if, indeed, they be in many respects dissimilar.</p>
-
-<p>Their pestilential character, their extended influence, and their great
-fatality, rendered their appearance and progress a special terror to
-physicians, and melancholy apprehension to the people. They seem to
-have been regarded as the manifestation of an invisible power, which
-directed and guided "the pestilence that walketh in darkness" and "the
-destruction that wasteth at noon-day;" a visitation or chastisement
-over which human ingenuity and medical skill had little control. Under
-these impressions, the earlier physicians labored and endeavored to
-satisfy the great mass of mind that these occasional and special
-developments of disease arose from <span class="pagenum"><a id="page11"></a>[p.11]</span> natural causes, and were
-subject to certain natural laws. They ascribed their origin to the
-commingling of some specific poison in the food, and drink, and air,
-which, through these "media," was received into the system.</p>
-
-<p>Subsequently, they seem to have made some advance on this theory, and
-considered the extreme Summer heat&mdash;especially the intense heat of the
-sun in a dry season&mdash;the emanations from stagnant waters, and the miasm
-exhaled from the soil, and from putrid bodies of animals, as the chief
-causes of all epidemics. These views prevailed for a very long period,
-and have undergone no very remarkable change from the observations and
-discoveries of centuries.</p>
-
-<p>Modern and quite recent writers have advanced nearly the
-same doctrines, embracing, however, the principal sources of
-insalubrity&mdash;the malarious and miasmatic influences; and have assigned
-as the cause of epidemics, especially that of Cholera, a peculiar
-constitution of the atmosphere, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page12"></a>[p.12]</span> and certain predisposing
-causes combining with each other, so that an association or union of
-these two independent and individual causes are necessary and essential
-to the production of the disease.</p>
-
-<p>Eminent scholars and pathologists have, during the century last past,
-patiently searched for its final cause, without arriving at any better,
-wiser, or more satisfactory conclusion than the earlier writers, who
-regarded it a poison, commingled with the food they ate, the water they
-drank, and the air they breathed. The modern writers, according to the
-more popular views, almost universally adopt the hypothesis that the
-remote or final cause of the Cholera is a specific poison; for at no
-period has a person in good health in this or any other country been
-known in a few minutes to be shriveled up, his face and extremities to
-turn purple, his whole body to become of an icy coldness, and with or
-without vomiting a peculiar fluid, like rice-water, to die in a few
-hours, except under the influence of poison. That this disease, so
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page13"></a>[p.13]</span> appalling and destructive in its effects, and so mysterious
-in its wanderings, should spread over countries in respect to climate,
-soil, geological formations, and as to the moral and physical habits of
-the population, so utterly opposite to those where it first originated,
-is only explicable on the hypothesis of its propagation on the
-principle of a specific disease-poison.</p>
-
-<p>How and in what manner it travels has not been satisfactorily
-determined. Whether independent of any and all human agency, or
-absolutely dependent on ordinary communication and intercourse of
-tribes, and peoples, and nations, is as yet unsettled. It is, however,
-a matter not of so much consequence as the fact that, in all its
-nomadic life, it retains unchanged its youthful disposition, vigor and
-energy. It seldom shows any inclination to associate, or coalesce, or
-even adopt the milder habits and manners of others.</p>
-
-<p>Perhaps some idea of its character may be obtained from a microscopic
-view of its birthplace and its surroundings. Whether <span class="pagenum"><a id="page14"></a>[p.14]</span> the
-locality of its irruption in 1629, or that of 1817, whence it spread
-over the greater part of the globe, be entitled to the unenviable
-distinction of fostering its gestation, concealing and protecting its
-birth, and nursing its infancy, is immaterial;&mdash;since the similarity
-of these localities strikingly illustrates its cause and ultimate
-development.</p>
-
-<p>On the north side of the island of Java, about 6° S. lat. and 107° E.
-long., near the mouth of the river Jacatra, is situated Batavia, in
-the midst of swamps and marshes, surrounded by trees and jungle,
-which prevent the exhalations from being carried off by a free
-circulation of the air, and render the town peculiarly obnoxious to
-marsh miasmata. Besides this, all the principal streets are traversed
-by canals, planted on each side with rows of trees, over which there
-are bridges at the end of almost every street. These canals are the
-common receptacles for all the filth of the town. In the dry season
-their stagnant and diminished waters emit a most intolerable stench,
-while <span class="pagenum"><a id="page15"></a>[p.15]</span> in the wet season they overflow their banks and leave
-a quantity of offensive slime. From these united causes, it is not
-surprising that Batavia has been considered the most unhealthy spot
-in the world, and has been designated the store-house of disease.
-According to Raynal, the number of sailors and soldiers alone who died
-in the hospitals averaged 1,400 annually for sixty years, and the total
-amount of deaths in twenty-two years exceeded a million of souls. The
-city was inclosed by a wall of coral rock, with a stream of water on
-each side within and without. Few Europeans, however, sleep within the
-town, as the night air is considered very baneful. The inhabitants,
-possibly, as an antidote against the noxious effluvia arising from
-the swamps and canals, continually burn aromatic woods and resins,
-and scatter about a profusion of odoriferous flowers, of which there
-are great abundance and variety. During the prosperity of the Dutch
-East India Company, Batavia obtained the title of Queen of the East,
-as the resources of all other districts were sacrificed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page16"></a>[p.16]</span> to
-its exclusive commerce. Here, in this noted locality, was the Cholera
-bred and reared in 1629, under circumstances of great significance,
-admirably adapted to convey some idea of its cause and character.</p>
-
-<p>A learned professor, speaking of the diseases of India, observes:
-"<span class="smcap">Cholera</span> is the most acute of acute diseases. It seems to
-have existed in Batavia as far back as 1629; and it has been known
-to prevail as an occasional epidemic in India at different years and
-places from 1774 to 1817. Since then it has been endemic, and is a
-disease whose germs are essentially maintained in, or upon the soil.
-It annually recurs at many of our large stations, commencing generally
-at the beginning of the hot season, but sometimes occurring in the
-rainy and cold season. Its greatest proclivity to propagation is
-amongst populations living in low, damp, crowded, and ill-ventilated
-situations, especially if the water supply is impure. Nearly all
-the diseases fatal in India are accompanied by profuse discharges,
-with which the air, water, linen, bedding, closets, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page17"></a>[p.17]</span> walls
-of hospitals, and barracks become more or less infected; so that the
-'Materies Morbi' come into contact with all the inmates of buildings
-where the disease prevails."</p>
-
-<p>Its origin, or reappearance in 1817, is not in any respect essentially
-different from its earlier development on the Jacatra. The River
-Ganges, in India, like the Nile in Egypt, flows for a long distance
-through a low, level country, which it annually inundates. Dividing its
-waters about 200 miles from the sea, the Delta of the Ganges commences
-and continues its variegated and checkered surface, till, approaching
-the borders of the sea, it presents a peculiar aspect, being composed
-of a labyrinth of creeks and rivers, called "The Sunderbunds," with
-numerous islands, covered with the profuse and rank vegetation called
-"jungle," affording haunts to numerous tigers and other beasts of prey.
-This large river, "a Deity of the Hindoo," is subject to an annual
-freshet, often rising to the height of 32 feet in the month of July;
-when all the lower parts of the country adjoining the Ganges, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page18"></a>[p.18]</span>
-as well as the Burrumpooter, are overflowed for a width of one hundred
-miles; nothing appearing but villages, trees, and sites of some places
-that have been deserted. Here in this vast pest-house, where every
-conceivable vegetable and animal substance is left upon the soil by
-the retiring inundation, exposed to the heat and dews of a tropical
-climate&mdash;where, too, noisome and infectious diseases have prevailed for
-centuries, the Epidemic Cholera is said to have arisen and acquired its
-strength and full development. A fit origin for a fatal and devastating
-pestilence.</p>
-
-<p>To this low, insalubrious, and festering locality, this vast
-pest-house, where so many noxious and noisome diseases are generated,
-and where so many epidemics have arisen and so often swept over the
-surrounding regions with most fatal and desolating effects, is ascribed
-the birthplace of the Epidemic Cholera of 1817. Here it is said to have
-first made its appearance at Jessore&mdash;a populous town in the centre
-of the Delta of the Ganges; whence attaining its growth <span class="pagenum"><a id="page19"></a>[p.19]</span> and
-power, it has extended its influence as from a common centre, and
-marked its progress with hecatombs of victims in the direction of
-almost every point of the compass.</p>
-
-<p>Here we may remark, that it is not our intention to travel over the
-whole ground embraced by the subject under consideration; but, on
-the contrary, to present in this treatise only a cursory view of a
-few prominent features which may interest and aid in the important
-object of deducing from the pathology and the varied phenomena of the
-Cholera some general principle of practice. For this, and to this,
-our labor and our investigations are directed. Availing ourselves of
-every source of information within our reach, and relying in part on
-the observations and experience of others, we shall aim to present
-such facts and arguments as will shed light upon the subject, and aid
-in the accomplishment of this desirable object. However difficult this
-may appear, it is nevertheless believed to be within the province of
-science and unbiased reason.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="pagenum"><a id="page20"></a>[p.20]</span> <span class="smcap">Section II.&mdash;Progress and Fatality.</span></h3>
-
-<p>The disease in 1817 appeared on the Delta of the Ganges, and gradually
-extending its influence, swept over various countries with terrible
-severity. Having here acquired its full development, and manifesting
-an indomitable determination to itinerate, it starts upon its lethean
-errand, and soon shows a capacity and power to overcome every obstacle
-opposed to its progress, and to pursue its course unchecked and even
-unretarded by any natural or artificial barrier. It soon traversed
-India, and in the succeeding season spread over adjacent countries,
-visiting in 1818 the Indian Peninsula, the Burmese Empire, the Kingdom
-of Aracan, and the Peninsula of Malacca. In 1819 it reached Sumatra,
-Singapore, and various other islands situated along the coast on either
-border of this vast peninsula.</p>
-
-<p>During the year 1820, pursuing steadily its progress eastward, it
-reached Tonquin, Southern China, Canton, the Philippine, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page21"></a>[p.21]</span>
-numerous other places and islands in that direction. In 1821 it visited
-Java&mdash;the place of its earlier nativity&mdash;Madura, Borneo, and many other
-places in the Indian Archipelago. During the years 1822, 1823 and 1824,
-it continued to spread over the vast and populous regions of Central
-and Northern China and the numerous islands upon the coast, and in 1827
-prevailed in Chinese Tartary, leaving few places in all these different
-countries on the continent, or even on the islands bordering on the
-eastern coast, unscathed by its terrible ravages and depopulating
-influence.</p>
-
-<p>During the same period, its progress westward has been uninterrupted,
-and attended with results no less remarkable. It has baffled all
-attempts to check or even retard its onward course, or mitigate its
-appalling effects. In July, 1821, it had reached Muscat in Arabia, and
-thence extended its influence to the populous cities and villages along
-the Persian Gulf. During the same season it appeared in Persia, and
-continued to ravage the principal cities <span class="pagenum"><a id="page22"></a>[p.22]</span> and towns of that
-empire for four successive years. At Bassorah and Bagdad it broke out
-in July, 1821, and thence extended its desolating influence westward
-to the Red and Mediterranean Seas, carrying off vast numbers of the
-inhabitants of the populous cities of Mesopotamia, Syria, and Judea.</p>
-
-<p>In 1822 it prevailed among the nomadic and Tartar tribes in Central
-Asia and in the northern Persian Provinces, and in 1823 broke out on
-the Georgian frontiers of Russia, at Orenburg on the River Ural, and
-at Astrachan on the Volga. Here its western course was apparently
-interrupted. There was, for a short period, an interval of complete
-immunity from its presence. Along the border of the Russian Provinces
-the disease had entirely disappeared, and seemed inclined to retrace
-its course and return to the home of its birth. But the fond
-anticipations of Europeans were disappointed; the destroyer was not to
-be arrested and turned back in his progress over the earth; his march
-was onward, his demands imperative.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page23"></a>[p.23]</span> Hence, in the month of June, 1830, the disease reappeared in
-a Persian province on the southern shore of the Caspian, and again at
-Astrachan, on the Volga, in July, where it prevailed with such unwonted
-violence that, before the close of August, more than 4,000 persons had
-died of it in the city, and 21,270 in the province. From its interval
-of repose, it would seem to have recuperated its strength and vigor for
-the lethean work awaiting its progress. Ascending the Volga, it reached
-Moscow, became prevalent there in September, and continued with great
-severity till February, 1831. Here it attacked, in the city, about
-9,000 persons, of whom more than one-half died. Continuing its advance,
-it reached Riga about the middle of May, and St. Petersburg on the 26th
-June.</p>
-
-<p>From Astrachan it also directed its course towards the northern coast
-of the Black Sea, and thence along the course of the rivers into
-the central parts of Russia. It reached Poland in January, 1831,
-accompanied the Russian army in its various marches and encampments
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page24"></a>[p.24]</span> during the subjugation of that country, and proved very
-destructive in Warsaw and many other places during April and May. It
-appeared at Dantzic in May, and in June at Lemburg, Cracow, and various
-other places and sections of country, extending through Gallicia,
-Hungary, and reaching Berlin and Hamburg in August and September, and
-Vienna about the same time.</p>
-
-<p>Smyrna was visited in September, and Constantinople soon afterwards. It
-is reported that the pestilence was conveyed by a caravan from Mecca
-to Cairo in August, 1831, some thousands having died on the road;
-and, by the middle of September, 10,400 Mohammedans, besides Jews and
-Christians, had died of it in this latter city.</p>
-
-<p>Passing from the western coast of the continent, on nearly the same
-parallels of latitude, it found its way over the Northern Sea to the
-British Isles, and made a lodgment, first, on the northeastern coast
-of England, in October, 1831, at Sunderland, situated in latitude 55°
-north, whence it <span class="pagenum"><a id="page25"></a>[p.25]</span> prevailed and extended its influence over
-this section, evincing the same malignant and lethean character it had
-manifested in its progress over the continent. Its course thus far has
-been marked with unparalleled fatality.</p>
-
-<p>It made its first appearance in Scotland, at Haddington, in December,
-1831, and at Edinburgh in January. In these and various other places it
-prevailed for some months, and, as warm weather came on, increased in
-severity, and carried off a large percentage of those attacked. After
-spreading thus over the northern section, and rioting for months in the
-more populous cities and towns, it made its appearance in London on
-the 14th February, 1832, where it found an abundance of material for
-recuperating its strength and multiplying its forces, and soon after
-spread over various other places in the United Kingdom, inflicting
-the most appalling bills of mortality. In short, its progress over
-this country has been attended with the same destructive influence
-and the same lamentable consequences as on <span class="pagenum"><a id="page26"></a>[p.26]</span> the continent. No
-change, modification, or softening of its disposition or character has
-arisen from its passage over the Northern Sea, nor from the refreshing
-influences of a purer atmosphere.</p>
-
-<p>It appeared in Calais on the 12th, and at Paris on the 26th of March,
-1832, where it continued in these and other cities and villages for
-some months with its accustomed severity. During the season it raged
-throughout the vast empire, and swept away an immense number of its
-inhabitants. During the succeeding years, 1833 and 1834, it traversed
-Spain, and proved very destructive in many of its larger cities and
-villages.</p>
-
-<p>In the mean time, continuing its course from the British Isles
-westward, unchecked by the prevailing western winds and the broad
-expanse of the Atlantic Ocean, over which it passes a distance of
-nearly three thousand miles, and makes its first appearance on the
-American continent at Quebec, Lower Canada, on the 8th June, 1832, and
-reaches Montreal on the 10th of the same <span class="pagenum"><a id="page27"></a>[p.27]</span> month. From these
-cities it rapidly spread in all directions, prevailing in the towns and
-villages on the St. Lawrence and its tributaries, and soon extended
-along the chain of lakes, dividing the Provinces from the United
-States, visiting the principal ports on either shore. It exhibited
-in all these places its peculiar epidemic character, and proved
-excessively violent and fatal wherever it appeared.</p>
-
-<p>Its first irruption in New York was on the 24th June, 1832, sixteen
-days after its appearance at Quebec, and at Albany, midway between
-the two former cities, on the 3d July. From New York it extended its
-influence to Flatbush and Gravesend, Long Island, where it appeared on
-the 5th July, and on the same day and date at the city of Philadelphia.
-It broke out at Rochester on the 12th and at Buffalo&mdash;July.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, while it was making its way westward along the great chain of
-lakes, towards the arteries of the Great West, it was, at the same
-time, steadily pursuing its uninterrupted course along the coast,
-visiting the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page28"></a>[p.28]</span> main cities, and spreading from these as from
-common centres over the intermediate towns and villages. In its
-progress it reached Baltimore on the 22d August, and the City of
-Washington on the 28th of the same month.</p>
-
-<p>Thence it continued its course to Richmond, Norfolk, Edenton, and
-various other cities along the Atlantic and Gulf coast.</p>
-
-<p>It appeared at New Orleans in the Autumn of 1832, during the existence
-of a severe epidemic of yellow fever, and apparently subsided on the
-disappearance of the fever. Sporadic cases, however, occurred during
-the Winter, and in the opening of Spring it broke out with unwonted
-vigor and severity, and thence spread, according to its accustomed
-laws of itineracy, along the rivers into the interior of the States
-bordering upon the Mississippi and the Gulf coast, and raged throughout
-Louisiana and Texas with unusual violence and fatality.</p>
-
-<p>In 1832, 1833, and 1834 it prevailed throughout the Mississippi Valley
-with great fatality, especially in the principal <span class="pagenum"><a id="page29"></a>[p.29]</span> cities,
-villages and towns situated upon its navigable waters. Here, after
-intervals of entire immunity from its presence, it occasionally
-reappeared in some of the larger cities with renewed vigor and power,
-and swept off vast numbers of the inhabitants. In no section of the
-States have greater numbers, compared with the whole population, fallen
-victims to it than in the fertile and sparsely settled prairies of the
-South and West.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, from the North, and at a later date from the South, extending
-its influence along the principal rivers into the interior, it swept
-over the States, prevailing in some places in the Valley of the
-Mississippi as late as 1836. In short, it reappeared in 1834 in many
-cities and places where it had before prevailed, and again spread over
-a considerable portion of the country with unprecedented fatality.</p>
-
-<p>In 1833, the disease appeared at Havana and Matanzas, and prevailed on
-the island for several months with great fatality, especially among the
-colored people. During <span class="pagenum"><a id="page30"></a>[p.30]</span> the same season it appeared in August
-at Tampico, Campeachy, Vera Cruz, and the city of Mexico, proving
-especially violent and destructive in these and other cities of the
-Republic. In Central America it is said to have attacked the army, and
-in a very short period to have swept away a very large proportion of
-its officers and men.</p>
-
-<p>Thus, it appears that the epidemic or Asiatic Cholera, from its first
-irruption on the northern coast, spread over the greater part of the
-North American Continent in the space of two years, and has several
-times reappeared in different sections in its peculiar malignant
-character, spreading on each occasion over a greater or less extent
-of territory with the same uniform and destructive influence. Neither
-time, nor science, nor professional skill has thus far appeared to
-soften its character, or mitigate its severity.</p>
-
-<p>When the disease had fully assumed its epidemic or malignant type in
-India, in 1817, its rate of mortality was everywhere in that vast
-territory excessively high.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page31"></a>[p.31]</span> According to the most reliable reports, the cases occurring
-in the earlier period of an irruption were generally fatal, few only
-surviving the attack; while of those occurring when the disease was
-on the decline, a greater proportion recovered. We read of numerous
-instances where one-third, one-half, two-thirds, and even nine-tenths
-of those seized with Cholera perished, and again of some places where
-one-fifth, one-fourth, and in some instances one-third of entire
-populations were cut off in a very short period by this disease. But
-without attempting to give the statistics of cholera in this part of
-the world, or even in Europe or America, we may present a few instances
-of mortality, going to show the great percentage of loss by this
-singular disease during its ravages from 1817 to 1837.</p>
-
-<p>In Siam, it is said 20,000 persons fell victims to it in twelve days.
-The inhabitants are remarkable for their uncleanly habits, and crowded,
-ill-ventilated tenements.</p>
-
-<p>In Sicily, 16,000 died of cholera in 1832, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page32"></a>[p.32]</span> at Catania; in
-Palermo, 40,000. These cities are represented as being filthy in the
-extreme, and the personal habits of the people so uncleanly, and the
-houses so crowded, that it is a matter of surprise the mortality was
-not greater.</p>
-
-<p>In Bassorah and Bagdad, situated in low, unhealthy localities, and
-exposed to a damp, insalubrious atmosphere, which, in the warmer
-season, is often essentially impregnated with miasmata and offensive
-exhalations from animal and vegetable decomposition, both within and
-without their inclosures, it is affirmed that more than one-third of
-their entire populations were carried off in less than one month.</p>
-
-<p>In the Province of Caucasus, out of 16,000 attacked by the disease,
-10,000 died. In Russia, out of 54,000 attacked in 1830, it is said more
-than 31,000 died.</p>
-
-<p>In Hungary, it is reported that the whole number affected by the
-disease was about 400,000, of whom more than one-half died.</p>
-
-<p>It is officially stated that the total number&mdash;the military
-excepted&mdash;of those affected <span class="pagenum"><a id="page33"></a>[p.33]</span> with cholera in France, from its
-first appearance at Calais, March 15, 1832, to January 1st, 1833, is
-230,000, and the deaths 95,000.</p>
-
-<p>In England, the whole number of cases of Cholera is reported to be
-49,594, and the number of deaths 14,807. In London there were 11,020
-cases, of which 5,274 were fatal. In Wales there were 1,436 cases, of
-which 498 proved fatal. In Ireland, from its first irruption in 1832
-to March, 1833, there had occurred 54,552 cases of cholera, of which
-21,171 were fatal.</p>
-
-<p>In Quebec, from June 9th to September 2d, 1832, there had occurred in
-that city alone no less than 5,783 cases of cholera, of which 2,218
-were fatal. In Montreal, from June 10th to September 21st, there were
-4,440 cases, and 1,904 deaths reported.</p>
-
-<p>In New York, from July 4th to August 28th, in 1832, there had occurred
-5,814 cases of cholera, and 2,935 deaths by the same disease. In
-Philadelphia, from July 4th to August 28th, 1832, there were reported
-2,314 cases of cholera, of which 935 were fatal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page34"></a>[p.34]</span> In many of our Southern and Western cities and villages the
-percentage of loss from the prevalence of cholera is considerably
-higher than the general average, compared with the data given above.
-The mortality varies materially in different localities, and, indeed,
-becomes very much augmented by the prevalence of those influences
-which particularly favor the vegetation, and are especially concerned
-in the production of zymotic diseases, whether in the lower or higher
-latitudes.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Section III.</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Causes&mdash;Propagation.</span></h3>
-
-<p>The remote or final cause is essentially of miasmatic origin, developed
-under certain atmospheric and terrestrial local conditions, not well
-defined or fully understood. In its nature and essence, it constitutes
-a peculiar disease-poison, which is now generally admitted to be, in
-one way or another, absorbed, and infects the blood, inducing a primary
-disease of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page35"></a>[p.35]</span> this vital fluid, and directly depressing and
-deranging the ganglionic system of nerves. To its general character,
-and the circumstances under which it is generated and in which it
-operates in producing the disease, we have alluded in speaking of its
-origin.</p>
-
-<p>The predisposing causes are as numerous as the varied influences
-which operate to depress the general health. The insalubrity of the
-atmosphere may be regarded as a general, and, perhaps, the most
-extensive predisposing cause. In this state, its vital element becomes
-diminished or impaired to such an extent as to render it incapable of
-sustaining the normal and healthy functions of the system in their
-most vigorous condition. Hence, the foul and noisome air of close,
-ill-ventilated apartments becomes very depressing and baneful; a direct
-and effective element, often, in constant operation in generating and
-producing the cholera, typhoid fever, or other deadly maladies. This
-is not unfrequently the case on board some of our emigrant ships,
-when hundreds of human <span class="pagenum"><a id="page36"></a>[p.36]</span> beings are stowed away between decks
-without the means of efficient ventilation, disinfection, or other mode
-of expelling the noxious principle. Though the germ of disease may be
-ever on board, it does not vegetate and come forth and rapidly acquire
-its activity, vigor and power, unless the localizing influence vivify,
-foster and nurture its development. This is fully confirmed by the
-recent arrival of two steamers with cholera on board.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>England</i>, and a few days later the <i>Virginia</i>, with crews and
-passengers all in perfect health, departing from a healthy port where
-no cases of cholera were known to exist, and after being out at sea six
-or eight days under the influence of a cool, invigorating atmosphere,
-were surprised by the sudden irruption of cholera on board. It breaks
-out among the steerage passengers who are crowded and packed together
-between decks like sheep for the slaughter, in a confined atmosphere,
-daily becoming more noisome, without the means of ventilation
-or disinfection. Can any sane man <span class="pagenum"><a id="page37"></a>[p.37]</span> say the disease&mdash;the
-cholera&mdash;was not here, on board these ships, generated and produced?</p>
-
-<p>This is also confirmed by the occurrence of an isolated case on
-Ninety-third Street, near Third Avenue, the first case in this city
-this season. Though the cholera exists at Quarantine, the patient had
-not been in any way exposed to the disease, except to the exhalations
-from the overflowing and drainage of a privy and the foul atmosphere
-arising from the cellar of her own tenement. On Monday, it is said, she
-partook of her dinner, feeling a little indisposed; at 4 <span class="smcap">P.M.</span>
-she called in her physician, and died the next morning, May 1st, at 11
-<span class="smcap">A.M.</span>, in a state of collapse.</p>
-
-<p>Take another instance: the second case in this city occurred in one
-of the tenement dwellings of the Sixth Ward, No. 117 Mulberry Street.
-The patient was a woman about thirty years of age, who had not been
-exposed, except to the noisome atmosphere of her own dwelling and its
-surroundings, which must be regarded, under the peculiar <span class="pagenum"><a id="page38"></a>[p.38]</span>
-circumstances, as a true, genuine cholera atmosphere. In these cases
-the evidence is conclusive that the disease was generated and produced
-within, and on these premises.</p>
-
-<p>The exhalations from low, moist, and marshy localities, from
-the offensive cesspools, water-closets, sinks, sewers, and the
-decomposition of animal and vegetable substances, from the refuse or
-garbage which so often befouls the sidewalks and gutters of streets,
-are all effective, predisposing causes, that directly facilitate the
-production of the cholera. Whatever tends to depress the vital powers,
-impair normal action, or relax in any degree the tone of the nervous
-system, favors the operation of the final cause. So, too, the low,
-underground, damp, unventilated apartments, the crowded and uncleanly
-tenement houses, in which multitudes of the poorer class live, in a
-confined, foul, and noisome atmosphere, not only favor, but actually
-invite, the active operation of the infecting agent.</p>
-
-<p>Habits of intemperance, profligacy, impurity, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page39"></a>[p.39]</span> and late hours,
-have a powerful influence to depress and prepare the system for an
-invasion of the disease in its most malignant form. In a neighborhood
-of this description, when the cholera in 1832 was raging in the
-adjacent city, from which it was separated by a very small creek, the
-uncleanly multitude escaped entirely, not a case occurring there at
-that time; but when, after an interval of several weeks, all danger
-seemed to have passed, and the people were rejoicing and congratulating
-themselves on their good fortune, the fearful disease suddenly appeared
-in their midst with greatly intensified effect, and in a very few days
-swept the place so clean that few were left to tell the sad story of
-its ravages.</p>
-
-<p>There are some other predisposing causes of no inconsiderable
-influence, which not only favor the operation of the infecting agent in
-the production of the disease, but even awaken its latent power, and
-stimulate its activity and development in the system, once exposed to
-its invasion. Among these, excessive fear of an attack, great anxiety
-and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page40"></a>[p.40]</span> depression of mind, constitutional debility, deranged
-condition of the digestive organs, accompanied with a relaxed state of
-the bowels, exhaustion arising from fatigue or disease, semi-starvation
-and unwholesome diet, neglect of personal and domestic cleanliness,
-irregular habits, and excesses of every description, are all direct
-incentives and stimulating agents in the production of the cholera. Any
-one of these may be sufficient to induce an attack; but when a number
-unite and act conjointly the danger is vastly greater, as the infecting
-agent or disease-poison becomes thereby more intensified.</p>
-
-<p>When the cholera first appeared in Europe and in this country in its
-epidemic form, the majority of medical men, as well as the people,
-believed it to be contagious, and to be propagated solely on this
-principle. But when the disease appeared in 1848 a decided change
-of opinion occurred, which led to a full discussion of the subject,
-without any definite result; and the great question as to its
-contagious character and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page41"></a>[p.41]</span> its mode of propagation remains still
-unsettled. The higher authorities, says an eminent author, concurred in
-the opinion of the Board of Health, "that the disease was not in any
-way contagious, and that no danger was incurred by attendance on the
-sick."</p>
-
-<p>A large body of evidence, however, has been exhibited, going to show
-that human intercourse has, at least, a share in the propagation of the
-disease, and that it, under some circumstances, is the most important,
-if not the sole means of effecting its diffusion. On the other hand, it
-is affirmed that though it may be communicated, in some cases, by the
-agency of human intercourse, it does not follow that the material cause
-spreads by true contagion, that is, by reproducing itself in the bodies
-of men, and there only.</p>
-
-<p>The disease may be carried by healthy persons in their clothing, in
-their ships, and in their caravans. That instances of this kind have
-occurred there can be no question, for numerous records present some
-undoubted <span class="pagenum"><a id="page42"></a>[p.42]</span> instances of the occasional communication of the
-cholera-poison through human intercourse; still it is no less certain
-that its general extension over the world cannot be accounted for on
-this principle alone. "Its propagation by this means seems to be the
-rare exception, its spread over the earth from other causes being the
-common rule."</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Hamlin, writing from Constantinople, in reference to the recent
-irruption and prevalence of the cholera in that city, observes, "The
-idea of contagion should be abandoned. All the missionaries who have
-been most with the most malignant cases, day after day, are fully
-convinced of the non-contagiousness of the cholera. The incipient
-attacks which all have suffered from are to be attributed to great
-fatigue, making the constitution liable to an attack."</p>
-
-<p>It is a very singular fact, that the medical profession in India,
-the birthplace and home of the cholera, almost universally reject
-the doctrine of contagion. If those most observant and familiar with
-its history, its <span class="pagenum"><a id="page43"></a>[p.43]</span> prevalence, and its annual recurrence as
-an endemic disease, which they are called to treat in all its varied
-phases, have discovered no contagious character by which it can be
-propagated, it may be safely inferred that it is not contagious in the
-common acceptation of the term, and that its extension over the earth
-is governed by some other principle, and that the predisposing and
-localized causes which are always in operation in India exercise no
-small share in its diffusion, in directing its course, aggravating its
-severity, increasing or diminishing its fatality, and determining the
-duration of its prevalence in particular localities. When its infecting
-germs have gained a lodgment in any city, section, or country, they may
-be stimulated and become exceedingly active in the production of the
-disease through these influences.</p>
-
-<p>As to its introduction into different countries, it is quite evident
-that the germ, or latent principle of the cholera-poison, exists in
-such a state as to be capable of transportation, and may in this way be
-diffused <span class="pagenum"><a id="page44"></a>[p.44]</span> to almost any extent when the localizing influences
-are sufficient to develop its energies.</p>
-
-<p>In this, as in all other zymotic diseases, some persons are more
-susceptible of an impression and more liable to an attack than others.
-Though no class can be considered exempt, yet there are some whose
-organization, or innate protective principle, seems to render them
-impervious to its influence. The cholera, however, is no respecter of
-persons, or rank, or condition. The anęmic and cowardly in all ranks
-and conditions are peculiarly liable, and are the most defenceless and
-unresisting when invaded. In Europe, the probable numbers attacked in
-that part of the world appear from statistics to be, in France, as 1
-in 300; Russia, as 1 in 20; Austria, as 1 in 30; Poland, as 1 in 32;
-Holland, as 1 in 144; Germany, as 1 in 700. "The circumstance of one
-attack by no means protected the individual from a second in the same,
-or any subsequent year; still a repetition of the disease in the same
-person in the same year was rare."</p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page45"></a>[p.45]</span> CHAPTER II.</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Section I.</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Pathology.</span></h3>
-
-
-<p>The doctrine now universally accepted and prevailing regarding its
-Pathology is, that a poison, virulent, subtle, and unknown, has been
-absorbed, and primarily infects the blood, so that, after a longer or
-a shorter time, a primary disease of this vital fluid is produced, and
-that the poison undergoes an enormous process of multiplication in
-the living body of the cholera patient, as the direct result of this
-morbific process so established, and that changes are induced in the
-function of respiration directly consequent on this alteration of the
-blood.</p>
-
-<p>This altered condition and rapid change in the life-sustaining
-principle of the blood, the loss of nerve-power, the impaired
-circulation and tendency to congestion, are the proper and
-distinguishing features of the disease; and the term "Algide," first
-used by the French Pathologists, very happily <span class="pagenum"><a id="page46"></a>[p.46]</span> describes one
-of the most remarkable and constant symptoms, namely, the diminution
-of animal heat. The loss of temperature and its consequent effects
-upon the circulation, depressing and prostrating the nervous power,
-impairing and paralyzing the respiratory organs, suspending the
-functions of the liver and kidneys, enfeebling the action of the heart,
-and causing the capillary vessels of the mucous tissues to expand and
-pour off the serous fluid from the blood and every muscle and tissue of
-the system, with great rapidity, essentially constitute the phenomena
-of the Cholera. The constantly increasing augmentation of the poison
-and its intensified effects measure the malignity, the violence, and
-the rapidity of the disease.</p>
-
-<p>It is this multiplication, and the disturbance which attaches to it,
-that in each case constitutes the disease and destroys life. Of this
-fact the circumstantial evidence is abundant and conclusive, and may
-account in part for the violence of the disease in its first irruption
-in any particular locality. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page47"></a>[p.47]</span> The vomiting, purging, and cramps
-are now generally considered as secondary and non-essential phenomena,
-for numerous cases of cholera have occurred in every section where it
-has prevailed in its more violent and malignant form without exhibiting
-these symptoms. The poison was so potent, and its progress so rapid,
-that life was extinguished in a very short time. In its first irruption
-at Muscat, cases are reported in which only ten minutes elapsed from
-the first apparent seizure before life was extinct. Dr. Milroy,
-speaking of the violence and rapidity of the disease as it occurred in
-1817, and again in 1845 and '6, at Kurrachee, observes, that "within
-little more than five minutes hale and hearty men were seized, cramped,
-collapsed, and dead." Instances of death taking place in two or three
-hours are extremely common. When it broke out at Teheran, in May, 1846,
-Dr. Milroy observes, that "those who were attacked dropped suddenly
-down in a state of lethargy, and at the end of two or three hours
-expired, without any convulsions or <span class="pagenum"><a id="page48"></a>[p.48]</span> vomitings, but from a
-complete stagnation of the blood." In many places during its prevalence
-in 1832, and subsequently in 1834, and in 1848 and '9, the rapid fatal
-character of the earlier cases was observed and reported as the most
-severe and hopeless. In various cities and villages in our own country,
-cases of this description were not unfrequent. In all these the
-destructive nature and rapid process of the disease was so depressing
-and overwhelming as to prevent any effort of the "vis naturę" to resist
-its progress.</p>
-
-<p>Hence, from the autopsy of those who have fallen victims to its baneful
-influence in the first stage, or within forty-eight hours of the
-attack, no alteration of structure in any organ or tissue has been
-discovered. But in those cases where death has occurred at a later
-period, some lesions and slight changes in the appearance of some
-tissues have been traced. The more important of these, illustrative
-of the characteristic effects of the disease, are, in brief, the
-following:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page49"></a>[p.49]</span> The follicular structure of the intestinal canal has been
-found slightly swollen, and the intestine partially filled with a
-turbid, inodorous, semi-diaphanous fluid, resembling thin starch,
-or rice-water, and is supposed to be the remains of that peculiar
-secretion which had taken place during life. This fluid is sometimes
-acid, and sometimes alkaline. In the small intestines it is found in an
-unmixed condition. It consists of two liquids of different consistency;
-the one thick, the other thin. The latter constitutes the rice-water
-stools, and may be passed off without admixture with the thicker
-substance. The colon has been found generally much contracted, and the
-mucous membrane and the sub-mucous cellular tissue of the digestive
-canal presenting evident marks of congestion, in some cases approaching
-to a sub-inflammatory state, generally in spots or patches of various
-sizes, the color of these varying from a very dark congestion to a
-more roseate hue. The glands of Brunner and Peyer, as well as the
-solitary glands, are greatly enlarged. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page50"></a>[p.50]</span> The stomach and bowels
-are frequently of a paler color than natural, both in their inner and
-outer surfaces. The liver, the spleen, and the kidneys have been found
-engorged with blood. The urinary bladder is always contracted, and
-empty. The gall-ducts are sometimes contracted, at other times not.
-The vena porta and all the other abdominal veins are loaded with black
-blood, resembling tar in its color and consistency. The membranes of
-the brain and cord are generally found congested, and the substance of
-the brain more or less dotted with small points or specks of blood than
-usual.</p>
-
-<p>"The most common appearances in the lungs," says an eminent
-pathologist, "are the presence of blood in the large vessels, chiefly
-or solely; the collapse and the deficient crepitation arising from
-the more or less complete absence of air and blood, and from the
-approximation of the molecular parts of the pulmonary substance.
-In other cases there is more blood in the minute structure, a
-corresponding dark color of the lung, and a variable amount of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page51"></a>[p.51]</span>
-frothy serum. The right side of the heart and the pulmonary arteries
-were generally filled, and in some cases distended with blood; the left
-side and aorta were generally empty, or contained only a very small
-quantity of dark blood; the left side evidently had received little or
-no blood, but had continued to contract, in some cases even violently,
-on the last drop of blood which had entered it."</p>
-
-<p>Such are some of the prominent appearances which the body has presented
-when the patient has died in the first, or pulseless stage of the
-disease. But in other cases, where the premonitory stage has been
-definitely marked, and attended with diarrh&oelig;a or other depressing
-disorder affecting the alimentary canal, and where the patient has
-continued under the influence of the disease for a longer period, and
-has passed through the usual successive stages of it, other additional
-appearances have been noticed, which are here omitted, as they are of
-a secondary importance, and belong especially to the more protracted
-cases.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page52"></a>[p.52]</span> The <i>post-mortem</i> appearances, the phenomena of the disease,
-the Algide, or diminished animal heat, and the loss of nervous power,
-all tend to show an obstructed circulation and consequent embarrassment
-of respiration resulting in the non-aeration and non-oxydation of the
-blood, from which a long train of secondary and non-essential symptoms
-arise. For it is affirmed that the mechanical part of respiration
-remains in a good degree perfect, and that the heart evidently
-continues to beat in many cases till stopped by the want of blood in
-the left side and by its accumulation in the right side. Hence, for the
-cause of this arrest of the circulation of the blood through the lungs,
-we are forced to look to the condition of the blood itself, and the
-deranged action of the ganglionic nerves.</p>
-
-<p>Attempts have been made to trace out from analysis the exact chemical
-changes in the order of their occurrence which attend the period of
-transudation from the blood into the intestinal canal. "The most
-prominent phenomena of cholera," says Dr. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page53"></a>[p.53]</span> Aiken, "during this
-period of transudation, consists in separation of the water and of the
-salts of the intercellular fluid (of the blood) through the mucous
-membrane of the intestinal canal, and the retention in the blood of an
-important excess of albumen and of blood-cells, with apparently less,
-but in reality with great diminution of the salts and fibrin."</p>
-
-<p>"The inorganic constituents," continues the same author, "if compared
-to the water, are during the first four hours increased, because at
-this time the water is passing off with great rapidity; afterwards, as
-the salts pass off, the disproportion is lessened, and after eighteen
-hours or so, the proportion of salts is greatly diminished, and, if
-compared with the organic constituents, the diminution is enormous.
-With respect to the individual salts, there is in the blood a relative
-preponderance of phosphates over chlorides, and of potash salts over
-soda salts. By the end of eighteen hours or so, the blood-corpuscles
-are left in a most abnormal condition; the great loss of water
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page54"></a>[p.54]</span> and of salts, especially of the chloride of potassium&mdash;a
-most important constituent of the blood-cells&mdash;at once leads to the
-conclusion that their functions must have been greatly impaired.
-Accordingly, Dr. Schmidt found that the amount of oxygen contained
-in them was lessened by one-half." Dr. Robertson affirms that the
-"fibrin of the blood is usually in large amount and coagulable with
-great firmness;" while Dr. Parkes, speaking of the same condition of
-the blood, and relying on the accuracy of his analysis, observes, "The
-presence of fibrin in the blood was not indicated by any coagulation
-either in or out of the body; and whether coagulated or not, the
-blood has usually a dark color; but it generally acquired an arterial
-tint when brought into contact with the air in thin layers." * * *
-"When we remember the great share taken by the blood-globules in the
-respiratory and heat-furnishing processes, it is scarcely possible
-to avoid concluding that their loss of salts is connected with the
-characteristic cyanosis and lowered temperature <span class="pagenum"><a id="page55"></a>[p.55]</span> in cholera."
-"The diarrh&oelig;a coincides with the first chemical changes in the
-blood&mdash;the transudation of some of the constituents of the serum."
-Hence the phenomena of the disease may thus be traced from this process
-as the starting-point. All other chemical changes in the blood, and the
-most marked symptoms, such as the abnormal respiratory process, follow
-as a matter of course. Such is the theory of the nature of cholera, now
-advanced and sustained by the most eminent pathologists, which embraces
-the doctrine previously advanced that the blood is the primary seat of
-the disease, and becomes contaminated by the absorption of a specific
-poison.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Section II.</span>&mdash;<span class="smcap">Phenomena, or Symptoms.</span></h3>
-
-<p>The attack of this fearful disease is most generally sudden, the
-patient being at the time apparently unconscious of any depressing
-influence, or derangement of the system. It is not unfrequent, however,
-that some <span class="pagenum"><a id="page56"></a>[p.56]</span> slight irregularity of the bowels, loss of animation
-and general vigor, or other apparently trifling indisposition,
-have preceded it. In some instances there are definite and decided
-premonitory symptoms which continue for a longer or shorter time
-prior to the attack, commencing usually with a pallor or collapse of
-the countenance, depression of spirits, slight pain in the forehead,
-noise in the ears, occasional or transient turns of vertigo, slight
-nausea, heat and pain in the epigastrium, oppression at the chest,
-with frequent sighing, nervous agitation, some loss of muscular power,
-general uneasiness, flatulence, with slight diarrh&oelig;a, sickness
-at the stomach, occasional twinges of the nerves, or cramps in the
-extremities, oppressed, small, feeble, and sometimes intermitting
-pulse, coldness, clamminess, or humidity of the surface, and general
-lethargy. Such are some of the premonitory symptoms which more
-frequently occur in the lower latitudes, where the general vigor
-becomes depressed by the long-continued and excessive heat of the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page57"></a>[p.57]</span> climate. Their duration, whenever any of them do occur, varies
-materially; sometimes one, two, or three days&mdash;sometimes longer but not
-often.</p>
-
-<p>According to the observations and descriptions given by those who have
-had the best opportunities for becoming familiar with all its various
-phases, the symptoms attending its invasion and general course are
-too distinctly marked to be ever mistaken for any other disease. In
-the minds of many who have been called to witness the developments of
-cholera, they undoubtedly exist with such distinctness and vividness
-as to render the most labored and accurate description tame. In this
-treatise, however, a description of the leading and more prominent
-phenomena will be given, and so far as a general principle of practice
-is concerned, this might be very appropriately limited to its first or
-cold stage.</p>
-
-<p>The commencement of the disease is often so insidious as to pass
-unnoticed till the system is fully prepared for the sudden and violent
-attack. The slight, painless diarrh&oelig;a, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page58"></a>[p.58]</span> depression of the
-nervous power, and occasional vertigo may all pass unheeded, and the
-patient be apparently in perfect health. He may retire to rest entirely
-unconscious of approaching danger, and after enjoying a sound and
-undisturbed sleep for hours, be, on awakening from his slumbers, seized
-with a remarkable sickness, perhaps vomiting, accompanied with most
-remarkable and profuse discharges from the bowels. These inordinate
-evacuations are usually attended with severe pains, extending down the
-thighs, and a sense of complete and almost perfect exhaustion. The
-physical powers and vital energies are immediately prostrated. The
-temperature rapidly sinks below the normal standard&mdash;the body becomes
-benumbed with an icy coldness&mdash;the skin becomes shriveled up, and
-almost insensible to hot and stimulating fomentations&mdash;the breath,
-too, as it comes from the lungs, appears to partake of the same icy
-coldness, indicating the rapid elimination of heat, or caloric, from
-the body. The patient complains of being greatly oppressed, throws
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page59"></a>[p.59]</span> off his clothing&mdash;calls for cold water, which he eagerly and
-copiously drinks; though it afford no relief to his insatiate thirst,
-it ought not to be withheld. This peculiar icy coldness and loss
-of temperature is also further shown by the livid, blue, or purple
-appearance of the hands and feet, extending sometimes over the greater
-part of the body. The skin becomes, even in a few minutes after the
-seizure, not only shriveled up, but often curiously wrinkled, as
-in extreme old age. Severe spasms in the fingers, toes, legs, and
-abdomen, cause the patient to groan and writhe under their influence,
-and to call on his attendants, if fortunate enough to have any around
-him, for aid and relief from his agonies. As the disease proceeds,
-there may be noticed a peculiar, sharp and contracted state of the
-features, and a wild and terrified expression of the countenance,
-arising from the impression and fearful apprehension of rapidly
-approaching dissolution. These important changes may all take place
-in a very few minutes. To these most obvious <span class="pagenum"><a id="page60"></a>[p.60]</span> and singular
-symptoms there is superadded constant vomiting&mdash;incessant purging&mdash;low,
-feeble pulse, though occasionally natural and sometimes rapid, yet
-in some instances, from the very first moment of attack, cannot be
-discovered either in the large superficial arteries or at the wrist.
-The voice is altered, becomes low, feeble, unnatural in tone, or sinks
-even to a whisper. Respiration becomes quick, irregular, laborious
-and imperfect. The inspiratory act being performed with difficulty,
-and expiration being quick and convulsive. The flow of bile into
-the intestines is suspended, the urinary secretion and micturition
-entirely suppressed. Almost the only organ which seems to preserve
-in any good degree its powers is the brain&mdash;the mental faculties in
-some cases being retained till the close of life;&mdash;in other cases
-feeble, weak, and much impaired. On the accession of the spasms, the
-vomiting&mdash;and the purging&mdash;the disease may be considered as being fully
-developed, and the crisis at hand, which, in a few hours, must decide
-the fate of the patient. Its <span class="pagenum"><a id="page61"></a>[p.61]</span> progress is now rapid, and must
-speedily terminate either favorably or unfavorably. If the result be
-unfavorable, the patient may die with all these symptoms distinctly
-and strongly marked. If the termination, however, be favorable, these
-violent symptoms soon yield, and seem to be materially relieved;
-yet, though these indications favor the return of normal power&mdash;the
-weakness, the cessation of the pulse, the coldness and blueness of the
-surface, and the sepulchral expression of the countenance, clearly show
-that a few hours must close the scene. To many death thus often comes
-calmly and quietly, without any struggle to mark the precise time of
-this life's departure.</p>
-
-<p>"If the patient," says an eminent author, "should happily survive
-the cold stage, the disease may terminate by a rapid recovery, or it
-may pass into the second or febrile stage." The former is the more
-usual course in India, the latter in Europe. The first symptom of
-returning health is shown by the patient falling into a sleep of
-unusual soundness, during which the respiration becomes <span class="pagenum"><a id="page62"></a>[p.62]</span> light
-and easy, the pulse freer, while a gentle, warm perspiration bedews
-the whole body. This grateful pause in the disease appears to be the
-result of the returning powers of life, uninfluenced by medicine, for
-it often occurs where none has been given. After this balmy slumber the
-patient awakes refreshed, and often recovers so rapidly, that in the
-natives of India it almost resembles a restoration after syncope. In
-all the Presidencies, indeed, and especially in Bengal, the recovery
-of the European has, in general, been followed by a stage of reaction,
-usually slight, but in some cases assuming the form of the bilious
-remittent fever of the country, which has occasionally terminated
-fatally. In most cases, however, the reaction is more considerable, and
-the patient, in a few hours after the subsidence of the cold stage,
-labors under a severe form of fever, resembling the typhoid. During
-the first few hours after the febrile reaction commences the tongue is
-white, but it quickly becomes brown and dry, while black sordes incrust
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page63"></a>[p.63]</span> the teeth and lips. The eye becomes deeply injected and red,
-the cheek pale or flushed, the pulse rapid, and the temperature of the
-body a little above the natural standard. The patient, either delirious
-or comatose, then lies in a state resembling the last stage of the
-severest typhoid fever of this country. This struggle usually lasts
-from four to eight days, when the symptoms either gradually yield, or
-death ensues. In a few mild cases the fever assumes an intermittent
-type, or sometimes a quotidian, sometimes a tertian form: all these
-cases usually recover. Such is, in brief, a summary of the more
-important symptoms of the Epidemic, or Asiatic Cholera, especially in
-its earlier or cold stage. The phenomena, especially developed in, and
-belonging to, the stage of reaction, being of minor importance, they
-have received only a very brief consideration; sufficient, however, to
-show the general character and tendency of the disease in this stage of
-its progress and termination.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page64"></a>[p.64]</span> CHAPTER III.</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Section I.&mdash;Unsuccessful Modes of Treatment&mdash;Venous Transfusion
-Explained.</span></h3>
-
-
-<p>In this discussion we shall avail ourselves of the researches and
-investigations of eminent Professors, whose observations, experience,
-and position give their views the highest authority. The latest and
-most deserving record on this subject is from the pen of Professor
-Aiken, of Edinburgh, who observes, "There are few diseases for the cure
-of which so many different remedies and modes of treatment have been
-employed as in Cholera, and, unfortunately, without our discovering an
-antidote to the poison. In Moscow it is said that the mortality was
-not greater among the destitute of medical aid than among those who
-had every care and attention shown them. It may be fairly <span class="pagenum"><a id="page65"></a>[p.65]</span>
-inferred, therefore, that in the severer forms of the disease, the
-action of this poison is so potent as to render the constitution
-insensible to the influence of our most powerful remedial agents. When,
-however, the disease is mild, or on the decline, much may be done by
-obviating symptoms to promote the recovery of the patient."</p>
-
-<p>"The heroic remedies that have been employed in Cholera are bleeding,
-and calomel and opium, either separately or conjointly. With respect
-to bleeding, it may be stated, that in every country the patients
-bore bleeding badly in any stage, and that the practice in Europe was
-at length limited to a few leeches occasionally to the head. As to
-calomel, that medicine was used to the greater part of an ounce in
-the twenty-four hours, but with so little success that many patients
-have been seized and have died under the full influence of mercury.
-On the appearance of cholera in Europe, opium was administered in the
-doses recommended by the Indian practitioners to the greater part even
-of an ounce of laudanum; but it <span class="pagenum"><a id="page66"></a>[p.66]</span> was soon seen that in the
-cold stage it was inefficient in controlling the vomiting or purging;
-that it did not allay the spasms, and, moreover, hardly produced any
-narcotic effect. The action of the accumulated doses of opium, however,
-though suspended during the cold stage, was often fully developed in
-the last stage, and occasioned so much affection of the head that
-most practitioners either abandoned its use or limited it to a mere
-fractional dose of that usually given in India, namely, from three to
-twelve minims of the tincture of opium, or half a grain to a grain of
-solid opium every four or six hours."</p>
-
-<p>Let us now turn to a paper by the justly celebrated Professor Maclean,
-whose observations and experiences have been more extensive than
-perhaps those of any other professional gentleman either in Europe or
-America. Unlike many of his brethren, he holds on this subject the
-safer doctrines of practice, and very frankly and earnestly expresses
-the same in the following language: "Opium in cholera should be
-given <span class="pagenum"><a id="page67"></a>[p.67]</span> only in the premonitory diarrh&oelig;a. At this stage,
-in combination with a stimulant, it is of the highest value. If
-persevered in, particularly in the strong doses (justly reprobated),
-it is a dangerous remedy, inducing fatal narcotism, or, at the least,
-interfering with the functions of the kidneys, and so leading directly
-to uręmic poisoning."</p>
-
-<p>"Urgent thirst is one of the most distressing symptoms in cholera;
-there is incessant craving for cold water, doubtless instinctive, to
-correct the inspissated condition of the blood, due to the rapid escape
-of the liquor sanguinis. It was formerly the practice to withhold
-water&mdash;a practice as cruel as it is mischievous. Water in abundance,
-pure and cold, should be given to the patient, and he should be
-encouraged to drink it, even should a large portion of it be rejected
-by the stomach; and when the purging has ceased, some may, with much
-advantage, be thrown into the bowel from time to time.</p>
-
-<p>In the stage of reaction, the fever may be moderated by cold sponging,
-or by the wet <span class="pagenum"><a id="page68"></a>[p.68]</span> sheet; the secretion of urine may be promoted by
-dry cupping over the loins by the use of chlorate of potash, and the
-like. But suppression of this secretion is most to be dreaded where
-opium has been too freely used in the treatment. In men of intemperate
-habits, we often see, during the stage of reaction, obstinate vomiting
-of thick, tenacious, green, paint-looking matter, probably bile
-pigment, acted on by some acid in the stomach or alimentary canal.
-It is a symptom of evil omen, and often goes on uncontrolled until
-the patient dies exhausted, and this although all other symptoms may
-promise a favorable issue. I have known it last for a week, resisting
-all remedies, and proving fatal when the urinary secretion had been
-restored and all cerebral symptoms had subsided. Alkalies in the
-effervescing form, free stimulation of the surface, and chloroform
-in small doses offer the best hope of relief. The patient should be
-nourished more by the bowel than the stomach when vomiting is present.
-Ice should be <span class="pagenum"><a id="page69"></a>[p.69]</span> not only to dissolve in the mouth, but to
-swallow in pieces of convenient size."</p>
-
-<p>"Another heroic plan," says Dr. Aiken, "peculiar, perhaps, to this
-country, which was practiced when the inefficiency of medicines was
-generally admitted, was an injection of a solution of half an ounce
-of muriate of soda, and four scruples of sesquicarbonate of soda in
-ten pints of water, of a temperature varying from 105 to 120 Fah.,
-into the veins of the suffering patient. The solution was injected
-slowly; half an hour being spent in the gradual introduction of the
-ten pints, and the immediate effects of this treatment were very
-striking. The good effects were rapid in proportion to the heat of the
-solution, but a higher temperature than what is stated could not be
-borne. After the introduction of a few ounces, the pulse, which had
-ceased to be felt at the wrist, became perceptible, and the heat of
-the body returned. By the time three or four pints had been injected
-the pulse was good, the cramps had ceased, the body, that could not
-be heated, had become <span class="pagenum"><a id="page70"></a>[p.70]</span> warm, and instead of cold exudation on
-the surface, there was a general moisture; the voice, before hoarse
-and almost extinct, was now natural, the hollowness of the eye, the
-shrunken state of the features, the leaden hue of the face and body had
-disappeared, the expression had become animated, the mind cheerful, the
-restlessness and uneasy feelings had vanished, the vertigo and noises
-of the ear, the sense of oppression at the precordia had given way to
-comfortable feelings; the thirst, however urgent before the operation,
-was assuaged, and the secretion of urine restored, though by no means
-constantly so. But these promising appearances were not lasting; the
-vomiting continued, the evacuations became more profuse, and the
-patient soon relapsed into his former state, from which he might again
-be aroused by a repetition of the injections; but the amendment was
-transient, and the fatal period not long deferred. Of 156 patients thus
-treated at Drummond Street Hospital, Edinburgh, under the direction
-of Dr. Macintosh, only <span class="pagenum"><a id="page71"></a>[p.71]</span> 25 recovered; a lamentably small
-proportion; and, small as it is, it seems doubtful if the recoveries
-were final or complete."</p>
-
-<hr/>
-
-<p>But let us turn to another page, whose beauty is especially marred by
-unreasonable expedients: "The warm bath," says the writer, "was at
-first tried, but discontinued from the uncontrollable nature of the
-vomiting and purging, and the oppressive sensation of heat it produced
-on the patient's feelings. Mr. Dalton's vapor bath and Turkish baths in
-the Hospital at Scutari have been used, but without benefit, and to the
-disappointment of the hopes which had been entertained of them."</p>
-
-<p>"Other methods of restoring warmth were had recourse to, such as
-frictions with the hand or by the flesh-brush, or rubbing the body with
-some strong stimulant embrocation, compounded of garlic, capsicum,
-camphor, cantharides, or other powerful irritants. Mustard poultices
-also were often applied to the feet and abdomen, blisters with or
-without an addition of oil of turpentine, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page72"></a>[p.72]</span> the part having been
-previously rubbed with hot sand; and in cases supposed to be urgent,
-the mineral acids, and even boiling water, were employed for the
-purpose of producing instant vesication."</p>
-
-<p>"And, again, we read of those who tried to stimulate the waning powers
-of life by galvanism, acupuncture of the heart, issues, setons, moxas,
-actual cautery along the spine, and, lastly, by small pieces of linen
-dipped in alcohol distributed over the body and then set fire to!!!"
-Such are some of the means which have been used in the treatment and
-cure of cholera.</p>
-
-<p>"The failure of such powerful means at length caused most practitioners
-to confine themselves to checking the diarrh&oelig;a, which so frequently
-precedes cholera, and subsequently, to obviating symptoms as they
-arose," and for this purpose, returned to and adopted a very simple
-stimulating mixture, recommended by the Board of Health:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="60%"/>
- <col width="32%"/>
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Pulveris Aromat.,</td>
- <td>&#658; iij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Tinc. Catechu,</td>
- <td>" x.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;<span class="pagenum"><a id="page73"></a>[p.73]</span></td>
- <td>Tinc. Cardamom, C.,</td>
- <td>" vj.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Tinc. Opii,</td>
- <td>" j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Mixt. Cretę Preparat.,</td>
- <td>&#8485; xx.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">M.&mdash;&mdash;S., j &#8485;, as necessary.</td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>Tinc. Kino, or the decoctum Hęmatoxyli, were sometimes added.</p>
-
-<p>These remedies, it is said, frequently arrested the attack altogether.
-If, however, the disease proceeded and the cold stage of cholera
-formed, the same remedies were prescribed in an effervescing draught.
-"To promote reaction in cholera and diarrh&oelig;a, the following formula
-has met with most universal approval in this country and in India. So
-highly is it valued, indeed, that it is ordered to be always in store,
-and in readiness in the <i>Medical Field Companion</i> of the army when on
-the march:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="5%"/>
- <col width="5%"/>
- <col width="32%"/>
-</colgroup>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Ol. Anisi,</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="bortop1 borright1 borbot1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="6">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="3">&#257;&#257;. &#658; ss.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="5">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Ol. Cajeput,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Ol. Juniper,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Ęther,</td>
- <td rowspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&#8485; ss.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Liquor Acid. Haleri,<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[I]</a></td>
- <td>&#658; ss.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Tinc. Cinnam.,</td>
- <td>&#8485; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page74"></a>[p.74]</span> M.&mdash;&mdash;S.: ten drops every fifteen minutes, in a table-spoonful
-of water. An opiate may be given with the first and second dose, but
-should not be continued."</p>
-
-<p>The learned author to whom we have referred, after detailing some of
-the various expedients employed in the treatment and cure of cholera,
-sums up the whole under the common term&mdash;failure&mdash;and, in effect,
-declares the most powerful remedial agents ineffective and useless in
-controlling and subduing this disease.</p>
-
-<p>This declaration is made in reference to the general result of the
-remedies and the various expedients adopted mainly by one class of
-physicians, to which special reference has been made. It is therefore
-partial, and confined solely to what is erroneously termed the regular
-practice. In declaring all remedial agents a failure, does not the
-author himself commit a greater failure in omitting to survey the whole
-subject of treatment, and to trace out and to show from the application
-of the pathology of the disease the probable cause of such failure?</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page75"></a>[p.75]</span> However formidable this disease may appear, on account of
-its rapidity and its firm, unyielding grasp upon the vital powers,
-the forbidding and almost hopeless prospect of relief, and the
-lamentable results which have attended some modes of treatment, it
-seems particularly unfortunate for the profession that there should
-have been a disposition on the part of this learned author to abandon
-all remedial agents as comparatively useless, without a more thorough
-investigation into the cause of failure. On this point no effort or
-inquiry even is made. This is the more remarkable and surprising after
-dwelling at length on the pathology of the disease. It would seem as if
-all the light and science derived from this source for nearly half a
-century had been overlooked, or the pathology of the disease, from some
-cause not satisfactorily explained, had been deemed unworthy at least
-in this instance to dictate the course of treatment. This should govern
-in cases of cholera as in all other forms of disease, or else all our
-efforts and remedies will prove <span class="pagenum"><a id="page76"></a>[p.76]</span> abortive. Now, had the doctor
-carefully investigated the various modes of treatment and compared
-the results of each, he might have come to a different conclusion.
-But, being confined and limited in his investigations, he is unable
-to discover anything reliable or worthy his commendation, except the
-formulas above and the recommendation of Dr. Maclean. Among all the
-remedies and expedients named, there is only one tending to fulfil,
-the indications required, and that one, though prompt and magical in
-its effects, has been unequivocally condemned, without looking beyond
-the transient result for any light it might shed upon the subject. How
-it should have escaped his notice and passed so long unobserved by the
-numerous professional gentlemen who had often witnessed the effect, and
-were anxiously searching for light and the means of affording relief to
-the suffering patient, is a most singular circumstance which can only
-be accounted for on the principle that they all were anticipating some
-strange phenomenon, or development <span class="pagenum"><a id="page77"></a>[p.77]</span> of cure as mysterious as
-the disease itself, which led them to overlook the simple and effective
-means of relief so clearly represented and shown in their numerous
-experiments for something more heroic and powerful than as yet the
-imagination ever conceived.</p>
-
-<p>If we trace the action of calomel, the use of opium, the effect of
-cupping, bleeding, blistering, etc., etc., we shall obtain no very
-desirable information; nothing valuable tending to indicate a correct
-principle of practice. If we go still further, and examine the tendency
-and effects of the various baths exhibited at Scutari, the use of the
-flesh-brush, the bare hand, the heated sand, the embrocations, the
-turpentine and other irritants, the boiling water, or the burning
-alcohol, skinning and cooking the patient alive, we shall be shocked
-at the enormous cruelty and barbarity that have been pursued, and
-turn from the repulsive exhibition, without discovering one ray of
-light to guide us in the right direction. Disappointed and baffled
-in our inquiries, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page78"></a>[p.78]</span> shall we here abandon our investigations
-and dismiss the whole subject, because our course is involved in
-difficulties? Would intelligence and reason justify the neglect to
-improve the means at command? We think not; but rather induce us to
-advance in search of truth if the elements of success are not quite
-exhausted. Let us be encouraged and stimulated to untiring perseverance
-so long as there remains any experiment untraced and uninvestigated
-in its bearing upon the direct action of the disease. Had Dr. Aiken,
-or those other eminent surgeons who took part in those numberless
-experiments, instituted on the Continent and in England, especially
-those who initiated the process of injecting into the veins a solution
-of soda raised to a temperature from 105° to 120° Fahr., continued
-their investigations patiently and assiduously, they might probably
-have discovered long ago the correct theory of practice for the
-treatment and cure of cholera.</p>
-
-<p>But they failed to see, or, if they saw at <span class="pagenum"><a id="page79"></a>[p.79]</span> all, rejected
-the feeble ray of light struck out by the experiments in which they
-had themselves participated, and like the celebrated Dr. Hunter,
-who refused to listen to the discoveries made by his pupil, the
-indefatigable Jenner, who traced the identity of the variola with the
-common disease affecting the kine; and thence extracted the vaccine
-lymph and established a principle by which that loathsome disease and
-often recurring epidemic has been nearly banished from the earth.
-Though they have thus failed, they have nevertheless left on record, in
-unmistakable language, the result of their bold experiments, which we
-may investigate, and appropriate the instruction drawn thence for our
-own and the advantage of our fellow-men.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, are these results, regarded as shedding light on this
-intricate subject? We refer only to one the most obvious which we have
-already cited above. Let us repeat and analyze, and, if practicable,
-show the principle evolved. There was, on various occasions, the
-solution of soda <span class="pagenum"><a id="page80"></a>[p.80]</span> injected into the veins at the temperature
-from 105° to 120° Fahr.: a higher temperature could not be borne.
-This process was performed slowly, thirty minutes being occupied
-in injecting the ten pints. Now mark the result as the operation
-proceeds. Says Dr. Aiken, "After the introduction of a few ounces, the
-pulse, which had ceased to be felt at the wrist, became perceptible,
-and the heat of the body returned." Mark the language: "only a few
-ounces" were required to arrest for the time being, the progress of
-the disease and restore warmth to the body; a very remarkable fact,
-replete with instruction, as will appear as we proceed. Again says the
-Dr., "by the time three or four pints had been injected the pulse was
-<i>good</i>, the cramps had ceased, the body, that could not be heated,
-had become warm, and instead of cold exudation on the surface, there
-was a general moisture. The voice, before hoarse and almost extinct,
-was now natural; the hollowness of the eye, the shrunken state of
-the features, the leaden hue of the face and body had disappeared;
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page81"></a>[p.81]</span> the expression had become animated, the mind cheerful, the
-restlessness and uneasy feelings had vanished; the vertigo and noises
-of the ear, the sense of oppression at the precordia, had given
-way to comfortable feelings; the thirst, however urgent before the
-operation, was assuaged, and the secretion of urine restored, though
-by no means constantly so." Such is the astonishing result obtained
-by this experiment, and this, too, when only three or four ounces had
-been injected&mdash;all the urgent symptoms mitigated and relieved. What, we
-ask, could have been more satisfactory, or better calculated to aid the
-discovery of an important truth? Every distinctive and fatal symptom
-for the time is relieved, and the normal condition and functions of
-the system restored; a result which could only have been obtained by
-the evolution of a principle of sufficient promptness and power and
-diffusibility to arrest and utterly suspend for a time the force of
-this disease.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, was the principle evolved in <span class="pagenum"><a id="page82"></a>[p.82]</span> this experiment,
-which gave immediate relief? Did it consist in the half ounce of
-muriate of soda alone, or in the four scruples of sesquicarbonate
-of soda alone, or in the ten pints of water alone, or in the whole
-combined, or more especially in the high temperature to which the
-solution was raised? It is a well-established fact that, in order
-to raise the temperature of cold water to blood heat and above, a
-large amount of free caloric must necessarily be absorbed, and exist
-mechanically in the fluid; and, in this condition, the solution was
-introduced into the veins, and there evolved its vast amount of free
-caloric, which immediately permeated every organ of the system,
-arresting disease, raising the temperature of the body, and restoring
-its normal functions. Of this there can be little doubt. For free
-caloric is one of the most prompt, effective and diffusive stimulants
-known, and was evidently in this case the remedial agent which produced
-the result. True, it may be said the effect was transitory, and passed
-off as soon as the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page83"></a>[p.83]</span> caloric became eliminated. This, however,
-cannot alter the nature, character, or influence of the principle on
-which it was produced. It is usually admitted that a remedy that has
-power to control disease, will, by its continued action and influence,
-restore the normal condition of the system permanently, or at least
-aid Nature to repair her own work. By this we would not be understood
-as advising a repetition of the experiment under consideration, even
-under the most urgent circumstances; far otherwise would be our advice.
-We are arguing for the purpose of evolving and establishing a general
-principle of practice.</p>
-
-<p>The great question, then, is, Did the principle evolved fulfill the
-indications required? and if so, is it available and consistent with
-the pathology and the peculiar phenomena, or symptoms of the disease?
-To settle this point, we need only turn to the law and the testimony,
-the very highest authority on the subject. The doctrine now universally
-accepted and prevailing regarding its pathology is, that a poison,
-virulent, and <span class="pagenum"><a id="page84"></a>[p.84]</span> subtle, and unknown, has been absorbed and
-infects the blood, so that, after a longer or shorter time, a primary
-disease of this vital fluid is produced, by which the vital energy is
-impaired, and all other morbific changes induced. The term "Algide,"
-first used by the French Pathologists, very accurately describes one
-of the most remarkable and constant symptoms, viz., the diminution
-of animal heat. On this depend the altered condition of the blood,
-the depression of the nervous power, the impaired functions of the
-respiratory and all the vital organs which are essentially involved
-by the disease. The icy coldness of the surface, the breath, the
-extremities and general loss of temperature, all show the character of
-the disease and the wants of the system.</p>
-
-<p>Did, then, the principle evolved accord with the pathology and
-phenomena of disease? And did it fulfill the indications required? If
-not, we ask by what means was the disease arrested, and all the urgent
-symptoms mitigated and relieved, or by <span class="pagenum"><a id="page85"></a>[p.85]</span> what were the good
-effects produced, and the normal action for a time restored? Can the
-result be reasonably accounted for on any other principle than the one
-assigned&mdash;the stimulating power of the free caloric? We think not; for
-it accords most perfectly with the pathology and the peculiar phenomena
-of the disease. It assuaged the more urgent symptoms, answered the
-imperious demand of the waning powers, revivified and reinvigorated
-the vital energies, and restored for the time the normal tone of
-the system. What more could be desired in any single agent than the
-result here obtained? That it accomplished all this, there can be no
-question, according to the statement of the learned professors who have
-repeatedly witnessed and described the results.</p>
-
-<p>The question, however, will arise, Can this principle be rendered
-available? Most certainly it can; and though it may not be convenient
-to introduce free caloric into the stomach, we can, by combination,
-introduce a stimulant of equal potency which shall be <span class="pagenum"><a id="page86"></a>[p.86]</span> equally
-as prompt, effective and diffusive in its action, similar in its
-influence, and similar in its results. It is the principle&mdash;not the
-precise element for which we contend.</p>
-
-<p>It is universally admitted that in many instances we may learn much
-from observing the manner of death which, in a majority of these cases
-of cholera, may be described by the term asthenia&mdash;a death similar to
-that which occurs in congestive fevers, and in some cases of accidental
-poisoning. Perhaps the most striking fact observed in these cases is
-the perfect exhaustion attending the last moments of existence, and
-the quiet, undisturbed manner in which life terminates. This very
-clearly shows the exhausting nature and congestive character of the
-disease, and gives us an idea of the course of treatment necessary to
-be pursued. If, then, there is anything to be learned from this source
-relative to its treatment, it does most certainly corroborate and
-strengthen the position we have here taken.</p>
-
-<p>Another feature of the case in aid of our <span class="pagenum"><a id="page87"></a>[p.87]</span> position consists
-in its entire accordance with the modes of treatment which have been
-most successful in the cure of cholera. The two formulas cited above,
-and now most universally adopted in Europe and India, are based on a
-similar principle. So in this country 1832,-33 and 34, the successful
-modes of treatment consisted in the adoption of a principle essentially
-similar. Hence we infer from the teachings of this experiment, and from
-all the collateral facts on the subject, that the general principle to
-be observed in the treatment of this disease is a prompt and diffusive
-stimulant; and hence we deduce the doctrine already apparent, that
-every form of treatment, to be successful, must be based on a prompt
-and effective stimulant of sufficient power to meet as speedily the
-indications required, as did the free caloric in the experiment to
-which we have referred.</p>
-
-<p>Here we might pause for a moment and examine the suggestion and
-doctrines advanced by the learned Drs. Bell, Johnson, and many other
-eminent practitioners in <span class="pagenum"><a id="page88"></a>[p.88]</span> India and Europe. We might further
-investigate the principles and trace the practical philosophy of such
-eminent surgeons, as Drs. Mackintosh, Thompson, Wallis Maxwell, Massy,
-Hill and Brady, all of whom have had opportunity of investigating the
-nature and character of the disease and extensive experience in its
-treatment.</p>
-
-<p>We might also, in a further examination of the subject, embrace a host
-of American authors whose works teem with every shade of doctrine,
-and almost every variety and description of practice, some evincing
-a degree of skepticism on the subject more wonderful and marvelous
-than is becoming the great apostles of medicine. It would seem as
-if the guiding light of science and experience had forsaken them in
-this, the hour of their need; that facts and arguments had failed
-to illumine their minds, or direct their inquiries in the proper
-course for the discovery of "the truth." Their conclusions on this
-subject are, therefore, marvelously inconsistent and conflicting. Over
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page89"></a>[p.89]</span> this mass of specious and conflicting testimony we might
-long ponder, without deriving any very valuable information worthy an
-elaborate effort, or making any discovery to aid in the establishment
-of a general principle of practice for the cure of cholera. But this
-investigation must be deferred to another occasion, when time may
-permit a more thorough and critical examination of their doctrines and
-practice than can be presented in this brief essay. We would, however,
-remark in passing, that in some instances their philosophy, doctrines,
-and results may lead us to the same conclusion to which we have arrived
-from other sources as above, and from our regard and belief in the
-progress of science, feel compelled to advocate the same, as offering
-the best hope of success in the treatment of this disease.</p>
-
-<p>In the employment of an anti-miasmatic principle and remedial agent,
-we feel ourselves abundantly sustained, by the concurrent testimony,
-of those English surgeons connected with the Medical Bureau in the
-department <span class="pagenum"><a id="page90"></a>[p.90]</span> of India, whose numerous experiments and carefully
-detailed clinic cases occurring in the recent irruption and prevalence
-of the disease in that section, exhibit its utility in such a striking
-contrast with all former practice, as to leave no doubt as to its
-direct and specific action in the cure of cholera. It is in allusion to
-these experiments, and in answer to the question, what is deemed the
-most successful mode of treatment, that the learned Professor Maclean
-unhesitatingly observes, "Alkalies in the effervescing form, free
-stimulation of the surface, and chloroform in small doses, offer the
-best hope of relief." As this opinion comes from such high authority,
-and is compatible with the pathology of the disease, we may, without
-fear of controversy, add in conclusion, in any and every form of
-medication for the cure of cholera, we must not forget that chloroform
-is our sheet-anchor; and must be so combined and administered as to
-meet promptly the indications required.</p>
-
-
-<h3 class="lihei1"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page91"></a>[p.91]</span> <span class="smcap">Section II.&mdash;Physiological Condition of the Blood.</span><br/>
-
-<span class="ftsize65">ITS NON-AERATION&mdash;NON-OXYDATION.</span></h3>
-
-<p>In the preceding section we alluded to the suggestions and doctrines
-advanced by the learned Dr. C. W. Bell, Physician to the Manchester
-Infirmary, and late Physician to H. M. Embassy in Persia&mdash;and also
-to Dr. George Johnson, of Kings College, whose views and doctrines,
-relative to the Pathology, illustrative of the congestive character
-and non-aeration of the blood, coincide with those of Dr. Bell. A
-brief examination of their philosophy and doctrines will show very
-conclusively the first direct impression of the poison&mdash;the gradually
-altered condition of the blood, and the corresponding loss of nerve
-power&mdash;the impeded arterial circulation and the general tendency to
-congestion, as well as the altered condition and stagnation of the
-blood, especially during the stage of collapse.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page92"></a>[p.92]</span> The question is asked, "What is the pathological explanation
-of this remarkable train of symptoms?" and the answer is given, "The
-one great central fact is this, that during the stage of collapse, the
-passage of blood through the lungs, from the right to the left side of
-the heart, is in a greater or less degree impeded." Very conclusive
-evidence as to the existence of impeded pulmonary circulation
-during life is afforded by the appearances observed in the heart,
-blood-vessels, and lungs after death.</p>
-
-<p>After adducing the evidence of this impediment from <i>post-mortem</i>
-examinations, and affirming that the blood does not flow freely
-through the lungs and pulmonary arteries, which are often filled and
-much distended with blood, it is observed&mdash;"The most interesting and
-conclusive evidence that arrest of blood in the lungs is the true key
-to the pathology of choleraic collapse, is to be found in the simple
-yet complete explanation which it affords of all the most striking
-chemical phenomena of the disease, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page93"></a>[p.93]</span> the imperfect aeration of
-the blood, and the suppression of bile and urine."</p>
-
-<p>And again, says the learned author, "It is obvious that the stream of
-blood from the pulmonary capillaries to the left side of the heart
-is the channel by which the supply of oxygen is introduced into the
-system. One necessary consequence, then, of a great diminution in the
-volume of blood transmitted to the left side of the heart must be,
-that the supply of oxygen is lessened in a corresponding degree. This
-position, probably, will not be disputed by any one who will give the
-subject a moment's consideration. Nor, again, can it be denied or
-doubted that certain results must of necessity follow this limited
-supply of oxygen." * * *</p>
-
-<p>"The blood in cholera is black and thick only during the stage of
-collapse; in other words, during the stage of pulmonary obstruction and
-defective aeration."</p>
-
-<p>Again, in his explanation of the injection of the solution of soda
-into the veins of the suffering patient, it is affirmed, "The benefit,
-however, is of but short duration, for the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page94"></a>[p.94]</span> primary cause of
-the impeded circulation, namely, the poisoned condition of the blood,
-being still in operation, * * * the stream of blood through the lungs
-will soon again be obstructed, and the patient thus passes into a
-state of collapse as profound as, and more hopeless than, before. It
-appears, therefore, that the hot saline injection into the veins and
-the operation of venesection, when it rapidly relieves, as it often has
-done, the symptoms of collapse, have this effect in common, that they
-facilitate the passage of the blood through the lungs, and thus lessen
-that embarrassment of the pulmonary circulation which is the essential
-cause of choleraic collapse. But whereas the <i>hot injections act</i> by
-removing the impediment which results from spasmodic contraction of the
-arteries; <i>venesection acts</i> by relieving over-distension of the right
-cavities of the heart, and thus increasing the contractile power of
-their walls."</p>
-
-<p>Such are, in brief, the views of the learned Drs. Johnson and Bell,
-whose works are very highly commended by their American <span class="pagenum"><a id="page95"></a>[p.95]</span> editor
-to the notice of the profession. These views, coming as they do from
-the highest authority, fully sustain the doctrine that the earliest
-impression of the disease is made upon the blood, and hence it becomes
-altered and changed in its most essential life-sustaining principle;
-for its oxygen becomes diminished, its consistency augmented, and its
-flow through the lungs impeded. Through this channel the effect of
-the poison soon makes an impression on the ganglionic mechanism, and
-the nerve-power becomes correspondingly diminished, and the action
-of the ganglionic nerves essentially deranged. But this is not all:
-they exhibit in the clearest manner the congestive character of the
-disease, and show the necessity of prompt and decided means to arrest
-this tendency. Hence, they urge, in the strongest terms, the importance
-of observing carefully this essential feature, and endeavor to exhibit
-fully the condition of this vital fluid at a particular stage of the
-disease, when bleeding, as recommended in their practice, is required,
-and may be performed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page96"></a>[p.96]</span> to the best advantage for the relief
-of the partially congested blood-vessels, and to stimulate and give
-freedom to the circulation. The passage of the blood, they affirm, is
-impeded, clogged, and partially suspended. To remove this obstruction,
-relieve spasm, and secure the prompt aeration of the blood, in hope
-of arresting the progress of this disease, is ostensibly the object.
-However, they seem studiously to avoid the most logical conclusions of
-their explanations, and justify a practice that can give no hope of
-permanent relief, while every fact and symptom is ominously suggestive
-of the wants of the system, which imperiously demands the aid of
-electrified oxygen, ozone, or free caloric, for the oxydation of the
-blood.</p>
-
-<p>Says Dr. Reid, "I believe the true explanation of the arrest of blood
-in the lungs to be this: The blood contains a poison, whose irritant
-action upon the muscular tissue is shown by the painful cramps which it
-occasions. The blood thus poisoned excites contraction of the muscular
-walls of the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page97"></a>[p.97]</span> minute pulmonary arteries, the effect of which is
-to diminish, and, in fatal cases, entirely to arrest the flow of blood
-through the lungs."</p>
-
-<p>Says Dr. Wallis, "The phenomena which are exhibited when the
-deleterious air has been drawn into the lungs are these: the great
-gastro-pulmonary nerve is either wholly or partially paralyzed; the
-consequences are the cessation of all its functions, either wholly or
-partially. This great nerve is a nerve of function, and performs the
-functions of digestion and respiration, and influences all secretions."</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Maxwell, of Calcutta, uses the following language: "The development
-of the stages of fever entirely depends on the changes the <i>leaven
-has effected</i>. If this change has been such that the blood has become
-too thick to flow through the lungs, then, as a matter of course,
-the collapse stage is developed in excess; in other words, <i>cholera
-asphyxia</i> is exhibited. The blood, unable to pass through the middle
-passage into the arteries, collects and swells out the veins, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page98"></a>[p.98]</span>
-giving that deadly or blue color to the skin. When the vomiting and
-spasms come on, this mass of blood in the veins is squeezed with great
-force, and hence the clammy moisture that is forced from every part
-during these fits. There is no pulse, because there is no blood in the
-arteries." "There are also lethargy and languor, and oppression in
-breathing, caused by the blood being collected in the veins. These make
-up the principal links in the chain of mechanical symptoms."</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Bell, dwelling on this congestive character of the blood, and
-endeavoring to point out the best mode of relief, observes, "When this
-has reached to such a point as to oppress the action of the heart,
-yawning first and then shivering, or a sense of suffocation and pain
-in the precordia, are the indications of oppressed circulation, and of
-the commencing effort of the heart to overcome the mass of blood which
-is stifling it. If, by the application of tourniquets to the limbs, or
-by <i>bleeding</i>, part of the blood which is rushing from the extremities
-to increase <span class="pagenum"><a id="page99"></a>[p.99]</span> this congestion is prevented from reaching the
-great veins, the heart, excited to increased action, is enabled, by
-this relief, more quickly to overcome the obstruction and restore the
-balance of the circulation, and the paroxysm passes off. If not thus
-mechanically aided, the heart, after a severe struggle to maintain the
-circulation during the period of constriction, is at length relieved
-by this nervous disturbance or spasm of the capillary circulation
-passing off of itself, and then the heart and arteries, so long excited
-by the struggle, maintain for a time their increased action after
-the obstruction in the capillaries is removed, and produce apparent
-febrile action. Presently this excitement subsides, the vessels become
-relaxed, and sweat succeeds. The vessels continue in this state for
-a longer or shorter period, according to circumstances, till they at
-length recover their ordinary tone and action in the intermission. This
-fever, however, is not fever properly so called, but reaction; and the
-sweating not critical, or essential, but relaxation. The cold stage
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page100"></a>[p.100]</span> is alone essential, and is the physiological cause of the
-subsequent stages."</p>
-
-<p>From the passages we have cited, it is quite evident that Drs. Johnson,
-Bell, Parkes, Reid, Wallis, Maxwell, Massy, and many others, admit this
-congestive character and impeded circulation of the blood to be the
-result, or consequent of a primary affection of the blood, as we have
-already observed in a former paper. The <i>term</i> "Algide" is peculiarly
-expressive of the diminished animal heat, and, as Dr. Bell represents,
-it is the cold stage which is alone essential, and is the physiological
-cause of the subsequent stages. It is the specific disease-poison,
-so often referred to, that has been inhaled, the leaven that has
-effected such obvious changes in the blood. The poison, virulent, and
-subtle, and unknown, so marvelously active in its operations, that
-is exhibited so prominently in all the works we have perused as the
-one great, mysterious, and efficient cause which produces the disease
-called cholera, and all the phenomena of its development. To its direct
-and specific <span class="pagenum"><a id="page101"></a>[p.101]</span> action, therefore, must be attributed all the
-phenomena of the disease as the resulting subsequent consequences.</p>
-
-<p>It is also further evident, from the pathological facts and arguments
-adduced in support of this theory of congestion, that the abnormal
-condition or state of the blood-vessels is the result and the product
-of the activity of the primary or final cause, and must be regarded
-in relation to it as cause and effect. On this principle alone, the
-thickening of the blood, the contraction of the left ventricle of the
-heart, and of the capillary and pulmonary arteries, assigned by some as
-the cause of choleraic collapse, must be accounted for. These effects
-are not and cannot be from a process independent and outside of the
-primary disease action, but are the result of such primary action.</p>
-
-<p>Again, it is evident, from the views and doctrines cited above, that
-the disease is decidedly congestive in its tendency and character
-from its very commencement. The impeded flow of the blood&mdash;the
-comparative <span class="pagenum"><a id="page102"></a>[p.102]</span> emptiness of the left ventricle of the heart
-and arteries&mdash;and the excessive loss of temperature, all indicate a
-rapid process of congestion attending the progress of disease. This
-is one of the peculiar and prominent features of cholera, and is
-strikingly exhibited in the morbid appearances observed in all those
-instances where death has occurred within a few minutes from the first
-indications of attack.</p>
-
-<p>When the attack is violent, the process is rapid; when mild, it is
-slow; and even in the collapse stage progresses tardily. In either case
-it is the direct resulting consequent of the primary cause. How else
-can the violent attacks, suddenly terminating in death, be accounted
-for? To what other principle can this altered condition and stagnation
-of the blood be attributed? The evidence confirmatory of this position
-is abundant and conclusive. Many instances of the apparently rapid
-action of the cholera poison are related by Dr. Milroy, in a historical
-sketch of the epidemic of 1817; and at Kurrachee in 1855 and 6,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page103"></a>[p.103]</span> it is said, that within little more than five minutes, hale
-and hearty men are seized, cramped, collapsed, and dead!!</p>
-
-<p>When the disease broke out at Teheran, in May, 1846, Dr. Milroy states
-that those who were attacked dropped suddenly down in a state of
-lethargy, and at the end of two or three hours expired, without any
-convulsions or vomitings, but from a complete stagnation of the blood.</p>
-
-<p>In the paper before us, it is stated, that "in a great majority of
-cases in which death has occurred during the stage of collapse, the
-right side of the heart and the pulmonary arteries are filled, and
-sometimes distended with blood; the auricle being partially, and the
-ventricle completely and firmly contracted. The tissue of the lungs is,
-in most cases, of pale color, dense in texture, and contains less than
-the usual amount of blood and air. There is something surprising in
-the contrast between the almost constant occurrence of this extremely
-anęmic condition of the lung, from which scarcely even a few drops
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page104"></a>[p.104]</span> of blood flow when the tissue is cut, and the hyperęmia of
-most of the other viscera." This impeded flow of the blood through the
-lungs, resulting, as it must, in a very scanty supply of blood to the
-arteries, in connection with the corresponding fact of the increased
-expansion of the veins, filled with black, and thick, and stagnant
-blood which, by the action of a powerful poison, or malignant disease,
-has become disorganized and unfitted for circulation, furnishes
-indubitable evidence of one prominent and characteristic feature of
-cholera which we term congestion, and to which we alluded in our
-remarks when the question under consideration was first introduced;
-in this view we are happy to find ourselves, on a more thorough
-examination of the subject, ably sustained by eminent pathologists
-and authors, who have arisen during the half century last past, and
-whose works are said to embrace all that is known and reliable on the
-character and treatment of Epidemic Cholera.</p>
-
-<p>It is worthy of notice, before passing <span class="pagenum"><a id="page105"></a>[p.105]</span> from this part of our
-subject, that according to Dr. Bell's <i>views</i>, the blood is forcibly
-sent into the great central veins, and there stopped in its course
-without any attempt to account satisfactorily for its singular arrest,
-at that point&mdash;Dr. Johnson comes to his relief, lifts the veil, and
-explains why it is kept there and cannot get any further. If the road,
-he tells us, had been clear and uninterrupted through the lungs, the
-blood would easily have got round to the left ventricle, and have again
-gone its round, but it is stopped by the spasmodic contraction of the
-minute branches of the pulmonary artery, which will not even allow the
-blood to enter the pulmonary capillaries, as shown by the remarkable
-anęmia of the texture of the lungs.</p>
-
-<p>In this connection may be introduced an opinion as to the cause of
-the disease and some of its phenomena, which has obtained at least
-some celebrity, and attracted the attention, if not the careful
-consideration of the profession. It will account, in part, if founded
-in fact, for the physiological condition under consideration.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page106"></a>[p.106]</span> It is said, some have observed a chemical change in the
-constitution of the atmosphere, and have attributed the cause of the
-cholera to the loss or diminution of its ozone&mdash;a principle which
-is understood to represent what is very properly termed electrified
-oxygen. Ozone is, therefore, the vital element of the air. It is said
-that oxygen cannot be assimilated or combined with the blood except
-when it is in an electrified state constituting the peculiar property
-or state of ozone. In this state it produces vital electricity of the
-blood, <i>which is the life</i>. The brain is considered and represented
-as the reservoir of this vital electricity, and the nerves are the
-telegraphic wires or conductors of it. As a necessary consequence, all
-acts of material and intellectual life depend upon this double cause.
-The absence, then, it is affirmed, of this principle, termed ozone&mdash;or
-electrified oxygen&mdash;from the atmospheric air in certain localities
-and the consequent non-aeration or non-oxydation of the blood, may be
-considered as an efficient cause which will <span class="pagenum"><a id="page107"></a>[p.107]</span> account for some
-of the most striking phenomena of the cholera.</p>
-
-<p>Whether this electrified oxygen, or ozone, is identical with free
-caloric, it is unnecessary for our purpose at present to determine. It
-will be admitted that oxygen is the source of animal heat, and when
-introduced into the system generates its free caloric, which is an
-essential life-sustaining principle.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Massy, after describing a severe and advanced stage of cholera,
-observes, "The treatment of this case depends in the first instance
-on bleeding, and largely, if the patient's pulse is good, giving at
-the same time twenty grains of calomel with one of opium. This, he
-thinks, will be found the best practice. After twenty minutes, he gives
-ten grains more of calomel and half a grain of opium. He considers,
-however, a reliance on opium in this form of cholera most faulty&mdash;but
-observes, as you draw blood, stimulate, give punch, brandy, or wine and
-water, or carbonate of ammonia. Apply friction, with stimulating and
-hot liniments to the extremities, warm sand-bags to the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page108"></a>[p.108]</span> feet,
-sinapisms to the calves of the legs and pit of the stomach; for, if
-you can once raise the pulse, the chances in favor of recovery will be
-vastly increased." The practice of bleeding and stimulating at the same
-time is deemed of vast importance. Dr. Bell coincides in this view, and
-devotes much space to the necessary instruction as to the time when and
-under what circumstances to bleed and to what extent, endeavoring to
-show the advantages arising from a strict observance of certain rules
-in carrying out this practice.</p>
-
-<p>We have thus traced, <i>in extenso</i>, the views and doctrines of eminent
-surgeons and authors on the changes of the blood, and especially of
-the impeded circulation, to show, if practicable, the inconsistency of
-the more common and prevailing practice, and its utter inadaptation
-to the pathology and phenomena of disease. On the latter there seems
-to be little or no discrepancy&mdash;on the former there is a great
-diversity&mdash;as there has been no general principle established and
-laid down as the basis <span class="pagenum"><a id="page109"></a>[p.109]</span> of treatment and cure of cholera.
-It has often been observed there is no disease on which so many
-different modes of practice have prevailed, some purely experimental,
-others empirical&mdash;and all without discovering an antidote to the
-poison, or any efficient mode of relief. The cause, or the poison
-producing the disease, still remains undiscovered. The direct mode
-of suspending and removing it, or counteracting its power and
-neutralizing its effect, and subsequently eliminating <i>it</i> from the
-system, remains still in doubt. What course, then, should the epidemic
-cholera again prevail in our midst, shall we pursue? Shall we rest
-satisfied with the diversified modes of treatment now prevailing? Or
-guided by the light of reason, science and experience, endeavor to
-adopt a general principle of practice, and exhibit and establish an
-efficient and judicious system, consistent with the pathology and
-the phenomena of the disease? Does then the practice, the prominent
-features of which are given above, accord with the indications
-required? <span class="pagenum"><a id="page110"></a>[p.110]</span> In short, does the exhibition of bleeding and
-calomel and opium, accompanied with sinapisms, and hot, stimulating
-applications to the surface, meet the pathological condition and
-the phenomena of the disease? We have seen that the rapid changes
-in the blood, and the consequent direct tendency to congestion, are
-the proper and distinguishing features of the disease;&mdash;and hence
-the diminution of animal heat and general loss of temperature and
-their consequent effect, impeding the circulation, depressing and
-prostrating the nervous power&mdash;impairing and paralyzing the respiratory
-organs&mdash;suspending the functions of the liver and kidneys&mdash;enfeebling
-the action of the heart, and causing the capillary vessels of the
-mucous surfaces to pour off the serous fluid from the blood, and every
-muscle and tissue of the system with great rapidity, essentially
-constitute the phenomena of the cholera;&mdash;and that the constantly
-increasing augmentation of the poison and its intensified effects,
-measure the malignity, the violence, and the rapidity of the disease.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page111"></a>[p.111]</span> Is there, then, any tendency in bleeding to arrest this rapid
-process of disease so disorganizing, depreciating, and enfeebling to
-the vital life-sustaining fluid, the blood? Can abstracting a portion
-of it, however large, suspend the poison, or its activity, or even
-check its progress in its rapid course and fatal termination? Can it
-have, under its depressing and depleting process, any tendency or
-power to relieve the congestion that is taking place, or change in any
-good degree the poisonous principle which is now generally admitted
-to exist in the blood, and to be the sole and efficient cause of its
-altered character and condition? The poison, once introduced into the
-blood, like the leaven hid in three measures of meal, will continue its
-activity, increasing its energy, and multiplying its forces, till the
-whole circulation becomes affected, and its life-sustaining power is
-destroyed and utterly lost, unless, by the exhibition of some remedial
-agent, it shall be promptly arrested in its progress, and suspended
-and eliminated. Again we ask, Will calomel fulfill <span class="pagenum"><a id="page112"></a>[p.112]</span> any of
-the indications required? Has it any influence or power to arrest this
-disease, to quiet the nervous system, relieve the cramps, or restore
-warmth to the body? Its specific action, so far as known, can have no
-tendency whatever to relieve the system in any essential particular,
-or stay the progress of disease, or delay its inevitable result, if it
-remain unsubdued by the action of other remedies. Its action upon the
-liver, however prompt it may be, is only of a secondary importance. The
-primary cause must be overcome, its activity and energy suspended and
-the system generally relieved, or there is little hope in the case.</p>
-
-<p>Here we may ask, Will opium aid, or give the relief so urgently
-demanded? However serviceable as an astringent and anodyne in the
-premonitory stage of the disease, it cannot be exhibited in the second
-stage to so good an advantage, as its direct influence is to aid and
-promote congestion in those cases, where a tendency of this kind is
-already in existence. Hence, its continuance in the true or collapse
-stage <span class="pagenum"><a id="page113"></a>[p.113]</span> of cholera is now generally considered faulty.</p>
-
-<p>Once more: The auxiliaries employed in aid of the leading remedies
-already noticed may be summed up in the language of the celebrated
-Dr. Massy, in his instructions and directions on the subject of the
-treatment now under consideration. He observes, "But, as you draw
-blood, stimulate, give punch, brandy, or wine and water, or carbonate
-of ammonia. Apply friction, with stimulating and hot liniments to the
-extremities; warm sand-bags to the feet, sinapisms to the calves of the
-legs and pit of the stomach; for, if you can once raise the pulse, the
-chances in favor of recovery will be vastly increased."</p>
-
-<p>To these directions there can be no special objections, except in the
-first instance in which he, indirectly, commends the use of means
-tending to deplete and depress the system, already brought by disease
-to the very verge of utter exhaustion. Remedies of this tendency
-are contra-indicated, and cannot, to say the least, be employed to
-advantage.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page114"></a>[p.114]</span> Depressing remedies generally, instead of checking, or
-counteracting the disease, will inevitably aid and hasten its fatal
-termination. Stimulants, such as are prompt and diffusive in their
-character, must be regarded as essential, and may be employed to great
-advantage. It will be found, however, exceedingly difficult in most
-cases, even where there is no depletion from bleeding, to keep up the
-waning powers, and carry the patient, through this formidable disease,
-to a favorable termination. Of the utility of warm applications to the
-surface generally, there can be no question; yet, our main reliance is
-on internal remedies, as has been already shown: the lost temperature
-of the body must be restored, the production and diffusion of heat, or
-caloric, must be internal through the administration of remedies, that
-will promptly and kindly produce this result.</p>
-
-<p>What are, then, the remedies? We have ventured in this discussion to
-recommend the internal use of chloroform, and believe it will be found
-in combination with other <span class="pagenum"><a id="page115"></a>[p.115]</span> prompt and diffusive stimulants,
-specially adapted to meet this condition. In this recommendation, we
-feel ourselves fully sustained by the result of various experiments
-heretofore made, and the recent trials of its use, as an internal
-remedy in the various stages of the disease.</p>
-
-<p>The earliest record of the use of chloroform in cholera is probably
-to be found in the London <i>Lancet</i> for November, 1848, in which Dr.
-Hill reports a case of its successful use by inhalation. He placed
-the patient in bed, covered with warm blankets, and applied friction,
-stimulant liniments, and heated bags of bran to the surface, and kept
-the patient under the gentle influence of chloroform, till the more
-urgent symptoms entirely subsided. At intervals brandy-and-water, and
-thin arrow-root or milk was given. All other medicines were avoided.
-Though the urgent symptoms returned at first, as the effects of the
-chloroform passed off, they were easily controlled by the repetition
-of the inhalation. By persevering in its use, reaction set in, and the
-patient became convalescent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page116"></a>[p.116]</span> Other cases, afterwards, were treated in the same way, with a
-similar result. Some, however, required the gentle use of chloroform
-by inhalation, at intervals, for twenty-four hours; after which, none
-seems to have been administered. For aught that appears these cases all
-recovered.</p>
-
-<p>Another very interesting case is related by Mr. Brady, who observes
-that an elderly lady was seized with slight diarrh&oelig;a, which, on
-the following morning, had become very profuse: excessive vomiting
-supervened, accompanied by spasms in the calves of the legs, fingers
-and toes. Under these urgent symptoms, the usual remedy, brandy, was
-administered without avail; the dejections became incessant, and the
-spasms increased in intensity, presenting the features of a decided
-case of malignant cholera. In this condition, the physician was called
-in haste, as it was believed and affirmed the patient was dying. In
-describing this case, the physician observes: "On my arrival, I found
-the patient presenting all the symptoms of malignant Asiatic cholera,
-in an <span class="pagenum"><a id="page117"></a>[p.117]</span> advanced stage; the features collapsed and ghastly;
-extremities and tongue cold; burning sensation in the stomach and
-&oelig;sophagus; pulse rapid and scarcely perceptible; voice diminished
-to a whisper; stomach exceedingly irritable, and the dejections from
-the bowels presenting the characteristic rice-water appearance; and
-all the voluntary muscles of the body were affected by spasm, so that
-the patient actually writhed in agony." Ordered the following: &#8478;.
-Chloroform &#658; j; Ol. Terebinth. &#8485; j; aq. Dist. &#658; iij. M.
-And gave immediately a large tea-spoonful, in a wine-glass, of dilute
-brandy; and applied sinapisms to the calves of the legs and abdominal
-and thoracic surfaces. Thirst was relieved by drinking plentifully of
-water nearly cold. Though the stomach was irritable, the chloroform was
-retained, as well as the fluid drank after it, and was followed by no
-dejection. Half an hour after, two pills were administered, composed
-according to the following: &#8478;. Calomel gr. v; fellis. bov. inspis.
-gr. x; Ft. Pil. ij. Half an hour after these <span class="pagenum"><a id="page118"></a>[p.118]</span> were given,
-vomiting ensued, but soon subsided; the diarrh&oelig;a had apparently
-ceased; the cramps had diminished in frequency and severity. A second
-dose of chloroform, now one hour after the first, was administered, and
-soon after this two more of the pills, both of which were retained,
-and gave decided relief. The pulse rose in power and became slower,
-the spasms less frequent, and, in an hour after the second dose, the
-patient was bathed from head to foot in a warm perspiration, and
-expressed herself comparatively free from all uneasy sensations. The
-attack had been completely subdued, leaving behind a good deal of
-pyrexia and debility, from which she rapidly recovered.</p>
-
-<p>Here it is worthy of notice, that in this case, severe as it was, only
-two doses of the chloroform mixture were administered, each containing
-about six minims of chloroform and forty of turpentine; the pills
-would naturally tend to perpetuate rather than relieve the nausea and
-vomiting, and in one hour after the administration of the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page119"></a>[p.119]</span>
-second dose, all the urgent symptoms were assuaged.</p>
-
-<p>In another case, the attending physician reports that, after giving
-calomel, combined with opium, which was immediately rejected,
-the following mixture was ordered: &#8478;. Chloroform vj minims;
-brandy &#658; iij; water &#8485; iijss, one-third of which was given
-immediately, and was thrown up in half an hour; a second dose was then
-given, and was retained. The vomiting and diarrh&oelig;a ceased; the
-spasms became less severe. In two hours after, gave the remaining third
-part; and during the next six hours, administered in two doses six
-minims more of the chloroform, with the most decided benefit, and the
-patient soon became convalescent. To the extreme tenderness over the
-region of the epigastrium flannel soaked in spirits of turpentine was
-applied; and as no urine was secreted, I am firmly of the opinion that
-the usual remedies would not have met this case. "I candidly confess,"
-says the physician, "I had no hope of success from its severity; and,
-but for a knowledge <span class="pagenum"><a id="page120"></a>[p.120]</span> of Mr. Brady's case, I believe I should
-have lost my patient."</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Davies reports a case in which he used chloroform fifteen hours
-after the seizure with relief, but not with success, and observes that,
-in a number of cases occurring in the hospital, there were 22 cases in
-which, as severe symptoms came on, the chief remedy was chloroform,
-administered internally, in doses of from seven to ten minims every
-hour, half hour, or quarter of an hour, according to the severity of
-the symptoms. Of these 22 cases, 8 terminated fatally, and 14 recovered.</p>
-
-<p>Again: "Out of 9 cases of cholera, and 13 of the worst cases of
-diarrh&oelig;a occurring in my own practice, and treated with chloroform,
-<i>one died</i>. All these were in the better ranks of life. In some of
-them, the warm bath (salt water) was used as an auxiliary, and the
-diet consisted of nothing but cold milk and water, with some carbonate
-of soda, <i>ad libitum</i>. The fatal case was that of a drunkard, who,
-probably, did not take the remedy. These cases varied in severity,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page121"></a>[p.121]</span> from sickness and diarrh&oelig;a, and mild collapse, to
-sickness, diarrh&oelig;a, severe cramps, and great collapse, with almost
-clear watery evacuations, passing away involuntarily * * * Of 14 cases
-of cholera treated by Mr. Towers, Medical Resident of the Infirmary,
-many of them under my own observation, <i>one died</i>. The fatal case was
-that of a woman aged 63, who was previously suffering great depression,
-consequent on extreme destitution."</p>
-
-<p>Again, says Dr. Davies, "It will probably be remembered that, in my
-second report, I expressed a very favorable opinion of chloroform in
-this deadly malady. I considered I had strong grounds for so doing,
-after observing the large proportion of cases which recovered under
-its administration. From the history of this last visitation in the
-county prison, however, the fact turns out, that, under some uncertain
-circumstances, the use of chloroform will not prevent the proportion
-of deaths being considerable. I have reason to believe that it was,
-from over-anxiety, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page122"></a>[p.122]</span> given in too frequent doses in some
-cases, and that it thus rather added to the coma, which is one of the
-characteristics of the malady.</p>
-
-<p>At the commencement of the outbreak, the doses were repeated every
-hour, or every two hours, and it is to be noted that the first seven
-cases <i>recovered</i>.</p>
-
-<p>As the cases multiplied, the remedy was given every half hour, and, in
-some instances, every quarter of an hour; the result was that the next
-six cases died. Whether these cases had anything in them inherently
-more fatal, it is difficult to tell. The symptoms at first were about
-equal, and the differences did not show themselves until towards the
-end. There was next a recovery of seven cases in succession; in these
-the remedy was administered less frequently, but subsequently two
-deaths occurred under the less frequent administration.</p>
-
-<p>The chloroform was administered also by inhalation, in some of the more
-severe cases of cramps, with the effect of affording relief in every
-instance. The inhalation was not <span class="pagenum"><a id="page123"></a>[p.123]</span> carried so far as to produce
-insensibility. Although I am still of the opinion that chloroform
-properly regulated is the remedy of all others hitherto tried to be
-depended on, yet it cannot be considered a specific for cholera."</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Steadman reports a very interesting case treated by chloroform.
-He observes, "The spasms were universal and extremely violent, as if
-knots were being tied in the bowels, countenance livid and cold, voice
-feeble, and all medicines rejected. In this condition gave chloroform
-combined with 'aquę vitę' and distilled water. The first dose had
-a partial but most satisfactory effect. In two hours after, as the
-symptoms manifested a disposition to return, gave a second dose, which
-entirely controlled all spasms, vomiting and purging. The patient was
-ordered cold rice and mucilaginous drinks, and had the chalk mixture
-with nitric ether prescribed. A dose of oxgall (gr. x) was given in
-course of the day, which produced the desired effect. In two days the
-patient was declared convalescent." <span class="pagenum"><a id="page124"></a>[p.124]</span> The daughter, who had
-nursed the mother in this case, was seized soon after in a similar
-manner, except the dejections were more abundant and frequent. The
-mother having some of the chloroform mixture left, gave it to the
-daughter without advice or hesitancy, and obtained the same magic
-results. The first dose was only partial in its effect, but the second
-completely subdued the disease.</p>
-
-<p>Such are the results of some of the experiments which have been made
-by the administration of chloroform; and, so far as appears, the first
-cases treated by inhalation were severe malignant cholera in the
-advanced stage, all of which recovered. So, also, those treated by the
-remedy used internally, combined with a prompt and decided stimulant
-like the spirits of turpentine, or aquę vitę and brandy, recovered.
-In all these cases the remedy appeared to meet the urgent demand, to
-remove the impediment to the circulation, to relieve the nausea and
-vomiting, and purging and cramps, and restore, in a very short time,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page125"></a>[p.125]</span> the general action and normal tone of the system. Still we
-must admit, that some cases, treated by its internal administration,
-and also by inhalation, proved, on some accounts not satisfactorily
-explained, unsuccessful. Were these cases given in detail, it would be
-much easier to detect the cause of failure, or its questionable use in
-such cases; but we have only the bare fact that they were thus treated,
-without the manner or character of the combination, if any were made,
-being given.</p>
-
-<p>Hence Dr. Davies, under whose direction these cases occurred,
-remarks, in view of this result, "that <i>no reliance</i> could be placed
-on chloroform alone." The correctness of this opinion cannot be
-questioned, for the experiments we have cited all show the necessity
-of a prompt and diffusive stimulant in aid of its action, to render it
-sufficiently prompt and powerful to meet and overcome the disease in
-the more rapid and severe cases. Chloroform, properly combined, offers
-the best hope of relief, and is, without doubt, the most perfectly
-adapted of any <span class="pagenum"><a id="page126"></a>[p.126]</span> remedy known to the pathology and phenomena
-of the disease. There is no remedy, when properly combined, so capable
-of meeting all the indications required as this, and none that can be
-administered with more certainty of success.</p>
-
-<p>In conclusion, we may, with much propriety, refer again to the
-pathology suggested by the authors cited above, and inquire whether
-the action of chloroform as a remedy in these cases be consistent?
-and whether as such it has that curative influence, or direct
-controlling power, to arrest, suspend, and cure the disease, so
-imperiously demanded? We have seen that, according to the opinion
-generally prevailing, the first impression of the poison is made upon
-the blood, and through it upon the nerves, especially those which,
-from their anatomical position, bear the most intimate relation to
-the blood-vessels. Through this channel the first invasion appears to
-be made on the ganglionic, the nerves of circulation. These nerves
-are distributed chiefly to the viscera and blood-vessels, and are at
-least very <span class="pagenum"><a id="page127"></a>[p.127]</span> early involved and essentially disturbed, for
-their healthful action depends in no small degree on the aeration or
-oxydation of the blood. Says an eminent author, "The action of every
-ganglionic mechanism depends on the existence of certain physical
-conditions, among which the most prominent and important is the due
-supply of arterialized blood. If this be stopped but for a moment the
-nerve mechanism loses its power, or, if diminished, the display of its
-characteristic phenomena correspondingly declines." Hence the loss
-of power in these nerves, and their deranged action, the contraction
-of the capillary and pulmonary arteries, the impaired and impeded
-circulation and all the phenomena arising therefrom.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the great pneumogastric nerve, which is composed of both motor
-and sensitive filaments, has a very extensive distribution in the
-upper part of the abdominal cavity. It supplies the organs of voice
-and respiration with motor and sensitive fibres, and the pharynx,
-&oelig;sophagus, stomach and heart with motor influence. This very
-important <span class="pagenum"><a id="page128"></a>[p.128]</span> nerve, through the primary action and deteriorating
-process of the cholera poison, becomes early involved, and its
-functions greatly, and, in fatal cases, permanently deranged. The
-evidence of this disturbance and loss of nerve-power is too obvious to
-be overlooked or disregarded in the treatment of this disease.</p>
-
-<p>In confirmation of this, we may, with great propriety, adduce the
-testimony of Dr. Wallis on the loss of nerve-power, and the process
-through which the result is produced, who observes, that "the phenomena
-which are exhibited when the deleterious air has been drawn into the
-lungs are these: the great gastro-pulmonary nerve is either wholly or
-partially paralyzed, the consequences are the cessation of all its
-functions either wholly or partially. This great nerve is a nerve of
-function, and performs the functions of digestion and respiration, and
-influences all secretions."</p>
-
-<p>Hence it appears the nervous power generally, as before observed, is
-very early and essentially impaired, and to such an extent <span class="pagenum"><a id="page129"></a>[p.129]</span>
-that there can be no rational hope of relief, unless some remedial
-agent can be found that will exercise such a controlling influence and
-power, as shall be adequate to restore the tone of the nervous system.</p>
-
-<p>Hence, we are forced to the conclusion that the prominent, leading,
-and most urgent symptoms requiring special attention, are "the Algide"
-or loss of temperature, the loss of nerve-power in the ganglionic and
-pneumogastric nerves and their branches, the altered or disorganized
-condition of the blood, the impaired or obstructed circulation, and
-the early and direct tendency to congestion. These are the prominent
-and essential features to be observed in the treatment. They are too
-intimate, dependent and inseparable, to warrant any attempt to mark the
-precise order of their development. They are the essential phenomena,
-proceeding equally and directly together from the primary cause and
-disease action, and strictly constitute the complex character of the
-cholera, and exhibit its main, distinguishing features, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page130"></a>[p.130]</span> which
-must necessarily govern and dictate the maxims of rational practice in
-the treatment of this disease. The object, then, of first importance
-is to restore the lost temperature, the caloric already eliminated,
-and prevent its further depression; to restore, at the same time,
-the lost nerve-power to the nerves again; to arrest the process of
-disorganization of the blood, and equalize the circulation; to relieve
-and suspend the congestion; and then, according to all the experiments
-which have been made, the consequent and dependent phenomena of the
-cramps and the vomiting and the purging will disappear.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Section III.&mdash;Different Modes of Treatment.</span></h3>
-
-<p>After speaking of the various expedients resorted to for the cure of
-cholera, says Dr. Watson: "I believe that each, in some cases, did
-good, or <i>seemed</i> to do so; but I cannot doubt that some of them did
-sometimes do harm. I had not more than six <span class="pagenum"><a id="page131"></a>[p.131]</span> severe cases
-under my own charge, and I congratulated myself that the mortality
-among them was not greater than the average mortality. Three died, and
-three, I will not say were cured, but recovered, * * * under large and
-repeated doses of calomel. Yet, as I said before, I do not venture
-to affirm that the calomel cured them." It seems that Dr. Latham
-commenced the treatment and Dr. Watson followed it up, repeating the
-half-drachm doses of calomel many times, as the patients seemed to
-rally after its administration. Again, he observes: "It was remarked
-of those who recovered, that some got well rapidly and at once, while
-others fell into a state of continued fever, which frequently proved
-fatal, some time after the violent and peculiar symptoms ceased.
-Some, after the vomiting and purging and cramps had departed, died
-comatose&mdash;<i>over-drugged</i>&mdash;sometimes, it is to be feared, by opium. The
-rude discipline to which they were subjected might account for some
-of the cases of fever." * * * "Never, certainly, was the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page132"></a>[p.132]</span>
-artillery of medicine more vigorously plied, never were her troops,
-regular and volunteer, more meritoriously active. To many patients,
-no doubt, this busy interference made all the difference between life
-and death. But if the balance could be fairly struck and the exact
-truth ascertained, I question whether we should find that the aggregate
-mortality from cholera in this country was any way disturbed by our
-craft."</p>
-
-<p>In a report by the acting physician to the Bellevue Hospital, made to
-then "Special Medical Council," August 2d, 1832, while the Epidemic
-Cholera was still prevailing there and in the city, the physician
-says: "The treatment I have divided into two kinds&mdash;the pathological
-and the mixed. The first having been determined on, after the careful
-examination of twenty-three persons dead of cholera; since then, ten
-more have been examined, which serve to confirm the conclusions first
-formed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Pathological Treatment</span>.&mdash;<i>First Stage</i>&mdash;This consisted in the
-administration of blue <span class="pagenum"><a id="page133"></a>[p.133]</span> pill and opium with absolute diet. If
-pain was present, leeches to the epigastrium and arms, and when these
-could not be procured, cups to the epigastrium. This plan never failed
-to arrest the disease in the hands of those who diligently pursued
-it, where the mucous membrane of the gastrointestinal canal was not
-previously diseased.</p>
-
-<p><i>Second Stage.</i>&mdash;First, Blood-letting; second, diligent frictions
-with the ointment alluded to above, when persons could be procured to
-perform the duty; third, ice to allay the thirst; fourth, small doses
-of brandy and laudanum, if the vomiting continues; fifth, cups to the
-epigastrium, if there was pain and the brandy omitted.</p>
-
-<p><i>Third Stage.</i>&mdash;First, ice to allay the thirst, which is now, indeed,
-unquenchable; second, external heat; third, a continuation of the
-frictions; fourth, no opium, and, frequently, no brandy, especially
-among the children.</p>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Mixed Treatment</span>&mdash;<i>First Stage.</i>&mdash;Besides the above treatment,
-calomel and Dover's powders was a very frequent prescription; <span class="pagenum"><a id="page134"></a>[p.134]</span>
-also scruple doses of calomel, and calomel and opium in small doses,
-and all with success. Nevertheless, I believe they occasionally did
-harm.</p>
-
-<p><i>Second Stage.</i>&mdash;First, blood-letting less frequent than above; second,
-calomel and Dover's powders continued; third, calomel and opium;
-fourth, calomel, capsicum and opium; fifth, soda powders; sixth,
-scruple doses of calomel every half hour; seventh, ice.</p>
-
-<p><i>Third Stage.</i>&mdash;Calomel and Dover's powder; calomel and opium; calomel,
-capsicum and opium; carbonate of ammonia and capsicum; scruple doses
-of calomel every half hour. External heat in various ways; ice, etc.
-Severe shocks of electricity along the course of the muscles to allay
-the cramps; also, the burning of alcohol on the skin. The first was the
-practice of Dr. Devan, the second, that of Dr. Gardner, and both lay
-claims to having been the first to use these means."</p>
-
-<p>The ointment alluded to above is composed of mercurial ointment, one
-pound, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page135"></a>[p.135]</span> camphor finely pulverized, seven ounces, and the
-same quantity of capsicum. With this, the patient was rubbed briskly
-from head to foot and repeated at short intervals. The result was,
-that mercury generally showed its specific effects upon the gums in
-from five to ten hours from the commencement of reaction. The success
-of this external application of mercury, conjoined with its internal
-administration and frequent blood-letting, may be learned from the
-cholera statistics of this and other institutions.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Pereira employed sixty-grain doses of calomel, it is said, with
-success, and Dr. Barton of New Orleans, in 1849, gave in ten cases from
-120 to 150 and even to 180 grains of calomel at a dose, and, in one
-case, gave 220 grains, intending, it is said, to have weight sufficient
-to keep it down. This brave and heroic practice did not afford relief
-in a single instance; the cramps, and vomiting, and purging continued,
-and a few hours closed the scene&mdash;all died.</p>
-
-<p>The treatment recommended in the American Practice of Medicine, by Dr.
-W. Beach, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page136"></a>[p.136]</span> which was fully tested by the author himself while
-in discharge of his official duties as physician of the Tenth Ward,
-city of New York, during the prevalence of cholera in 1832, is worthy
-of consideration on account of its simplicity, its great efficiency and
-wonderful success. "Among all the medicines," says the author, "ever
-given or proposed in the incipient or premonitory stage, none will
-be found so efficacious as our neutralizing mixture, made of genuine
-materials and given very strong. Occasionally, it may be proper to add
-fifteen or twenty drops of laudanum; this, however, is very seldom
-necessary. A vast number of medicines are recommended in this stage
-of cholera, but there are none, I am convinced, so efficacious as the
-above."</p>
-
-<p>In the second, or confirmed stage, the same medicine was continued in
-larger and more frequent doses, with hot fomentations to the abdomen,
-stimulating lotions, sinapisms and injections. The cholera drops were
-also administered, composed according to the following formula:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="5%"/>
- <col width="37%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a id="page137"></a>[p.137]</span> &#8478;.</td>
- <td colspan="2">Tincture of Capsicum,</td>
- <td rowspan="4">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="4">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2">Tincture of Opium,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">Spirits of Camphor,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">Essence of Peppermint.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2">Equal parts&mdash;mix.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>Give a tea-spoonful every hour or half hour, according to the severity
-of the symptoms.</p>
-
-<p>In the third, or collapsed stage, he directed a tea-spoonful of
-pulverized black pepper to be mixed and given in a tumblerful of hot
-gin-sling; also, the same to be prepared and applied hot to the bowels
-and extremities. Also, to two tea-spoonfuls of either pulverized red
-or black pepper, pour on a sufficient quantity of hot water, let it
-stand till nearly cold; strain and inject the whole up the bowel. This
-would often arouse the patient in the collapsed stage when there was
-little or no hope of recovery. Such are in brief the remedies which
-were used so successfully in the Tenth Ward of this city, in 1832.
-Here it will be noticed that the general principal evolved in this
-treatment consists in its prompt <span class="pagenum"><a id="page138"></a>[p.138]</span> and diffusive stimulant, its
-antispasmodic and corrective power so combined as to act gently and
-kindly, yet promptly and successfully, as the records show, to which we
-shall refer in the sequel.</p>
-
-<p>Another mode worthy of a passing notice is one analogous to this,
-adopted and recommended by the eminent Dr. G. S. Hawthorne, of
-Liverpool, England, who observes: "Of the medicinal remedies, the chief
-is opium. This, I have explained, should be given in combination with
-medicines of a cordial, stimulating and antispasmodic character, of
-which the most efficient are camphor, capsicum, ether and aromatic
-spirits of ammonia. The following formulę present the combination of
-the medicines which I would prefer:"</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="40%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Powdered Opium,</td>
- <td>gr. xij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Camphor,</td>
- <td>gr. xxx.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Capsicum,</td>
- <td>gr. ix.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>Spirits of wine and conserve of roses Q. S.&mdash;mix&mdash;divide into twelve
-pills. Each of these pills, it will be observed, contains <span class="pagenum"><a id="page139"></a>[p.139]</span> one
-grain of powdered opium. These are accompanied with the following:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="45%"/>
- <col width="10%"/>
- <col width="37%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td colspan="2">Chloric Ęther,</td>
- <td rowspan="4">&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="5">&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2">Aromatic Spirits Ammonia,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">Camphorated Spirits,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="2">Tincture of Capsicum.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td colspan="2">Of each, one drachm.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="3">Cinnamon water, two ounces&mdash;mix.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>"Cholera," observes Dr. H., "presents itself in four distinct degrees
-of malignity. All the modifications of the disease require to be
-treated on the same principles, the only difference being that, in the
-detail, the milder forms require less powerful doses of the medicines.
-The mode of treating the most malignant form of the disease, will
-serve as a model on which all the others are to be treated. This
-most malignant form has, by all writers on the subject hitherto,
-been pronounced incurable. They say it never was cured in a single
-instance, and never can be cured by the power of medicine. I shall,
-however, point out a mode of treating it which will prove itself
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page140"></a>[p.140]</span> infallibly successful where my directions are followed with
-sufficient promptness, boldness and skill." In detailing the mode of
-procedure, the doctor observes: "Place the patient immediately in the
-horizontal posture in bed, and give him on the instant, as this is
-an extreme case, ten of the antispasmodic pills, and two ounces of
-the antispasmodic mixture, and wash the whole down with a glass of
-undiluted brandy or whisky, flavored strongly with cloves, essence
-of ginger, or some such warm aromatic spice. In the mean time, have
-him covered with an additional blanket, and let the usual means of
-communicating heat, such as jars or bottles of hot water, bags of hot
-salt or sand, hot bricks, or whatever can be most readily procured,
-be applied without delay to the feet and different parts of the body,
-so as to restore the temperature and produce perspiration as quickly
-as possible. As soon as the perspiration has begun to flow freely,
-superadded to the medicines and cordials already administered, a glass
-of brandy-punch should be given, the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page141"></a>[p.141]</span> punch to be made strong
-and to be swallowed hot as possible. After this, no drink should be
-given until the perspiration has flowed freely for a few minutes. The
-stomach will then retain it, and the patient should be indulged freely
-with copious draughts of rennet whey, warm toast-water, flavored with
-some agreeable spice, mint, or balm-tea, or any such mild beverage. The
-necessity of attending to this is most important. When the discharges
-from the bowels cease, and when the pulse becomes full and bounding,
-the body is covered with a copious, warm perspiration, which will not
-fail to be the case under such treatment; the danger is over. The
-perspiration, if the patient can bear it, should be kept up for twelve
-hours, and may, with advantage, be continued moderately even longer.
-Its duration, however, must be regulated according to the strength of
-the patient and the state of the pulse. After the first four or six
-hours, more heat need not be applied than is perfectly agreeable to the
-feelings of the patient. It is remarkable how suddenly <span class="pagenum"><a id="page142"></a>[p.142]</span> the
-precordial oppression, etc., are relieved on the breaking out of a free
-perspiration, and, what is of greater importance still, the vomiting,
-where it exists, immediately ceases." In short, all the urgent symptoms
-soon subside, and the patient becomes convalescent.</p>
-
-<p>Such is Dr. Hawthorne's treatment, which is affirmed to have been
-invariably successful. It is based on the same general principle as the
-preceding&mdash;a prompt and diffusive stimulant. Here we might ask, What
-constitutes the chief reliance in the formulę? Was it the opium that so
-promptly met and arrested the disease? or the combination of the other
-powerful stimulants with which it was united? Dr. H. places his main
-reliance on this drug, and yet affirms that it produced no narcotism or
-other sensible effect whatever, except as a diaphoretic, and even in
-this its influence may be questioned. The prognosis becomes favorable
-from the fact of a sudden rise in the temperature of the body, for the
-icy-coldness disappeared, the heat of the surface <span class="pagenum"><a id="page143"></a>[p.143]</span> returned,
-the circulation was equalized and a profuse perspiration set in, and,
-as these conditions appeared, the urgent symptoms subsided. Not the
-excessive doses of opium, but the remedies in combination as a whole,
-produced by its prompt stimulating power these results, and the patient
-was thus relieved.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Forward, while superintending some of the public works in the
-State of Kentucky, in 1832, had in his employ more than two hundred
-laborers, among whom the Cholera Epidemic of that year appeared about
-a week before its irruption in Louisville. The first case was that
-of a young, sober, industrious white laborer, who was at the time
-vigorous and apparently healthy. It was a sudden and severe case and
-occurred about eleven o'clock at night. The physicians who usually
-attended these men were at a distance, and could not be obtained
-without considerable delay. Under these circumstances, Mr. Forward,
-after visiting the patient, becoming acquainted with the symptoms,
-and believing it a genuine <span class="pagenum"><a id="page144"></a>[p.144]</span> case of cholera, commenced
-treatment at once, fearing, as he states, the patient could not live
-till a physician could be obtained. It was, indeed, a desperate case;
-violent spasms, with constant vomiting and severe purging, attended
-with that livid appearance and peculiar coldness so characteristic of
-the disease. "Of the treatment," says Mr. Forward, "I gave him first a
-quick, stimulating emetic prepared from the lobelia seed, which checked
-the vomiting and purging, but had little effect upon the spasms. I
-then applied the steam bath, having his feet and legs at the same time
-immersed in water as warm as he could bear, which was made strong with
-salt and wood ashes. I then sweetened a tumbler of warm water and put
-into it a tea-spoonful of "number six," and about the fourth part of
-a tea-spoonful of Cayenne pepper, and gave him one-third of it when
-I commenced sweating him, and the balance at intervals while he was
-sweating. By the time he had been sweated ten minutes, he was free from
-spasms and pain, but I <span class="pagenum"><a id="page145"></a>[p.145]</span> continued the sweating ten or fifteen
-minutes longer, then wiped dry, after which the patient laid down and
-went to sleep&mdash;being thus relieved and cured."</p>
-
-<p>Another case of a colored man who was strictly temperate and healthful
-occurred an hour or two later the same night. His attack, too, was
-sudden, and still more severe; cramps very violent, vomiting and
-purging equally as severe, though he had not been awakened from his
-slumbers more than fifteen minutes. This case was treated the same
-as the former, with the emetic, sweating, and when the sweating had
-subsided, administered a table-spoonful of spirits of turpentine, which
-relieved him entirely, and he soon went to sleep. The next morning
-both were comfortable, and went to work and remained well. During the
-prevalence of cholera at that time, Mr. Forward had thirteen cases in
-his own family, and, on one day when the epidemic was at its height,
-seven cases among the laborers. All these and many others that occurred
-were treated in the same manner, with the same undeviating <span class="pagenum"><a id="page146"></a>[p.146]</span>
-success. Not a single instance of death from cholera in his own family,
-or among the hands on the road. When the epidemic cholera reappeared in
-1835, the same course of treatment was pursued, with the same uniform
-success. Such results, considering the malignant character of the
-disease, are truly astonishing. Whatever may be said of the general
-principle of practice in these cases, its success must be admitted
-as equaling, if not surpassing, the treatment of any equal number of
-cases on record. Though conducted by an unpretending and unprofessional
-gentleman, yet, out of the whole number attacked during the continuance
-of the epidemic, not a single case was lost.</p>
-
-<p>In a report of a case of cholera treated successfully by rectified oil
-of turpentine, administered internally as a specific, by Richard Brown,
-Esq., Surgeon, Cobham, Surrey, November, 1848, it is stated that the
-patient, "aged fourteen, having suffered from severe bowel complaint,
-presented all the symptoms of cholera in the stage of collapse.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page147"></a>[p.147]</span> The bowels acted incessantly, and anything taken into the
-stomach was immediately rejected; the pain around the umbilicus was
-intense, attended with severe cramps of the legs; the pulse exceedingly
-small, and scarcely perceptible; tongue coated in the centre, and
-flabby; the surface of the body much below the natural standard; the
-countenance of a blue cast, and expressive of the greatest anxiety. So
-decided, indeed, was the symptom that the case was considered almost
-without hope." "But I had determined," says the physician "to treat
-the first case of cholera that occurred in my practice with rectified
-oil of turpentine, given internally, the active principle of which,
-camphogen, possesses stimulating, diuretic, diaphoretic, sedative,
-antispasmodic, antiputrescent properties. I administered immediately
-one drachm of it combined with mucilage and aromatics, directing it to
-be repeated every two hours, the patient to be kept warm and to take
-meal broth with excess of salt."</p>
-
-<p>Now mark the result of this simple, uncombined <span class="pagenum"><a id="page148"></a>[p.148]</span> remedy. In
-the evening of the same day all the urgent symptoms were assuaged, the
-purging and vomiting had ceased, the pulse was raised, the surface
-of the body had become warm and moist with perspiration, the pain
-around the umbilicus diminished, and the cramps less violent, but the
-countenance still bore the appearance of great anxiety. Such were the
-immediate results of the administration of this remedy, which appear,
-from the subsequent history of the case, to have been permanent and
-unattended with any constitutional derangement, or other serious and
-unpleasant effect. On the morning of the next day the patient was
-steadily improving; much of the anxiety of countenance had vanished,
-but the pain in the belly and cramps of the legs still remained, though
-much relieved. On the second morning after the attack the patient was
-very much better; no pain in the belly, and does not feel sick from
-the turpentine. On the third morning the patient was up, and, though
-exceedingly weak, there was no trace of any alarming symptom remaining.
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page149"></a>[p.149]</span> The bowels had moved from the effects of a previous dose of
-calomel (two grains) given the next morning after the attack, and the
-evacuation was much more healthful. A mild tonic and alterative plan
-of treatment was all that was necessary to restore the patient to her
-usual health, and she is now well. The remedy was given at first every
-two hours, then every four, and lastly every six hours. This treatment
-commenced on the 26th and terminated on the morning of the 29th. Its
-duration about sixty hours, when the patient is declared convalescent
-and comparatively well. Here we might ask, What experiment with any
-single remedy has been more important and satisfactory in indicating
-and directly pointing out a general principle of practice for the
-successful treatment and cure of this formidable disease? We say single
-remedy, for it is doubtful whether the two grains of calomel exercised
-any curative influence whatever, or in any way varied the result. It
-is, therefore, to the use of the rectified oil of turpentine that
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page150"></a>[p.150]</span> the favorable termination and cure of the disease is to be
-attributed.</p>
-
-<p>There is another mode of practice which has been exhibited to some
-extent in almost every part of the world, claiming to be more
-efficacious and successful than any other in the cure of epidemic
-cholera. It is the general principle which is the great and important
-consideration with which we are concerned in presenting it among the
-various modes adopted for the cure of this disease. This is found
-clearly defined and ably presented by Dr. Joslin in his lecture on
-cholera, in which, after exhibiting the views and doctrines governing
-the practice, and contrasting its results with those of other modes,
-he observes, in relation to the treatment of cholera in its early
-stages, that "whatever may be the form of attack, give one drop of the
-tincture of camphor dropped on a lump of sugar, and then dissolved in
-a table-spoonful of cold water. Repeat this every five minutes until
-there is a decided mitigation of the symptoms. This will usually be
-after five or six doses. <span class="pagenum"><a id="page151"></a>[p.151]</span> If the disease be taken in time, ten
-or twelve doses are ordinarily sufficient. There is abundant testimony
-of the efficacy of this camphor treatment from all parts of Europe."
-Again, speaking of the first variety, in which the most prominent
-symptom is diarrh&oelig;a, the Dr. observes, "If camphor does not soon
-give relief, we are to resort to phosphorus, or to phosphoric acid. Dr.
-Quinn has employed both with equal success. Phosphoric acid is to be
-preferred when there is a gluey matter on the tongue. In some cases,
-veratrum, chamomilla, mercurius, or secale may be indicated. However,
-phosphorus and phosphoric acid rarely fail to cure; and some high
-authorities are in favor of giving one of them at first, in preference
-to the administration of camphor in this form of cholera."</p>
-
-<p>Again, in the second variety, cholera gastrica, Dr. Joslin observes,
-that "the remedies are generally ipecacuanha or veratrum, sometimes
-nux vomica. Camphor is to be given at the outset. Put two or three
-globules of the third of ipecac. in a little <span class="pagenum"><a id="page152"></a>[p.152]</span> sugar of milk
-and place them on the tongue. This may be repeated, if necessary, in
-half an hour, an hour, or an hour and a half. But if the disease is not
-checked, give veratrum or other medicines according to the different
-indications." Again, in the third variety, cholera spasmodica, "the
-remedies are camphor, cuprum metallicum, and veratrum. If camphor has
-not relieved, give cuprum, and repeat it many times, at intervals of
-half an hour or an hour, if its salutary effect is not manifested. If
-necessary, then give veratrum in repeated doses, or other medicines,
-according to the different indications." In the fourth variety,
-cholera sicca, "there is no diarrh&oelig;a or vomiting; there is sudden
-prostration of the vital powers," etc. "The first remedy, as in other
-varieties, is camphor. If the patient is cold, blue, pulseless, that
-is, collapsed, carbo vegetabilis; some recommend hydrocyanic acid." In
-the fifth variety, cholera acuta, veratrum is named as the main remedy.</p>
-
-<p>Such is, in brief, the treatment so highly <span class="pagenum"><a id="page153"></a>[p.153]</span> extolled and
-recommended by some in the cure of cholera. It is, in substance, the
-same as was originally suggested when the disease first appeared in
-Europe, nearly half a century ago, and will probably continue unchanged
-for generations to come. Of its general principle and its adaptation
-to the pathology of the disease we shall speak more at length in the
-sequel.</p>
-
-<p>After referring to the pathology of the epidemic cholera, showing its
-strong analogy to congestive fever, from the fact that in both diseases
-the blood recedes from the surface, and collects upon the internal
-organs, inducing a state of congestion, and showing the necessity of
-adopting prompt and efficient means to promote reaction, Dr. Massie
-observes, "I am not so bigoted, or so wedded to any system of medicine,
-as to be its champion to the exclusion of others. I consider I have a
-perfect right to investigate all of the different systems, and avail
-myself of any information which I may deem important and true, and I
-will premise by saying that the treatment I now <span class="pagenum"><a id="page154"></a>[p.154]</span> adopt for
-cholera has been attended with more success than when I treated it
-under a different system."</p>
-
-<p>"If I am called at an early period of the disease, even when there is
-nausea, vomiting, and diarrh&oelig;a, I commence the treatment by giving
-equal parts of rhubarb root pulverized, saleratus, and peppermint plant
-powdered; one pint of boiling water being added to half an ounce of
-this compound. After simmering it for half an hour, sweeten with loaf
-sugar and strain, and, when nearly cold, two or three table-spoonsful
-of good French brandy should be added. Give two table-spoonsful of
-this, taken warm, in connection with the following preparation, viz.:
-&#8478;. Pulverized cinnamon, cloves, and gum guaiacum, each one ounce,
-good brandy one quart, given in two tea-spoonsful to a table-spoonful
-every fifteen or twenty minutes to an adult."</p>
-
-<p>"The patient should be well covered with warm clothing, and bottles
-of hot water, bricks and stones placed around his body. This course
-is almost sure to be followed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page155"></a>[p.155]</span> by a moderate moisture of the
-skin, which should be kept up for eight or ten hours; to do which,
-I give ptisans of catnip or spearmint, and apply hot tincture of
-Cayenne by flannel cloths over the abdomen; if this fails to keep up
-the perspiration, I administer the following: &#8478;. Camphor, grs.
-x.; Ipecac., grs. v.; Opium, grs. ijss; Supercarbonate of soda,
-&#8456; ij. Mix, and divide into two, three, or more powders; give one
-every hour, or oftener."</p>
-
-<p>"In very urgent cases, I have used tincture of camphor, &#8485; iv;
-essence of peppermint, &#8485; iv; syrup of ginger, &#8485; ss; tincture
-of Cayenne, &#658; j. A table-spoonful, from one to four in an hour. I
-have given the saturated tincture of prickly ash, with the compound
-tincture of guaiacum, with good effect, in doses from a tea-spoonful
-to a table-spoonful every fifteen or twenty minutes. When there is
-excessive irritability of the stomach, the following injection should
-be given after every discharge: &#8478;. Saturated tincture of prickly
-ash, &#8485; ss; water, &#8485; j; tincture opii, &#658; ss. Mix." Such
-are the views of <span class="pagenum"><a id="page156"></a>[p.156]</span> Dr. Massie, as presented in his Treatise on
-the Eclectic Southern Practice of Medicine. They are confirmatory of
-the observations and experience of many other eminent practitioners,
-and strictly accord with his views of the pathology and essential
-phenomena of the disease.</p>
-
-<p>We find in a very valuable work, entitled the Eclectic Practice of
-Medicine, published at Cincinnati by Professors Powel and Newton, a
-full account of the mode of practice generally adopted and pursued by
-the great body of physicians in the West, the substance of which we
-are induced here to present, preserving, as far as practicable, the
-language of the authors. For our inquiries are, What are the modes of
-practice? and what modes, if any, are consistent with the pathology and
-the essential phenomena of the disease? Each mode, however prominent or
-however obscure, is entitled to a fair representation in our inquiries,
-and should be held responsible for its deviations from the strict
-and generally received principles of science, and the consequences
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page157"></a>[p.157]</span> arising from any such deviations, or departure therefrom.</p>
-
-<p>"When called upon," say these eminent professors, "to treat a patient
-in the early stage of the disease, he should at once be placed in a
-recumbent position, and everything should be avoided which will have a
-tendency to disturb the mind, as well as the stomach and bowels. In the
-greater part of cases in this early stage, the administration of the
-compound pills of camphor, made according to the following formula, is
-sufficient to prevent a further development of the disease:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="2%"/>
- <col width="3%"/>
- <col width="37%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Camphor,</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="bortop1 borright1 borbot1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="3">&#257;&#257;., gr. xxxv.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="4">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Opium,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Kino,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Capsicum,</td>
- <td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>gr. v.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="4">Conserve of roses, Q. S.&mdash;Mix.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>Divide into thirty pills, and give one after each discharge from
-the bowels, or oftener, if the urgency of the case requires it.
-Occasionally, however, there may be applied a large sinapism over
-the whole <span class="pagenum"><a id="page158"></a>[p.158]</span> abdomen with advantage. Greenhow's aromatized
-brandy,<a name="FNanchor_B_1" id="FNanchor_B_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_1" class="fnanchor">[II]</a> the aromatic tincture of guaiacum,<a name="FNanchor_B_2" id="FNanchor_B_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_2" class="fnanchor">[III]</a> may sometimes be
-beneficially alternated with this pill. Should there be an overloaded
-condition of the alimentary canal, the fluid extract of rhubarb and
-potassa,<a name="FNanchor_B_3" id="FNanchor_B_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_3" class="fnanchor">[IV]</a> three parts, with saturated tincture of prickly-ash
-berries, one part, may be administered in table-spoonful doses every
-hour, and continued until the bowels are properly evacuated, after
-which the above astringents may be given; but where the diarrh&oelig;a
-is excessive, it would be imprudent to wait for catharsis, as the
-discharge should be checked as speedily as possible.</p>
-
-<p>In the second stage, when nausea, vomiting, and cramps are present,
-more active means should be pursued. To overcome the nausea or
-vomiting, the preparation of Dr. O. E. Newton, termed in the American
-Dispensatory compound mixture of camphor,<a name="FNanchor_B_4" id="FNanchor_B_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_4" class="fnanchor">[V]</a> may be used with
-excellent effect; it is prepared as follows:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="2%"/>
- <col width="3%"/>
- <col width="37%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a id="page159"></a>[p.159]</span> &#8478;.</td>
- <td>Camphor water,</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="bortop1 borright1 borbot1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="4">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="3">&#257;&#257;., f &#8485; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="4">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Peppermint water,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Spearmint water,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Paregoric,</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
- <td>f &#658; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Mix.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>From a tea-spoonful to a table-spoonful may be given every five or ten
-minutes; and in cases where this does not act sufficiently prompt, the
-following may be administered:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="42%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Common salt,</td>
- <td>&#658; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="4">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Black pepper,</td>
- <td>&#658; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Vinegar,</td>
- <td>f &#658; v.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Hot water,</td>
- <td>f &#8485; iv.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>&nbsp; </td>
- <td>Mix.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>Of this a table-spoonful may be given every ten or twenty minutes, and
-continued until the nausea ceases.</p>
-
-<p>To remove the cramps, hot bricks, or bottles of hot water, etc.,
-should be kept applied to the feet, legs and arms, and cloths wet in
-water as hot as can be borne, must be applied over the abdomen and
-changed every few minutes; this should be perseveringly <span class="pagenum"><a id="page160"></a>[p.160]</span>
-pursued until relief is obtained. Sometimes advantage will ensue from
-stimulant applications along the whole length of the spine. Cramps of
-the muscles of the limbs may be overcome by bathing with the compound
-cajeput mixture,<a name="FNanchor_B_5" id="FNanchor_B_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_5" class="fnanchor">[VI]</a> either alone or in combination with chloroform,
-and applying friction at the same time. This course usually checks the
-further progress of the disease, and the patient is saved; however,
-should it fail and the stage of collapse come on, in addition to the
-above treatment energetically pursued, the patient should be enveloped
-in blankets, wet with water as hot as can be borne, which should be
-renewed every ten or twenty minutes, and stimulants may likewise be
-given; the saturated tincture of prickly-ash berries will here be found
-beneficial, both by mouth and enema."</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Morrow observes, that "to fulfill the most prominent indication,
-the production of an equilibrium in the circulation, and excitability,
-the compound tincture of guaiac<a name="FNanchor_B_6" id="FNanchor_B_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_6" class="fnanchor">[VII]</a> <span class="pagenum"><a id="page161"></a>[p.161]</span> may be given." This
-is prepared by adding gum guaiacum, cinnamon and cloves&mdash;each, one
-ounce to a quart of best brandy, and is administered in tea-spoonful
-doses in hot, sweetened water and brandy, every fifteen or twenty
-minutes till relief is obtained. As a general remedy, its exhibition
-is most salutary. In some cases where excessive nausea is the most
-prominent symptom, it may be advisable to administer an emetic to
-relieve the gastric irritability, to equalize the circulation and check
-the spasms. For this purpose, the acetous tincture of lobelia and
-sanguinaria,<a name="FNanchor_B_7" id="FNanchor_B_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_7" class="fnanchor">[VIII]</a> with the addition of one-third spirituous tincture
-of aralia spinosa,<a name="FNanchor_B_8" id="FNanchor_B_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_8" class="fnanchor">[IX]</a> is preferred. This is given in doses from a
-tea-spoonful to a table-spoonful every ten minutes in warm catnip-tea,
-sweetened. In very urgent cases, it may be given in larger doses and
-frequently repeated.</p>
-
-<p>In most cases, the saturated tincture of xanthoxylum fraxinifolium
-bac. may be used with great advantage. It is a reliable, excellent
-and prompt remedy. When given <span class="pagenum"><a id="page162"></a>[p.162]</span> in the early stages, it will
-frequently relieve in from ten to twenty minutes. In combination
-with the fluid extract of rhubarb and potassa,<a name="FNanchor_B_9" id="FNanchor_B_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_9" class="fnanchor">[X]</a> it has generally
-proved very prompt and efficient. In cases of partial collapse, when
-the patient is suffering from severe cramps, Hunn's Antispasmodic
-Mixture<a name="FNanchor_B_10" id="FNanchor_B_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_10" class="fnanchor">[XI]</a> is an excellent remedy. In cases of violent spasms, it
-has been administered every ten minutes in doses of from one to two
-tea-spoonsful in hot brandy-and-water sweetened, with great advantage,
-and it is peculiarly applicable in such cases where there is not too
-great irritability of the stomach. In many cases, camphor is very
-beneficially prepared, by adding one drachm of camphorated spirits to
-a half-pint of cold water and the mixture given in tea-spoonful doses
-every three or four minutes.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. King states that in the early stage he has used very extensively
-the following preparation:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="2%"/>
- <col width="3%"/>
- <col width="37%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Ox Gall,</td>
- <td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&#8485; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="3">&nbsp; <span class="pagenum"><a id="page163"></a>[p.163]</span></td>
- <td>Capsicum,</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="bortop1 borright1 borbot1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="2">&#257;&#257;., &#8456; iv.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Gum Guaiac,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Leptandrin,</td>
- <td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&#658; iv.&mdash;Mix.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>This was given in doses of one grain, and repeated two or three times
-a day. He had also succeeded in some cases with a mixture composed as
-follows:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="42%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
-<td>&#8478;.</td>
-<td>Sulphur Sub.,</td>
-<td>grs. iv.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td rowspan="4">&nbsp;</td>
-<td>Gum Guaiac,</td>
-<td>grs. ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td>Charcoal,</td>
-<td>grs. ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td>Camphor,</td>
-<td>gr. j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td>Opium,</td>
-<td>grs. ss.&mdash;Mix.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>Dose, one to ten grains, repeated every ten minutes until relief is
-obtained. In some cases, however, this compound did not appear to
-exercise any beneficial influence. In cases of excessive irritability
-of the stomach, oat-meal cake coffee was given, for the purpose of
-allaying its irritability, with admirable effect. The saturated
-tincture of prickly-ash berries,<a name="FNanchor_B_11" id="FNanchor_B_11"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_11" class="fnanchor">[XII]</a> combined with tincture of opium,
-was used in some cases as an injection, with very good effect.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. R. S. Newton observes that he had <span class="pagenum"><a id="page164"></a>[p.164]</span> also used a preparation
-composed of equal parts tannin, capsicum, camphor and kino, with
-considerable success, to be given in doses of four grains, and repeated
-at short intervals until the discharges were checked.</p>
-
-<p>He considered the saturated tincture of xanthoxylum fraxinifolium
-bac.<a name="FNanchor_B_12" id="FNanchor_B_12"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_12" class="fnanchor">[XIII]</a> the most valuable of all the remedies for the cholera which
-he had tested. When the stomach would not retain it, he gave it as an
-injection. It had a peculiar influence on the system, and having taken
-the remedy, he could speak from experience of its effects. When given
-as an injection, the effect produced was almost instantaneous; the
-sensation was as if he had received an electric shock; its use was very
-soon followed by a copious perspiration. He had more confidence in this
-than any other one remedy with which he was acquainted.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Wright observes that he had also used the neutralizing extract,
-saturated tinc. xanthox. fraxi. bac., and the compound tincture of
-guaiac.<a name="FNanchor_B_13" id="FNanchor_B_13"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_13" class="fnanchor">[XIV]</a> He had succeeded <span class="pagenum"><a id="page165"></a>[p.165]</span> best with a mixture of equal
-parts tincture of prickly-ash berries and neutralizing extract.<a name="FNanchor_B_14" id="FNanchor_B_14"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_14" class="fnanchor">[XV]</a></p>
-
-<p>He had always found it necessary to attend strictly to the surface. The
-best external application he found was equal parts of capsicum, salt
-and mustard.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Chase states that, "in the early period of the disease, he had
-used the leptandrin, combined with neutralizing extract,<a name="FNanchor_B_15" id="FNanchor_B_15"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_15" class="fnanchor">[XVI]</a> very
-successfully. He thinks opium can be dispensed with in the treatment of
-cholera altogether. In typhoid cases, he pursued an entirely different
-course, and remarked that many cholera cases presented symptoms similar
-to those described in Wood's Practice, as belonging to pernicious
-fever, which must be treated according to their peculiar character."</p>
-
-<p>Such, it is said, is the more general and successful practice in the
-Mississippi Valley, where the disease has several times prevailed
-in its most malignant form. For its curative efficiency much is
-claimed. Its utility, however, must be measured, as in all <span class="pagenum"><a id="page166"></a>[p.166]</span>
-other cases, by the unerring rule, the actual results sustained by
-incontrovertible facts. The nearer any mode of practice accords with
-the general principle of pathology, the greater must necessarily be its
-success, for it is not in this disease, or in any other, that the bold,
-energetic and heroic practice, which is inconsistent and incompatible
-with this principle, cures, however extensively adopted and rigidly
-pursued. For this principle must direct and govern the practice, or
-else it becomes necessarily experimental or empirical, and must be
-inevitably attended with the most lamentable results.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Section IV.&mdash;Statistics&mdash;Percentage of Loss&mdash;Variable
-Results&mdash;Their Cause.</span></h3>
-
-<p>The results of the different modes of practice which we have briefly
-noticed will aid materially our effort to discover and establish some
-general principle for the successful treatment and cure of cholera. For
-all modes, whatever be their merits or demerits, are supposed to be
-founded on the <span class="pagenum"><a id="page167"></a>[p.167]</span> pathology of the disease. To treat any disease
-successfully, its pathology must be observed, and so applied in the
-arrangement and adoption of a mode of practice as to secure not only
-entire harmony, but a complete and perfect adaptation of the treatment
-to its pathological character. The nearer any mode approaches to an
-exact conformity to this principle the greater will be its success. The
-neglect to conform, in the treatment of the epidemic cholera, to this
-acknowledged and universal law, has, no doubt, been the prolific cause
-of the sacrifice of thousands of valuable lives. For this principle
-is the key to unlock the mystery of disease, unfold the process of
-diseased action, and, as an unfailing and definite rule, must govern
-all correct theories as well as all rational practice of medicine,
-under whatever name it may be conducted. All practice, then, deviating
-from, opposed, or contrary to, this principle must be purely empirical,
-and unworthy the confidence of an intelligent community. Hence we may
-refer to statistics <span class="pagenum"><a id="page168"></a>[p.168]</span> rather than argument on the subject, to
-ascertain how far and to what extent each of the different modes of
-practice conform to the general principle; and on the other hand, to
-show what modes may be at fault, being deficient in the application
-of science, opposed to the established laws of practice, and contrary
-to observation and experience, and therefore utterly and hopelessly
-empirical.</p>
-
-<p>The statistics collected from the most reliable sources, and here
-presented, may be regarded as a fair representation of the general
-average of loss by the different modes of practice. In a report
-now before us, it is stated, "The average proportion of deaths in
-Paris from cholera, treated under the allopathic practice, was 49
-per cent.; while that under the hom&oelig;opathic was only 7<sup>1</sup>/<sub>4</sub> per
-cent." "In Vienna, (Aus.,) under the former, the deaths are reported
-at 31 per cent.; while under the latter it was only 8 per cent. In
-Bordeaux, death occurred under allopathic treatment at the rate of
-67 per cent., and under hom&oelig;opathic, 17 per <span class="pagenum"><a id="page169"></a>[p.169]</span> cent. only.
-The general average in the places last mentioned will stand thus:
-Allopathic, 49 per cent.; hom&oelig;opathic, 10<sup>1</sup>/<sub>4</sub> per cent." The record
-of mortality in twenty-one hospitals in Europe shows the average
-deaths under allopathic treatment to be 65<sup>1</sup>/<sub>8</sub> per cent., while in
-ten hospitals where the cholera patients were under hom&oelig;opathic
-treatment, the average deaths from that disease was 11<sup>3</sup>/<sub>4</sub> only. In
-a report "published by the authorities of Pischnowitz (in Prussia),
-it will be seen that 680 cases were treated as follows: 278 treated
-hom&oelig;opathically, of which 27 died; 381 treated allopathically, of
-which 102 died."</p>
-
-<p>In St. Louis, during the prevalence of cholera in 1849, the number
-treated by three hom&oelig;opathic doctors, to July 13th, was 1,567, of
-which 51 died&mdash;a loss of 3<sup>1</sup>/<sub>4</sub> per cent.</p>
-
-<p>In Cincinnati, during the month of May, there were treated by the
-eclectic physicians 330 cases of cholera and 198 cases of cholerine, of
-which only five died.</p>
-
-<p>In the same city, during the same time, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page170"></a>[p.170]</span> there were treated by
-the allopathic physicians 432 cases of cholera, of which 116 died.</p>
-
-<p>Again, during the month of June there were treated by the eclectic
-physicians, when the disease had reached its maximum intensity, and
-many of the patients being reached by the physicians only in the
-collapsed stage, 764 cases of cholera, with a large number of choleroid
-diseases not fully reported. During this month, the mortality with all
-physicians was necessarily greater than either in the preceding or
-subsequent month. Including then the month of May, the aggregate to
-July 1st is 1,094 cases, with a loss of only 36, which is considerably
-less than four per cent. (being 3.28); while the mortality of the old
-school cholera practice being 26 per cent. in May, must have risen to
-at least 50 per cent. in June, when the ratio of mortality was more
-than doubled with all physicians. The <i>Western Lancet</i> for July, 1849,
-issued while the cholera was still raging, and speaking in behalf of
-the allopathic physicians, observes, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page171"></a>[p.171]</span> "that of the cases of
-true cholera, with rice-water discharges, at least one-half the cases
-in this city, as everywhere else, proved fatal." This confession of the
-<i>Lancet</i>, edited by a thoroughgoing allopathic physician, advocating
-the interests of that school, must be regarded below rather than above
-the actual allopathic loss. Now, admitting the <i>Lancet's</i> correctness,
-and taking into account the aggregate loss of only 36 by the eclectic
-physicians in treating 1,094 cases of "true cholera," we ask what
-must have been the loss by the allopathic school of practice to have
-brought the average percentage of all schools up to 50 per cent., as
-affirmed by the <i>Western Lancet</i>? If the cholera hospitals be included
-in exhibiting the results of the different modes of practice, it will
-appear from the reports that the total number of deaths, compared to
-the admissions, was, under the eclectic treatment, 23<sup>1</sup>/<sub>3</sub> per cent.;
-under the allopathic treatment, 60 per cent. This percentage is
-confined exclusively to the three cholera hospitals reported.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page172"></a>[p.172]</span> In the report of 1832, by Dr. Atkins, it appears "that the
-total number of cases" of cholera in this city, New York, "including
-those in the hospitals, as well as those reported to the Board of
-Health, had been 5,835 on the 1st of September. The total number of
-deaths by cholera to September 1st was 2,996." More than one-half died.
-"Dr. Buell reports the success," says Professor Clark, "of sixty-grain
-doses of calomel in one of the New York hospitals, as 93 deaths in 100
-cases;" very remarkable success! the largest mortality in the city.</p>
-
-<p>As like causes produce like effects, we need not be surprised at this
-high rate of mortality, for, says Professor Aikin, "taking the whole
-number attacked, it is said that the number of deaths in Astrakan
-were <i>as one to three</i>; in that of Nizhni Novgorod, <i>as one to
-two</i>; in Moscow and Kazan, <i>as three to five</i>; and in Penza, in the
-country of the Don Cossacks, <i>as two to three</i>. In the summer of 1831
-the mortality at Riga, St. Petersburg, Mittan, Limburg, and Brody,
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page173"></a>[p.173]</span> according to the <i>Berlin Gazette</i>, was <i>about one-half</i>,
-while at Dantzic, Elbing, and Posen it was <i>about two-thirds</i> of the
-whole number attacked. The period of the epidemic, however, greatly
-influenced the mortality; for on the first onset, <i>nine-tenths</i> of
-all those attacked perished, then <i>seven-eighths</i>; and the proportion
-of deaths forms a gradually decreasing series of <i>five-sixths</i>,
-<i>three-fourths</i>, <i>one-half</i>, <i>one-third</i>, till, towards the close, a
-large proportion of those attacked recovered. The uniformity of this
-law in every country affected with cholera, whether Europe, America,
-India, or China, is extremely remarkable." This high rate of mortality
-is truly and peculiarly illustrative of the inadaptation of the general
-mode of the so-called regular practice to the pathology of the disease.
-This, no doubt, is the main cause of its failure, and justly exposes it
-to the unenviable distinction of being empirical.</p>
-
-<p>The practice of Dr. Beach, the physician of the Tenth Ward of this
-city, during the prevalence of the cholera in 1832, embraced <span class="pagenum"><a id="page174"></a>[p.174]</span>
-about one thousand cases, of which only a small percentage was lost.
-One of his associates, Dr. Hopkins, reported 157 cases, of which only 6
-died, being less than 4 per cent., which probably is not much below the
-general average of the other districts in that ward at that time.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Forward, an unprofessional gentleman of Kentucky, treated a large
-number of cases, during the prevalence of the disease among his
-employees, numbering over two hundred, without the occurrence of a
-single death. Another instance similar in principle is that of Dr.
-Browne, who reports a case treated by rectified oil of turpentine,
-with the most satisfactory and happy result. So, too, the late Dr.
-Sharp, of Paris, Ky., adopted a similar principle of practice, and
-became, thereby, eminently distinguished for the cure of cholera; his
-percentage of loss being very small indeed.</p>
-
-<p>We might extend these statistics and references, and quote from the
-reports of many other distinguished physicians who have been very
-successful in the treatment <span class="pagenum"><a id="page175"></a>[p.175]</span> of this disease; but these are
-sufficient for the purpose of directing our inquiries as to the utility
-and success of different modes of practice. It is immensely important
-to ascertain, if practicable, the general principle which has been most
-successful in the treatment of this disease, before it shall again make
-its appearance among us as a prevailing and fatal epidemic; especially
-when we realize and duly appreciate its vast mortality, as represented
-in the report now before us, that prior to its recent irruption and
-prevalence in India and Europe, nearly fifty millions of the earth's
-inhabitants have been swept away by this terrible scourge alone.</p>
-
-<p>This estimate may, however, appear excessive and unworthy belief.
-Yet the general average for the forty-three years included is only a
-little over one million per annum, truly a vast number to be carried
-off by the prevalence of one disease alone. But, if we reduce this
-estimate within more reasonable limits, and take only two-fifths of
-it, or twenty millions, <span class="pagenum"><a id="page176"></a>[p.176]</span> as an approximation to the truth, it
-would still be appalling, and imperatively demand, on account of the
-vast interests involved, the most rigid and thorough investigation as
-to both the direct and indirect cause of this vast sacrifice. It will
-also furnish us a sufficient apology for attempting a brief review
-and critical examination of the principles involved in the different
-modes of practice noticed above, in order to ascertain any failures or
-errors that may have, in some degree, operated as the indirect cause,
-in procuring this immense loss of life. All must admit that there
-are, in respect to the treatment of the cholera, great and palpable
-failures and errors which, though they have continued for nearly half
-a century, and have been sanctioned by high authority, as well as by
-long usage, ought nevertheless to be fully shown and exposed, so that
-they may henceforth be avoided. In our examination, there is but one
-rule to be observed, and one criterion of ultimate appeal by which to
-try each and every principle on which any mode of practice <span class="pagenum"><a id="page177"></a>[p.177]</span>
-may be conducted. This universal and acknowledged rule is Pathology,
-the science which unfolds and exhibits the nature and character of
-disease, and "dictates the maxims of rational practice." It is the
-foundation and only base of rational medicine, which proceeds on the
-assumption that the nature and character of disease is fully known and
-appreciated. This knowledge is not only rational, but indispensable, in
-order to understand and apply the principles which ought to govern in
-the medication and cure of disease.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2><span class="pagenum"><a id="page178"></a>[p.178]</span> CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Section I.&mdash;General Principle of Rational Practice&mdash;Dictated by the
-Pathology of the Disease&mdash;Confirmed by Observation and Experience</span>.</h3>
-
-
-<p>It has been observed that the essential characteristic, the leading
-and most prominent indications requiring special attention and
-permanent relief, are the "Algide," or loss of temperature; the loss
-of nerve-power in the ganglionic and pneumogastric nerves and their
-branches; the altered or disorganized condition of the blood; the
-impaired or obstructed circulation, and the early and direct tendency
-to congestion; and that these prominent and essential features are
-correspondingly developed, and in their relation to each other are
-too intimate and dependent to admit the idea of priority <span class="pagenum"><a id="page179"></a>[p.179]</span>
-and regular order of succession. The primary impression being on the
-blood, these proceeding, <i>pari passu</i>, together constitute the complex
-character of the disease, and suggest the general principle of rational
-practice. If our pathology be correct, it must be regarded as the
-foundation and only base for a successful mode of treatment, and must
-be allowed to dictate the maxims of rational practice in the prevention
-and cure of this singular disease. The neglect to apply to the
-treatment of the cholera the science of its peculiar and established
-pathology and phenomena, or to give heed to its teachings, has no doubt
-led to the errors and failures in practice, which, from their too
-general occurrence, induced the learned and celebrated Dr. Velpeau to
-declare, before the Academy of Medicine in Paris, that "we know nothing
-more of the treatment of cholera now, than on its first appearance in
-1832. All our remedies and modes of practice have failed."</p>
-
-<p>By observing the fundamental principles <span class="pagenum"><a id="page180"></a>[p.180]</span> of the science of
-medicine, and adopting a mode of practice suggested by the pathology
-and phenomena of the cholera, these errors and failures, which have
-justly brought odium upon the so-called regular profession, will
-probably result in saving nine-tenths of those attacked, instead
-of losing that appalling proportion, as has been the case in some
-instances in years past.</p>
-
-<p>What, then, is the principle which, for nearly half a century, has
-been strangely overlooked, and utterly disregarded by the so-called
-regular profession, so far as the maxims of rational practice are
-concerned in the treatment of this disease? We unhesitatingly affirm
-the principle suggested by the pathology of the disease is, and must
-be, one that will reproduce and resupply the lost caloric, or restore
-warmth to the body; one that will restore promptly the lost nerve-power
-to the ganglionic nerves especially; one that will arrest and remove
-the tendency to congestion, equalize the circulation and relieve the
-oppressed respiration, and thus mitigate the long <span class="pagenum"><a id="page181"></a>[p.181]</span> train of
-dependent symptoms. For this purpose, a prompt and diffusive stimulant
-is required of sufficient power to meet these urgent demands, and
-suspend promptly any further depressing influence or action of the
-cholera poison. A stimulant, essentially different from alcohol in any
-of its forms, is required. Alcohol, except so far as it necessarily
-enters into the composition of medicines, is inadmissible. So, too,
-are all those stimulants whose action is violent, or tends to induce
-constitutional derangement, or impairs in any way the subsequent
-health of the patient. It must be one prompt, kind and diffusive in
-its nature, and peculiarly adapted to meet and relieve the essential
-urgent symptoms on which the whole train of <i>non-essential symptoms</i>
-depend. In short, it must be one possessing the singular properties of
-a stimulant, sedative and astringent, especially an arterial stimulant
-and antispasmodic.</p>
-
-<p>In confirmation of this doctrine, we may refer to the general principle
-exhibited in the most successful modes of practice. During <span class="pagenum"><a id="page182"></a>[p.182]</span>
-the prevalence of the cholera in 1832, the physician having charge
-of the Tenth Ward in this city, in which more than a thousand cases
-occurred, adopted as the principle of general practice in that ward a
-prompt and diffusive stimulant, which was, at that early day, regarded
-by him as based on the pathology of the disease. This principle
-was strictly observed and fully carried out in practice by all his
-assistants. The result, embracing the different stages of the disease,
-and some of the most malignant cases, was the curing and saving of more
-than nine-tenths of those attacked.</p>
-
-<p>Another instance directly in point is the course pursued by Mr.
-Forward, an unprofessional gentleman, who had over two hundred laborers
-in his employ, among whom the cholera prevailed in 1832 with its
-accustomed severity. On its first appearance, Mr. Forward, unadvised,
-and depending on ordinary domestic remedies, adopted as the base of
-practice in the emergency a prompt and diffusive stimulant, which
-proved perfectly <span class="pagenum"><a id="page183"></a>[p.183]</span> successful. Being advised to continue the
-same course, should any more cases occur, the result was, in treating
-a large number of cases, including thirteen in his own family, that
-all were cured. Again, on the reappearance of the cholera in 1835,
-the same practice was pursued, with the same uniform success. Can
-anything be more satisfactory or more conclusive as to the adaptation
-of a principle of practice to the pathology of the disease, or furnish
-better evidence of the correctness of the doctrine we have advanced?</p>
-
-<p>Richard Brown, Esq., surgeon, Cobham, Surrey, November, 1848, reports
-a case treated successfully by rectified oil of turpentine, the
-therapeutic character of which is unquestionable.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Massie, of Texas, adopted a similar principle of practice, and
-highly commended the same to his professional brethren, as the
-safest, best, and most efficient in the treatment of the cholera. He
-affirms, that of all the modes devised for the prevention and cure of
-this disease, none is so simple <span class="pagenum"><a id="page184"></a>[p.184]</span> and efficacious as the one
-exhibited in his practice.</p>
-
-<p>The hom&oelig;opathic treatment, which claims to be a complete and
-perfect system, arranged and adopted by its originator and all his
-disciples, confirms the correctness of the doctrine we have advanced.
-Its curative principle in the treatment of cholera is based on a
-prompt and diffusive stimulant, peculiarly adapted, so far as it has
-any power, to meet and relieve the essential symptoms of this disease.
-Hence its success and favorable results, which show a saving of nearly
-nine-tenths of all the cases treated.</p>
-
-<p>Again, the eclectic physicians, who now, including all of the reform
-school, constitute a majority of the practitioners of medicine in
-this country, adopted a principle essentially similar, which has
-governed their practice in the treatment of this disease from its first
-appearance in 1832. Their system seems to have been more strictly
-conformed to the pathology of the cholera than that of any other
-school. Hence, their unparalleled <span class="pagenum"><a id="page185"></a>[p.185]</span> success furnishes the most
-substantial and conclusive evidence, sustaining the correctness of
-the doctrine we have adduced, and the general principle of rational
-practice suggested and imperatively demanded by the pathology of
-the disease. Their treatment, directed mainly to the relief of the
-essential symptoms, has been based on a prompt and diffusive stimulant,
-which, fulfilling to some extent the indications required, has enabled
-them to meet the disease on each occasion of its reappearance with some
-assurance of success, and more generally to arrest its progress or
-subdue its power as exhibited in its several stages, and even in many
-instances to restore the patient and save life in the last stage of the
-almost hopeless collapse. This is clearly shown in the actual results
-which fully exhibit the incomparable fact that in private practice
-considerably more than nine-tenths of the cases of "true cholera"
-are cured, and the constitution and health of their patients saved
-unimpaired.</p>
-
-<p>Again, this doctrine is substantially confirmed <span class="pagenum"><a id="page186"></a>[p.186]</span> by the
-results of the experiments made by Drs. Hill and Davies, in the
-exhibition of chloroform, either alone or combined with other
-stimulants. In the carefully detailed account of its exhibition in the
-various stages of the disease, it is clearly shown that its direct
-action tends to arrest and suspend the depressing influence of the
-primary cause, and when properly combined with other stimulants,
-affords very prompt relief. The favorable results thus obtained
-encourage the hope that it may prove a successful remedy and lead to
-the adoption of a more consistent mode of practice in the treatment
-of epidemic cholera. In India, in Europe, and in America, it is now
-regarded as a very important remedy, and especially indicated in this
-disease. As an antidote to miasmatic poison, and as a prompt and
-diffusive stimulant when properly combined, it is admirably calculated
-to meet and suspend the most urgent symptoms. In short, it may be
-considered, in relation to this disease, an excellent therapeutic
-agent, and well calculated to <span class="pagenum"><a id="page187"></a>[p.187]</span> form the base of the principle
-for which we contend.</p>
-
-<p>But again, our doctrine is confirmed by the experiment usually
-termed "venous transfusion." The solution of soda, when raised to a
-temperature from 105° to 120° Fahr., and injected into the veins of
-the suffering patient, gave <i>temporarily</i> prompt and immediate relief;
-but, when injected at a lower temperature, failed. In this experiment,
-the sole and only agent contributing to the result was, as before
-explained, the free caloric which immediately permeated every tissue,
-supplied warmth to the body, relieved the depressed nerve-power,
-equalized the circulation, and restored generally the normal action of
-the system. Of this result, and of the diffusive and prompt stimulating
-power of free caloric, there can be no question. The principle here
-evolved, which answered so perfectly the imperious demand and so
-immediately suspended the power of the disease, is the very principle
-dictated by its pathology. Stronger and better evidence of the utility
-of a <span class="pagenum"><a id="page188"></a>[p.188]</span> prompt and diffusive stimulant, permanent in its
-character and influence, cannot be furnished; one that will act kindly,
-without violence and without any disturbance to any organ or tissue, to
-injure or delay the return of immediate and perfect health after the
-disease is subdued. Such we affirm to be the principle demanded in the
-successful treatment of the epidemic cholera.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Section II.&mdash;Remedies, Recipes, etc.</span></h3>
-
-<p>Considering the general principle of treatment, and the nature of the
-remedy so clearly suggested by the pathology of the disease to be fully
-established, it now remains for us to point out some of those curative
-agents which may be employed to advantage. It may be here observed,
-that among the few that can be confidently recommended, there is no
-single remedy yet discovered which seems to possess all the properties
-necessary to meet the complex condition presented in a malignant case
-of cholera. Yet it is believed we have simple <span class="pagenum"><a id="page189"></a>[p.189]</span> remedies,
-which, when properly combined, will prove successful. Among the number
-that seem best adapted to meet and fulfill the indications, may be
-named chloroform, as the leading remedy on which we may reasonably hope
-for success. This may be united with spirits of camphor, the tincture
-of xanthoxyli fraxinifolii bacca, the compound fluid extract of rhubarb
-and potassa,<a name="FNanchor_C_1" id="FNanchor_C_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_1" class="fnanchor">[XVII]</a> and the oil of monarda punctata, and a very
-valuable and reliable remedy obtained. The following formula exhibits
-the mode of combination, which may be varied and adapted to suit any
-emergency:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="42%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Chloroform,(sq.,)</td>
- <td>&#658; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="5">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Spirits Camph.,</td>
- <td>&#658; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Ol. Monarda,</td>
- <td>gtts. x.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>M. et adde&mdash;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Tinc. Xanthox. Frax. Bac.,</td>
- <td>&#8485; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Fluid Ext. Rhei et Potas.,</td>
- <td>&#8485; iv.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>M.&mdash;S.&mdash;From &#658; j. to &#8485; ss. every half-hour, hour or two hours,
-according to the urgency of the symptoms and the stage of the disease.
-As soon as relief is obtained, it <span class="pagenum"><a id="page190"></a>[p.190]</span> should be given in minimum
-doses and less frequently. This is admirably adapted to the cold stage,
-and will give prompt relief in a great majority of cases.</p>
-
-<p>In the premonitory stage, it can be administered to good advantage
-in small and less frequent doses. In some instances, an additional
-astringent may be necessary. The deceptive and painless diarrh&oelig;a
-should receive prompt attention, and be regarded and treated as the
-incipient form of the disease. According to the best authorities, the
-diarrh&oelig;a commences with the first chemical change or alteration of
-the blood, and proceeds gradually, in most cases, for some hours, and
-even in some instances, though rarely, for days. It is not sufficient
-to check the diarrh&oelig;a merely; the cause must be removed, which is
-essentially of miasmatic origin. When the cholera is prevailing, and
-the diarrh&oelig;a is essentially choleraic, or the result of a depressing
-miasmatic influence, it should be treated with chloroform, aided, if
-required, by appropriate astringents.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page191"></a>[p.191]</span> In the fully developed stage, and even in the stage of
-collapse, perhaps no combination is better adapted to meet promptly
-all the necessities and wants of the system, and suspend the action of
-the cholera-poison, than the one named above. It is a simple, prompt
-and diffusive stimulant, approximating the principle indicated. This
-peculiar remedy is essentially required, and should be continued
-through all the stages of the disease till relief be obtained, varying
-its administration according to the urgency of the symptoms. When the
-stomach is too irritable to retain medicine, it should be given by
-the bowel. Take of the above mixture, one-half ounce, of the tincture
-of prickly-ash berries one-half ounce, of the tincture of opium ten
-drops, of warm water one ounce and a half&mdash;mix and inject. This may
-be repeated after every evacuation three or four times, unless relief
-be obtained earlier. Thus, it should be administered perseveringly by
-stomach and by bowel, aided by due employment of all necessary external
-means for furnishing <span class="pagenum"><a id="page192"></a>[p.192]</span> warmth and giving relief. Opium,
-however, should be omitted after two or three injections. Its continued
-use to check the movement of the bowels is decidedly injurious.</p>
-
-<p>The vomiting and irritability of the stomach may often be allayed by a
-strong decoction of spearmint and horse-peppermint (monarda punctata),
-equal parts, alternated with camphor water in small repeated doses
-every five minutes. This will often succeed when all other means fail.</p>
-
-<p>The compound cajeput mixture<a name="FNanchor_C_2" id="FNanchor_C_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_2" class="fnanchor">[XVIII]</a> is a very excellent and prompt
-stimulant, and may be alternated with other remedies with good effect.
-It is particularly useful in allaying violent cramps, and restoring
-warmth to the body, and may be given in doses of one tea-spoonful every
-ten or twenty minutes in mucilage, simple syrup, or, better still, in
-hot brandy-and-water sweetened.</p>
-
-<p>The aromatic tincture of guaiac<a name="FNanchor_C_3" id="FNanchor_C_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[XIX]</a> will be found very useful in some
-cases, and may be united with chloroform according to the following:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="42%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a id="page193"></a>[p.193]</span> &#8478;.</td>
- <td>Chloroform,(sq.)</td>
- <td>&#658; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="5">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Spirits Camphor,</td>
- <td>&#658; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Ol. Monarda</td>
- <td>gts. v.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>M. et adde&mdash;</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Tinc. Guaiac. Arom.,</td>
- <td>&#8485; iv.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>M.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>S.&mdash;From one-half to one tea-spoonful every half hour, or, if
-necessary, in violent cases every twenty minutes, in a little sweetened
-water. This may be alternated with some other remedy to great advantage.</p>
-
-<p>Chloric ether has been with some a very favorite remedy, and, in
-combination with other diffusive stimulants, may serve a good
-purpose. So, too, the spirits of turpentine, and the rectified oil of
-turpentine, have proved very beneficial, the former in combination,
-the latter administered alone. These agents, however, can be rendered
-more prompt and effective by combination. It is the promptness, the
-instantaneous or electric action like that of oxygen, ozone, and
-caloric that gives value to the combination, and renders it peculiarly
-efficacious <span class="pagenum"><a id="page194"></a>[p.194]</span> when it possesses the other peculiar properties
-required.</p>
-
-<p>In the early stage, sulphuric acid, in the form of elixir vitriol, has
-given very prompt relief, and is very highly recommended as a curative
-agent in the treatment of this disease. The following formula presents
-the mode of its exhibition:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="42%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Elixir Vitriol,</td>
- <td>&#8485; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Tinc. Xanthox. Frax. Bac.</td>
- <td>&#8485; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Ess. Lemon,</td>
- <td>&#658; j.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>M.&mdash;S.&mdash;Tea-spoonful in a gill of sweetened cold water every two or
-three hours.</p>
-
-<p>This recipe was used in the incipient stage quite extensively in the
-epidemic of 1849, with decided advantage. It generally removed the
-symptoms speedily, without any other treatment. In the more advanced
-stage it was thought not so reliable as other means named above.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Fuller, of this city, advocates the use of sulphuric acid as
-a prompt and efficient remedy, and affirms that according to his
-experience, a great majority of cases may be cured by this mode of
-treatment.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page195"></a>[p.195]</span> Dr. Cox, of England, has also spoken in its favor, and
-recommended its use as an infallible remedy. The eclectic physicians
-are entitled to the credit of its first introduction as a curative
-agent in the treatment of the Asiatic cholera, combined with the
-tincture of prickly-ash berries and the essence of lemon, as noticed
-above. In our estimation it may be rendered more effective, combined
-according to the following:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="2%"/>
- <col width="3%"/>
- <col width="37%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Elixir Vitriol,</td>
- <td rowspan="2" class="bortop1 borright1 borbot1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="2">&#257;&#257;., &#8485; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="4">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Chloric Ether,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Tinc. Xanthox. Frax. Bac.</td>
- <td rowspan="3" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&#8485; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Ess. Lemon,</td>
- <td>&#658; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>M.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>S.&mdash;A tea-spoonful in a gill of sweetened cold water every two or three
-hours. Thus combined, it forms a very prompt and diffusive stimulant,
-and is well adapted to meet the indications in the earlier stage of
-the disease. In the last stage perhaps no remedy will be found so
-prompt and decided in its action as the injection named above, with the
-internal use of chloroform as combined in the recipe on page <a href="#page189">189</a>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page196"></a>[p.196]</span> In cases of excessive irritability of the stomach, the
-following combination was administered with good effect, and was
-especially beneficial in cases attended with stupor from the
-commencement of the disease:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="42%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Common Salt,</td>
- <td>&#658; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="4">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Black Pepper,</td>
- <td>&#658; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Vinegar,</td>
- <td>f. &#658; v.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Hot Water,</td>
- <td>f. &#8485; iv.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>M.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>Of this, when settled, or strained, a table-spoonful may be given every
-ten or twenty minutes. It seldom failed to quiet the stomach and check
-the motion of the bowels. In this condition the injection should be
-also administered, and repeated as occasion may require.</p>
-
-<p>Some advocate the use of the spirits of ammonia and tincture of
-capsicum, properly combined with other diffusive stimulants, as a very
-efficient and successful remedy. The following is, perhaps, the most
-desirable formula:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="2%"/>
- <col width="3%"/>
- <col width="37%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a id="page197"></a>[p.197]</span> &#8478;.</td>
- <td>Chloroform, (sq.)</td>
- <td rowspan="4" class="bortop1 borright1 borbot1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="4">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="4">&#257;&#257;., &#658; iij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="5">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Spts. Camph.,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Spts. Ammonia Aromat.,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Tinc. Capsicum,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Elix. Opii (McMunn's),</td>
- <td rowspan="2" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&#658; ss.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Syr. Zingiberis,</td>
- <td>&#8485; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>M.&mdash;S.&mdash;Tea-spoonful in water every thirty minutes till relieved. Then
-less frequently, according to circumstances. This is said to give
-very prompt relief in the earlier stage of the disease. With some
-practitioners the following has been quite a favorite remedy:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="42%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Ęther Chloric.,</td>
- <td>&#8485; j.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="5">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Tinc. Cardamom.,</td>
- <td>&#8485; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Spts. Camph.,</td>
- <td>&#8485; ss.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Elix. Opii (McMunn's),</td>
- <td>&#658; ss.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Syr. Zingib.,</td>
- <td>&#8485; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>M.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>S.&mdash;Two tea-spoonsful in water every 10 or 30 minutes till relieved,
-then continued less frequently and in less doses every one, two, three,
-or four hours, according to circumstances.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page198"></a>[p.198]</span> For the purpose of promoting reaction in cholera and
-diarrh&oelig;a, the following formula has been extensively used and most
-universally approved. It is, indeed, so highly valued in England and in
-India, that it is ordered to be always in store and in readiness in the
-Medical Field Companion of the army when on the march:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="2%"/>
- <col width="3%"/>
- <col width="37%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td>&#8478;.</td>
- <td>Ol. Anisi,</td>
- <td rowspan="3" class="bortop1 borright1 borbot1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="3">&#257;&#257;., &#658; ss.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="6">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Ol. Cajeput,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Ol. Juniper,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Ęther Chloric,</td>
- <td rowspan="4" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&#8485; ss.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Liquor Acid. Haleri,<a name="FNanchor_C_4" id="FNanchor_C_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_4" class="fnanchor">[XX]</a></td>
- <td>&#658; ss.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Tinc. Cinnamon,</td>
- <td>&#8485; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>M.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>S.&mdash;Ten drops every fifteen minutes, in a table-spoonful of water. An
-opiate may be given with the first and second dose, but should not be
-continued.</p>
-
-<p>Another recipe which has been used with some success in private
-practice, illustrative of the use of chloroform as a diffusive
-stimulant and sedative, is the following:</p>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" summary="formula">
-<colgroup>
- <col width="8%"/>
- <col width="50%"/>
- <col width="2%"/>
- <col width="3%"/>
- <col width="37%"/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr>
- <td><span class="pagenum"><a id="page199"></a>[p.199]</span> &#8478;.</td>
- <td>Chloroform (sq.)</td>
- <td rowspan="5" class="bortop1 borright1 borbot1">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="5">&nbsp;</td>
- <td rowspan="5">&#257;&#257;., &#658; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td rowspan="6">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>Spts. Camph.,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Tinc. Capsicum,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Tinc. Zingib.,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Tinc. Cardamom.,</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>Syr. Simplex,</td>
- <td rowspan="2" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
- <td>&#8485; ij.</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
- <td>M.</td>
- <td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p>S.&mdash;Tea-spoonful in a little water every half hour, hour, or two hours,
-according to circumstances. An opiate may be given with the first and
-second dose, but should not be continued. Should the first dose be
-ejected, give another immediately after the vomiting.</p>
-
-<p>In collapse, which is simply a more advanced stage of the disease,
-indicating the gradual failing of all the powers of life, our main
-reliance is on enemata, as noticed above, often repeated, and continued
-as occasion may require.</p>
-
-<p>Rev. Dr. Hamlin, of Constantinople, observes, "It is difficult to say
-when a cure has become hopeless. The blue color, the cold extremities,
-the deeply sunken eye, the vanishing pulse, are no signs that the case
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page200"></a>[p.200]</span> is hopeless. Scores of such cases in the recent epidemic have
-recovered."</p>
-
-<p>Here it may be proper to add, that a cure, even with the most efficient
-remedies, cannot be easily effected without placing the patient at
-the commencement in a recumbent position. This appears indispensable.
-The patient should be placed in bed and kept there in the horizontal
-position, comfortably covered with blankets, and with warm applications
-to the feet. Every necessary convenience should be at once provided to
-prevent, if possible, the patient from rising to, or standing upon,
-his feet, for the erect posture, before relief is fully obtained,
-will inevitably hasten the unfavorable termination of the disease. On
-this direction, therefore, the physician must insist if he would save
-his patient. Says an eminent physician, perfectly familiar with the
-disease, "This direction faithfully observed, and good nursing, will
-save very many patients even without medicine."</p>
-
-<p>Of the auxiliary aids, consisting of various external applications,
-we cannot speak <span class="pagenum"><a id="page201"></a>[p.201]</span> in very flattering terms. To the mind of
-the practitioner the more important are readily suggested, and are
-promptly employed by nurses in the earlier stages of the disease. It is
-impossible for any person to attend on a case of true cholera without
-being instinctively moved to apply heat friction, and warm stimulants
-to the surface for the relief of the suffering patient. Any attempt
-to prevent these kind offices and apparently beneficial appliances
-would be unwise, and most certainly, in private practice, unavailing.
-It becomes, therefore, necessary to direct the use of those which are
-most agreeable to the patient and tend to preserve and sustain the
-recuperative power; those which tend to weaken and depress the system
-are the most objectionable. Among the number that seem to do good, we
-may mention bottles of hot water to the feet and calves of the legs,
-hot bricks dipped in water and wrapped in flannel and applied to
-different parts of the body; blankets wet in water as hot as can be
-borne, and wrung out so as not to drip, and applied to the
-<span class="pagenum"><a id="page202"></a>[p.202]</span> whole surface, and changed at short intervals, so as to
-keep up a steady and permanent temperature of the surface; flannels
-moistened with spirits of turpentine, or other stimulant embrocation,
-and laid over the stomach and bowels, may be employed, as these all,
-in some instances, seemed to be beneficial. Their necessity and use,
-however, must be governed by circumstances. As we have before said, our
-main reliance is on a prompt and diffusive stimulant internally; other
-means, at best, are very uncertain.</p>
-
-<p>Such are some of the remedies evidently suggested by the pathology
-and phenomena of the disease, and adapted to meet and remove the more
-urgent, essential symptoms. They are not entirely new. They have been
-employed to some extent in former epidemics of cholera, and have
-sustained a good reputation as useful and curative agents in the
-treatment of this disease. The combinations here suggested are the
-result of observation and experience, and are intended to present the
-form in which these remedies <span class="pagenum"><a id="page203"></a>[p.203]</span> can be exhibited to the best
-advantage. They are simple, prompt, and reliable, such as will leave
-the system, when the disease is subdued, in its ordinary condition,
-without any injury whatever to prevent its immediate return to its
-normal state of health. Let them be employed, and their utility
-thoroughly tested. They will bear the strictest scrutiny, and sustain
-their reputation untarnished under the most trying circumstances.
-Should the cholera appear again in our midst in its epidemic form,
-and these remedies be generally employed and properly administered,
-we venture to predict their efficacy will be abundantly proved in the
-successful result of saving more than nine-tenths of those attacked.</p>
-
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Section III.&mdash;Prophylaxis&mdash;or Means of Prevention.</span></h3>
-
-<p>In presenting a course of preventive treatment consistent with the
-origin and general character of the disease, we are necessarily limited
-to the means of sustaining <span class="pagenum"><a id="page204"></a>[p.204]</span> the <i>normal</i> action of the system,
-and suppressing the operation of those causes which, by reducing the
-general health, tend to generate, foster, and develop the cholera. Of
-the former so much has been written and published, inculcating the
-general principles of hygiene, that it seems quite unnecessary to dwell
-on a subject so familiar to the great mass of community; yet, there
-are occasions when the most familiar truths have to be impressed upon
-the mind, by constant repetition, to prevent threatened dangers, and
-obviate the most serious consequences. In no instance is this more
-important than in time of prevailing epidemics; for it is an undeniable
-fact, that multitudes <i>will</i> neglect the most obvious principles of
-hygiene, and tolerate, with utter indifference, the most offensive
-nuisance, in and around their dwellings, and if attacked by disease,
-will often wonder why <i>they</i>, more than <i>others</i>, should be visited by
-a malignant disease, or become the victims of a prevailing epidemic.
-Hence the necessity of urging the observance of some <span class="pagenum"><a id="page205"></a>[p.205]</span> of the
-most obvious principles of hygiene, in the preventive treatment of
-Asiatic cholera.</p>
-
-<p>Pure air, pure water, and a frugal nutritious diet are Nature's
-great preventives for the thousand ills of life. These are the great
-essentials in sustaining the healthful and normal condition of the
-system, always of primary importance in preserving its tone and energy,
-and rendering it impervious to any miasmatic or epidemic influences.
-Therefore, the tone of the system should, more especially when
-epidemics are prevailing, be kept fully up to its normal standard.
-This cannot be accomplished without pure air,&mdash;whether our dwellings
-be located in the city or in the country; free ventilation of all
-apartments is of the first importance. Kitchens, sitting-rooms,
-dressing-rooms, and especially sleeping-rooms, should be kept
-constantly and thoroughly ventilated; cellars and vaults, too, should
-receive attention, and be kept free from a deteriorated or foul
-atmosphere. Everything within and without <span class="pagenum"><a id="page206"></a>[p.206]</span> our dwellings,
-tending to impregnate the atmosphere with noxious effluvia, should be
-removed, and the foul air promptly purified by the use of appropriate
-disinfectants.</p>
-
-<p>Pure water for drinking and culinary purposes is another preventive
-remedy, whose employment cannot be safely omitted. It is a well-known
-fact that, in various localities, wells only a few feet deep, which are
-mainly supplied by drainage or surface water, have proved a fruitful
-source, and in some instances a direct and efficient cause of epidemic
-cholera.</p>
-
-<p>The water from rivers flowing past large cities and villages is often
-so impure as to render its use decidedly deleterious, if not an actual
-source of disease. In some cases they have been literally so filled
-with portions of fish, and other animal matter, that all city supplies
-were made endurable only by long-continued filtration. The waters of
-many of our Southern and Western rivers are rendered impure from the
-lime and surface drainage with which they are so highly impregnated
-that they <span class="pagenum"><a id="page207"></a>[p.207]</span> often become a direct source of diarrh&oelig;a and
-cholera. Pure water, free from the impregnation of vegetable, animal
-and mineral substances, should be sought and obtained for domestic use.</p>
-
-<p>A good nutritious diet is an indispensable requisite in the prevention
-of disease. The system in comparative health requires, and should
-regularly receive, its proper aliment. Its daily recurring demands
-should be judiciously met with pure and wholesome food, in such
-quantity as can be readily digested, assimilated and duly appropriated
-for the supply of its wants. Due regard, however, must be had to the
-existing and peculiar condition of the digestive organs, on which
-mainly depends the process of supporting and perpetuating the general
-health.</p>
-
-<p>It is not the profuse variety and the incongruous mass composed of
-baked, roasted, boiled and fried meats, fish and fowl, oyster, lobster,
-frog and turtle, with puddings, tarts, jellies, cakes and creams from
-the pastry room&mdash;fruits and salads, native and foreign, rich and
-rare&mdash;alcoholic stimulants, and cooling <span class="pagenum"><a id="page208"></a>[p.208]</span> ices, but the simple,
-plain and frugal diet, properly cooked and particularly nutritious,
-that conduces to the most vigorous health.</p>
-
-<p>Regular, temperate habits in all things, are especially commended;
-excesses of all kinds are reprehensible. Great and sudden changes in
-the habits of living are always deleterious, and must be particularly
-so, when an appalling and fatal epidemic is prevailing. Temperance,
-sobriety and cheerfulness, regular hours for meals, for rest and for
-business, repeated ablutions and perfect cleanliness, moderate exercise
-and avoidance of irregularities, persevering self-government and duly
-subjected passions, all contribute to health, to happiness, and the
-prevention of disease.</p>
-
-<p>Exposure to the extremes of heat and cold should be avoided, and
-the clothing properly adapted to the climate&mdash;to the season and its
-variable temperature. Constant vigilance is necessary to guard against
-the numberless causes tending to produce an abnormal condition,
-resulting in the derangement of the stomach and bowels, or <span class="pagenum"><a id="page209"></a>[p.209]</span>
-in depressing the nervous power, thus enfeebling and prostrating the
-general health. The neglect of these hygienic principles and essential
-preventives of cholera may induce the condition which temptingly
-invites the disease. Some are vastly more susceptible than others, and
-may not be able, with all their watchfulness and care, to avoid an
-attack, should the disease extensively prevail among us.</p>
-
-<p>The premonitory symptoms requiring special attention, when the
-epidemic cholera is prevailing, are definitely presented in Chap.
-II., Sec. 2, page <a href="#page56">56</a>, to which special reference is made. Whenever
-any of these do occur, though generally supposed to present no
-particular characteristic of the cholera, they should, however,
-receive prompt attention. The loss of animation, the depression of
-nerve-power, the pain in the forehead and slight vertigo, the nervous
-agitation and oppression at the chest, with slight nausea, may in
-most instances be promptly removed. They should be at once patiently
-and perseveringly <span class="pagenum"><a id="page210"></a>[p.210]</span> treated by the use of camphor water,
-prepared as follows: Take spirits of camphor, one tea-spoonful, and
-put it into a half-pint of cold water, and give of the mixture two
-tea-spoonfuls every half-hour, hour, or two hours, according to the
-severity of the symptoms. A strong decoction, or tea of horsemint
-(monarda punctata), is an excellent remedy even in this early stage.
-The essence of monarda, or horsemint, in doses of eight or ten drops in
-a little water, and repeated every hour or two, will often give prompt
-relief. Where the horsemint cannot be obtained, the spearmint, and the
-peppermint also, may prove serviceable.</p>
-
-<p>Keith's concentrated Tincture of Veratrum Viride is also an excellent
-remedy in these premonitory symptoms. Put three or four drops into a
-tumblerful of cold water, and give of the mixture a tea-spoonful every
-hour or two hours, as occasion may require. This may be alternated with
-the essence, or tea of horsemint.</p>
-
-<p>But another more general symptom, which may be properly termed the
-incipient <span class="pagenum"><a id="page211"></a>[p.211]</span> stage of the disease, is the slight diarrh&oelig;a,
-usually termed painless, though it is by no means always so, but
-frequently the very reverse, severe and painful. This at first may be
-slight, but gradually increasing, soon becomes obstinate, painful, and
-exceedingly difficult to control. It therefore should receive attention
-at its very commencement, for it is in reality the stealthy invasion
-of the citadel&mdash;it is the cholera. The loss of life becomes imminent;
-treatment becomes indispensable; send at once for your physician. And,
-in the meantime, continue the camphor mixture, the horsemint tea, and
-give of the fluid extract of rhubarb and potassa, prepared according
-to the formula in the American Dispensatory, one or two tea-spoonfuls
-every hour, and, if necessary, add four or five drops of laudanum, or
-its equivalent in paregoric, to each dose, till relieved. In this early
-stage, opium in small doses may be given four or five times, but should
-not be continued. These remedies, properly administered, will control
-the great majority of cases.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="page212"></a>[p.212]</span> If, however, the diarrh&oelig;a be uncontrolled and vomiting
-ensue, the recipe on page <a href="#page189">189</a> will be found very efficient, and
-should be perseveringly administered till relief is obtained. It is
-prepared as follows: Chloroform, two drachms; spirits of camphor, one
-drachm; essence of monarda (or horsemint), three drachms; tincture
-of prickly-ash berries, two ounces; fluid extract of rhubarb and
-potassa, four ounces&mdash;mix. Give from one-half to one table-spoonful
-every half-hour, hour, or two hours, according to the urgency of the
-symptoms and the stage of the disease. This remedy is well adapted to
-every stage, and may be used in collapse as an injection, combined as
-follows: Take of the above mixture <i>two table-spoonfuls</i>, and add to
-it tincture of prickly-ash berries, <i>two table-spoonfuls</i>; laudanum
-<i>ten drops</i>; warm water, <i>six table-spoonfuls</i>&mdash;mix, <i>and inject up the
-bowel</i>. This injection should be repeated as often as required. In some
-desperate cases it has been repeated many times and the patients saved.</p>
-
-<p>Wherever the disease prevails, all discharges <span class="pagenum"><a id="page213"></a>[p.213]</span> from cholera
-patients should be promptly disinfected and disposed of. Bedding,
-linen, water-closets, cesspools, etc., should be thoroughly disinfected
-and renovated, so that no germ may remain to propagate the disease.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 class="lihei1">FORMULĘ<br/>
-
-<span class="ftsize65">FOR SOME OF THE PREPARATIONS USED IN THE ABOVE RECIPES.</span></h2>
-
-
-<div class="bltext">
- <p><span class="smcap">Greenhow's Aromatic Tincture of Guaiacum.</span>&mdash;Take of guaiacum,
- cloves and cinnamon, each, in powder, <i>one ounce</i>; best brandy, <i>two
- pints</i>. Macerate for fourteen days and filter.</p>
-
- <p>Dose.&mdash;From a tea-spoonful to a table-spoonful, in sweetened water,
- every fifteen or twenty minutes.&mdash;<i>Am. Dis.</i></p>
-
- <p class="martop2"><span class="smcap">Compound Cajeput Mixture&mdash;Hunn's Drops.</span>&mdash;Take of oils of
- cajeput, cloves, peppermint, and anise, each, <i>one fluid ounce</i>;
- rectified alcohol, <i>four ounces</i>. Dissolve the oils in the alcohol.</p>
-
- <p>The ordinary dose is from ten drops to half a tea-spoonful; to be
- given in simple syrup, mucilage of slippery-elm, or in hot brandy and
- water <i>sweetened</i>.&mdash;<i>Am. Dis.</i></p>
-
- <p class="martop2"><span class="pagenum"><a id="page214"></a>[p.214]</span> <span class="smcap">Fluid Extract of Rhubarb and Potassa</span>.&mdash;Take of the
- root of the best India rhubarb, in powder, and bicarbonate of potassa,
- of each, <i>one ounce</i>; cassia or cinnamon, and golden seal, in powder,
- of each, <i>half an ounce</i>; boiling water, one-half pint. Macerate
- the roots and seeds for an hour; strain and dissolve the potassa in
- the strained liquor when nearly cold, and add one gill best brandy;
- essence of peppermint, one tea-spoonful, and refined sugar, <i>two
- ounces</i>.</p>
-
- <p>Dose.&mdash;From one to two tea-spoonfuls as often as necessary.&mdash;<i>Am. Dis</i>.</p>
-
- <p class="martop2"><span class="smcap">Tinc. Xanthoxyli</span>, or Tincture of Prickly-ash Berries.&mdash;Take
- of prickly-ash berries <i>eight ounces</i>; diluted alcohol, <i>two pints</i>.
- Form into a tincture by maceration, or displacement, and make two
- pints of tincture.</p>
-
- <p>The ordinary dose is twenty or thirty drops. In cholera, from
- a tea-spoonful to one or two table-spoonfuls, according to
- circumstances.&mdash;<i>Am. Dis.</i></p>
-
- <p class="martop2"><span class="smcap">Tincture of Oil of Monarda</span>&mdash;Essence of Monarda, or
- Horsemint.&mdash;Take of oil of horsemint <i>one fluid ounce</i>; alcohol, <i>nine
- fluid ounces</i>, Imp. Meas. Mix with agitation.</p>
-
- <p>Dose.&mdash;From ten to twenty drops on sugar, or in sweetened water.&mdash;<i>Am.
- Dis.</i></p>
-
- <p class="martop2"><span class="smcap">Elixir of Opium</span>, prepared on the base of Dupuy's formula is
- less objectionable as an ingredient in recipes for an advanced stage
- of cholera than other preparations of that drug.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<h2>FOOTNOTES:</h2>
-
-
-<div class="footnote indent03">
-<p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">I</span></a> Sulphuric acid, one part; Rectified Spirit, three parts.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_1" id="Footnote_B_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_1"><span class="label">II</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_2" id="Footnote_B_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_2"><span class="label">III</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_3" id="Footnote_B_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_3"><span class="label">IV</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_4" id="Footnote_B_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_4"><span class="label">V</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_5" id="Footnote_B_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_5"><span class="label">VI</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_6" id="Footnote_B_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_6"><span class="label">VII</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_7" id="Footnote_B_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_7"><span class="label">VIII</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_8" id="Footnote_B_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_8"><span class="label">IX</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_9" id="Footnote_B_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_9"><span class="label">X</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_10" id="Footnote_B_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_10"><span class="label">XI</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_11" id="Footnote_B_11"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_11"><span class="label">XII</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_12" id="Footnote_B_12"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_12"><span class="label">XIII</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_13" id="Footnote_B_13"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_13"><span class="label">XIV</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_14" id="Footnote_B_14"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_14"><span class="label">XV</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_B_15" id="Footnote_B_15"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_15"><span class="label">XVI</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_C_1" id="Footnote_C_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_1"><span class="label">XVII</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_C_2" id="Footnote_C_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_2"><span class="label">XVIII</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_C_3" id="Footnote_C_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_3"><span class="label">XIX</span></a> See American Dispensatory.</p>
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_C_4" id="Footnote_C_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_4"><span class="label">XX</span></a> Sulphuric acid, one part; rectified spirit, three parts.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-<div class="box martop4">
-<h2>Transcriber's Notes:</h2>
-
-
-<p>Other than the corrections listed below, printer's inconsistencies
-in spelling, punctuation, hyphenation, and ligature usage have been
-retained.</p>
-
-<p>The tables have been equalized as good as possible.</p>
-
-<p>The following words have been retained in both versions:</p>
-
-<ul class="tn">
- <li>formula (pages <a href="#page73">73</a>, <a href="#page136">136</a>, <a href="#page157">157</a>, <a href="#page189">189</a>, <a href="#page194">194</a>, <a href="#page196">196</a>, <a href="#page198">198</a>, <a href="#page211">211</a> and <a href="#page214">214</a>),
- formulas (pages <a href="#page76">76</a> and <a href="#page87">87</a>) and formulę (pages <a href="#page8">8</a>, <a href="#page138">138</a>, <a href="#page142">142</a> and <a href="#page213">213</a>)</li>
-
- <li>ether (pages <a href="#page123">123</a>, <a href="#page138">138</a>, <a href="#page193">193</a> and <a href="#page195">195</a>) and ęther (pages <a href="#page73">73</a>, <a href="#page139">139</a>, <a href="#page197">197</a> and
- <a href="#page199">199</a>)</li>
-
- <li>spoonful and spoonsful (various occurrences in the text)</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>The following misprints have been corrected:</p>
-
-<ul class="tn">
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"December, 805; making a total in"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"December, 805"; making
- a total in"</span> (page <a href="#page9">9</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"principle of a specific disease&mdash;poison."</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"principle of
- a specific disease-poison."</span> (page <a href="#page13">13</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"violent and fatal whereever it appeared."</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"violent and
- fatal wherever it appeared."</span> (page <a href="#page27">27</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"cholera in 1832, at Cataria; in Palermo, 40,000."</span><br/> into<br/>
- <span class="ftsize105">"cholera in 1832, at Catania; in Palermo, 40,000."</span> (page <a href="#page32">32</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"In Bassorah and Bagdad, situate in low, unhealthy"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"In
- Bassorah and Bagdad, situated in low, unhealthy"</span>(page <a href="#page32">32</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"In the Province of Caucassus, out of"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"In the Province
- of Caucassus, out of"</span> (page <a href="#page32">32</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"phenomena, for numorous cases of"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"phenomena, for
- numerous cases of"</span> (page <a href="#page47">47</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"The slight, painless diarrh&oelig;ea, depression of"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"The
- slight, painless diarrh&oelig;a, depression of"</span> (page <a href="#page57">57</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"be withheld. This pecnliar icy coldness"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"be withheld.
- This peculiar icy coldness"</span> (page <a href="#page59">59</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"urinary secretion and micturation entirely"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"urinary
- secretion and micturition entirely"</span> (page <a href="#page60">60</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"the second or febrile stage. The former is"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"the second
- or febrile stage." The former is"</span> (page <a href="#page61">61</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"spent in the gradual introducion of the"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"spent in the
- gradual introduction of the"</span> (page <a href="#page69">69</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"Other methods of restoring warmth were had"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">""Other
- methods of restoring warmth were had"</span> (page <a href="#page71">71</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"when on the march:""</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"when on the march:"</span> (page <a href="#page73">73</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"philosophy of such eminent surgeon, as"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"philosophy of
- such eminent surgeons, as"</span> (page <a href="#page88">88</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"Medical Bureau in the departmnet of India, whose"</span><br/> into<br/>
- <span class="ftsize105">"Medical Bureau in the department of India, whose"</span> (page <a href="#page89">89</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"opium, accompanied with sinipisms, and hot, stimulating"</span><br/> into<br/>
- <span class="ftsize105">"opium, accompanied with sinapisms, and hot, stimulating"</span> (page <a href="#page110">110</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"if it remainun subdued by"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"if it remain unsubdued by"</span>
- (page <a href="#page112">112</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"</span><span class="smcap">Pathological Treatment</span><span class="ftsize105">&mdash;<i>First Stage</i>: This consisted"</span><br/>
- into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"</span><span class="smcap">Pathological Treatment</span><span class="ftsize105">&mdash;<i>First Stage.</i>&mdash;This consisted"</span>
- (page <a href="#page132">132</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"the medicines which I would prefer:"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"the medicines which
- I would prefer:""</span> (page <a href="#page138">138</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"Aromatic Spirits Amomnia,"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"Aromatic Spirits Ammonia,"</span>
- (page <a href="#page139">139</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"It was a sudden and severe, case and"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"It was a sudden
- and severe case and"</span> (page <a href="#page143">143</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"are camphor, cuprum metalicum, and veratrum."</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"are
- camphor, cuprum metallicum, and veratrum."</span> (page <a href="#page152">152</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"may be given. This is prepared"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"may be given." This is
- prepared"</span> (page <a href="#page161">161</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"administered in tea-spoonful does in hot, sweetened"</span><br/> into<br/>
- <span class="ftsize105">"administered in tea-spoonful doses in hot, sweetened"</span> (page <a href="#page161">161</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"unfold the process of d seased action, and, as"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"unfold
- the process of diseased action, and, as"</span> (page <a href="#page167">167</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"in that of Mishni Novogorod,</span>"<br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"in that of Nizhni
- Novgorod,"</span> (page <a href="#page172">172</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"in Moscow and Kasan,"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"in Moscow and Kazan,"</span> (page <a href="#page172">172</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"During the prevalence of the cholora in 1832, the physician"</span><br/>
- into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"During the prevalence of the cholera in 1832, the physician"</span>
- (page <a href="#page182">182</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"&#8478; Chloroform, (sq.,)"</span><br/> into<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"&#8478;. Chloroform, (sq.,)"</span>
- (page <a href="#page189">189</a>)</li>
-
- <li>changed<br/> <span class="ftsize105">"M. S.&mdash;From &#658; j. to &#8485; ss. every half-hour,"</span><br/> into<br/>
- <span class="ftsize105">"M.&mdash;S.&mdash;From &#658; j. to &#8485; ss. every half-hour,"</span> (page <a href="#page89">189</a>)</li>
-</ul>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Asiatic Cholera, by
-Elijah Whitney and A. B. Whitney
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