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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Porneiopathology, by Robert J. Culverwell
-
-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
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Porneiopathology
- A Popular Treatise on Venereal and Other Diseases of the Male
- and Female Genital System
-
-Author: Robert J. Culverwell
-
-Release Date: April 06, 2021 [eBook #65003]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: Brian Coe, Quentin Campbell and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PORNEIOPATHOLOGY ***
-
-
- Transcriber’s Note
-
-In what follows, italic text is denoted by _underscores_. Small capitals
-in the original text have been transcribed as ALL CAPITALS.
-
-See the end of this document for details of corrections and other changes.
-
- ————————————— Start of Book —————————————
-
-
-
-
- PORNEIOPATHOLOGY.
-
-
- A
-
- POPULAR TREATISE ON
-
- VENEREAL AND OTHER DISEASES
-
- OF THE
-
- MALE AND FEMALE GENITAL SYSTEM;
-
- WITH REMARKS ON
-
- IMPOTENCE, ONANISM, STERILITY, PILES, AND GRAVEL,
- AND PRESCRIPTIONS FOR THEIR TREATMENT.
-
- BY R. J. CULVERWELL, M. D.,
- Member of the Royal College of Surgeons, Fellow of many
- Learned Societies.
-
- WITH ONE HUNDRED PLATES.
-
- —————————————
-
- NEW YORK:
- J. S. REDFIELD, CLINTON HALL.
- ———
- 1844.
-
-
-
-
- PREFACE.
-
- —————
-
-EVERY medical man who will study to investigate as far as possible,
-in every case, the original channel through which disease or
-constitutional disorder first found its entry into the system, will
-be astonished at the mass of human suffering which may be traced up
-to a venereal origin, although its primary symptoms may have been
-for years apparently eradicated from the frame. The malady generally
-commences its attack in early life, before experience has overcome the
-short-sighted heedlessness of youth, and taught it to look beyond the
-pains and pleasures of the passing moment. Delicacy or shame will not
-allow him to seek assistance, until the poison has acquired strength
-and virulence too alarming to be neglected; and the patient then,
-instead of applying to his usual professional friends, flies to some
-empirical practitioner, who temporarily arrests the external symptoms,
-and discharges him as cured. Thus matters go on, until the malady
-becomes constitutional; and the patient is at last compelled to place
-himself under the treatment of those who, at an earlier period, might
-have preserved his constitution untainted, and his body comparatively
-uninjured by the ravages of this insidious disease.
-
-Some years ago the idea first occurred to me that a popular treatise,
-divested as much as possible of technical phraseology, explaining
-to the non-medical reader the structure and anatomy of the parts
-primarily affected by the venereal disease, and describing its first
-as well as its subsequent and aggravated symptoms, and pointing out
-the safest treatment of it in inexperienced hands, while in its simple
-form, would be of much avail in counteracting the effects of the
-complaint resulting from mal-treatment or neglect among the young and
-thoughtless. This work is intended to teach him where serious danger
-exists, or may be apprehended; for the treatment in a great degree, and
-under any circumstances, must fall upon the patient himself: and every
-medical man knows that, in very many instances, those who are fully
-alive to the injury that may arise from such self-management, are yet
-reduced, by considerations of delicacy and secrecy, to practise it; and
-it is hoped that a perusal will contribute to give him a knowledge and
-confidence which he never could acquire from the uneducated empiric.
-Under these impressions have I ventured to submit the following pages;
-and while I hope their utility may be acknowledged, I would remark,
-that they are not intended to supersede medical aid in any stage of
-the disorder, but that, on the contrary, I would impress upon the
-reader, if he need it, the prudence of having immediate recourse to
-a well-educated physician in the earliest stages of the disease, and
-to beware of advertising quacks. But where, from circumstances which,
-in venereal complaints, very frequently occur, the party can not have
-recourse to professional aid, the next best step is certainly to place
-in his hands a formula of that treatment which is most likely to be
-successful with himself.
-
-In thus publicly unfolding the mysteries of this department of the
-profession, I expect some reprehension from those who assume that
-all medical knowledge should be limited to the regular practisers of
-the science; but I would fain remind all parties that, although this
-branch of medical writing has hitherto been in the hands of mercenary
-empirics, it is equally conducive to the honor of the profession, and
-the interest of the patient, that these pretenders should be driven
-from the field. Conscious of my integrity as a regularly educated
-surgeon, and not altogether destitute of successful practice to rest
-my claim upon, it is with less hesitation I depart from professional
-ceremony; and whatever opinion may be pronounced, as to my success
-in performing the task I have undertaken, I may be allowed to hope,
-without arrogance, that I am at least entitled to the praise of
-industry and humanity.
-
- R. J. CULVERWELL, M. D.
- 1843.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- Page.
- GENERAL REMARKS 7
- Anatomical and Physiological Review of the Male
- Organs of Generation, with eight engravings 7
- Of the Testicles, their Structure and Functions, with
- seven engravings 14
- On Gonorrhœa, or Morbid Secretion and Irritability
- of the Urethra, with five engravings 20
- The Surgical Treatment of Gonorrhœa, with prescriptions 26
- Medical Treatment of Gonorrhœa and its Consequences,
- with engravings, prescriptions, and specific remedies 29
- On Gleet 41
- Morbid Irritability of the Urethra 44
- Stricture of the Urethra, with fifteen anatomical engravings
- and diagrams, illustrative of the nature of the disease 45
- Treatment of Stricture, with thirty engravings, explanatory
- of the mode of treatment, prescriptions, &c. 58
- Diseases of the Testicles, with three engravings 68
- Hydrocele 69
- Radical Cure of Hydrocele 71
- Hydrocele Cured by Acupuncturation 71
- Diseases of the Bladder 73
- Irritability of the Bladder 74
- Paralysis of the Bladder 75
- Inflammation of the Bladder, with prescriptions 75
- Origin of the Venereal Disease 79
- On the Character of the Syphilitic Poison 84
- Of Syphilis, with fifteen engravings 86
- Of Buboes, with two engravings 93
- Of Lues Venerea, or Secondary Symptoms 96
- Of the Symptoms of the First Stage of Lues, with eight
- engravings 98
- On the Treatment of Syphilis 104
- Treatment of Chancre, with prescriptions 106
- Bubo, with engravings and prescriptions 112
- Secondary Symptoms 117
- Syphilitic Eruption, with an engraving 117
- Sore Throat, with prescription 121
- Venereal Affections of the Bones, Joints 122
- Secondary Symptoms 123
- Treatment of Ditto, with prescriptions 125
- Syphilitic Lepra 127
- Nodes and Pains in the Bones 128
- Syphilitic Sore Throat, with prescriptions 130
- Advice to Invalids 133
- The Female Organs of Generation—their Structure,
- Purposes, and Diseases, with thirteen engravings 136
- On the use of the Speculum, with an engraving 150
- Gonorrhœa in the Female 151
- Syphilis in Females, with five engravings 152
- Leucorrhœa, or the Whites 154
- Treatment of Ditto, with numerous prescriptions 155
- Effects of Incontinence, Celibacy, and Marriage 162
- On the Hereditary Transmission of Disease 169
- On Impuissance, or Impotence 173
- Impotence and Sterility of the Male—four engravings 174
- Impotence and Sterility of the Female—five engravings 180
- Treatment of Impotence 184
- Sexual Debility 188
- On Piles, internal and external, with prescriptions and
- four engravings 191
- Prolapsus of the Rectum, with an engraving 196
- Stricture of the Rectum, with an engraving 197
- Diseases of the Urine, with three engravings 200
- On Incontinence of the Urine 204
- The Gravel 212
- Cause of Gravel 213
- Treatment of Gravel 213
-
-
-
-
- POPULAR TREATISE
-
- ON
-
- VENEREAL DISEASES.
-
- —————————————
-
- GENERAL REMARKS.
-
-
-THE diseases known by the general term of _syphilis_ or _venereal
-disease_, and arising from impure coition, appear generally in three
-forms, _gonorrhœa_, _chancres_, and _bubo_. These sometimes exist
-alone, and sometimes together. As they affect the genital organs and
-their appendages, a description of these organs is necessary to a full
-understanding of the subject.
-
-_Genital organs and appendages in the male._—This term embraces the
-_penis_, _testicles_, _bladder_, and _kidneys_. The form of the penis
-is familiar to every one. It commences at the bladder, is of a _spongy_
-nature, and is composed of three different parts; the two upper and
-larger are called the _cavernous_ bodies, and the lower the _spongy_
-body; these bodies are covered by the skin which comes over the head of
-the penis, and forms the _prepuce_. When this skin is drawn back, the
-head of the penis, or the _glans_ penis is seen, which is a development
-of the spongy body, and is extremely sensitive. A whitish secretion,
-with a peculiar odor, forms at the end of the glans, where the prepuce
-seems to join it. The object of this secretion is to preserve the
-sensitiveness of the glans, and to facilitate the withdrawal of the
-prepuce in coition and in urinating. This material sometimes collects,
-irritates, hardens, and causes much inconvenience. This can be done
-away with by circumcision, which is performed as follows:—draw an inked
-line on the skin of the prepuce, corresponding to the base of the glans
-penis; draw the prepuce forward, and have the inked part held firmly by
-an assistant with a pair of forceps. Then the surgeon takes that part
-of the prepuce projecting beyond the forceps with his left hand, and
-with a bistoury cuts the prepuce at the inked line with his right. When
-this is done, the lining skin of the prepuce, which cannot be drawn
-forward, remains entire, and covers the glans; this lining is divided
-by a single cut with the scissors: then the flaps are removed round to
-the frenum, and then the two flaps are held together and removed, with
-the frenum, at one cut. The mode of holding the prepuce, &c. is seen in
-the cut.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-On the under side of the glans, near the mouth of the water passage,
-or urethra, the prepuce is attached by a fold called the _frenum_,
-or bridle, or martingale of the penis. The use of this frenum is to
-confine the movements of the prepuce, and to draw down the mouth of the
-water passage to direct the flow of the urine. Sometimes the frenum is
-too short, and confines the prepuce too much; it may be slit down with
-a pair of scissors as far as is considered expedient. The frenum is
-frequently ruptured in a first coition. The frenum is very elastic, and
-protects the sensitive surface beneath it as the eyelid does the eye.
-Sometimes, however, it becomes permanently contracted;—the glans is
-then denuded, but soon loses its sensibility. The person is sometimes
-born with this formation.
-
-The _cavernous bodies_ form two tubes, united in most of the length of
-the penis, separated only by a thin partition, and enveloped in a firm
-sheath; they are composed of an immense number of cells, principally
-formed by dilated veins, which communicate with each other; these, when
-the penis is erected, become filled and even distended with blood. The
-cavernous bodies terminate abruptly and form rounded points under the
-glans penis. At the other extremity they separate, and form the crura
-or legs of the penis.
-
-The _spongy body_ forms the lower and under body of the penis,
-terminates at one end at the point in the glans, whilst it extends
-the whole length of the penis, again becomes enlarged, and forms the
-_bulb_. The urethra or water passage extends through the spongy body,
-and connects the penis with the bladder. This cut is a section of the
-penis showing the three bodies:
-
-[Illustration:
- _a._ Corpora Cavernosa.
- _b._ The division or Septum.
- _c._ Corpus Spongiosum.
- _d._ Urethra.
- _e._ The great vein of the Penis.]
-
-The cut below shows a section of the cavernous body, showing the blood
-vessels that go to it and cause a distension or erection of the penis:
-
-[Illustration:
- _a._ Urethric part.
- _b._ Glans.
- _c._ Dorsal Artery serving the Glans.
- _d._ Dorsal Artery serving the interior of the Corpus Cavernosum.
- _e, f._ Deep-seated Arteries.]
-
-[Illustration:
- _a._ Urethra.
- _b._ Glans.
- _c._ Dorsal Vein.
- _d._ Septum.
- _e._ Vessels.]
-
-In the cut above we see the septum or division of the cavernous bodies,
-in which are seen the vessels by which, when the erection of the penis
-subsides, the blood passes into the dorsal vein of the penis.
-
-The _Urethra_, or water passage, is the canal that passes through the
-spongy body to the bladder. The urine and semen pass through it. It
-is very elastic, and may be dilated so as to admit a large instrument
-to be passed into the bladder, and it contracts on the smallest. It
-is supported in its course by the spongy body and the prostate gland,
-between which is a portion unprotected, called the membranous portion.
-The passage varies in its size in different parts: thus it is rather
-contracted at the orifice, enlarges within, and for an inch again
-contracts, dilates nearer the bulb, diminishes at the membranous
-portion and near the prostate gland, and finally enlarges into the
-bladder. The cut opposite will show these parts.
-
-[Illustration:
- _a._ Bladder, or receptacle of urine.
- _b._ Ureters, or passages through which the urine
- comes from the kidneys, where it is formed,
- to the bladder.
- _c._ Vas Deferens, through which the semen passes
- from the testicle, where it is formed, to the
- seminal vesicles, where it is matured.
- _d, d._ Openings of Ureters into the bladder.
- _e._ Prostate Gland.
- _f._ Orifices of excretory ducts.
- _g._ Openings of the seminal ducts.
- _h._ Ischio-cavernous muscles.
- _i._ Bulb of Urethra divided.
- _k._ Cowper’s Glands.
- _l._ Wide part of Urethra.
- _m._ Narrow part.
- _n._ Fossa Navicularis, usually affected in gonorrhœa.
- _o, p._ Prepuce.]
-
-The urethra is constantly moistened with a mucous secretion,—from the
-membrane itself, the glands, and the folds which yield to the pressure
-of the urine as it flows, or from other altered conditions of the
-urethra pour out their contents. The inner surface of the urethra is
-very vascular and sensitive, as is shown by the slightest laceration by
-the bougie or by chordee, when considerable bleeding often takes place.
-Its sensitiveness is well known in the first passing of the bougie, or
-in inflammation, when the pain of the former and the act of urinating
-in the latter, often causes fainting.
-
-The bladder is the reservoir of the urine, which is formed in the
-kidneys, comes into the ureters, passages leading from the kidneys to
-the bladder, and thence flows, drop by drop, into the bladder. The
-bladder is shaped somewhat like a pear, but this shape is varied by
-its contents, and the relative condition of its adjacent parts. Thus,
-when the bladder is full, its upper part may be felt rising above the
-pubis, that portion of the lower part of the belly that is covered with
-hair. In very fat persons the bladder is flattened by the weight of
-the intestines, and obliged to find room where it can, as in pregnant
-women. Anatomists, when describing the bladder, speak of its body,
-base, or upper part, sides and neck, where the urethra or water passage
-begins, and which is surrounded by the prostate gland. These parts are
-seen in the first engraving on the opposite page.
-
-The bladder is composed of several coats. There is a peculiar
-membrane investing the important structures in the abdomen called the
-peritonœum. The base and back part of the bladder is covered by a
-portion of this peritonœum, which in a measure supports the bladder
-in its position, and also exercises certain properties which may
-hereafter be alluded to.
-
-[Illustration:
- _a._ The inner surface of the Bladder,
- showing the direction of the Muscular Fibres.
- _b._ The opening of the right _Ureter_
- into the Bladder, whence the urine issues.
- _c, c._ The Prostate Gland cut through, and its
- sides exhibited.
- _d._ The Urethra.
- _e._ Verumontanum.
- _f, f._ Orifices of the Seminal Ducts, marked by
- twigs inserted therein; the other points
- mark the orifices from the Prostate and
- other Glands.]
-
-The position of the _perineum_ is seen in the following cuts in which
-the skin has been removed, disclosing—
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. The superficial fascia of the Perinœum.
- 2. The fascia lata, or shiny covering of the
- muscles of the thighs.
- 3. The tuberosity of the ischia, or part
- whereupon we sit.
- 4. The last portion of the spine, called the
- Coccyx, easily to be felt posteriorly to
- the rectum.
- _a._ The Sphincter muscle of the Anus.
- _b._ The inferior border of the great
- muscles of the buttock, called
- the Gluteal.
- _c._ The Levator Ani, or muscles which
- elevate the rectum.]
-
-The following cut represents the muscles of the perinœum exposed, the
-superficial fascia having been removed.
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. Point in the Perinœum where the principal muscles
- arise or meet.
- 2. Covering of the Thigh.
- 3. Seat.
- 4. Corpora Cavernosa of the Penis.
- 5. Corpus Spongiosum.
- 6. Coccyx.
- 7. Great Sacro Sciatic ligament.
- _a, a._ Erector Muscles of the Penis.
- _b, b._ Accelerator Urinæ Muscles.
- _c._ Line whence the above Muscles take their origin.
- _d._ Transverse Muscles of the Perinœum.
- _e, e._ Sphincter Muscle of the Anus, supposed to
- be distended with tow or wool.
- _f, f._ Levatores Ani.
- _g, g._ Great Gluteal Muscles.]
-
-A brief description of the structures displayed in the two preceding
-and the following drawing (p. 14) will render this part of our subject
-perfect.
-
-The _Fasciæ_ means the coverings of muscles, such as is seen in cutting
-a domestic joint—a leg of mutton, for instance—a shiny surface; their
-use is to strengthen the action of the muscles, to bind them well
-together, and they mostly exist about the buttocks, back, &c.
-
-The office of a Sphincter Muscle, of which we have several, as that of
-the bladder and anus, is to keep closed the aperture they surround.
-The sphincter ani closes the rectum, and pulls down the bulb of the
-urethra, by which it assists in ejecting the urine and semen.
-
-The Levator Muscles lift up the part they are connected with. The
-levator ani muscles form the funnel appearance of the rectum, and help
-to draw it up after the fæces or stools are evacuated. They also assist
-in sustaining the contents of the pelvis, and help to eject the semen
-and urine, and contents of the rectum, and, perhaps, by pressing upon
-the veins, contribute to the erection of the penis.
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. Coccyx.
- 2. Semen.
- 3. Covering of the Thigh.
- 4. Great Sacro Sciatic
- Ligament.
- _a._ Bulb of the Urethra.
- _b._ Corpus Spongiosum.
- _c._ Crura of the Penis, being the conclusion of—
- _d._ Corpora Cavernosa Penis.
- _e._ Sphincter of the Anus.
- _f._ Levatores Ani, covered by a fascia or prolongation
- of the triangular ligament of the Urethra.
- _g._ Great Gluteal Muscles.
- _h, h._ Triangular Ligament of the Urethra. The artery
- of the bulb is seen on the left as it runs between
- the Crus Penis and bulb of the Urethra.]
-
-The Gluteal Muscles help the rotatory motion of the thigh, and give
-support generally to the buttocks.
-
-The Sacro-Sciatic Ligaments assist in the firm union of the bones of
-the pelvis.
-
-The Erector Muscles of the penis propel the urine and semen forward;
-and, by grasping the bulb of the urethra, push the blood toward the
-corpus cavernosum and the glans, and thus distend them.
-
-The Accelerator Urinæ Muscles, as their name implies, help to eject the
-urine and semen.
-
-The Triangular Ligament of the urethra assists the preceding purposes.
-
-_Testicles._—The testicles are two glandular oval bodies suspended
-in the scrotum. They furnish the male seed. They are supported by
-what is called the Spermatic Chord, which consists of the spermatic
-artery that supplies the testicle with arterial blood, whence the
-semen is concocted; the veins that return the superfluous blood, and
-the tube that conveys the semen to the urethra. The testicles are
-very liable to inflammation, and particularly to changes resulting
-from the wear and tear of human life—changes that not simply produce
-pain or inconvenience, but those whereby the power of the organs
-becomes partially if not wholly lost. A rather ample description of
-their complicated structure will show the necessity of attending to
-the earliest symptoms of disturbance. The testicles, in embryo, are
-lodged in the belly, but they gradually descend, and usually are found
-in the scrotum at birth. There are occasional exceptions, when one or
-even both testicles do not descend, but are retained in the groin. Mr.
-Hunter considered that their virility was thereby impaired, although
-such an opinion is negatived by numerous illustrations. The non-descent
-of the testicle, necessarily from its confined situation when in the
-groin, can not be so fully developed as where it is allowed to range
-in the scrotum. It is also exposed to accidents when retained, and
-cases have occurred where Hydrocele, a disease to be noticed hereafter,
-has ensued, producing much inconvenience, and occasionally the same
-has been mistaken for rupture. The testicles have several coats. The
-Scrotum should be considered as one, which is merely a continuation of
-the common integuments, exceedingly elastic, nearly destitute of fat,
-and possessing a peculiar contractile power of its own, whereby it
-can closely embrace the testicles, and at other times yield or become
-distended, as in hernia or hydrocele, to the size of a melon. The
-contractile powers of the scrotum have been assigned to the supposed
-presence of a muscle, which is merely a thickened cellular membrane,
-and called Dartos. It was stated that the testicles were suspended by
-their spermatic chords—their support is rendered more perfect by the
-presence of a muscle to each, that descends into the scrotum, and which
-is called the Cremaster—it is an expansion of one of the muscles of the
-abdomen, called the internal oblique, and it spreads itself umbrella
-fashion around the chord, over the upper part of the testicle, and its
-fibres extend ray-like over the other coats of the testicle—its office
-is to draw up the seminal organs during procreation.
-
-The testicles, thus suspended, have two coats, one adhering closely,
-and the other loosely surrounding the former—between the two, a
-lubricating fluid is secreted, whereby the various movements of the
-body are permitted without injury; it is between these coats that
-water is secreted occasionally, constituting the disease known as
-hydrocele. The closely fitting coat is termed from its whiteness and
-density Tunica Albuginea—the other Tunica Vaginalis. These coverings
-are formed of that extensive membrane in the abdomen called the
-Peritonœum. The Tunica Albuginea which surrounds the testicle previous
-to its descent, accompanies it into the scrotum, propelling, as it
-were, the Tunica Vaginalis before it. On the descent of the testicles
-into the scrotum, the opening through which they passed becomes
-impermeably closed.
-
-The annexed diagram will explain the coats and facilitate the
-understanding of subsequent descriptions.
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. Body of the Testicle.
- 2. Epididymis.
- 3. Vas Deferens.
- 4. Spermatic Artery.
- 5. Veins.
- 6. Cremaster Muscle.
- 7. Tunica Albuginea.
- 8. Tunica Vaginalis.
- 9. Scrotum.
- 3, 4, 5, 6, and 8 constituting the Spermatic Chord.]
-
-When the coats of the testicle are taken off, it is found to consist
-of innumerable delicate white tubes, which when disengaged from the
-cellular membrane that connects them together, and steeped in water,
-exhibit a most astonishing length of convoluted vessels; they appear
-to consist of one continuous tube, convoluted in partitions of the
-cellular membrane. When the _Tubuli_ come out from the body of the
-testicle, they run along the back of it and form a net work of vessels
-called Rete Testis; it is supposed that by the net work the semen is
-conveyed from the testicle. The continuations of this _Rete Testis_
-have been denominated _Vasa Deferentia_, which, ending in a number of
-_Vascular Cones_, constitute what is called the Epididymis. The _Vasa
-Deferentia_, after forming three conical convolutions, unite and form
-larger tubes, which ultimately end in one large excretory duct, called
-the Vas Deferens. The following description relates to the accompanying
-sketch.
-
-[Illustration:
- _a._ Body of the Testicle.
- _b._ Tubuli Testis.
- _c, c._ Rete Testis.
- _d._ Vasa Deferentia.
- _e._ Vascular Cones.
- _f._ Epididymis.
- _g._ Vas Deferens.]
-
-The preceding completes the anatomical description of the Testicle. The
-semen is supposed to be secreted by the arteries that ramify among the
-seminal tubes; the last drawing exhibits the testicle as from the hand
-of the dissector. In life and in health the epididymis is attached to
-the testicle—the vas deferens passes up the chord, enters the abdomen,
-and, passing down into the pelvis, terminates in the vesiculæ seminales
-as already, but to be again, alluded to. The two subjoined drawings
-illustrate the testicles in their natural situation.
-
-[Illustration:
- _a._ Body of the Testicle.
- _b._ Commencement of the Epididymis.
- _c._ End of ditto.
- _d._ Vas Deferens.]
-
-In the larger figure the testicle is displayed as enveloped by its
-coverings, and in the lesser as stripped of them. The references serve
-for both.
-
-We now come to speak of the Vesiculæ Seminales. It was just observed,
-that the Vasa Deferentia terminated in these structures. They
-are attached to the lowest and back part of the bladder, behind
-the Prostate Gland. The following drawing is the prelude to the
-description—It represents the Prostate Gland, the Vesiculæ Seminales
-and the Bladder.
-
-[Illustration:
- _a, a._ Prostate Gland.
- _b._ Gland cut away to show the Ducts of
- the Vesiculæ.
- _c._ Ends of the Ducts.
- _d, d._ Cells of the Vesiculæ.
- _e._ Left Vas Deferens, also cut open to show
- its connexion with the Vesiculæ.
- _f._ Right Vas Deferens.
- _g, g._ Openings of the Vas Deferens and Vesiculæ
- into the Urethra.
- _h._ Bladder.
- _i._ Ureter.]
-
-The Vesiculæ Seminales appear like two cellular bags. They have two
-coats, the one called nervous, and the inner the cellular, a membrane
-divided into folds or ridges. The use of the vesiculæ is supposed
-to be, to act as reservoirs for the semen; but there are different
-opinions upon the subject, some contending that they furnish a fluid,
-not spermatic, but merely as an addenda to the seminal secretion;
-whereas others, who have examined the vesiculæ of persons who have
-suddenly died, have discovered all the essential qualities of the
-male seed therein; and, in fact, physiologists, who direct researches
-in these matters, advise such examinations as the surest means of
-obtaining, in a state of purity, the seminal fluid.
-
-The Male Semen is a fluid of a _starch-ish_ consistency and of a
-whitish color. It has a peculiar odor, “like that of a bone while
-being filed—of a styptic and rather acrid taste,” (for physiologists
-use more senses than one in these researches), “and of greater specific
-gravity than any other fluid of the body.” Shortly after its escape,
-“it becomes liquid and translucent;” if suffered to evaporate, it
-dries into scurfy-looking substance. By being examined through a
-powerful microscope it is ascertained to be animated by an infinite
-number of animalcules; but they are only present in healthy semen, and
-consequently that fact is taken as a criterion of the virility of the
-secretion.
-
-President Wagner thus describes the germe of future animal life: “The
-seminal granules are colorless bodies with dark outlines, round and
-somewhat flattened in shape, and measuring from 1-300 to 1-500th of a
-line in diameter.” “The animalcules exist in the semen of all animals
-capable of procreation. They are diversified in form in all animals
-according to their species, but in man they are extremely small,
-scarcely surpassing the 1-50th, or almost the 1-40th of a line in
-breadth. This transparent and flattened body seldom exceeds from the
-1-6th to the 1-800th of a line in length.”
-
-The annexed drawing exhibits the granules and animalcules of a human
-male being magnified from 900 to 1,000 times:—
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. Animalcules of a man, taken from the
- Vas Deferens, immediately after death.
- 2. Seminal Granules.
- 3. A bundle of Animalcules, as grouped
- together in the Testicle.
- 4. Seminal Globule.
- 5. Same surrounded by a cyst or bag.]
-
-The semen is never discharged pure; it is always diluted with the
-secretion from the prostate and other glands, and also the mucus of the
-urethra. A chymical analysis is thus given of 100 parts:
-
- Water 90
- Mucilage 6
- Phosphate of Lime 3
- Soda 1
- ———
- 100
-
-The semen may certainly be vitiated and diseased: the odor and color
-assume all the gradations of other secretions when in a morbid
-condition.
-
-Semen not discharged is supposed to be absorbed, thereby adding to the
-strength and nutriment of the economy; but as it is furnished for a
-specific purpose, and its secretion depends much upon the play of our
-animal passions, and as they are rarely permanently idle, there is not
-only the inducement that the fluid be furnished, but also emitted, and
-hence we have nocturnal emissions. These, to a degree, are salutary;
-but they may happen so frequently that the function becomes disordered
-and perverted, and in some individuals the semen (unconsciously to
-them) escapes during sleep, or on the slightest local excitement of
-riding, walking, or on the action of the bladder or rectum.
-
-The prostate gland, as has been stated, contributes much to the
-dilution of the semen; it may empty itself independently of it. The
-gland is composed of numerous cells, from which proceed some twenty or
-thirty pipes or passages that open in the urethra by the sides of the
-verumontanum, as shown in the drawing.
-
-_Morbid Secretions and Irritability of the Urethra._—I have stated that
-clap or gonorrhœa is one of the first and most frequent complaints
-of the generative apparatus. There are many secretions common to
-the urethra, such as those afforded by the various glands for the
-purpose of lubrication, &c.; and the lining membrane of the passage
-yields a moisture for its own protection, like the membrane of many
-other organs, such as the eyes, nose, mouth, and so forth, and these
-secretions may become unhealthy or vitiated, and give rise to symptoms
-that lead on to confirmed disease; and, what is still more remarkable,
-may assume many of the characters and appearances of gonorrhœa, but
-they rarely induce such constitutional disturbances as clap. The
-symptoms, consequences, and duration of clap, form its distinguishing
-features from any other discharge of the urethra: it is very important
-that such distinction should be understood, for the treatment of the
-two affections differs most materially; the one is an affection of
-weakness, and the other of an inflammatory and pestilential nature.
-The symptoms of clap are as follow: there is usually first felt an
-uneasy sensation at the mouth of the passage or urethra. The patient
-is frequently called upon to arrange his person; that uneasy sensation
-sometimes amounts to an itching (occasionally of a pleasurable kind)
-the feeling extends a little way up the penis; there is oftentimes
-an erection and a desire for intercourse, which, if indulged in,
-the sooner develops the disease. The itching alone will not convey
-the disease from one person to another; but if intercourse be held,
-the action of the inflamed vessels is accelerated, and a purulent
-secretion which is infectious is urged forth and emitted with the
-semen: therefore the very symptom of the tingling or itching, for it
-rarely exists in healthy urethræ, should be noticed, and intercourse be
-avoided until it shall have ceased.
-
-About this time is perceived a slight heat on passing water, or at the
-conclusion of the act; and shortly after, or may be before, a yellowish
-discharge is observed oozing from the mouth of the glans or nut of the
-penis; the symptoms then rapidly advance, unless timely and judicious
-means be adopted to palliate them or effect a cure; the scalding
-becomes intense, and the pain and smarting continue some time after
-each operation of passing water: the discharge becomes profuse and
-clots on the linen, and continues to ooze out with little intermission:
-the orifice of the urethra looks red and inflamed, and the glans itself
-swells and is occasionally extremely tender: the foreskin or prepuce
-sometimes, but fortunately not always, becomes swollen, and tightened
-over the nut of the penis, from which it can not be drawn back,
-constituting that form of the disease known by the name of phymosis.
-See drawing annexed.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-When that is the case, other annoyances ensue; the purulent matter
-collects around the glans; excoriations, ulcerations, and sometimes
-warts, are the consequence; the whole symptoms become thereby much
-aggravated. It also happens that the prepuce from inflammation assumes
-a dropsical appearance, that is to say, the edges or point swell, and
-appear like a bladder filled with water; thus, the size which the
-penis then arrives at is enormous, and to the patient very alarming;
-it usually, however, subsides in a day or two, if rest and proper
-measures be employed.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The glans with some people, is always bare, and the foreskin drawn up
-around it. Such a state may be induced also by disease: in either case,
-it may become so inflamed as to resist any efforts to draw it over the
-glans and, from the swelling and consequent pressure on the penis, a
-kind of ligature is created; and instances have been known where the
-most disastrous results have ensued. The circulation of the blood in
-the glans is checked; the nut puts on a black appearance, and if the
-ligature be not removed or divided, mortification takes place, and the
-tip or more of the penis sloughs off or dies away. This state of the
-prepuce is called _paraphymosis_: it sometimes happens to young lads,
-who, having an indicated opening of the foreskin, endeavor to uncover
-the glans: they succeed, but are unable to pull the prepuce back again.
-They either take no further notice of it, or else become frightened,
-but conceal the accident they have committed: in a few hours, the parts
-become painful, swell, and all the phenomena above detailed ensue.
-
-The annexed diagram exhibits the foreskin in a state of paraphymosis.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The next proceeding which will probably be induced, will be an
-extension of the inflammation to the bladder: the symptoms are a
-frequent desire to make water, and occasionally ulceration of the
-membrane lining the bladder follows, when a quantity of muco-purulent
-matter is discharged, which, mingling with the urine gives it the
-appearance of whey. Now and then the bladder takes on another form of
-disordered function: the patient will be seized with _retention of
-urine_, that is, a total inability to discharge his water, except by
-the aid of the catheter. A new and most perplexing feature about this
-stage of the proceeding is perceived: it is what is called _chordee_.
-The existing irritation excites the penis to frequent erections,
-which are of the most painful nature. The penis is bent downward; the
-occasion is, the temporary agglutinization of some of the cells of the
-_corpora cavernosa_ through inflammation, and the distension of the
-open ones by the arterial blood, thereby putting the adherent cells
-on the stretch, and so constituting the curve, and giving rise to the
-pain. This symptom is frequently a very long and troublesome attendant
-upon a severe clap; it is more annoying, however, than absolutely
-painful, as it prevents sleep, it being present chiefly at night-time
-when warm in bed.
-
-Occasionally the glands in the groin enlarge and are somewhat
-painful; they sometimes, but very rarely swell and break; they more
-frequently sympathise with the adjacent irritation, and may be viewed
-as indications of the amount of general disturbance present; as the
-patient gets better the glands go down, leaving a slight or scarcely
-perceptible hardness as it were to mark where they had been. The most
-painful of all the attendant phenomenon of clap is _swelled testicle_,
-or, as in medical phraseology it is called, _Hernia humoralis_.
-
-The first indication of the approach of the last-named affection is
-a slight sense of fulness in the testicle, generally the left first,
-although occasionally in the right, sometimes one after the other,
-but rarely both together: a smart twinge is now and then felt in
-the back upon making any particular movement: the testicle becomes
-sensibly larger and more painful, the chord swells also and feels
-like a hardened cord in the groin: the patient is soon incapacitated
-from walking, or walks very lame; if the inflammation be not subdued
-by some means, and if the patient be of a “burning temperament,” that
-is, of a very inflammatory constitution, fever is soon set up, and the
-patient is laid upon a “sick bed.” There is no form of the complaint
-so dangerous to neglect as swelled testicles; they have sometimes been
-known to burst or become permanently callous and hardened, and ever
-after wholly unfit for procreative purposes: in other instances,
-they have entirely disappeared by absorption: in fact, all diseases
-of the testicles interfere with the generative power. At the onset of
-inflammation there may be a brief increase of sexual appetite, but
-when the structure of the testicle becomes altered or impaired, that
-appetite is subdued or wholly lost; there is such a wonderful sympathy
-betwixt all parts of the generative economy of man, that if one portion
-only be injured, the ordinary end of sexual union is frustrated.
-
-The gonorrhœal poison is capable of producing a similar discharge from
-other parts to which it may be applied besides the urethra. It has
-been conveyed by means of the finger or towel to the eyes and nose;
-and a purulent secretion (attended with much pain and inconvenience,
-indeed with great danger, when the eye becomes so attacked), has
-oozed plentifully therefrom. Gonorrhœa is an infectious disorder, and
-consequently is communicable by whatever means the virus be applied.
-It certainly is possible, and (if we are to believe the assertions of
-patients, who are often met with, declaring they have not held female
-intercourse, and yet have contracted the disease), it certainly is
-not improbable that it may be taken up from using a water-closet that
-has been visited by an infectious person just before. It may also be
-contracted by using a foul bougie.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-If the gonorrhœal discharge be suffered to remain on particular parts
-of the person, such as around the glans of the penis, or on the outside
-of the foreskin, excoriations, chaps, and warts, spring up speedily
-and plentifully, and protrude before the prepuce, or sometimes become
-adherent to it, as here drawn: it therefore only shows how necessary
-cleanliness is in these disagreeable complaints, to escape the
-vexations alluded to. A species of insect also is apt to appear about
-the hairy part of the genital organs, and indeed extend all over the
-body, particularly in those parts where hair grows, such as under the
-armpits, chest, head, &c., if cleanliness be not observed. They are
-called crabs. The itching they give rise to is very harassing, and the
-patient, unable to withstand scratching, rubs the parts unto sores,
-which, in healing, exude little crusts that break off and bleed.
-
-[Illustration:
- A. The Pubis studded with these insects.
- B. The Crabs, or Pediculi Pubis, as they
- are called, about their natural size,
- as picked from the skin.]
-
-When the gonorrhœa has been severe and there has been much
-constitutional disturbance, there frequently hang about what are
-called flying rheumatic pains; and sometimes, if the patient’s health
-be much broken up, confirmed rheumatism seizes hold of him, and
-wearies him out of several months of his existence. I have seen many
-a fine constitution, by a tedious ill-treated or neglected gonorrhœa,
-much injured, that, had the sufferer consulted a medical man of even
-ordinary talent, in the first instance, instead of foolishly leaving
-the disease to wear itself out with the help of _this_ recommended by
-one, and _that_ by the other, he might have shaken off the hydra, and
-have averted the hundred vexations that follow.
-
-I come now to add to the list of calamitous consequences, stricture,
-which, in my opinion, prevails to an enormous extent; however, its
-consideration will be reserved, as well as the affections of the
-bladder, and prostate gland, for their proper places. I will simply
-repeat my impression that a stricture, or narrowing of the urethra,
-or some organic changes, invariably ensue when the gonorrhœa has been
-mismanaged, or its cure unfortunately protracted.
-
-It is the opinion of many medical men, and it can, no doubt, be borne
-out by many patients, that a gonorrhœa if unattended by any untoward
-circumstance, will wear itself out, and that the duration of such a
-proceeding is from one to two months; there is no disputing but such
-has been, and is now and then the case, but such rarely stand even
-so fair a chance of recovery as to be left entirely alone: even if
-medicine be not taken, rest, abstemiousness, and such like means, are
-seldom followed up; either the patient lives gloriously free, or else
-goes to the opposite extreme.
-
-The cases of gleet which seek medical relief are more numerous, as
-most professional men must be aware, than those of gonorrhœa, for the
-reasons so frequently alluded to; the fair inference would be, that a
-gonorrhœa seldom escapes the terminus of a gleet.
-
-The distinguishing feature of gleet from gonorrhœa is that it is not
-considered infectious: it consists of a discharge ever varying in
-color and consistence; it is the most troublesome of all urethric
-derangements, and doubtlessly helps more to disorganize the delicate
-mucous membrane lining the urinary passage than even the severest
-clap. Its action is constant though slow; and subject as we are to
-alternations of health, of which even the urinary apparatus partakes,
-it is not to be wondered at that a part of our system which is so
-frequently being employed, should become disturbed at last, and that
-stricture and all its horrors should form a finale; but as gleet and
-stricture form in themselves such important diseases, I shall devote a
-chapter to the consideration of each separately.
-
-_The Surgical Treatment of Gonorrhœa._—The principal symptoms
-indicative of the outbreak of a gonorrhœa are a scalding burning
-sensation along the urethra as the urine passes through it, and also
-the pouring forth of a profuse discharge of yellow matter from the
-same passage. The urethra is lined with a very sensitive membrane,
-fashioned, however, to be insensible to the urine in its natural
-state; but if the character of the urine or the membrane itself be
-altered, the most exquisite misery is produced. Now in gonorrhœa,
-when it is a first attack, the initiatory sensation is invariably
-heat, itching, or pain in the urethra; the seat of this suffering is
-in the mucous membrane. On separating the lips of the orifice of the
-urethra, the passage appears highly vascular, very red, and looks,
-according to the popular notion, very sore. On examining it with a
-powerful glass, little streaks or surfaces of a yellow and tenacious
-matter are perceived, which, upon being removed, are soon replaced by
-others. When the patient attempts to urinate, this purulent exudation
-becomes washed off. By this time, the system is somewhat excited, and
-the urine is consequently more deeply impregnated with uric acid,
-which renders it more acrid and pungent to the delicate and now tender
-outlet through which it flows: the sensation is faint at first, but
-is rendered very acute by the combined worry inflicted upon the
-urethra, by its muscular contraction to eject every drop of urine,
-the denuded state of the membrane itself, and the irritating quality
-of the water. Such, however, is the habit of action, that the urethra
-in course of time becomes indifferent to the annoyance of the flow
-of urine. The nervous sensibility is much diminished, and the urethra
-is further protected by an abundance of the venereal secretion. There
-are numerous contingencies that prevent the changes ensuing in such
-order, and, consequently, the scalding, and the amount of discharge,
-are seldom two days alike. Were there to be no interruption, the
-inflammation, for such is the whole process in obedience to the animal
-law, would fulfil its intention and retire; but molested as it is
-by diet, exercise, the varied states of health, and numerous other
-fortuitous circumstances, as we well know, it exists indefinitely. It
-would be next to an impossibility to explain the process whereby the
-character of a secretion becomes altered, or to describe the exact
-changes which the structure or vessels undergo when furnishing the
-discharge; but we well know that some such changes do take place, and
-that a cause must precede an effect. In like manner we can ascertain
-the result of certain experiments, although the _modus operandi_ may
-baffle our penetration. Gonorrhœa is originally a local complaint, but
-if not arrested, it involves not only the neighboring parts, but it
-compromises the general health. Now if the same ends can be brought
-about by artificial means in a few days, that it takes weeks to effect
-in the ordinary routine, all the intermediate suffering may be avoided,
-and all the inconvenience of confinement and physic-taking spared.
-
-To cure this disease I find that in many cases, if the parties apply at
-the very onset of the disease, before the discharge and scalding have
-set in with anything like severity, and they themselves be not of a
-very inflammatory temperament, that a sharp stimulating injection will
-at once subdue the sensitiveness of the urethra and alter the action,
-and, at the cost of very little, and that only temporary suffering,
-effect a speedy cure: the mode, except it be by stimulating the relaxed
-vessels, or owing to the specific action of the injection, is, like
-all other medical operations, a mystery. A favorite prescription is
-the nitrate of silver, say one scruple of the nitrate to the ounce of
-water, but the disease must be thus treated at the very first symptom:
-the patient must be otherwise in comparatively good health, and his
-occupation must not expose him to much bodily fatigue. He must not be
-given to intemperance, nor should those instances be selected where
-the sufferer is of a very inflammatory constitution. Experience begets
-confidence, and confidence begets experience. In cautious hands I
-am satisfied of its usefulness; but there are cases that turn out
-failures. I have used the injection when the disease itself was a
-week old, and with like success; but I am ready to confess I have
-known cases, the cure of which were retarded by its employment. The
-inflammation has been temporarily aggravated, but they were cases
-where the treatment was not appropriate; the disease was far advanced,
-there was much heat and swelling, and the patient’s health was in most
-instances considerably affected; but yet beyond the few hours’ of
-suffering merely, no extraordinary symptoms were produced. The cure was
-very shortly after effected by means which I shall presently allude to.
-
-In all cases of suspicious connexion I recommend copious ablution as
-soon as possible.[1] The syringes I would advise to be used should
-have their points conically shelved off pear fashion; they fill up
-the urethra like a wedge, and prevent the immediate escape of the
-injection: all injections should be retained a few seconds, and then be
-allowed to flow out. It is seldom worth while to repeat the operation
-more than twice on an occasion; but that occasion may be resorted to
-two or three times a day.
-
-When the nitrate of silver is used, the syringe had better be made of
-glass. The nitrate of silver discolors the skin, linen, &c.; therefore
-gloves should be worn, and care taken that the fluid be not spilt over
-the person or dress, but should the skin be stained, it can be removed
-by a strong solution of hydriodate of potash.
-
-The plan of injection, I must remind the reader, is only applicable
-in early and old cases. The recent cases, as I have before stated,
-are less frequently before the medical man than what we may call a
-“ripe” gonorrhœa. The old cases present also some difference as to the
-cause of their continuance, and require also some difference in their
-treatment, and they will be introduced under the chapter headed “Gleet.”
-
-The symptoms of a clap, fully developed, are severe scalding,
-voluminous discharge, painful erections, local inflammation, probably
-phymosis or paraphymosis, glandular swellings, and possibly swelled
-testicle.
-
-But all cases of gonorrhœa are not ushered in with such severity; nor
-do many, if common cleanliness and quiet only be maintained, experience
-even the various accompaniments just described, and still fewer would
-if the following precautions and measures were used.
-
-The plan just laid down, may be called the surgical treatment of
-gonorrhœa; the following may be designated the _Medical_. This is
-divided into two methods—the one denominated the Antiphlogistic,
-the other Specific. The _Antiphlogistic_ is a term applied to
-medicines, plans of diet, and other circumstances, that tend to oppose
-inflammation by a diminution of the activity of the _vital powers_,
-whereby the inflammation is subdued, and nature rights herself again
-of her own accord. The _Specific_ implies a reliance upon a particular
-remedy, which is supposed at once to set about curing the disease, as,
-for instance, by giving Bark in Ague—Colchicum in Rheumatism—Cubebs or
-Copaiba in Gonorrhœa.
-
-Now, both these plans are successful in curing gonorrhœa; but the
-majority of medical men adopt the former method, inasmuch as although
-it but _quietly_ conducts the case to a successful termination, still
-it _does so_, whereas the specific, in unskilful hands, is often
-productive of many annoyances, much delay, and not always a cure.
-
-Our plan, however, is as follows: in the first place, I take into
-consideration the appearance of the patient; if he be strong, robust,
-sanguine, or of full habit, and youthful—if it be his first attack, and
-if the symptoms be ushered in with any degree of severity, I invariably
-and rigidly (where I choose not the surgical) pursue the antiphlogistic
-course of treatment; if the case be in a person of phlegmatic
-temperament, of mature age, and the disease be but a repetition of the
-past, and there be no evidence of physical excitement, I fearlessly
-adopt the specific. Where, in the third place, I encounter a patient
-with no very prominent peculiarity, nor with symptoms demanding
-extraordinarily active measures, experience has taught me the propriety
-of cautiously combining the two methods—a mild aperient had best always
-a precede a tonic or a stimulant, in cases where there is a doubt of
-inflammation lurking in the system; and, recollecting the tendency our
-complicated organization has, when assailed by a distemper, to become
-irritable, it is always as important to know when to withhold a remedy
-as when to prescribe one.
-
-The three following imaginary cases will serve as no inapt illustration
-of the principles laid down:—
-
- A. B. A man twenty-six years of age, five feet six inches in height,
- weighing eleven stone six pounds, of a full rounded form—florid
- complexion, of what is termed a sanguine temperament, and harassed
- with the following symptoms: profuse discharge in large yellow clotted
- lumps of gonorrhœal virus—intolerable scalding on passing water—great
- pain at the rectum at the close of micturition—redness and swelling of
- the orifice of the glans penis, puffiness of the prepuce, a _vicious_
- chordee—inclination to headache—a bounding pulse—hot skin, and an
- anxious mind. Treatment: say first bleeding, then purging; warm
- bath, saline powders or mixtures, cold lotions to the part, rest,
- abstinence; the following eve, symptoms will be less severe. Continue
- the powders, temperance and quiet. In a few days, the discharge will
- be lessened, the scalding mitigated, the chordee gone, and the fever
- exchanged for the cool skin of health. The resuscitative powers of
- nature await only the fillip of some gentle stimulant, and the sick
- man throws off his mantle for the coronal of health.
-
- B. C. At twenty-three, dark countenance, marked features, well
- developed muscular form, pulse 66, bilious temperament, accustomed
- to late hours, hard drinking, and seldom still, and _subject_ to
- clap. Symptoms: plenteous discharge with but little scalding, and
- no inconvenience beyond the suspension of ordinary sensualities.
- Treatment: cleanliness, cubebs or copaiba, injections, a black
- draught, and half a dozen days’ rest, release him from his quarantine.
-
- C. D. At nineteen, a timid bashful youth, for the first time infected
- with gonorrhœa, which he had enduringly borne for the last fortnight,
- having neglected until now to seek professional aid, although cajoled
- into the purchase and imbibing of some popular “never-failing
- antidote” for a “certain disease.” Symptoms: discharge _cured_? right
- testicle swollen, and treble the size of the other, and excruciatingly
- painful; frequent desire to pass water, pain in the groin and back,
- general lassitude, and a feeling of illness all over. Treatment:
- leeches, warm bath, bed, purging, fever medicines, cold lotions, hot
- fomentations, low diet and patience, a month’s imprisonment, and a
- slow recovery. Had the treatment of the first two cases been reversed,
- the results would have been very different: and had the last sought
- timely and efficient aid, he would have been spared much that he
- endured.
-
-However, to particularize the treatment for each symptom; to commence,
-I will request the reader to remember that on the first appearance of
-gonorrhœa, attended with an unusual inflammatory aspect, I practise,
-where permissible, venesection; if the case demand it not, at least
-there should be administered an aperient; let, therefore, a dose of
-opening medicine be taken immediately (Form 1). This is the first step
-toward reducing inflammatory action—the next should be directed toward
-allaying the local symptoms, by diminishing the nervous irritability of
-the urethric passage.
-
-With this view, no plan surpasses that of bathing the penis in warm
-water, or immersing the entire body in a warm bath. The former should
-be repeated several times in the day; the latter daily, or certainly on
-alternate days, so long as the severity lasts.
-
-By these means, the parts will be preserved clean, and will derive
-benefit from the soothing influence of warmth; and, in many cases, this
-will be the means of averting chordee or swelled testicle.
-
-Where, however, from peculiar circumstances, warm water and warm baths
-are not to be had, the penis should be bathed in _cold_ water, or
-encircled with pledgets of rags or lint, moistened with cold goulard
-or rose-water. Warm, however, is to be preferred, although cold water
-seldom fails of affording relief.
-
-To lessen the acrimony of the urine, which keeps up the irritability,
-and somewhat to lower the system, all strong drinks, such as ale, beer,
-wine, and spirits, should be avoided, and milk, tea, barley-water,
-toast and water, linseed tea, gum arabic in solution, and other
-such mucilaginous diluting liquors taken instead. The diet should
-be lowered: in fact, a spare regimen should be adopted, not wholly
-abstaining from animal food, but partaking of it only once in the day,
-and carefully excluding all salted meats, rich dishes, soups, gravies,
-&c. The usual employment should be suspended, and rest should be taken
-as much as possible in a recumbent posture.
-
-Of course the preceding remarks apply only to cases of severity; I mean
-such cases as first attacks ordinarily prove; and which remarks, if
-attended to, will greatly mitigate the violence of the disease.
-
-To assist the foregoing treatment, the aperient medicine, which should
-be repeated, at least, on alternate days, until the inflammation is
-ameliorated, should be followed by some saline or demulcent medicine to
-allay the general disturbance. Several formulæ are suggested for that
-purpose, suitable to various temperaments and conditions—[_See Forms_
-2, 3, 4, 5 _in Formulæ annex_.]
-
-By these means, the disease, if not aggravated by intemperance of
-living, or otherwise, will gradually subside, and in the course of a
-fortnight or three weeks, cease entirely, without the aid of any other
-remedy whatever.
-
-But we need not rest satisfied with merely “showing” the disease
-through its stages; we can expedite it, and many of its steps we can
-skip over, and here it is we may call to our aid the specific method of
-treatment alluded to. This specific method consists of the suspension
-of a vitiated secretion, and a restoration of a healthy one. Now how
-this is effected we know not; we only know that it can be done—and
-experience has taught us that it may be done safer at one time than
-another. During the existence of a fevered state of the circulation,
-it would be highly impolitic suddenly to check a discharge from any
-surface, much less one situated like the mucous membrane of the
-urethra, in the immediate connexion, as it is, of important nerves and
-glandular structures—a metastasis of the inflammation will almost
-invariably ensue; and hence we account for swollen testicles, buboes,
-painful affections of the bladder, &c. Whereas, on the subsidence of
-inflammation, the revulsion is borne; and to our satisfaction, the
-disease disappears. A constitution in a state of excitement is like a
-fretted child—it will have its “will” out, and the rod is not always
-the safest corrective.
-
-On the subsidence, therefore, of the scalding, and a lessening of the
-general fever, the specific plan of treatment may be commenced. Upon
-the same principle that the surgical treatment is selected according to
-the symptoms, so also are the just-named preliminaries in many cases
-dispensable, and hence, as hereafter detailed, it will be found that
-the antiphlogistic and specific do not go always hand in hand. However,
-to explain the latter:—
-
-By specifics are meant those remedies that exert a positive curative
-effect on a particular disease; and the most prominent of those, in
-gonorrhœa, are copaiba and cubebs. See Formulæ annex for some useful
-recipes of both—Forms 6, 7, 8, 9, 10.
-
-For instance, cubebs may be taken alone, in water, in doses of a
-tablespoonful twice or thrice daily. If cubebs produce no good effect
-in four or five days, it had better be discontinued, and other means
-sought after.
-
-These proceedings usually carry the disease to a close, and, if no
-adventitious circumstances occur, successfully and speedily. It is well
-to deserve success, but it can not be always commanded.
-
-The business engagements of young men render it almost impossible for
-them to devote that care and attention so importantly requisite; and
-few, consequently, will be found who will be fortunate enough to escape
-the usual concomitants of a gonorrhœa.
-
-Where, therefore, the scalding or passing the urine is very severe,
-the pain may be mitigated by carefully injecting, previously to making
-water, either of the formulæ No. 11 or No. 12 (see Formulæ annex) into
-the urethra.
-
-The inflammation extends in general not more than two inches down that
-passage, so that much force is not required to inject the intended
-fluid, nor should an unnecessary quantity be used.
-
-When the inflammation reaches the bladder—which is indicated by pain in
-that viscus and the perinœum, with a constant desire to pass water—the
-taking of a warm bath at a temperature of 100°, and remaining therein
-for a quarter of an hour, will afford essential relief.
-
-When a chordee is attendant on a gonorrhœa, and the patient can not
-sleep, the draught (Form 13) may be taken on going to bed, or the
-powder (Form 14) in some gruel. The embrocation (Form 15) rubbed on the
-parts affected, however, will instantly remove both the pain and the
-spasmodic contraction, and not unfrequently prevent their recurrence.
-Care must be taken that the embrocation be only used for its specific
-purpose, and not swallowed by mistake, as it is poisonous.
-
-In the event of the patient being obliged to follow his ordinary
-occupation, or to go about, the use of a suspensory bandage will be
-found of great benefit; indeed it is indispensable, and the neglect of
-it has often brought on swelled testicle, or most excruciating chordee.
-
-By way of recapitulation, the treatment of gonorrhœa thus far consists:
-in severe cases, of bleeding; in ordinary ones, and in both, of warm
-bathing, local or general—where impracticable, cold—attention to diet,
-the taking of aperient, soothing and astringent medicines, rest as much
-as possible, and the use of the suspensory bandage. These remarks are
-equally applicable, then, through every stage of this complaint that
-is accompanied by inflammation, and may be relied upon as the most
-effectual to avert all the consequences I now proceed to detail.
-
-The consideration of the symptoms here following is not in the order
-in which they always occur; for swelled testicle may ensue without
-phymosis or paraphymosis preceding, or even being present; and the
-converse holds equally good with regard to every other.
-
-The successful treatment of phymosis (that condition of the foreskin
-in which it can not be drawn back over the glans) depends very much
-upon local management. Bathing the part frequently in warm water, the
-daily use of the warm bath, and the frequent injection, by means of a
-syringe, of warm milk and water, are generally all that is required
-to reduce phymosis; but where it is attended with much inflammation,
-where the glans is excoriated, probably by the discharge from the
-urethra accumulating between it and the prepuce, and thereby inducing
-irritation, bleeding is even sometimes necessary, the strictest
-antiphlogistic regimen should be preserved, and the treatment advised
-in the early stages of gonorrhœa scrupulously followed.
-
-Sometimes the prepuce becomes so swollen as to assume an œdematous or
-dropsical appearance; in which case it may be scarified with a lancet,
-or several leeches applied. With the exception of concealing the state
-of the glans, phymosis is less dangerous than paraphymosis, and is
-most usually produced by the patient worrying the part, by frequently
-uncovering the glans to observe its condition. Where a discharge is
-perceived oozing from beneath the prepuce, which is not urethral,
-and the glans does not feel sore or tender, the injection (Form 16)
-syringed up five or six times a day, will prove very efficacious in
-healing the ulceration.
-
-Where there is an unnatural elongation of the prepuce, it will be
-constantly subject to phymosis, not only from gonorrhœal inflammation,
-but from the accumulation of the natural secretions of the part. In
-that case, cleanliness is the only remedy the patient can employ of
-himself. Occasionally it is necessary to have recourse to the surgeon’s
-knife.
-
-Paraphymosis is the opposite to phymosis, and usually arises in this
-way: the orifice of the prepuce, being contracted by the inflammation,
-is drawn back for the purpose of washing or examination, and is allowed
-to remain, or, as frequently happens, it can not be redrawn. When this
-continues some time, considerable inflammation, both of the glans and
-prepuce, arises. The contracted orifice pressing more tightly, it will
-often happen that a sloughing of both it and the glans will take place;
-but this occurs only in consequence of neglect, or in constitutions
-injured by intemperance.
-
-If seen and attended to early, this state may be removed very easily.
-The penis should be immersed in a basin of cold water, or sponged, so
-as to cool it as much as possible; or it may be well oiled. In either
-case there will not be much difficulty in pressing up the glans and
-drawing up the prepuce over it; but where adhesion has taken place, or
-ulceration exists, it will be harder to accomplish: the adhesions must
-be separated, or the stricture divided with the scalpel.
-
-I need scarcely observe, that such an operation is out of the province
-of the non-professional person, who should lose no time in consulting
-his surgeon.
-
-I omitted to mention, in the description of the symptoms of gonorrhœa,
-that occasionally, in very severe cases, a tumor forms in the perinœum,
-which, if neglected, proceeds to suppuration, and establishes a
-fistulous communication with the urethra. On the instant of such a
-swelling appearing, leeches, fomentations, and poultices, should be
-applied with a view to disperse it; but the management of such a case
-had better be intrusted to the surgeon.
-
-Excoriation of the membrane of the glans or prepuce requires for
-its treatment frequent ablution with warm water until the redness
-and discharge somewhat diminish, when Form 16 may be resorted to,
-and applied, if practicable, by a moistened layer of lint; but if
-accompanied by phymosis, the syringe must be used.
-
-Warts, if not large, are easily removed, by brushing them with the
-muriated tincture of iron, or the application of a lotion of lunar
-caustic (Form 17).
-
-Where they are numerous and large, and resist the remedies just
-recommended, the nitric acid is an excellent escharotic; it gives
-little or no pain, and is rarely productive of inflammation. The glans,
-if not naturally denuded (in which instance, by the way, warts seldom
-accrue), should be kept so for a time; and the nitric acid, after a
-few moments, washed off with cold water. Notwithstanding, excision is
-sometimes necessary to their complete removal.
-
-When the organs of generation are infested by pediculi, or crab-lice,
-the most efficacious and agreeable remedy is the sulphur-bath; one bath
-generally effecting an extinction of every one of them, even though
-they be all over the body.
-
-Some recommend shaving the hair off the pubis, the locality in which
-the vermin are most usually engendered, and applying blue ointment
-or the black wash. Such a practice is seldom ineffectual, but the
-irritation attendant upon the reproduction of hair is absolutely
-intolerable. The hair need not be removed, as the above remedies will
-be all-sufficient without it. Rubbing the parts well with strong
-mercurial (or blue) ointment, or the black wash (Form 18), or even
-powdering them with calomel, will at once destroy the insects, and
-thereby remove the itching.
-
-Swelled testicle, or _hernia humoralis_, more especially that
-proceeding from gonorrhœal irritation, is ushered in and discovered
-in the following manner: The patient, on some sudden movement of the
-body, experiences a pain, darting from one of the _testes_ (both being
-rarely affected at the same time) to the loins—the left testicle is
-the one generally attacked. On examination, he finds that the testicle
-is rather swollen and full, and very painful on being handled; the
-swelling quickly increases and becomes hard, which hardness extends to
-the spermatic chord, presenting the feel of a rope, passing from the
-scrotum to the groin.
-
-It is remarkable that when swelled testicle occurs, the discharge
-from the urethra, which, from previously being very profuse, and
-the scalding on making water, which was very severe, both suddenly
-diminish, or cease entirely, until the inflammation of the _testis_
-declines; hence, it has been supposed by some, that the disease is
-translated from the urethra to the testicle.
-
-It is more probably however, derived from the sympathy between the two;
-the irritation of the one affecting the other, and the preponderance
-of inflammation in the testicle acting on the principle of
-counter-irritation to the urethra, and, for a time, thereby lessening
-the disease in it: for it is observed that, as soon as one improves,
-the disease returns in the other. The treatment of _hernia humoralis_
-must be strictly antiphlogistic. In no form of gonorrhœal disease is
-bleeding more absolutely necessary.
-
-The timely and prompt loss of twelve or sixteen ounces of blood from
-the arm will often cut short the complaint, and render other remedies
-almost unnecessary; while the temporising delay, under the vain hope
-of the inflammation subsiding, will allow the disease to make rapid
-progress, and impose a necessity of several weeks’ rest and absence
-from business, before a cure can be effected.
-
-Immediately, then, on the occurrence of swelled testicle, I would
-recommend the patient to be bled—to take some aperient medicine,
-and, if the inflammation continues, to apply from twelve to eighteen
-leeches, and afterward suffer the wounds to bleed for twenty minutes
-in a warm bath; to retire to bed or to the sofa, and to maintain a
-horizontal posture. If he be strong, young, and robust, an emetic (Form
-19) may be given previous to the aperient, which has been known to
-remove the swelling almost instantaneously.
-
-Iodine (Form 20) also possesses a similar specific property in reducing
-swelled testicle, and may be taken during the inflammatory stage after
-bleeding and aperients, as may likewise the chlorate or hydriodate of
-potass (Form 21).
-
-With regard to local applications, the repeated employment of leeches,
-fomentations, and poultices, with the frequent use of the warm bath,
-and, above all, keeping the testicle constantly supported by means of
-a bag, truss, or suspensory bandage, will subdue the disease in a very
-short time, without impairing the functions of the important organ
-concerned.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A hardness, however, of the _epididymis_ commonly remains and continues
-during life, but rarely gives rise to any inconvenience, although this
-may often be remedied by compressing the testicles with strips of
-adhesive plaster, as seen in the cut.
-
-Almost every case of inflamed testicle will terminate favorably by
-strictly pursuing the plan proposed; but when, from any untoward
-circumstance, the inflammation proceeds to suppuration, the case must
-be treated like one of common abscess, in which event professional aid
-should be sought for without delay.
-
-Other diseases of the testicle will be treated upon under a specific
-head.
-
-To return to the treatment of Gonorrhœa:—On the abatement of all or
-any of the enumerated symptoms, such as the diminution of the scalding
-upon making water, the subsidence of chordee, the escape from, or
-cure of, swelled testicle, phymosis and paraphymosis, warts, crabs,
-excoriations, &c., the discharge may still continue, though thicker
-in consistence, and deeper in color: and it is at this period, which
-I will call chronic gonorrhœa, when all inflammatory symptoms have
-left, that stimulants may be judiciously given; but it must be borne in
-mind that relapses often occur from imprudence: and this chronic form
-requires as much attention as the acute or early stage. (See _article
-Gleet_.)
-
-_Gleet._—Gleet is certainly, as its name implies, a discharge of
-thin ichor from a sore. Patients usually understand, and medical men
-usually allow, a gleet to be a discharge from the urethra, which has
-existed some time, of a whitish color, unattended with pain, and that
-is _not infectious_, by which is meant is incapable of producing
-gonorrhœa. There are several kinds of morbid secretions, the successful
-treatment of which depends upon a knowledge of their differences.
-They may be divided into two principal orders—those secreted from the
-mucous surface of the urethra or bladder, and those which proceed from
-the various glands-leading into one or the other. Gleet is a term
-popularly applied to both, but more strictly relates to that which
-proceeds from the membrane lining the urinary canal. There is great
-analogy in inflammatory affections between the mucous membrane of the
-digestive and pulmonary, as well as urinary passages. In inflammatory
-sore throat, the secretions assume various appearances; there is a
-discharge of viscid mucus, of purulent matter, or of a thin watery
-nature; these secretions are dependant upon the amount and duration
-of the inflammation present. Exactly in like manner may be explained
-those issuing from the urethra. They are consequently alike modified
-by treatment, by diet, by rest, and aggravated by a departure from
-constant care. It is the nature of all membranes, lining canals that
-have external outlets, to attempt the reparative process by pouring
-forth discharges, while those which line the structures that have
-not, effect their cure by union with the opposite surface. It is an
-admirable provision, else important passages might become closed, and
-so put a stop to vital processes; and in the other case, accumulations
-ensue that could not escape without occasioning serious mischief.
-When, however, disease has existed a long time, the operation of
-the two kinds of membranes is reversed. The serous,[2] through
-inflammation, take on the character of abscess, dropsy, or other
-secretions, and the mucous ulcerate or form adhesions, as evidenced
-in stricture, or ulceration of the throat or urethra. Gleet may be
-a spontaneous disease, that is to say, may arise from other causes
-than infection. It may exist independently of gonorrhœa, and be the
-result of cold, of intemperance, and of general or of local excess.
-Its long continuance and neglect, however, renders it infectious, and
-it also gives rise to ulceration, excrescences, and stricture: and
-when, from other causes, ulceration, or excrescences, or stricture,
-are set up, gleet is in return generally one of their consequences.
-Gleet, despite these various occasions, is, after all, most frequently
-a remnant of gonorrhœa; and it is very difficult to define the time
-or point where the one ends and the other commences. Pathologists
-draw this distinction between the two:—they say that gonorrhœal
-discharge consists of _globules_, mixed with a _serous_ fluid, while
-gleet is merely a mucous secretion. I confess it difficult for a
-non-professional person to decide which is which, the resemblance,
-in fact, being so great—a gonorrhœal discharge being one day thick
-and yellow, a few days afterward thin and whitish, and at one time
-in quantity scanty, and the next profuse. Gleet assumes nearly the
-same changes. The best test for distinguishing them is, by regarding
-the accompanying symptoms. Where there is pain on passing water,
-bladder-irritability, tenderness in the perinœum or neighboring parts,
-and the discharge plentiful and offensive, staining the linen with
-a “foul spot,” it may, without much fear, be decided to be clap;
-but where the discharge is next to colorless, like gum-water, for
-instance, and where there is no other local uneasiness than a feeling
-of relaxation, and where it has existed for a long period, and was, or
-was not, preceded by a gonorrhœa, it may fairly be called a gleet. Now
-where does the discharge of gleet come from? Let us recapitulate its
-causes; first from clap, which is a specific inflammatory affection. It
-may therefore be a chronic inflammatory state of the lining membrane
-of the urethra, of greater or less extent; in which case we would call
-it chronic gonorrhœa, and which would be owing to a relaxed state of
-the secretive vessels. We know that when a disease exists for a long
-while, and is one not positively destructive to life, a habit of action
-is acquired that renders its continuation in that state as natural
-as its healthy condition. This is the state of the secretive vessels
-in gleet, arising from gonorrhœa; and hence the discharge is poured
-forth, instead of the secretion natural to the urethral passage in its
-healthy order. Secondly, such may have been the severity of a clap,
-that ulceration of some portion of the urethra may have taken place.
-The disease may have got well except in that identical spot which,
-owing to the constant irritation occasioned by the urine passing over
-it, struggles with the reparative intention and effort of nature,
-and exists even for years. Thirdly, when stricture is brewing, which
-will be explained in an appropriate chapter, the alteration going on
-gives forth a discharge, and, as I have stated in another part of
-this work, I here repeat, that a long and obstinate gleet, as the
-slightest examination would testify, rarely fails to indicate the
-presence of a stricture. Lastly, gleet may be produced by loss of
-tone in some or the whole portion of the secretive vessels, induced
-by one or many of the accidents of life, or the various kinds of
-physical intemperance when they not only weep forth various kinds of
-fluids, at irregular intervals, which impair the muscular and nervous
-energy of the generative organ, but render persons laboring under this
-description of weakness very susceptible of infection, if they hold
-sexual contact with those but slightly diseased. Hence persons laboring
-under this form of debility incur what others escape. An individual so
-circumstanced would receive a taint from a female having leucorrhœa.
-Very many inconveniences have arisen from this infirmity, giving birth
-occasionally to unjust suspicions, and creating alarms of the most
-distressing nature.
-
-Thus, then, we may have gleet from gonorrhœa, gleet from ulceration,
-gleet from stricture, gleet from debility and discharges, popularly
-understood to be gleet, but in reality glandular secretions, which
-will be considered shortly and separately. Gleet is a tiresome and
-troublesome disorder. So difficult, occasionally, is its management,
-that oftentimes the more regularly a patient lives, and the more
-strictly he conforms to medical regimen, the more deceptive is his
-disorder. He will apparently be fast approaching to, as he conceives,
-a recovery, when, without “rhyme or reason,” the complaint recurs,
-and hints that his past forbearance has been thrown away. It would
-be dispiriting, indeed, were every case of gleet to realize this
-description; but it is well known that many do, either from neglect
-or mismanagement. Now it must be evident that the treatment of gleet
-depends upon what may happen to be the occasion of it. Where the
-membrane of the urethra is entire, internal remedies may, and do
-avail. Copaiba will achieve wonders; the use also of a mild injection,
-perseveringly employed (as a solution of iodide of iron, or citrate
-of iron, ten grains to the ounce of water), will give tone and
-stringency to the weakened vessels, and so correct the quantity, at
-least, of the secretion. In very obstinate cases, stronger injections,
-as of the nitrate of silver, twenty grains to the ounce of water,
-are serviceable; and we are not without many useful internal medical
-combinations, which, properly administered, conquer this troublesome
-complaint. In ulceration and stricture, these two causes must be
-removed, else all efforts are unavailing. In general and local
-debility, the attention must be devoted to the constitution. Common
-sense and common reading must give to persons, possessing both, every
-necessary information. The community are beginning to appreciate the
-advantages of temperance, air, and exercise, too highly, to need
-instructions how much of the one or either of the other two are
-essential to the preservation or recovery of health.
-
-_Morbid Irritability of the Urethra._—Of the varied symptomatic
-sensations, few are more provoking and fretting than some continued
-troublesome itching or pain that frequently attends the passing of
-water. There may be no discharge of any kind, but there is either
-a constant tingling, partially pleasurable sensation, drawing the
-attention perpetually to the urethra, or there is felt some particular
-heat or pain during the act of micturition. These feelings do not
-always indicate a venereal affection; they appear to depend upon local
-irritation, perhaps induced by a morbid condition of the urine. The
-treatment consists in temperate diet, moderatively laxative medicines,
-and now and then local applications. Some cases yield to sedatives
-topically applied, and alkalies given internally, while others need
-local stimulants and specific tonics. At all events, whenever there is
-an unhealthy feeling in those parts, it points out some altered action
-is going on, which, if not arrested, is likely to end in stricture or
-gleet, and therefore attention had better be bestowed upon it as soon
-as possible.
-
-_On Stricture of the Urethra._—Of all diseases of the genito-urinary
-system, stricture must be allowed to be the most formidable. It is
-not the most difficult to cure; but it involves, when neglected,
-more serious disturbances—disturbances which frequently compromise
-only with loss of life. Stricture is a disease unfortunately of
-extensive prevalence; and in nine cases out of ten is the sequence
-of a gonorrhœa; and, what is still more comforting, few persons
-who become the prey to the latter infliction escape scot-free from
-the former; not because a clap _must_ necessarily be succeeded
-by a stricture, but simply because it _is_, and all owing to the
-carelessness and inattention manifested by most young men in the
-observances so necessary for the perfect cure of the primary disease.
-One very prevalent notion, and which explains a principal cause of
-the extension of the venereal disease, is entertained, that the way
-to give the finishing _coup_ to an expiring clap, is to repeat the
-act that gave rise to it: the disease becomes temporarily aggravated,
-and the impatient invalid probably flies, from an unwillingness to
-confess his new error, from his own tried medical friend to some
-professional stranger. From a desire to earn fame as well as profit,
-the newly consulted prescribes some more powerful means; the discharge
-is arrested for a while, but returns after the next sexual intercourse;
-a strong injection subdues the recurrent symptom, which only awaits a
-fresh excitement for its reappearance. Thus a gleet is established.
-The patient finding little or no inconvenience from the slight oozing,
-which, as he observes, is sometimes better and occasionally worse,
-according to his mode of living, determines to let nature achieve her
-own cure, and for months he drags with him a distemper that, despite
-all his philosophy, he can not reflect on without an humiliating
-diminution of self-approval. So insidiously, however, does the
-complaint worm its progress, that the patient, considering his present
-state the worst that can befall him, resolves to endure it, since it
-appears his own constitutional powers are incapable of throwing it off.
-
-In the midst of this contentment, the invalid finds that the process
-of urinating engages more time than formerly, the urine appears to
-flow in a smaller stream, and is accompanied by a sensation as though
-there were some pressure “behind it.” The act of making water is not
-performed so cleanly as it used to be; the stream differs in its flow,
-seldom coming out full and free, but generally split into three or four
-fountain-like spirts, as the annexed drawing displays.
-
-At other times it twists into a spiral form, and then suddenly splits
-into two or more streams, while at the same moment the urine drops
-over the person or clothes, unless great care be observed, as witness
-diagram.
-
-In advanced cases, the urethra becoming so narrow the bladder has not
-power to expel the urine forward, and it then falls upon the shoes or
-trowsers, or between them, as observe illustration.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Persons afflicted with stricture, and urinating in the streets, may
-almost be detected from the singular attitude they are obliged to
-assume to prevent the urine from inconveniencing them, and also from
-the time occupied in discharging it. Some few minutes after making
-water, when dressed and proceeding on his way, the patient finds his
-shirt become moist by some drops of urine that continue to ooze from
-the penis; and it is only as these annoyances accumulate, he begins to
-think he is laboring under some other disease than the gleet. The next
-symptom he will experience will be a positive but temporary difficulty
-in passing his water—perhaps a total inability to do so; it will,
-however, subside in a few minutes. This will lead him to reflect, and
-he will even appease his fears by inclining to think it may be the
-consequence of his last night’s excess: he resolves to be more careful
-for the future, and he gets better; his contemplated visit to his usual
-professional adviser, if he have one, is postponed, and a few more
-weeks go by without a return of the last symptom. The next attack,
-which it is very difficult to avert, and which is sure to accompany
-the succeeding debauch, or to follow a cold or fatigue, does not so
-speedily subside; the patient finds that he can not complete the act of
-making water without several interruptions, and each attended with a
-painful desire resembling that induced by too long a retention of that
-fluid. In that state he eagerly seeks medical assistance; the treatment
-generally adopted consisting of some sedative, immersion in a hot
-bath, or the passage of a bougie. Relief being thus easily obtained,
-professional advice is thus thrown up, and the symptoms are again
-soon forgotten. Before proceeding further with the more severe forms
-and consequences of stricture, which may now be fairly said to have
-commenced in earnest, a brief anatomical description of the urethra may
-enable the reader to understand how the constriction or narrowing of
-that canal takes place.
-
-I have elsewhere stated the urethra to be a membranous canal, running
-from the orifice of the penis to the bladder, and situated in the lower
-groove formed by the _corpus spongiosum_.
-
-The difference of opinion entertained by some of our first anatomists,
-on the structure of the urethra, is deserving of notice; for only in
-proportion to the correctness of our knowledge of it, can we arrive at
-a just definition of its diseases.
-
-One party assert it to be an elastic canal—whether membranous or
-muscular they do not say—endowed with similar properties of elasticity
-to India rubber, or to a common spring. That it is elastic, is beyond
-doubt; but the mere assertion is no explanation of its mode of action.
-
-Others, from microscopical observations, declare it to consist of two
-coats—a fine internal membrane, which, when the urethra is collapsed,
-lies in longitudinal folds—and an external muscular one, composed of
-very short _fasciculi_ of longitudinal fibres, interwoven together, and
-connected by their origins and insertions with each other, and united
-by an elastic substance of the consistence of mucus. This is the more
-satisfactory of the two.
-
-They account for the occurrence of stricture in this way. They say
-that “a permanent stricture is that contraction of the canal which
-takes place in consequence of coagulable lymph being exuded between the
-_fasciculi_ of muscular fibres and the internal membrane, in different
-quantities, according to circumstances.”
-
-A spasmodic stricture they define to be “a contraction of a small
-portion of longitudinal muscular fibres, while the rest are relaxed;
-and as this may take place, either all round, or upon any side, it
-explains what is met with in practice—the marked impression of a
-stricture sometimes a circular depression upon the bougie, at others
-only on one side.”
-
-With respect to the change consequent upon permanent stricture,
-dissection enables us, in some degree, to arrive at the truth.
-Excrescences and tubercles have been found growing from the wall of the
-urethra; but in the majority of instances, the only perceptible change
-is a thickening of the canal here and there, of indefinite length;
-but whether it be occasioned by the exudation of coagulable lymph, or
-whether it be the adhesion of ulcerated surfaces, which I contend are
-more or less present in gleet, is not so easy to determine; at all
-events, it is undoubtedly the result of inflammation.
-
-With regard to the action of spasm, all we know of it is theoretical;
-but experience every day furnishes instances of its occurrence.
-
-Spasmodic stricture is generally seated at the neck of the bladder,
-and may occur to persons in good health, from exposure to wet or cold;
-from some digestive derangement; from long retention of the urine,
-particularly while walking, owing to the absence of public urinals; or
-to violent horse exercise; but more frequently does it happen to those
-young men who, when suffering from gleet or gonorrhœa, imperfectly or
-only partially cured, are tempted to commit an excess in wine, spirits,
-or other strong drinks. Surrounded by jovial society, glassful after
-glassful is swallowed, each one to be the last. The patient, with
-his bladder full to repletion, scarcely able to retain his water,
-yet probably “_going_” every moment, represses his desire until the
-party breaks up, when, on encountering the cold air, he finds himself
-unable to void even a drop, or if so, but with extreme difficulty. The
-greater the effort, and the more determined the straining, the greater
-is the impossibility, and unless relief should be afforded, the most
-alarming consequences may ensue.
-
-The rationale is this: the patient, opposing the action of the muscles
-of the bladder, by contracting those of the urethra, they (the latter),
-from irritation, become spasmodically contracted.
-
-The urine, by the powerful action of the muscles of the bladder, is
-forced against the contracted portion of the urethra; and by its
-irritation increases the mischief. Where neglected, or unless the
-spasms yield, extravasation will take place, mortification ensue, and
-death follow.
-
-The urethra is situated at the under part of the penis, and is embraced
-by a substance called the _corpus spongiosum_; it (the urethra)
-consists of several different layers or coats—the inner, the one
-continuous with that lining the bladder, which possesses the power of
-secreting a mucous fluid, and the other made up of muscular fibres,
-which give to the urethra the power of contracting and dilating,
-that regulates the flowing or jetting of the fluid which has to pass
-through it. The mucous membrane of the urethra is of a highly sensitive
-nature, and more so in some parts than in others, as, for instance,
-in the membranous and bulbous portion of the canal; and hence it will
-be found, that those are the parts most liable to disease. The mucous
-membrane has several openings called _lacunæ_, for the furnishing a
-particular fluid to moisten and lubricate the urinary tube: these also
-are frequently the seat of disease. These are seen in the drawing on
-page 50.
-
-In passing a bougie in contracted and irritable urethra, it sometimes
-enters the opening marked B, and if violence be used in propelling the
-instrument, false passages are made.
-
-Independently of the function of the urethra being to discharge the
-urine, it has also to convey the semen to the orifice of the glans; and
-here in this act is to be observed the wonderful adaptation of means
-to an end. During the excitement attendant upon venereal commerce, the
-seminal fluid accumulates, prior to emission, in the bulbous portion,
-and when the fitting moment arrives for its ejection, the membranous
-portion spasmodically contracts, thereby preventing the regurgitation
-of the semen into the bladder, while the muscles surrounding the
-bulbous portion contract with energetic force, and so complete the
-transmission of the generative fluid. Such are the functions of the
-urethra in health.
-
-[Illustration:
- A—Signifying the urethra cut open.
-
- B—The lacunæ and the cut end of bougie,
- to show the continuation of the urethra.]
-
-Now, this canal being extensively supplied with nerves, that have more
-extensive communication with others than any particular ones have
-in the whole body, and made up, as before stated, of surficial and
-muscular membranes, and exposed to the performance of several duties
-which are often unduly called into exercise, can not be supposed to be
-exempt from the consequences of such misappropriation; and therefore
-it is very liable to inflammation. From the sensitive nature of the
-tube, it is very obnoxious to spasm, which may be partial, general,
-temporary, or continuous: hence spasmodic stricture. This condition is
-of course dependent upon many causes, excess of diet, fatigue, cold,
-&c., irritating the general system; when from the local irritation
-previously set up in the urethra by the forenamed causes—a neglected
-gleet or clap—the urethra is not long in participating in it: the
-phenomena are the symptoms recently narrated. Highly restorative as
-the powers of nature may be to remove disease, she does not appear
-readily disposed to interfere with the processes set up in the machine
-she inhabits, for self-defence, to protect itself from the constant
-irritation produced by the daily flow of acrid urine, which in several
-cases often produces ulceration; coagulable lymph is thrown out in the
-cellular structure of the particular diseased part, thereby thickening
-the walls thereof, and constituting permanent stricture, it appearing
-preferable to impede a function which a narrowing of the urethric canal
-does, namely, that of urinating, than of allowing ulceration to ensue,
-whereby the urine would escape into the neighboring parts, and occasion
-great devastation, and probably death. Permanent stricture, as its
-name implies, outlives the patient; _it never yields, unassisted by
-art_. I have described the ordinary symptoms of stricture, especially
-that form induced by gonorrhœa. Stricture may arise from other causes.
-Inflammation, in whatever way set up, if allowed to go on or remain,
-will give rise to stricture, and the celerity or tardiness with which
-it takes place depends upon circumstance. An injury from falling
-astride any hard substance, blows, wounds, contusions occasioned by
-riding, the presence of foreign substances, the injudicious use of
-injections, and lastly, which is as frequent a cause as any one of
-those heretofore enumerated, _masturbation_. The violent manual efforts
-made by a young sensualist to procure the sexual orgasm for the third
-or fourth time continuously, I have known to be of that degree that
-irritation has been communicated to the whole length of the urethra,
-extending even to the bladder; and retention of urine, in the instance
-I allude to, ensued, and required much attention before it could be
-subdued. Excessive intercourse with females will give rise to the
-same effects; not so likely as in the case preceding, inasmuch as
-the former can be practised whenever desired, while the latter needs
-a participator. The act of masturbation repeated, as it is, by many
-youths and others, day after day, and frequently several times within
-each twenty-four hours, must necessarily establish a sensitiveness
-or irritability in the parts, and alteration of structure is sure to
-follow.
-
-The positive changes which take place in stricture in the urethral
-passage are these: there ensues a thickening and condensation of
-the delicate membrane and the cellular tissue underneath, which may
-possibly unite it to the muscular coat. This thickening or condensation
-is the result of what we call effusion of coagulable lymph. It will
-be rather difficult to explain the process; but lymph is that fluid
-understood to be the nutritious portion of our sustenance or system,
-and which is here yielded up by the vessels which absorb it, and which
-vessels abound, with few exceptions, in every tissue of our body.
-However, it will suffice to say, that where inflammation takes place,
-there is an alteration of structure, and that alteration is generally
-an increase. In stricture, this increase or thickening takes place,
-as I observed before, in particular parts of the urethra, but where
-the inflammation is severe, no part is exempt, and whole lengths of
-the passage become occasionally involved. It is true, certain parts
-are more predisposed than others, as, for instance, the membranous,
-bulbous, and prostatic portions of the canal; but there are oftentimes
-cases to be met with where these parts are free, and the remainder
-blocked up. This effusion or thickening assumes various shapes, and
-selects various parts of the urethra. The subjoined diagram will convey
-a tolerably perfect idea of the malady in question; indeed it is a
-beautiful specimen of simple stricture.
-
-[Illustration:
- A—The cut edges of the corpus spongiosum.
-
- B—The urethra.
-
- C—The stricture.]
-
-To continue the description of the formidable consequences of neglected
-stricture.
-
-In protracted and neglected cases, that part of the urethra between
-the stricture and bladder becomes dilated, from the frequent pressure
-of the urine upon it, induced by irritability of the bladder, which
-has an increasing desire to empty itself. In process of time, complete
-retention of urine will ensue, ulceration will take place at the
-irritable spot, and effusion of urine into the surrounding parts
-will follow; and the consequences will be, as in the instance of
-the spasmodic affection, _fatal_, unless controlled by the skilful
-interference of the surgeon.
-
-The symptoms of permanent stricture are often as slow in their
-progress, and as insidious in their nature, as they are appalling in
-their results, and are seldom distinctly observed by the patient, until
-firmly established.
-
-He is suffering from a long-continued gleet, and is first alarmed by a
-partial retention of urine—it passes by drops, or by great straining,
-or not at all. This usually occurs after intemperance, and is relieved
-by the warm bath, fomentations, and laxative medicines. This is the
-first stage, and is attributed to the debauch solely; whereas, at this
-time an alteration of structure is going on in the urethra. Its calibre
-is becoming diminished, which necessarily causes the urine to flow in a
-smaller stream. This is not observed at first; and it is only after a
-long period that the patient becomes aware of the fact.
-
-The disease proceeds. In the morning, from the gluing together of the
-sides of the urethra, by the discharge from its diseased surface,
-the urine flows in a forked or double stream; and then, as this
-agglutinution is dissolved, it become natural.
-
-There is a greater and more frequent desire to make water, disturbing
-sleep many times during the night, but unattended with pain, unless the
-neck of the bladder be affected.
-
-There are also uneasy sensations in the perinœum, a sense of weight
-in the pelvis, with flying pains in the hips; and in the permanent
-stricture there is a remarkable symptom frequently prevailing—that is,
-a pain extending down the left thigh from the perinœum.
-
-As the disease advances, the urine flows in only a very small stream,
-or forked, twisted, double, or broken, or in drops; and the patient
-solicits the flow by pressing with his finger on the perinœum, and
-elongating the canal, somewhat after the manner in which a dairy-maid
-milks a cow.
-
-The dilatation of the urethra between the stricture and the bladder
-already alluded to, now takes place; and some urine remains in the
-dilated part, which oozes through the stricture, making the patient wet
-and uncomfortable.
-
-There is great difficulty felt, and more time is occupied in getting
-rid of the last drop of water, than formerly. This sensation continues
-all along; and the cure is never accomplished until this is finally
-removed.
-
-If the stricture is still neglected, more severe symptoms come on, and
-the neighboring parts become affected also.
-
-The _sphincter ani_, or the muscles of the anus, are relaxed, from the
-excessive action of the abdominal muscles; and the fæces pass in small
-quantities involuntarily. There is a protrusion of the bowel, which
-adds to the distress, and, by its irritation, brings on a looseness or
-diarrhœa.
-
-The prostate gland, which is seated near the neck of the bladder,
-suffers inflammation and enlarges, beginning at the orifice of the
-ducts, which open into the urethra.
-
-The emission of semen, which often happens involuntarily, is attended
-with agonizing pain, producing cold shiverings, followed by heat; and
-fever soon becomes fairly established.
-
-The liver and its secretions become diseased, discharging in the
-intestines large quantities of vitiated bile. The fever assumes the
-intermittent character. The discharge from the urethra is greatly
-increased in quantity, showing the formation and bursting of an abscess
-of the prostrate gland into it.
-
-The bladder is much thickened and diminished in size, and acutely or
-chronically inflamed. The desire to make water is continual, allowing
-hardly a moment of rest; and the patient, in the agony of despair,
-prays to be relieved from his sufferings.
-
-Soon succeeding the irritation of the prostate, the testicles become
-involved, the disease being propagated by means of their ducts, which
-open into the urethra. The testicles swell a little, become uneasy and
-painful, and a dropsical or hardened enlargement ensues.
-
-When the stricture forms a nearly complete obstruction to the passage
-of urine, the violent efforts of the bladder to expel it bring on
-ulceration or rupture of the urethra, through which the urine is forced
-into the cellular membrane, with all the power of a spasmodically
-excited bladder.
-
-The scrotum and neighboring parts become distended, erysipelas
-supervenes, black patches of mortification break out in different
-places, the febrile symptoms are augmented, and the patient at last
-irrecoverably sinks into a state of coma or muttering delirium, and
-death closes the scene. Such is the progress and termination of
-stricture when neglected.
-
-The reader, if he be an afflicted one, will eagerly turn to the page
-wherein the treatment of this formidable and distressing malady is
-considered; and great will be his satisfaction and delight, on finding
-it remediable by such simple means, and entirely within his own
-control; more especially if he direct his attention to the disease in
-its earlier stages.
-
-He must by no means, however, be too sanguine, from these remarks, or
-indulge in the idea that as stricture is remediable, it is unimportant
-when the cure be attempted; the longer the delay, the greater will be
-the cost to the patient; and, furthermore, the slightest deviation from
-the instructions laid down, will surely aggravate the disease, and
-increase the embarrassment of the sufferer.
-
-The following diagrams are further explanatory of the stricture in its
-amplified forms.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The dark marginal line denote the calibre of the urethra, and the inner
-lines the actual diameter of the obstructed passage. Figure 1 shows the
-stricture to be on the lower part of the urethra. Figure 2 the upper
-part. Figure 3 exhibits a stricture of some length, and a somewhat
-contracted state of the whole canal. Figure 4 denotes a very common
-form of stricture, which resembles a flour-bag tied in the middle; it
-is the least difficult to cure of any, because it signifies that the
-seat of irritation is limited; but these cases are generally precursory
-to severer forms, if not promptly attended to. Figure 5 represents
-a stricture of considerable length, and of course very difficult of
-removal.
-
-There are many provocatives to stricture, and when once mischief is
-progressing, it makes up for its slow initiation by giant strides. A
-patient may have a trifling stricture for years without experiencing
-much inconvenience. He takes cold, fatigues himself, commits some
-stomachic or other excess, may possibly have fever, all of which more
-or less disturb the general economy, alter the character of the urine,
-and in that manner doubly accelerate the disorganization going on in
-the urethra. A small abscess may spring up _in_ the urethra, or _below_
-it among the cellular membranes and integuments. In either case, it
-chances now and then to burst an opening and create a communication
-externally with the urinary passage, constituting what is called
-_fistula_. A person laboring under stricture is always liable to these
-occurrences. As much mischief is done oftentimes by mismanagement
-as by neglect. The clumsy introduction of a bougie, or, in other
-instances, the unjustifiable introduction of one, is likely to, and
-very frequently does, lacerate the delicate and irritable membrane,
-and make a false passage. Figure 6 exhibits an instance at Nos. 1 and
-2; the upper numerical shows a false passage made by a bougie, and an
-obliteration of the ordinary passage of the urethra, the result of
-inflammation, constituting an impassable stricture; the lower figure
-exhibits a false opening made, in the first instance, by a fruitless
-effort at passing an instrument, when inflammation completed the
-process. No urine escaped from it of course, because communication was
-cut off from the bladder by the impassable stricture; the outlet for
-the discharge of that fluid being through a sinuous opening marked No.
-2, the No. 3 denoting the closed end of the urethra. The case happened
-to a man in very ill health, who was prone to ulceration, and he
-gradually sunk under exhaustion from debility and premature old age.
-Figure 7 exhibits a stricture where the posterior part was enlarged
-by the constant pressure of the urine to escape through the narrowed
-part of the urethra; ulceration ensued, and a fistulous opening was
-the consequence; the stricture was seated high up, and the fistulous
-canal was several inches long, terminating in the upper and posterior
-part of the thigh; the urine used to dribble through it as well as
-through the urethra. The patient had been a seafaring man; he was in
-exhausted health from hot climates and intemperate living, and he died
-at last of consumption. I have the parts showing the stricture and the
-fistulous opening by me, in a state of good preservation. In Figure
-8 is presented an illustration of extensive ulceration producing two
-fistulous openings; the state of the urethra was only discovered after
-death, the patient having concealed his infirmity for many years;
-he died suddenly from apoplexy, being found dead in his bed by the
-people of the house where he lodged. Figure 9 portrays irregular and
-extensive ulceration. The patient died from syphilis, having gonorrhœa
-at the same time. I have the preparation. Figure 10 shows an impervious
-urethra, and a fistulous opening through which the urine flowed. The
-urinary passage was blocked up within two inches from the orifice, and
-the length of the obstruction was perhaps a quarter of an inch. It
-was perforated successfully by the lanceted stilette, and the passage
-thereby rendered continuous; the catheter was worn for several days,
-and the false opening soon healed after a slight application or two
-of nitric acid. Numerous other illustrations might have been given,
-but the preceding convey a passable notion of the simplest, and most
-confirmed, and most severe forms, of the malady in question.
-
-It is melancholy, notwithstanding the resisting and reparative power
-of nature to avoid so saddening a disease as stricture, that it is so
-very prevalent, and that it is occasioned by so many causes. Where it
-is not destructive to life, it is very injurious. It involves, where it
-is severe, other important organs beside the seat of its abiding; the
-repeated calls upon the bladder, through sympathy of the irritation,
-created so near to that viscus, the efforts which at all times it is
-obliged to make, although assisted by the muscles of the abdomen and
-contiguous parts to void its contents, at last, and very frequently end
-in paralysis, and total inability to pass water ensues, except through
-the aid of the catheter. Independently of which, where so much disease
-exists as in the urethra, the urine also constantly pressing against
-ulcerating and irritable surfaces, extravasation of that secretion
-takes place, and the most formidable and alarming consequences ensue.
-In the simplest form of stricture, many important functions are
-disturbed. A very frequent consequence is permanent irritability of the
-bladder, so that the patient is obliged, ten or twelve times a day, to
-micturate, and is unable to pass through the night without suffering
-nearly the same inconvenience. Besides which, the natural sensitiveness
-of the genital organs becomes speedily and much impaired. I am
-satisfied that where disorganization of the testicles does not exist,
-and where the patient is young, or even middle-aged, if he be impotent,
-he will in nine cases out of ten be found to have stricture. There
-are exceptions, which shall be named when speaking on the infirmities
-of the genital system, but in nearly all cases of impuissance there
-will be found, if not stricture, at least some morbid irritability of
-the urethra. During the existence of stricture, there is generally a
-vitiated secretion from the seat of mischief, constituting a gleet;
-therefore a gleet at all times should be regarded, lest it be an
-indication of something more than a mere weeping from enfeebled vessels.
-
-_On the Treatment of Stricture._—Having fully described the symptoms
-and progress of stricture, I proceed to the more pleasing part
-of treatment. Stricture, if early attended to, is a disease easy
-remediable: if neglected, its horrors accumulate, and sufferings the
-most acute close the scene. Such, however, is the progress of science,
-that it is almost possible to cure the most inveterate case, at all
-events to relieve it; but that is no reason why the initiatory notices
-should be disregarded. Stricture, as must be perceived, is of two
-kinds, spasmodic and permanent: the treatment of the first is chiefly
-medical, the treatment of the latter chiefly mechanical. The principal
-agents I rely upon in the cure of the former, are the warm bath, rest,
-sedatives, and certain dietetic restrictions; for the removal of the
-latter, I place unbounded confidence in the practice of _dilatation_;
-and I am of opinion that the other methods, namely, the application
-of caustic or the scalpel, might be dispensed with altogether, if the
-dilating method be not delayed too long.
-
-Before commencing the cure of stricture, I need hardly observe, that we
-ought to be fully satisfied of its existence. Symptoms are not always
-unerring guides; and, therefore, our reliance should not wholly depend
-on them.
-
- ——“to be once in doubt
- Is once to be resolved.”
-
-The only mode of ascertaining the precise condition of the urethra, is
-by an examination of it, which should not be delayed a moment after
-suspicion is entertained of the impending evil.
-
-For this purpose, it is recommended that a solid silver sound should
-be used as the best instrument; because it will pass with much less
-pain or inconvenience. It should be made conical, that is, smaller
-at the point than at the shaft, and of a size to pass very readily
-into the orifice; the shaft or body of the sound should not exceed
-two thirds of the size of the canal. The sound should be warmed,
-and afterward it should be well oiled. The directions for examining
-the urethra pertain to the passage of a bougie or catheter; and as
-it often falls to the lot of a patient, that he is beyond medical
-assistance, it behooves him to learn how an instrument should be
-passed, in order that in emergencies he may officiate himself; besides,
-it often happens, in cases of diseased bladder, and in those cases
-where retention of urine frequently occurs, that an invalid can not
-command the necessary constant attendance of his professional man; and
-therefore such knowledge will well repay any little time or trouble
-bestowed in the acquisition. The two annexed drawings will render the
-commonest observer a proficient. The first shows the manner in which
-the bougie is to be introduced. Where the instrument can be passed thus
-far, without the assistance of the other hand than that which holds
-the bougie, it is better, as it keeps the penis and the muscles which
-influence it in a passive state. When the instrument has passed as
-far as it will, in the direction the dotted lines denote, it is to be
-turned gently round, raising the handle toward the abdomen. A slight
-pressure is then to be made _downward_, and the handle of the catheter
-or bougie at the same time to be borne away from the body. See diagram.
-The instrument will, if there be no impediment, gradually slip into the
-bladder. A trial or two will perfect and surprise the novice. The same
-directions apply to the introduction and use of all other instruments
-into the urethra. The sensation experienced on having a bougie passed,
-partakes more of a strange tickling feeling than absolute pain, except
-there exist stricture, and even then the urethra, on a subsequent
-trial, is almost insensible to it.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-If soreness or pain is felt, on the sound passing over the affected
-part, we may presume there is chronic inflammation of the urethra,
-or that the surface is ulcerated, as in long standing gleet. If the
-sound meet with an impediment, but proceeds after a little pressure,
-it indicates a thickening of the mucous membrane, the forerunner of
-stricture.
-
-I may here observe, that stricture is generally found to exist either
-within an inch of the orifice, or at about six inches and a half from
-it, or in the prostate part of the urethra.
-
-If the sound passes, without hinderance, the last situation, but with
-increased pain, the membrane of that part is diseased, and may extend
-to the bladder; which will be indicated by the frequent desire to
-micturate during the night, owing to the irritable state of that organ.
-
-If the instrument be arrested at about six inches and a half, the
-complaint, in all probability, is seated in the transverse portion of
-the prostate, and requires very cautious treatment.
-
-When the obstruction is at the very entrance of the bladder, a
-resistance will be perceived, which, on yielding, will impart a
-peculiar sensation as the sound enters the bladder. When stricture is
-thus situated, there is a frequent desire, with almost total inability,
-to micturate; and when once formed, it is productive of the most
-serious mischief, unless relieved.
-
-In cases of permanent stricture, the passing of the sound conveys
-the sensation of going over a ridge. Where it meets with a temporary
-stoppage, and then passes on, it has probably hitched to a fold of the
-urethra. Sometimes it will enter the orifice of a dilated follicle; and
-if much pressure is used, it will occasion considerable bleeding.
-
-The nature and situation of the disease being ascertained, the cure
-may now be proceeded in, recollecting that no force is to be used,
-and that too much be not attempted at one essay. Now without entering
-into an inquiry as to the laws on which _contraction_ and _elasticity_
-of certain animal structures depend, it is enough for our purpose to
-know, that the urethra possesses both properties; it may contract
-so as to oppose the exit or entrance of the smallest stream, and it
-may be dilated to admit the introduction of an instrument an inch in
-circumference. The urethra maintains these properties in disease as
-well as in health, and upon the strength of this fact, is the practice
-of dilatation in the cure of permanent stricture founded, permanent
-stricture, it will be recollected, is a positive narrowing of the
-urethric canal; and as it is the nature of all organic diseases to
-progress, unless prevented by art, it needs no stronger argument than
-necessity to show how imperative it is to set about their removal.
-
-The cure by dilatation is as follows:—the seat and size of the
-stricture being ascertained (both of which can be easily done by the
-passing of the sound as directed, and the observance of the stream of
-urine), a bougie in circumference somewhat larger than the calibre
-of the urinary current, warmed and dipped in an oleaginous mixture
-combined with some sedative (Forms 22, 23, 24) or stimulant (Form 25)
-according to circumstances, is to be passed to the stricture, and the
-gentlest pressure is to be employed for the space of five, ten, or
-twelve minutes, according to the irritation it produces, removing it as
-soon as any uneasiness is felt.
-
-Even in this very simple operation, a certain dexterity is requisite;
-for the direction of all urethræ is not alike, and the mere pushing
-a bougie against a contracted part is not the only likely method
-of effecting a free passage. Much also depends upon the nature of
-the bougie—the elastic ones, although assisted in their attempted
-passage to the bladder, by the smooth and well lubricated sides of
-the urethra, have a tendency to straighten; and unless considerable
-rotatory motion be observed, are apt to hitch in a fold of the urethra,
-especially if the case befall a person of relaxed fibre, and he be
-much worn down by suffering. The bougies that I employ are constructed
-upon an improved plan to those in general use, being prepared of a
-material that will preserve the shape I adapt them to, previously to
-introducing them, but at the same time sufficiently soft to yield to
-any accidental tortuosity of the tube they are intended to explore.
-The bougie then is to be pressed softly, but steadily, against the
-obstruction, now and then withholding for a minute the bearing, so as
-to allow a respite to the stretched membrane; then renewing by, what
-is better done than expressed, an “insinuating” pressure for the space
-of the time advised above. The patient should not be dispirited, even
-if the bougie do not perforate the stricture at the first trial; it
-would doubtless do so, if longer time were employed, but that is rarely
-advisable, except in cases where the urine can scarcely escape, or much
-expedition be requisite. Should the operation even be unsuccessful in
-this first attempt, the patient will find his ability to micturate much
-greater than before the introduction; but, save in long-standing and
-obstinate strictures, I rarely find myself foiled, nor do those who
-practise the same method, if they have patience and skill enough, in
-overcoming the difficulty at the first interview. A great advantage of
-the cure by dilatation, independently of its safety and efficacy, is
-the insignificant pain it occasions; the sensation produced being only
-like a pressing desire to make water, which immediately subsides on
-withdrawing the bougie.
-
-Another method of dilating a stricture, where it happens to be of
-chronic existence, is the passing a plastic catheter into the bladder,
-and suffering it to remain all night, or even for several nights,
-stopping up the handle end with a cork or wooden peg, which the patient
-can remove when he desires to urinate. The urethra, by this means,
-becomes quickly dilated, and much beyond the size of the instrument. It
-necessarily confines the patient to his room and couch; but where an
-expeditious cure is the object, as much may be effected in this manner
-in six days, as by the ordinary method in as many weeks. Time, however,
-it must be remembered, is the working _material_ of nine tenths of
-strictured invalids, and a week’s lay-up may cost a twelve-month’s
-salary—a purchase too dear to be generally incurred.
-
-Several other plausible methods have been suggested for the cure of
-stricture—one by means of an instrument, that the operator could
-enlarge when it was passed into the urethra, through turning a screw;
-another, which was to introduce a tube made of some thin skin, and
-then to distend it with wind or water; a third, and oftentimes, in
-reality, a very useful and available one, is to compress the penis
-around the glans, and suffer the urine, as it accumulated, to distend
-the anterior part of the urethra before the bandage was removed and the
-urine suffered to escape. But they have their several disadvantages:
-the processes, with the exception of the last, are complicated and
-uncertain in their result; the instrument is not so manageable, or so
-useful, as an ordinary sound; and the gut, instead of distending the
-strictured part, enlarges the healthy portions of the urethra. The
-bougie, in proper hands, notwithstanding it is a simple instrument,
-is the most positive and effectual method of curing stricture as
-yet, or likely to be, discovered. An entrance, then, having by this
-means been gained, a bougie of a larger size is to be selected on the
-next occasion, and the same process repeated. It is never advisable
-to repeat the operation oftener than once in two days, and when the
-urethra is irritable, only every three or four days.
-
-By continuing in this manner, the stricture gradually yields, and
-a bougie as large as the orifice will permit to enter will at last
-proceed through the whole passage without meeting any obstacle. The
-operation, notwithstanding this apparent success, should not be wholly
-laid aside, but continued until the disposition for contraction
-is entirely removed; and the patient should never rest without
-occasionally examining his urethra, say once a month (at least once a
-quarter), lest he encounter a relapse.
-
-Having disposed of the treatment of stricture in its fortunately most
-usual—namely, the mildest—form, I proceed to consider the treatment
-of severe kinds—previously to which, a few remarks upon the various
-kinds of instruments, their structure, shape, and size, will render any
-subsequent allusion more intelligible.
-
-The diagram here introduced represents the calibre of the various
-bougies in general use, and the observer will perceive, that as they
-are made to accommodate themselves to the passage they have to pass,
-how varied must be the changes which the urethra undergoes. The
-last outline indicates the natural and healthy bore of the urethra.
-Bougies are manufactured of different materials: waxen cloth rolled
-together, elastic and yielding; flexible metal, silver, and gold.
-The bougies which I employ are constructed upon an improved plan
-to those in general use: the elastic, as they are termed, although
-assisted in their attempted passage to the bladder by the smooth and
-well-lubricated sides of the urethra, have a constant tendency to
-straighten, and consequently are liable to hitch in all the folds they
-may encounter, which, in relaxed habits, are very numerous in the
-membranous portion of the urethra. To obviate such a possibility, I
-prefer that the bougie should be of such a consistence and manufacture
-as will admit of its preserving the shape I adapt it to previously to
-introducing it; at the same time the material to be sufficiently soft
-to enable it to accommodate itself to any accidental tortuosity of the
-tube it is exploring.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Catheters are instruments for the purposes of withdrawing the urine;
-they are consequently hollow, and are made of the same materials as
-bougies; but the most useful and to be depended upon are composed of
-silver. Surgeons, like other men, have their fancies: a catheter,
-when made of silver, has very little flexibility; accordingly it must
-be shaped beforehand. Some medical men prefer them quite straight,
-others with an immense curve. A surgeon should possess many forms, as
-the direction of the urethra differs almost in all men. The subjoined
-exhibits not the size, but the shape of the more useful and those
-most generally used. Figures 1, 2, and 3, suffice in most instances,
-whereas figure 4 is necessary in cases of enlargement of the prostate
-gland, which presses up the bladder, and renders the urethral passage
-consequently longer.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The French employ not only variously curved instruments, but variously
-shaped. In peculiar cases they are doubtlessly useful; but they require
-to be used only by persons of skill and judgment. In the next three
-kinds are views of such; they are called conical bougies—the first
-curved, the second straight. They are made of silver, waxen cloth, or
-India-rubber. The third exhibits a sound, employed to ascertain the
-seat of the stricture.
-
-I have already alluded to the improved method I employ on finding it
-necessary to use escharotics. I can not better explain the process
-than by submitting a sketch of the instruments, whereby the mode of
-application will be instantly perceived. The instruments are made of
-silver. The figures represent No. 8 a curved, No. 9 a straightened, No.
-10 ditto, with enlarged head, which puts the areola of the stricture on
-the stretch, and secures the central part for the application of the
-caustic, or whatever substance may be employed.
-
-The next kind of instruments are for the purposes of dividing or
-piercing hardened obstructions—one or two applications creating a
-passage which a hundred _cauterizings_ would not effect. When any
-styptic is applied to a morbid growth, its tendency is to create a
-slough, or to destroy the part whereto it is applied. In some instances
-a styptic actually promotes increased action: it may temporarily
-destroy the part; but the moment the effect is over, a reaction
-follows, and the excrescence is increased. Such is the case in many
-long-standing, obstinate strictures; and their removal by perforation
-or division is rendered indispensable. The practice requires the
-most careful attention and anatomical knowledge; and no one but a
-professional man would attempt its employment.
-
-No. 11 sketch exhibits a curved instrument, with the pointed lancet
-projecting as when applied. No. 12 exhibits ditto, but with a
-differently formed instrument, consisting of two portions separated,
-so as to allow a director, in the form of a thin silver wire with a
-silver knob, to pass for the purpose of exploring the passage which the
-instrument is to follow and enlarge. It is indispensable in strictures
-seated upon the soft and deep parts, lest a false passage should be
-made. No. 13 represents a straight instrument; No. 14 ditto, but with
-the lancet in reserve—the last a perforator.
-
-The reader has now been made acquainted with the various resources
-the surgeon has at his command. A few words on their employment will
-complete the necessary amount of information to render the one as wise
-as the other. By way of recapitulation, the treatment of stricture
-is by _dilatation_, _cauterization_, and _division_. They are to be
-estimated in the order of their arrangement. By dilatation is meant the
-enlarging of the urethral passage through the frequent introduction
-of bougies of graduated sizes. It is an operation unattended with any
-considerable pain; its novelty sometimes renders a patient a little
-nervous, but a complaint is rarely made after a second or third
-introduction. Indeed, it is oftentimes courted more frequently than is
-desirable. The application also of caustic, or even the perforator,
-produces scarcely the least inconvenience. Hemorrhage, of most
-things to be dreaded, is less frequent, with cauterizing and cutting
-instruments (in skilful hands), than the incautious employment of
-blunt-pointed bougies.
-
-_Diseases of the Testicles._—The testicles, from their office and
-connexion with other structures equally as important, are liable
-to many excitations. In gonorrhœa they are subject to sympathetic
-inflammation, as in _hernia humoralis_, which, if neglected or
-maltreated, gives rise to abscess or chronic hardness. Inflammation
-also occurs in them as in other structures. Accidents, such as blows or
-bruises, horse-riding, wearing very tight pantaloons, are all fertile
-sources of derangement. Scrofulous constitutions are predisposed to
-have their testicles, like the rest of the glands, diseased. The most
-frequent disturbance, however, of the testicles, is a dilatation of
-the veins, constituting what is called varicocele; and generally
-accompanied by a wasting away of the testicle itself. It is rare,
-indeed, to find perfectly healthy testicles in an individual who
-has been exposed to amatory pleasures and sensualities; and as, of
-course, even amative desire, as well as amative power, depends upon
-the absolute sound condition of the glands in question, the inference
-is, that in very numerous persons, the sexual instinct is considerably
-diminished, and not unfrequently wholly suppressed, before half the
-natural term of their existence has expired, at which time they ought
-in reality to be at the climax of their prime and capability.
-
-It is not so much a painful complaint, as an unpleasant one. There are
-occasionally pains in the back and loins, and other feelings, creating
-a sensation of lassitude and weariness; and now and then some local
-uneasiness is felt.
-
-Varicocele gives to the examiner a sensation as though he were
-grasping a bundle of soft cords. It sometimes exists to such a degree
-as to resemble a rupture. In advanced stages of the disease, or
-disorganization, the epididymis becomes detached from the body of the
-testicle, and is plainly distinguishable by the finger. The result of
-all is, that a considerable diminution of sexual power takes place;
-and if means are not adopted to arrest a further break-up of the
-structure, the venereal appetite will subside altogether. The annexed
-drawing exhibits a tolerably faithful portrait of the disease; it
-represents the varicocele to be on the left side—the side most usually
-affected.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The folds formed by the veins lapping over each other are clearly
-distinguishable, and the dependent state of the scrotum on the affected
-side exhibits very well the occasion of it. The treatment consists
-in giving support by means of a suspensory bandage, which may be
-worn during the day, and the use of local refrigerants night and
-morning. The state of health is sometimes mixed up with it; and tonics
-and generous diet are useful. The cold shower bath helps to brace
-the system. It is a complaint in which, if it be not of very great
-severity, nor very long continuance, much good may be done. In some
-instances the veins may be allowed to empty themselves, which they will
-do when the body is in a recumbent position, and a coated ivory ring,
-or a silken band, may be so placed around them as shall prevent their
-refilling. It is, however, a case fitter for the surgeon’s management.
-
-_Abscess in the Testicle._—The testicle is subject to inflammation
-and suppuration like any other structure. A case about three years
-ago fell under my notice, where a quantity of dark fœtid fluid was
-released on puncturing a testicle in which the sense of fluctuation
-was very evident; and the patient stated that it had been five or six
-years in arriving at that condition. He was wasted considerably from
-nocturnal perspirations and acute pain, and his sexual desire was much
-diminished. The case did well, and the latter function was restored
-without much loss.
-
-_Hydrocele._—Hydrocele is an accumulation of yellow serous fluid in
-the _tunica vaginalis testis_ (refer to the engravings in next page),
-or peritoneal covering of the testicle. It is a disease incident to
-every period of life, but more commonly met with in grown persons.
-The ordinary formation of hydrocele is unattended with pain; and the
-patient accidentally discovers the existence of the swelling, but
-oftentimes not until it has attained a considerable magnitude. The
-tumor, when large, produces an unsightly appearance, and forms a
-hindrance to sexual intercourse, from the integuments of the penis
-being involved therein, and thereby preventing a perfect erection of
-that organ. The disease may appear to originate spontaneously; but it
-is usually traceable to some bruise, blow, or other external injury to
-the part.
-
-The two following drawings exhibit the outward and inward appearance of
-the scrotum in hydrocele:—
-
-[Illustration: The Scrotum largely distended.]
-
-[Illustration: The Scrotum distended to its utmost extent, and the
- position of the fluid shown. The penis is almost always more or
- less drawn up, and in severe cases it appears drawn up so as
- scarcely to be perceptible.]
-
-The notion that the cure of hydrocele depends on promoting adhesion to
-the sides of the tunica vaginalis with the testicle is somewhat upset
-by several preparations in the London hospitals, exhibiting the _tunic_
-taken from persons in whom a radical cure was effected by injection,
-and in whom no fluid was reproduced; nor were the sides of the said
-investment at all adherent with the testicle, but apart, as in the
-healthiest individual. Hitherto surgeons, acting on the aforesaid
-notion, with a view to obliterate the cavity, adopted various plans of
-treatment—such as, for instance, laying open the entire cavity, cutting
-away a portion of the tunica vaginalis, the application of caustic,
-and, lastly, the seton, as advised by Dr. Pott, which was suffered
-to liberate itself by ulceration. When, in any of these instances,
-suppuration was induced, the cavity became in time filled up by the
-granulating process. The plan of the present day is by perforating
-the sac with a trocar, suffering the effused fluid to escape, and
-injecting some stimulating liquid which is allowed to remain until a
-degree of inflammation is produced, that shall cause an obliteration
-of the cavity by adhesion, or, as it has also been proved, prevent
-a reproduction of the fluid, by closing the mouths or altering the
-diseased action of the exhalent arteries. Whichever be the effect
-produced thereby, the cure is almost certain, and the principles of the
-treatment consequently judicious. But, notwithstanding, the operation
-is not always immediately, nor _ultimately_ successful; the degree of
-inflammation set up may be insufficient, and the effusion again take
-place, and the operation may require a second and third repetition;
-or an excessive degree of inflammation may ensue, that shall occasion
-serious constitutional disturbance, either by suffering the injected
-fluid to remain too long, or its being of too stimulative a character,
-or from its escaping into the cellular membrane of the scrotum, an
-accident not unfrequent, unless great care be used in the operation.
-
-_Radical Cure of Hydrocele._—The term radical is applied to the process
-narrated in the last case; but, as has been observed, the operation is
-occasionally required to be repeated several times. In the case I am
-adverting to, after tapping, several injections were thrown in between
-the tunics, and withdrawn; and on one occasion the morbid fluid was
-secreted to the greatest possible distension of the scrotum by the
-following morning. Its subsequent withdrawal, and the injection of a
-more active stimulant, effected, however, a permanent cure. In the
-country, surgeons frequently plunge a lancet in the scrotum, suffer the
-effused liquid to escape, and desire the patient merely to wrap the
-parts up in a handkerchief, to take no further heed, and to ride home:
-and these cases generally do well.
-
-_Hydrocele Cured by Acupuncturation._—A new method of treating
-hydrocele has of late years been introduced, namely, by the insertion
-of a needle into the sac or bladder of the testicle, which, upon its
-withdrawal, permits the fluid to escape into the cellular membrane,
-whence it is rapidly absorbed. A pint of fluid may be got rid of in
-that way in two or three hours; and, although the disease may not be
-radically cured, it will occupy several months before a reaccumulation
-of the fluid takes place. In recent cases, this treatment oftentimes
-proves permanently successful. Many nervous persons will not submit
-to anything approaching an operation, not even to the simple one
-of acupuncturation. In such cases, there is no alternative but
-counter-irritants, to be applied over the part, such as the tincture of
-iodine, or the following ointment (Form 26).
-
-It is at all times best to attend early to any disease of the
-testicles; the progress is so rapid, the mischief so great, and the
-consequences so deplorable, of uncontrolled disease.
-
-_Eruptions incident to the Organs of Generation and the Rectum._—The
-structures included in the above heading are subject to a variety of
-eruptions, varying in character, intensity, and duration. Thus we have
-the _papular_, a chronic inflammation characterized by papules, or very
-minute pimples, of nearly the same color as the skin, accompanied by
-intense itching, and terminating, when broken by scratching, in small
-circular crusts: this is called, by dermoid pathologists, Prurigo.
-Another order of eruption is designated the _vesicular_ and _pustular_,
-and consists of groups of small pimples of a very bright red color,
-and containing a serous fluid. They are accompanied by itching,
-which increases as the contained humor becomes turbid, and assumes
-the puriform aspect; they then incrustate, and at the end of about a
-fortnight drop off, leaving the skin healthy underneath. The name given
-to this variety is Herpes.
-
-The last and most inveterate species is characterized by an itching of
-the skin, which, on inspection, appears of a diffused redness, and
-gives off, after a while, a number of thin scales: these reaccumulate,
-and the entire organs of generation becomes sometimes covered with
-similar patches: this is denominated Psoriasis. These affections, which
-are but various degrees of inflammation, modified by idiosyncrasy and
-habit, arise from local and constitutional causes. Among these are
-frequent excitation of the organs of generation, the contact of the
-fluids secreted during sexual intercourse, an unhealthy and relaxed
-condition of the genitals, and, lastly, a disordered state of the
-digestive organs. It is astonishing to what an extent these disorders
-prevail, and more so to find how long the individuals, probably from a
-sense of diffidence in seeking professional assistance, endure them. I
-have encountered many patients who have informed me that they have had
-the complaint upon them from five to ten years, purposing during the
-whole of that period to consult some medical friend, but postponing it
-until their interview with myself; and it is the more to be regretted,
-as the cure may always be effected in a week or two, with moderate
-attention and perseverance; but if the attempt be neglected, there
-is no limiting the extent to which the disease may proceed. Local
-diseases, especially of such a nature as those under consideration can
-not exist any great length of time without involving the digestive
-organs, which become sympathetically deranged; and in like manner do
-local diseases participate with dyspeptic disturbances—each, therefore,
-goes on aggravating the other.
-
-_Diseases of the Bladder._—The anatomical description of the bladder
-will be found in the earlier pages of this work. It may simply be
-restated:
-
-The bladder is a viscus somewhat similar in structure to the stomach.
-It is composed of several coats—muscular, nervous, and mucous. Each are
-liable to diseases peculiar to their several structures. The size of
-the bladder differs in most persons, and in the sexes.
-
-The female bladder is generally the largest; but the largeness is
-observable more especially in females who have borne children. The
-proverbial ability of females to retain their urine longer than men is
-thus accounted for.
-
-Much mischief is often done by both sexes disobeying the particular
-“call of nature” to urinate; and the younger branches should have that
-fact impressed upon them. I have known children acquire a severe and
-obstinate form of irritability of the bladder by retaining their urine
-too long. Diseases of the bladder are generally the consequences of
-other complaints, and those complaints have already been enumerated.
-They may be thus summed up:
-
-Gonorrhœa extending to the bladder, and producing absolutely a clap
-of the bladder. If the inflammation is not subdued, or does not
-subside, probably some permanent mischief ensues; at all events, the
-inflammation extends, and involves other coats than the interior.
-Accordingly, we have inflammation of the muscular coat, the nervous
-coat, and, lastly, the peritoneal coat. These terminations, severally,
-have certain symptoms, and certain names.
-
-There are others, and among them may be named colds, local injuries,
-hæmorrhoids, excess in drinking particular fluids, sensual indulgences,
-diseased condition of the kidneys, or long retention or vitiated states
-of the urine, nervousness, and, lastly, the formation of stone in the
-bladder. The most common form of bladder ailment is irritability,
-which is a milder term for inflammation. Then we have absolutely
-inflammation, and, lastly, loss of power, or paralysis.
-
-_Irritability of the Bladder._[3]—The chief indication of disease
-affecting the bladder is a frequent desire which the patient
-experiences to pass his water; but that symptom alone does not
-determine the nature of the complaint. It may be irritable from
-sympathy with surrounding irritation, and disappear on the subsidence
-of that irritation. It may constantly be fretting the patient by its
-contractions, through the urine (owing to some general derangement
-in the system, being altered in its chemical qualities) exciting the
-bladder the moment it is secreted therein; or it may be the result of
-nervous agitation, with or without any actual diseased state of the
-bladder. These causes should be understood to regulate the treatment,
-which of course must be qualified by the provocation, and which the
-patient, when in doubt, had better leave to the discrimination of his
-physician.
-
-_Paralysis of the Bladder._—The bladder may become, through loss
-of nervous stimulus, insensible to irritation, and consequently be
-disobedient to its natural functions. The urine, in these cases,
-accumulates in large quantities, distends the bladder to its utmost,
-which it does without pain; and the excess of secretion then dribbles
-away involuntarily. This state of the bladder is called paralysis, and
-is an aggravated form of disease, arising from the same causes that
-establish inflammation, or from some contiguous nervous injury. The
-treatment of paralysis of the bladder must be intrusted to experienced
-hands; it consists chiefly of purgatives, stimulative enemata up the
-rectum, the introduction of the catheter, the cold bath, rest, and
-general medicinal nervous excitants.
-
-_Inflammation of the Bladder._—Cases of acute inflammation of the
-bladder are of rare occurrence; but they do occur, occasionally prove
-fatal, and always are productive of much general disturbance, which
-yields not without vigorous and active treatment. Gonorrhœa is most
-usually the exciting cause. On the sudden suppression of the urethral
-discharge, an inflammation sympathetically seizes the testicle, the
-glands in the groin, or the bladder; and when the latter is the seat of
-the transference, it may be held as the ratio of the severity of the
-disease. In inflammation of the bladder, there is a constant desire
-to pass water, which, when made, is usually in very small quantities,
-and leaves a sediment. The patient often experiences an insupportable
-inclination to urinate, with a sensation as though the bladder were
-ready to burst—whereas there may be little or no urine in it. There is
-much pain at the root of the penis, and it extends along the perinœum
-to the rectum, which latter is assailed with almost constant spasms
-resembling straining. There is considerable thirst, fever, and anxiety;
-the pulse is full and quick, the tongue furred, and all those symptoms
-are present that prevail during severe constitutional excitement.
-The treatment consists of bleeding, leeching, or cupping; relieving
-the bowels by castor oil and injections; giving mucilaginous drinks,
-administering opiates, preserving rest, and total abstinence from
-stimulating diet. If these means fail in subduing the inflammation it
-runs on to ulceration, permitting extravasation of urine occasioning
-mortification and death; but where they are effectual, the patient is
-soon left free from complaint. It often happens that the inflammation
-is not so vigorously treated, or it may be wholly neglected, and yet
-it may happily resolve itself without proceeding to the extremity
-narrated; but, unfortunately, it may degenerate into a minor but not
-less troublesome form, denominated chronic, and which, in fact, is the
-disease christened “irritability,” and the one, for obvious reasons,
-as above stated, for which relief is most usually sought, the patient
-having in vain daily looked for the subsidence of his malady. Having
-stated that irritability of the bladder must be treated with reference
-to its cause, it is obvious that more than non-medical discrimination
-is required. Where it depends upon stricture, the stricture must
-be first cured; where upon stone in the bladder, the stone must be
-removed; where upon sympathetic inflammation, the source must be
-attacked, and so on.
-
-However, it has been stated that other causes may exist—that it may
-even be a primary disease in itself; and as this treatise professes to
-be a private mentor to the invalid, I will detail such measures as may
-be safely adopted for the cure of a complaint as often borne from being
-trusted to unskilful hands, as from a morbid delicacy in seeking proper
-and legitimate relief. The ordinary symptoms are, first, an inordinate
-desire to make water; it flows in small quantities, with pain before,
-during, and after. The urine has an offensive ammoniacal odor; it
-deposites a thick, adhesive mucus, of a gray or brown color, sometimes
-streaked with blood, and of an alkaline character.
-
-In this stage of affairs, rest is indispensable; sedatives and opiates
-may be given; but alkalies (rarely omitted in prescriptions for
-incontinence of urine) should not be indiscriminately given, for they
-only render the urine more alkaline, which occasions it to deposite
-calcareous flakes, that, if not passed off, accumulate, unite, and
-lay the foundation of that frightful disease, stone in the bladder.
-The extract of _conium_, or _henbane_, combined with mucilage, may be
-given in doses of three to five grains every six hours. The _tincture
-of henbane_, in doses of a _fluid-drachm_, or the _tincture of opium_,
-not exceeding _ten or fifteen_ _drops_ at a time, may be given in
-like manner, and continued for several days, keeping the bowels open
-with castor oil. The daily or alternate daily use of the hot, general,
-or hip bath, will afford immense relief. The various preparations of
-_morphine_, _aconitine_, and of _hops_, possess great power in small
-and frequent doses. The _uva ursi_ is a remedy of ancient note, and is
-often prescribed with advantage; the dose is one scruple to a drachm
-in milk, or any bland fluid, three times a day, or it may be taken in
-infusion or decoction, one ounce to a pint of water—that quantity to
-be drank during the day. The _pareira brava_, exhibited in a decoction
-(by simmering three pints of water, containing half an ounce of the
-root, down to a pint), may be taken in divided doses of eight or twelve
-ounces during the day, or in the form of extract, in quantity of a
-scruple, which equals the above amount of decoction.
-
-The _achillæ millefoliæ_ is an excellent plant, and possesses
-astonishing astringent powers, often restoring the tone of the bladder
-to a healthy condition, when all other remedies have failed. A handful
-of the leaves are to be infused in a pint of boiling water, which, when
-cool, may be poured off, and given in doses of a cupful three times a
-day. Any of the preceding sedatives may be given in conjunction with
-these preparations.
-
-Lime-water taken with milk, as an ordinary drink, is a useful
-corrective.
-
-The _buchu_ (the _diosma crenata_)—an ounce infused for several hours
-in a pint of boiling water, and a wineglassful of the cooled liquid
-administered three or four times a day—has justly obtained some
-notoriety.
-
-Where all these means prove ineffectual, the injection of sedative and
-astringent applications often answers the most sanguine expectations;
-but they should be employed only by professional persons, and even
-then with great care; as when the disease has been at its height,
-and they have been used, much inconvenience, and even mischief, has
-been occasioned. A mild infusion of poppies, or weak gruel, may be
-thrown in, once or twice a day, in quantities not exceeding two or
-three ounces at a time, and withdrawn after being suffered to remain
-thirty or forty seconds. A catheter, with elastic bag, should be the
-instrument used.
-
-In the more chronic forms, where the urine does not deposite much
-mucus, or is tinged with blood, the addition of ten drops (_very
-gradually_ increasing the quantity) of the diluted nitric acid may be
-made to the fluid injected, repeating or declining the operation, as
-the effects are discovered to be advantageous or prejudicial.
-
-In an irritable state of the bladder depending on some disease of the
-kidney, there is a frequent desire to void the urine without there
-being any, or but very little, urine in the bladder. There is also a
-severe cutting pain felt about the neck of the bladder, especially
-after each effort to make water, followed or attended by a “languid”
-pain in the loins. The urine is often the color of whey, at other times
-tinged with blood, and deposites, when suffered to remain a while, a
-purulent sediment. The severe symptoms should be allayed by the same
-remedies as prescribed in irritable bladder arising from other causes;
-but the original seat of the disease in this instance demands energetic
-attention. The various counter-irritants are in great requisition;
-leeches, blisters, setons, &c.
-
-In addition to the tonics and astringents already advised, an infusion
-of the _wild-carrot seed_, made by macerating for a couple of hours
-one ounce of the seeds bruised in a pint of boiling water (drinking,
-when cool and strained, the whole of the liquid in divided doses during
-the day), may be taken with every chance of relief. As in the other
-infusions, the patient must persevere in the use of this for some time.
-
-
-
-
- ORIGIN OF THE VENEREAL DISEASE.
-
-
-THE reader will allow that it can not be for want of materials to
-produce a book, that this subject is introduced, as the multifarious
-nature of this work’s contents will readily testify; but it is
-briefly to explain certain probabilities and conjectures which the
-afflicted curious are generally desirous of being satisfied upon. Who
-ever suffered under syphilis but was solicitous to know how such a
-plague came into the world? Many moralists believe and insist that
-it is a specific punishment, sent for our physical transgressions.
-Philosophically speaking, such it is; because the infringement of any
-natural law always incurs a penalty. However, if it be a manifestation
-of divine displeasure, it certainly is most unequally apportioned;
-for it generally happens to the least licentious, instead of the most
-depraved—the timid, scrupulous, and nervous man, contracting it on the
-first loose intercourse, whereas the man of the town revels almost
-with impunity; and, lastly, he who exercises the greatest caution
-and cleanliness escapes it altogether, although he may be the most
-deserving of the infliction. In a state of timorous excitement, we
-are more apt to catch the latent mischief. The careless, thoughtless
-libertine, hardened against infection by indifference, free living,
-and probably strong health, often escapes scot-free; and the cool and
-calculating pleasure-hunter, who exercises those useful antagonists
-to disease, namely, ablution and selection, comes off triumphant with
-still greater certainty.
-
-The point at issue is, when the disease first arose, and where.
-Medical historians give credit to America, Spain, and France, for its
-propagation; and controversies have been carried on by various parties,
-each disclaiming the honor. Now, as I do not propose to analyze the
-authorities, but simply to venture my own opinion, with the reasons
-for the same, I have no alternative but to refer the reader, if he
-be dissatisfied with my attempted exposition, to more comprehensive
-and elaborate conjectures than my own. Starting upon the proposition
-that nature’s laws are unalterable, and believing that fever is, and
-has been fever since the creation of the world; that a cut finger has
-healed by the first intention, or has _festered_, and ever may do
-so—each condition being modified by the state of health of the party,
-and the nature of the wound; that a broken limb was attended with the
-same consequences in the year 1 as it will be in the year 1900; and
-that dirtiness generated itch, and does so still: I can not reconcile
-myself to any other belief, but that any violation of the laws
-whereupon sexual intercourse has been permitted, has been, is, and will
-be, attended with corresponding results; and as such violations most
-likely exist where numbers cohered together, I consider both gonorrhœa
-and syphilis to have been coeval with the origin of mankind. They both
-doubtlessly are much modified by climate, habits, and constitution; and
-therefrom ensue the many modifications we see in Europe, and the other
-large portions of the globe. The proofs that can be adduced in favor of
-this hypothesis are interminable.
-
-It is said that, until the arrival of some British sailors at
-Otaheite, the disease was unknown in that territory. Possibly, in
-its present modification; but previously to this new intercourse, it
-is most probable that the sexual cohabitation was not so promiscuous
-or frequent, and that that very infringement entailed a new form of
-irritation. In married persons, of even temperate passions, and of most
-careful habits, local sexual disorders are of frequent occurrence,
-the slightest derangement of female health giving rise to vaginal
-disturbance, that unsuspectingly is increased by the marital embrace,
-and communicated to the husband; and only from its presence does it
-occur, that the coitus may have been the cause of it. By attending to
-the simple suggestion of nature, namely, abstinence, cleanliness, and
-rest, a cure is effected; but where neglected, or should either party
-be unfaithful to the marriage vow, the disease becomes magnified, and
-extended to, mayhap, innocent parties.
-
-The next question is, are gonorrhœa and syphilis identical? Certainly
-not, any more than the very many modifications of generative sores.
-It is absolutely, now-a-days, a difficult question to solve, whether
-this or that be syphilis; so numerous and yet so closely in resemblance
-are the ulcers that ensue after sexual cohabitation. The eye is not
-to be trusted, because so different is real from spurious syphilis
-that the French surgeons decide the point by inoculating a healthy
-portion of the body with the matter or discharge from what they suppose
-to be a syphilitic ulcer. If a corresponding ulcer be produced, the
-disease is decided to be syphilis. If, on the other hand, no result
-follow, the patient is proclaimed free from that malady, and stated
-to be laboring under merely common local irritation. What is still
-more curious is this: a patient will have ulcers, which every medical
-man will pronounce, on beholding, to be chancres; yet, upon this
-trial, the inoculation will not evince them to be so. A while after,
-supposing the chancres to be healed, secondary or other symptoms will
-show themselves—sore throat, spotted skin, glandular enlargements, or
-painful joints, follow. The same consequences oftentimes ensue after
-gonorrhœa. The primary diseases can not be identical, because the
-symptoms are vastly different, and the parts attacked are also unlike;
-and yet there is this anomaly, that the after-consequences frequently
-closely resemble each other.
-
-Another surprising result from loose intercourse is, that one female
-will convey to this individual gonorrhœa, to another syphilis; a
-third will escape scatheless, and a fourth will have a modifiable
-affection of both diseases. A satisfactory exposition of the why and
-wherefore such things should be, or are, is I fancy beyond the skill of
-pathologists. It is enough to know that they happen; and it is better
-to use those means which past and daily experience furnishes to get
-rid of them, than to ponder and wonder in the vain endeavor to explore
-their origin.
-
-In giving an opinion that we have always been liable to fever, to
-cut fingers, and to syphilis, I am ready to admit that these several
-conditions depend upon the varied states of health of the parties.
-The fevers (ensuing upon the ill-ventilated places) of olden times,
-compared with those of the present day, differ in intensity and
-frequency, because the causes are neither so numerous nor severe. The
-cut finger of a drunkard, and one of otherwise feeble health, is more
-likely to fester, and even mortify, than should the accident befall
-a temperate and healthy individual; and the syphilis (or diseases
-simulating it) at the present time is less severe than formerly, owing
-to greater attention being paid to personal cleanliness, and the
-simplicity and earliness of the treatment.
-
-A question worthy of inquiry is, why gonorrhœa and syphilis should be
-infectious? _Contagion_ is a word that many medical men would expel
-from worldly usage, not believing in its existence; that is to say,
-the extension of a fever or epidemic, for instance, is not traceable
-to the disease seizing the individual, but to the peculiar aptitude
-of the party to become the recipient of it. Consumption is of the
-most extensive prevalence; but it only occurs in the delicate—those
-peculiarly formed, or rendered apt for it, from the circumstance of
-their lungs being hereditarily feebly constructed, or disordered
-through inflammation following a cold, and which effects are traceable
-to an infraction of some of nature’s laws. Sickly children owe their
-condition to their sickly parents, or to their physical mal-education,
-or some other positive violation of nature’s regulations; and in like
-manner, where the fire rages or the wind blows, the feeblest and least
-protected become the earliest victims. Both gonorrhœa and syphilis
-furnish a remarkably irritating purulent fluid, which, applied to
-delicate surfaces, produces certain effects. Experiments have not
-been made to multiply these effects, beyond those incurred by sexual
-freedom; and the one of inoculation by the French surgeons, as quoted;
-but accident has proved that the eye, for instance, puts on, after
-contact with the discharge of gonorrhœa, the same kind of inflammation
-as follows its contact in coition with the antagonist generative organs.
-
-The rectum has also been the seat of venereal affection; and instances
-have been known of the mouth being also the recipient of disease
-communicated by a deposition of the poison. If there be such a thing as
-contagion, it certainly exists in the venereal disease; for, although
-I admit it (the disease) may occur spontaneously, or be generated by
-half a dozen of each of the sexes herding and cohabiting together,
-and neglecting the duties of cleanliness, or committing excesses,
-those very circumstances imply that the disease can be extended,
-notwithstanding a majority of the careful and hardy may escape, after a
-risk of the same. The fact of its contagious properties is not upset,
-because escape is owing to the non-susceptibility of the parties, and
-the caution they exercise to prevent a lodgment of, or contact with,
-the poisonous matter.
-
-John Hunter observes, that it is only the developed disease that is
-communicable, and for the propagation of venereal affections the
-_poisonous secretion_ must be deposited. So confident was he of this,
-that he even permitted married men having gonorrhœa to cohabit with
-their wives, to save appearances; care being taken first to clear
-all the parts of any matter, by syringing the urethra, then making
-water, and, _lastly_, washing the glans. Such, however, is my belief
-of the rapidity of the formation of the secretion, that, aided by
-the excitement of the generative act, the deposite of the same would
-necessarily take place with the seminal emission, especially in persons
-of full temperament, and in the plenitude of the sexual appetite, and
-thereby be liable to communicate the disease.
-
-It is becoming a prevalent fashion to give new names to the several
-forms of venereal disease, such as substituting “urethritis,”
-“blenorrhagia,” &c., for gonorrhœa; and even to syphilis are added
-“tertiary symptoms;” the names quoted being selected to express more
-symptoms than the old ones conveyed. I consider that this circumstance
-tends to support my opinion—that gonorrhœa and syphilis are not
-identical, and that each disease (the former being distinguished by
-urethral discharges, and the latter by ulcers and other cutaneous
-disfigurements) has innumerable varieties. I hold them both to be
-but modifications of inflammation from a poisonous source, and its
-consequences common to the structures in which they respectively become
-seated, and differing in degree according to the severity of the
-attack. Another proof in support of the last assertion is, I think, the
-time of the appearance of the particular disease. There is certainly a
-more usual time for a clap to manifest itself, such as from the seventh
-to the ninth day; but it very often occurs within twenty-four hours
-after connexion, and syphilis sometimes as early; and instances occur
-where weeks elapse before either of the forms shows itself.
-
-Briefly to recapitulate, I consider, then—1. That the generative organs
-have ever been liable to disease from misuse; that the disease is
-variable and modifiable by many circumstances, such as have been before
-stated—namely, climate, age, constitution, and cause. 2. That it is
-contagious; mild cases usually producing mild consequences, but those
-depending much upon the treatment and health. 3. Newly-indisposed and
-severer cases, establishing a worse form of disease, alike modifiable
-by circumstances. I am not prepared to insist that the syphilis of the
-present time assumes the aspect as it did with the ancients, any more
-than I would affirm that it will be the same centuries hence: but I
-contend that all abuses of sexual pleasures will be surely followed by
-sexual disturbances, and that the most likely form of ailment is marked
-either by discharges or ulceration; that these diseases are simple or
-complicated, and all are separate in themselves. There is no fixed
-order in which what are called secondary symptoms occur. It may more
-usually happen that a sore throat will follow the healing of a bubo,
-as swelled testicle is more commonly subsequent to the occurrence of a
-gonorrhœal discharge; but in very many cases neither occur, or not in
-the succession stated. The anomalies in the disease I shall consider in
-describing the symptoms and treatment, when the reader will judge how
-far the view herein entertained, as to the origin and character of the
-disease, facilitates and simplifies its management and control.
-
-In conclusion of this part of our subject, I may state, that I believe
-the form and severity of any syphilitic disease depend more upon the
-state of health and other aptitudes of the party receiving, than of the
-one communicating the disease.
-
-_Of the Character of the Syphilitic Poison._—“The venereal poison is
-only known by the _action_ which follows its application.” It has
-been observed, that it is only communicable by deposition; and that
-certain parts are essentially prone to its reception: these are the
-generative apparatus of both sexes. The poison is conveyed in the form
-of a purulent fluid; that of gonorrhœa from inflamed vessels with
-corresponding morbid action; that of syphilis, also from a purulent
-fluid emanating from the surface of an ulcer. The disease prevails
-only in the human race; it is impossible to transfer it to animals of
-a lower kind. John Hunter soaked lint in matter from a gonorrhœa and
-chancre, and introduced it into the vaginæ of bitches and asses without
-producing any effect. The same experiment was tried by interposing
-the purulent matter within the prepuce of dogs and male asses, and
-also by inoculation, but with no other effect than that of producing a
-common sore. The venereal poison attacks the human body in two ways,
-locally and constitutionally; the latter by absorption of the poison
-secreted by the patient himself. We can only suppose the local form of
-the disease to arise from absorption, and so altering the local action
-of parts as to produce specific results. The constitutional form is
-generally an after-occurrence, although instances are known where it
-has not been preceded by any apparent previous form; albeit, no doubt
-such _has_ existed without exciting observation. Gonorrhœa shows
-itself without abrasion of surface; but syphilis is marked by another
-action—an ulceration of the solids whereon it is found.
-
-In Hunter’s Work on the Venereal Disease, there is an interesting
-chapter respecting the source of the gonorrhœal secretion, in which
-it appears that it is produced from the vessels investing the
-mucous membrane of the urethra, by their becoming altered in their
-action; and that ulceration is seldom found within the urethra, and
-when so discovered, it is not from the gonorrhœal poison; and that
-where ulceration occurs, it must be ascribable to an accession of
-inflammation of a distinct character. Both gonorrhœa and syphilis
-are conditions assumed by the human frame in self-defence, and are
-processes set up to cure the previous one; and unless the constitution
-be much impaired, the disease gets well. Such impediments, however,
-exist in the form of moral and social arrangements, occupation
-and variable health, that the end, without assistance, is seldom
-accomplished. Gonorrhœa may cease of its own accord; but, according
-to the belief of Hunter, syphilis never; and certainly every day’s
-experience proves the fact. We see gonorrhœa cured by the most ignorant
-persons and by the most empirical measures; but syphilis often defies
-the most skilful treatment. The first attack of venereal affections,
-especially gonorrhœa, is the most severe; from which it is presumed
-that a habit of reconciliation takes place between the disease and the
-generative organs; so that after a recurrence or two of the complaint,
-the same party may almost bid defiance to a new infection. Yet, if a
-man lose the habit obtained by frequent intercourse, through abstinence
-from venereal pleasures, he will be very likely to contract the
-disease even on the first re-essay, with the very same parties, who
-may preserve precisely the same condition of health that formerly was
-innocuous to him. Cases innumerable can be adduced in support of this
-statement. In the first part of this book, statements have been made,
-proving that the difference in the symptoms of gonorrhœa are almost
-endless. The same may be anticipated with regard to syphilis.
-
-
-
-
- OF SYPHILIS.
-
-
-SYPHILIS is another and a more violent form of the venereal disease
-than gonorrhœa. All its effects and symptoms are divided into two
-conditions, _primary_ and _secondary_; the former being those which
-arise either from the direct application of the virus or poison to the
-part where the ulceration first shows itself, or from the irritative
-and specific effects of the poison on the absorbent vessels and glands,
-as it is passing through them on its way to the circulation.
-
-Hence, among the first—the primary—may be classed the _ulcer_, or
-_chancre_, which in almost every instance is situated on the parts of
-generation, and may or may not be followed by a swelling in the glands
-of the groin, constituting that form of the complaint called _bubo_.
-
-The secondary symptoms may be defined to be all those effects of the
-disease which take place subsequently to, and in consequence of, the
-absorption of the poison into the system: comprising sore throat,
-cutaneous affections—both eruptions and ulcers, pains in the bones and
-joints, and swellings thereon, called _nodes_.
-
-I will first consider the symptoms of primary syphilis—_chancre_ and
-_bubo_.
-
-The coverings and linings of the body differ according to their
-situation. The former, the integuments become hardened by exposure
-and exercise, and preserve their velvety softness where protected by
-clothing, and where they are subject to less use—instance the hands,
-feet, face, and abdomen. Certain functions are assigned to each. The
-covering of the feet takes on a horny hardness, and in like manner
-the hands of a laborer assume a glove-like protection. The abdomen,
-by being constantly clothed, preserves its soft texture. The lining
-membranes of the body have also separate offices to perform—the
-_serous_ and _mucous_, as they are called. The _serous_ is a name given
-to those lining the cavities; the _mucous_, to those having outlets.
-From the glans penis being generally covered by the prepuce, the parts
-in contact are called mucous. It differs, however, in sensitiveness,
-from the urethra. The entire covering also of the penis is of a very
-delicate and tender structure; and hence also, from sexual intercourse,
-these parts become the chief seat of syphilis. Gonorrhœa confines its
-attacks to mucous membranes, or, in other words, secreting surfaces. In
-fact, the matter deposited on the common and exposed skin is harmless;
-so also, but to a less degree, is that of syphilis. Gonorrhœa is
-frequently seated _on_ and _around_ the glans, and the inner surface
-of the prepuce; but more frequently, by a hundred fold, _within_ the
-urethra. The delicate surface, then, of the glans and prepuce, losing
-some of its sensitiveness by frequent exposure, and losing also the
-defence of the secretion which mucous membranes pour out, becomes
-accessible to an occurrence of syphilis—a disease that is readily
-communicable, by inoculation, to almost any part of the body. To quote
-Hunter, he says: “It is an invariable effect, that when any part of an
-animal is irritated to a certain degree, it inflames and forms matter,
-the intention of which is to remove the irritating cause. This has
-been before stated; but it is common only to secreting surfaces; and
-when the same cause is applied to non-secreting surfaces, ulceration
-is set up. This is not only the case in common irritation, but also in
-specific cases, as in syphilis, burns,” &c.
-
-It is somewhat difficult to explain how a chancrous sore is produced.
-Surmises are at our service, and those which are founded upon certain
-facts are the more likely to be true. For instance, a person receiving
-syphilis must contract it from another individual having it. The mere
-solitary act of coition will not spontaneously produce it, provided the
-party be clean, for that surely is not an excess; but having connexion
-with an infected one, and thereby exposing a healthy surface to a
-diseased one, becomes an infraction of one of nature’s laws. Well, the
-patient contaminating the other must have a chancre, which giving off,
-by contact, its morbid secretion, produces a specific result, namely, a
-small pimple.
-
-In men, the disease is generally contracted upon the frænum, glans
-penis, or prepuce, or upon the common skin of the body of the penis,
-but most frequently upon the interior. From the peculiar and alterable
-structure of the penis and its prepuce, the poison, unless well washed
-off, is apt to lodge in the folds thereof, and sooner or later it
-manifests its influence, which may occur in twenty-four hours, or may
-be withheld for months. Generally, however, seven or eight or nine
-days puts the patient out of suspense. The first symptoms consist in
-an itching, succeeded by a redness of the part, out of which is soon
-observed to spring up a small elevation or pimple. In connexions where
-haste, disproportion of size, or much excitement or excess prevails, an
-absolute abrasion of the skin often takes place, and the parts where
-such occur are generally the everted portion of the prepuce, or the
-frænum of the same.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The accompanying drawings represent the extent of the redness and
-the first appearance of the pimple. The upper diagram alludes to the
-irritation and excoriation around the frænum, and the lower, the
-first evidence of a chancre. I am describing the most common form of
-chancre, such as is known in the profession as Mr. Hunter’s chancre. A
-perceptible hardness next ensues round the pimple, which becomes more
-elevated when it ulcerates, or, in other words, the head gets broken
-off and a little hollow is left. The tumor (for such it may be called)
-is generally of a limited circumference, seldom exceeding the size of
-a silver penny, unless in an advanced stage of the disease. When a
-chancre attacks the frænum, and undermines it, as it were, the frænum
-is often destroyed; and of course, with its destruction, departs its
-property of controlling or of directing the orifice of the urethra in
-urinating, or in the emission of the semen.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This drawing exhibits three ulcers: one on the prepuce, another under
-the frænum, having eaten its way through, as marked by the black
-cross-line, and the third situated on the glans.
-
-When the pimple appears on the outside of the prepuce for instance, it
-assumes generally a larger form, and, as the head is broken off, crust
-after crust rises up, until the process of ulceration has very far
-advanced, or the applications that are generally employed prevent its
-re-formation. In the former instance, the crusts are attributable to
-evaporation of the discharge; in the latter, their absence is already
-explained by the prevention of the same. There is such a thing as
-sympathy in eruptive disorders. In skin affections of the corners of
-the mouths of children, we often see the inflammation cross from corner
-to corner. The same is observable where the attacks comprise the angle
-of an eye. So is it with the penis, a structure equally as delicate;
-and accordingly the edges of the prepuce often put on a jagged
-appearance resembling chaps on hands.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Witness the above wood-cut. It portrays an ulcer somewhat
-diffused on the prepuce, and the ragged edge of the same structure.
-The sketch just introduced was taken from a patient perhaps only a
-fortnight old with the disease. Being a rackety, dissipated young man,
-and regardless of the treatment suggested, a week’s neglect produced
-the following alteration:—
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A new ulcer sprung up, the old one increased in size, and the entire
-edge of the prepuce became involved in the irritation.
-
-Phymosis and paraphymosis occur in syphilis as they do in gonorrhœa.
-The treatment is the same in both. Warm, soothing applications are
-indispensable; and occasionally, to prevent adherence between the
-glans and prepuce, the scalpel must be had recourse to. I have already
-expressed my conviction that the progress of the disease rests as
-_much_ or _more_ upon the condition of the party receiving it, than the
-specific property of the complaint.
-
-“If the inflammation spreads fast and considerably, it shows a
-constitution more disposed to inflammation than natural; if the
-pain is great, it shows a strong disposition to irritation. It also
-sometimes happens that they begin very early to form sloughs; when this
-is the case, they have a strong tendency to mortification. Bleeding
-is also a consequence owing to exposure of the ulcered _corpus
-cavernosum_.”—_Hunter._
-
-The reader will recollect that it has been stated that chancres, like
-the many symptoms of gonorrhœa, differ in their characteristics.
-Quoting from authorities, and, as will be further illustrated,
-the following may be taken as the summary of the most prominent
-appearances:—
-
-The ordinary chancre is characterized by a hollow centre, a hard and
-ragged edge, a yellow surface, with a deposite of tenacious matter,
-and a red and inflammatory margin. There is also a hardness felt at
-its base on taking the part up between the fingers. This has already
-been shown; but as illustrations multiply, the possessor of this
-publication, especially if he be an invalid, will recognise the
-annexed. It exhibits the ordinary chancre on the inner part of the
-prepuce, the glans, and the orifice of the urethra—no unfrequent seat
-of chancre.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Many ulcers assume a very indolent form, and remain quiescent for a
-long period. One patient I knew, who consulted me for rheumatism, and
-who disavowed ever having had syphilis. He took vapor baths, which
-assuaged the pain, but did not remove it. Accident discovered to me
-the existence of a sore on the penis, by observing the dressings
-of the same, carefully placed on the corner of the mantel-piece in
-the bath-room. The following was the appearance of the sores. He
-had endured them for nearly three months, nor had he perceived much
-alteration, either for better or worse. The disease was properly
-healed, and he soon got well.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Another kind is one denominated the superficial, with raised edges.
-It is more frequently seated at the upper part of the prepuce, and
-creating a thickening of it, ending in phymosis, which lasts a long
-time after the cure of the ulcers. This kind of chancre is sometimes
-very obstinate, and continues many weeks. The following illustration
-portrays its presence near the edge of the _corona glandis_.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-There are two other kinds of sores called the _phagedenic_ and
-_sloughing_ ulcers and chancres.
-
-The phagedenic is a corroding ulcer without granulations. It is
-also destitute of any surrounding induration, but frequently
-its circumference is of a livid red color. When the disease is
-injudiciously treated, the whole of the penis will be destroyed in
-a very short time. The absence of coloring detracts from a faithful
-representation of the kind of sore just alluded to. The drawing is
-sketched from Mr. Skey’s work on Syphilis.
-
-[Illustration:
- _a_—The ulcer.]
-
-Another and more confirmed specimen from the same authority is
-presented. It represents the _sloughing_ ulcer.
-
-[Illustration:
- _a_—The ulcer on the prepuce.
-
- _b_—The ulcer on the penis.]
-
-I have witnessed the sloughing, or, in other words, the loss of the
-entire top of the glans and prepuce, within half a dozen days. The
-subjoined drawing (overleaf) represents a tumefied state of the penis,
-ulceration on the glans surrounding the orifice of the urethra,
-phymosis of the prepuce, and ulcers in different stages on the outside
-thereof. The sketch was taken from Wallace’s work. Such are often
-met with. Chancres, as before stated, often become irritable, spread
-rapidly, and slough, more particularly in persons of intemperate and
-dissipated habits, or when the case has been improperly treated;
-and openings into the urethra are formed to a considerable extent,
-sometimes to the destruction of the glans, or a portion of the penis.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The illustrative companion to this paragraph exhibits an ulcer that
-has wormed its way through the prepuce, as marked by the black line.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Warts are often met with, as in gonorrhœa, and, like those, will arise
-from simple local irritation, from the accumulation of the natural
-secretions, or want of cleanliness. They are hard and soft, and require
-different treatment accordingly. They are not contagious; that is,
-they do not communicate a venereal affection, but they very readily
-produce a similar disease in parts they come in contact with. The story
-is here well told by the engraver’s aid.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It often happens that the ulceration appears checked. A tumor (see next
-page) will form, and the surface will look very red and angry—will
-even yield a moisture, and finally disappear. I say finally, because
-it frequently proves very obstinate, and trespasses upon the patience
-and forbearance almost to induce despair. It usually is very irritable,
-the itching being most troublesome. The illustration was taken from a
-patient who had been an invalid several months.
-
-[Illustration:
- _a_—The tumor.]
-
-After a certain time, varying in proportion to the virulence of the
-disease, the poison is conveyed by the numerous absorbents (which run
-from the penis) to the glands in the groin, one or more of which become
-inflamed and enlarged, producing that well-known swelling, already
-alluded to, called _bubo_. Ulcers, too, are sometimes situated within
-the urethra, as is seen in the annexed cut.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- OF BUBOES.
-
-
-SURGEONS apply the word bubo to inflamed glands from syphilis, wherever
-they happen to be. The body abounds with absorbents, which are small
-delicate vessels that form a net-work over the entire surface, and
-exist also in every structure. Their purpose is to convey the nutriment
-to the circulation. They form _stations_, as it were, or points of
-assemblage; and these are generally situated in the angles of the
-body—the groin, the armpits, hams, neck, &c.—parts most protected from
-injury. When skin inflammation is present, to familiarize the meaning,
-the nearest glands sympathize and swell; as, for, instance, who has
-escaped a swelling, at one time or other of his life, in the neck,
-throat, or armpits? When a sore prevails on the penis, or a gonorrhœa
-exists, there most frequently ensues an enlargement of the glands of
-the groin. The result of that enlargement depends upon the nature
-of the inflammation. In gonorrhœa it is merely temporary, not being
-sufficient to provoke suppuration, or the formation and discharge of
-matter, or very rarely so; but in the case of venereal ulcers, where
-the inflammation is so conveyed, the escape from such consequences is
-as seldom.
-
-The mode which nature adopts to transfer the poison is as inexplicable
-in its operation as the production of a swelled testicle. Buboes
-(herein meant), then, are—or I should say a bubo is—a specific
-inflammation of the glands of the groin. It usually occurs on the
-same side of the body as the ulcer is situated; but when the ulcer is
-seated on or under the frænum, there seems to be no fixed rule which
-side shall have the honor. Another peculiarity is, that they more
-readily spring up from ulcers on the prepuce than on the glans, and
-are more attributable to ulcers than merely inflamed surfaces. They do
-occur sometimes without either being apparent. To facilitate the clear
-understanding of what we are talking about, a drawing is presented of
-the inguinal glands, and the absorbents leading to and from it, which
-conveys but an imperfect idea of the number of the absorbents; but it
-serves to show the nature of them, and their mode of communication.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Glands become inflamed from other causes than syphilis; a scratch,
-a bruise, or any local irritation, will occasion an enlargement of
-the nearest set of glands, or at least one of them. Scrofula is a
-specific cause. As the venereal poison carries with it its morbid
-nature wherever it happens to be conveyed, the glands become infected
-with it; and hence it is the more readily transferred to the system at
-large. Very frequently and fortunately the disease terminates _in_ the
-glands; that is to say, does not extend to the circulation at large.
-The time that intervenes after absorption has taken place, before
-bubo manifests itself, is as uncertain as that of chancre appearing
-after connexion; but generally the party is safe a fortnight after
-the entire disappearance of the chancre. Where it is otherwise, some
-trace of irritation on the glans or prepuce is discoverable upon close
-investigation, or it will follow great fatigue, venereal excesses, &c.
-If the disease extend to the constitution, it rarely affects other
-glands than those primarily attacked; and hence it is rare that more
-than one gland becomes inflamed. Having given the received notions of
-the cause, the symptoms should next be described.
-
-No person can be unaware of the approach of a bubo. There is seldom
-much advance of a swelling without pain, which latter may be said to
-attract the patient’s attention to the part, when a tumor, possibly the
-size only of a horse-bean, is discovered. If the swelling be venereal,
-it rapidly increases in size. It is at first moveable, but soon feels
-as though firmly fixed. There is next experienced inconvenience in
-walking. If the disease proceed to suppuration, a continued throbbing
-is felt in the part, which also swells, assumes a diffused redness,
-and at last an evident sense of fluctuation is perceived. It may be
-ushered in with a shivering fit. The skin becomes thin and tender, and
-a conical point protrudes, which, unless punctured, bursts and emits
-its contents. It is astonishing what immense destruction of parts takes
-place in large buboes. The theory how solids become converted into
-fluids—how muscle, fat, and cellular membrane, become absorbed, and
-a thick purulent secretion deposited, is fitter for a work addressed
-exclusively to medical men than to the public; and it therefore must
-suffice that such happen, and few persons are ignorant of the fact; but
-the _modus operandi_ may at best be but the subject of conjecture.
-
-The artist’s graver has pencilled a faithful picture (see next page)
-of the appearance of the disease in question. On the right side is
-represented a bubo that has broken, or discharged its contents, and
-which is in a state of healing; on the left side a bubo ready to burst;
-and, by way of economising space, the left testicle is exhibited in a
-state of varicocele, by no means an unfrequent accompaniment to the
-previously narrated condition, but at the same time by no means a
-necessary attendant, it being a totally distinct affection. Buboes
-present more varieties in their size, and duration, and consequences,
-than they do on their initiation. Cases in corroboration will be found
-in their proper place.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- ON LUES VENEREA, OR SECONDARY SYMPTOMS.
-
-
-SECONDARY symptoms are those changes which occur in consequence of the
-admission of the venereal poison into the system, or common circulation
-at large. The introduction to the disease of bubo explains the mode
-of inlet. Like gonorrhœa and primary syphilis, it is often a very
-complicated complaint. Secondary symptoms are admitted to occur without
-being preceded by any primary form, as, for instance, by immediate
-absorption unattended with the irritation which accompanies chancre, or
-attendant upon bubo; but where one secondary affection arises without
-the primary, at least many hundred arise subsequent to it; and unless,
-in the latter instance, treatment, and vigilant too, is adopted, not
-one in a hundred escapes them.
-
-_Lues venerea_ (a synonymous term with syphilis) is supposed to be
-imbibed from a very sensitive glans penis, a simple abrasion of the
-skin of that organ, an ordinary ulcer, or it may be transferred by
-inoculation. The late John Hunter is certainly the most eminent
-authority—the _vade mecum_ of professional men. In these matters he
-was a man of indefatigable perseverance and untiring observation. Few
-new lights have been thrown on syphilis since his time, except on the
-treatment, which has become wonderfully simplified.
-
-In thus again adverting to Mr. Hunter’s name, it is chiefly to
-observe, that the basis of my own thoughts and practice has been built
-upon his writings; and therefore, in being thus explicit in describing
-syphilis and its multitudinous varieties, the reader is assured
-that what is here written is, at all events, well founded, and not
-compounded of the many new adventurising propositions of the day. Mr.
-Hunter considered that contamination took place about the beginning
-of the local complaints; that no person was safe from lues while the
-original sore was present, and not under treatment; but that, if the
-seeds of lues were not already implanted in the constitution, the
-consequences might be averted by treatment. Children are born infected
-with lues, which they derive from their parents; for instance, a man
-laboring under secondary, or primary symptoms, cohabits with a healthy
-female, the female _may_ escape both diseases, but the child may
-inherit them.
-
-Instances have been known of children so infected, conveying the
-disease to the wet nurse, to whose care they may be removed; and,
-like other infectious disorders, the complaint may be diffused _ad
-infinitum_. There is an impression abroad, that, like consumption,
-healthy persons are obnoxious to the breath and perspiration of the
-afflicted; but, as in many other conjectures, corroboration is wanted
-to prove the fact.
-
-Syphilis is divided into primary and secondary; but modern pathologists
-add a third stage, called tertiary symptoms. Hunter used to divide lues
-into two orders; the first was the most frequent form of the complaint,
-after chancre and bubo; the second, the remaining symptoms. The
-former consisted of the affections of the skin, throat, nose, mouth,
-and tongue; the latter, the bones and their coverings, called the
-periosteum and the fasciæ of muscles, as explained in the preliminary
-part of this publication. Lues does not always exhibit itself according
-to this arrangement; which circumstance explains that the occurrence
-is more owing to conditions of health, and peculiar tendencies of
-the structures involved to receive the contamination, than to any
-properties of the animal poison.
-
-He considers, also, that the development of the disease depends much
-upon the state of weather, and the care the patient may bestow upon
-himself; cold being a formidable predisposer to the extension of
-secondary symptoms, and that the parts least protected are generally
-the first to become diseased. Hence the throat usually exhibits a
-morbid action before the skin, furthermore, upon the cure of the more
-superficial parts of the body; and, therefore, suddenly suspending
-treatment, the symptoms manifest themselves in the deeper seated. The
-deduction from this statement is, a necessity for especial care in the
-clothing of the body, and the continuance of the treatment some little
-while after all external evidences of the complaint have disappeared.
-
-Mr. Hunter considered that the disease may be engrafted in the
-constitution, and remain dormant for a considerable period, through
-the parts not being brought into action by any of the aforementioned
-causes. Ordinary illness, simple fever, excess, fatigue, and a host
-of other occasions, may excite a particular structure into a morbid
-condition, when the hitherto dormant disease will sprout out. His
-arguments are supported by numerous cases wherein _several years_
-elapsed between the primary and secondary symptoms, although no new
-infection was contracted in the intermediate time.
-
-Mercury was Mr. Hunter’s sheet-anchor; his faith in it was to the
-effect that it would cure every stage of the disease, but that one
-course of it, although it might cure chancre, would not prevent
-secondary symptoms. They might not occur, because the poison may not
-have been carried into the circulation; and in like manner the second
-stage of the disease need not be followed by a third. But he considered
-that, when the several forms of the disease betrayed themselves, their
-origin must be traced to a general contamination of the system at the
-same time.
-
-
-
-
- OF THE SYMPTOMS OF THE FIRST STAGE OF LUES.
-
-
-SIX weeks is the time usually allowed to elapse between primary and
-secondary symptoms; but it is not invariably the case, instances
-having occurred where the disease has embraced, and most severely,
-both stages in a fortnight, and others between which a much longer
-time has existed. The first symptoms of lues consist either of a sore
-throat or a spotted skin. When the skin is the seat, a red spot, not
-unlike a flea-bite, is perceived; the color soon dies into a brownish
-or copper-colored hue. Occasionally, at the outset, a small pimple is
-observed, which breaks and scurfs; the coppery-colored spot next feels
-rough, and a kind of scurf will exude that after a few days falls off
-to make way for more. The disease being more usually slow than rapid
-in its progress, weeks may be consumed before ulceration occurs, and
-merely a discoloration of the skin is seen in spots seldom exceeding
-the size of a sixpenny or fourpenny piece. Some of these spots will
-nearly disappear, leaving a faint scar, and new ones will spring up.
-The entire body may be covered with them, but usually those parts
-nearer the centre of circulation generally possess the most—such as the
-chest, neck, shoulders, arms, wrists, hands, and head. As the disease
-progresses, the scurf on the spots accumulates, falls off, re-forms,
-getting thicker each time, when upon being detached, for they cling now
-more closely, a sore and moist state of the skin is observable. This
-may be covered with a new crust, or may at once proceed to suppuration.
-
-When an ulcer is formed, it will sometimes spread rapidly, and embrace
-a patch the size of a crown-piece, when the process of ulceration will
-assume the vigor of disease.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The accompanying sketch portrays, perhaps, more the seat of the disease
-when attacking the upper part of the body, than the appearance; for
-to give a true portraiture, the drawing should be the size of life,
-and colored after nature. It is, however, I doubt not, sufficient to
-exemplify the site of the disorder. The eruption is smaller on the
-face, and less vicious, generally, than on the body; but it proves most
-unsightly, and indicates great advancement of the disease. The legs
-(see next page), and those parts of the skin least vascular, assume a
-mottled appearance resembling recent bruises; at other times, clusters
-of spots like grapes hanging together.
-
-The shoulders, arms, and wrists, also present a somewhat similar
-appearance; though perhaps not to the same extent, owing to being more
-warmly clad, and less in exercise, than the lower extremity.
-
-When the disease extends to the hands, it is marked by exfoliations of
-the palm, with occasional deep cracks that cause much pain. Nor are the
-fingers and nails exempt from this encroaching malady, which, during
-its occupation, shows itself by a redness under the nail, that at last
-ends in the destruction of the nail.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The head, also, is a frequent seat of the disorder. It is generally
-discovered by running the hands through the hair, when a little crust
-will be detected by the fingers, or a slight itching will show its
-position, or the brush may break it off. The top and hind parts of the
-head are generally the situations selected. Occasionally the hair will
-fall off, leaving spots of a smooth baldness.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The vital organs, fortunately, are never subject to syphilitic
-inflammation—such as the brain, the viscera of the chest, and abdomen;
-nor is even the mucous membrane of the interior of the body affected,
-its power being confined solely to those parts or structures subject to
-the influence of external causes.
-
-When the venereal virus attacks the throat or palate, the membrane
-of the roof of the mouth becomes red and inflamed, patches ulcerate,
-and, if not cured, sooner or later expose the bony palate, which may
-be felt by the probe. This is the first stage. The exposed bone next
-exfoliates, and a communication is thereby formed between the mouth and
-nose, the fluids return through it, the voice is changed into a nasal
-twang, and a most offensive discharge is secreted.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-This drawing represents ulceration of the tonsils, uvula, and arch of
-the palate; also the edges of the tongue. The drawing, p. 102, shows
-the under surface of the tongue, the inner part of the lower lip, and
-the lower gums affected with venereal ulcers.
-
-When the tonsils are attacked, ulcers appear, precisely similar in
-character to chancres, hollow in the centre, with raised ragged edges,
-yellow on the surface, with a livid color on the surrounding margin.
-A sense of dryness is perceived, extending up the eustachian tube to
-the ear. Sometimes the tongue, gums, and inner part of the lips, are
-attacked (see representation).
-
-[Illustration]
-
-In the progress of the disease, the pharynx, or top of the gullet, is
-brought under its influence, and the ulceration spreads through it to
-the vertebræ or back-bone. Extending its course, it next attacks the
-larynx, or top of the windpipe, when, if not arrested, it will soon
-destroy life. Attending this affection of the larynx, there is always
-loss of voice—the patient speaks in a low whisper. It is more fatal
-than any other form of the venereal disease.
-
-The mucous membrane of the nose stands next in order, as subject to the
-influence of syphilis. The patient’s attention is first directed to it
-by an incrustation which forms in the nostril. On this being removed, a
-quantity of blood, mixed with purulent matter, is discharged. In two or
-three days, similar incrustations are formed, and under them ulceration
-takes place, which frequently lays bare the bone, and occasions it to
-exfoliate; and this exfoliating often continues after the venereal
-action has ceased. The number of bones which come away is often very
-considerable, and horrible deformity is the result.
-
-The periosteum and bones become in their turn affected by swellings
-called nodes—the periosteum first, and the bones subsequently.
-Of these, the cylindrical, being most exposed to vicissitudes of
-temperature, are commonly the first attacked. Those which are much
-covered by muscle are rarely affected, as, for instance, the back
-part of the _tibia_, or large bone of the leg, while nothing is more
-common than to see nodes on its anterior part, which is only covered
-with skin and periosteum. They occur on the _fibula_ only when it is
-slightly covered, and only on the _ulna_, or elbow-bone, when similarly
-circumstanced. Nodes on the _os humeri_, or shoulder-bone, except
-on the outer side, are of very rare occurrence, but are frequently
-found on the _clavicle_, or collar-bone, at its scapular and sternal
-articulations.
-
-In the following wood-cut is an illustration of the most frequent
-situation of nodes on the forepart of the tibia, or chief bone of
-the leg. The swelling is considerable; the upper one proceeding to
-suppuration, and the lower indicating merely a tumefaction of the lower
-part of the bone, near the instep.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The symptoms which mark the disease are as follow: The patient
-experiences in the evening a sensation of pain in the bone which is
-afterward the seat of the node. In the course of a few days, a swelling
-appears in the evening, which disappears again on the following
-morning. It is excessively painful and tender at night, but in the
-morning it is hardly perceptible, and the tenderness is almost gone.
-At this particular period the periosteum is only affected; but when
-the inflammation has continued some time longer, the bone is diseased
-and becomes enlarged. The rationale is this: An inflammation of the
-periosteum ensues. In a short time a deposite takes place between it
-and the surface of the bone. This deposite, in the first instance, is
-only a serous fluid, but a cartilaginous substance is soon secreted,
-which is gradually converted into bone.
-
-When attended to early, their treatment is very simple; but
-occasionally cases of considerable difficulty will arise.
-
-Large quantities of fluid will be found fluctuating between the
-periosteum and the bone, which, when unaccompanied by redness and
-inflammation of the skin, may be absorbed by proper treatment, but
-which more usually is only curable by evacuation; and, unless great
-care be used, exfoliation of the bone will ensue to a very great, and
-sometimes fatal extent. The eyebrows, forehead, and temples, are often
-the seat of fluid tumors varying from the size of peas and beans. Their
-cure must be effected by absorption, or destruction of the bone is
-often produced.
-
-The flat bones are also subject to syphilis. The one most commonly
-attacked is the _os frontis_, the symptoms being just the same as those
-on the skin. The side bones of the head now and then are affected; the
-os _occipitis_, or back-bone of the head, very rarely; and the _os
-temporis_, or temporal bone, being well covered with muscles, and
-exposed to very little change of temperature, is never affected.
-
-The _os frontis_, being the most exposed, is the most frequently
-attacked. Suppuration sometimes takes place; and when this has occurred
-on the front, it has happened that the same suppurative process has
-occurred interiorly between the _dura mater_, or the external membrane
-of the brain, and the internal surface of the bone. The matter presses
-upon the brain, and death is the consequence, if the pressure be not
-removed by the use of the trephine or trepanning instrument. This is a
-degree of severity to which the disease rarely reaches now-a-days, from
-the more extended knowledge and improved treatment of modern times.
-
-It must be observed, generally, of both these diseases—that of the
-throat and nose, and this of the bones—that they are oftener the result
-of improper treatment, such as the excessive use of mercury, and
-exposure to great vicissitudes of weather while under its influence,
-inducing what is called the mercurial disease (which in fact is, or
-was, of more frequent occurrence than the constitutional syphilitic
-one), than the result of the natural tendency of the disease in an
-otherwise healthy individual.
-
-_On the treatment of Syphilis._—I consider it a fair presumption that
-any invalided reader, except he be an accidental one, of this book—by
-which I mean one, not having _sought_ its possession—must be acquainted
-with the association of _mercury_ and _syphilis_. If not, let him
-be told for the first time, that such association exists as between
-copaiba and gonorrhœa; or perhaps what may be rendered more familiar
-to him, namely, as between _quinine_ with _ague_, or _colchicum_ with
-_rheumatism_. That for upward of three hundred years past mercury has
-been held an antidote to venereal affections; and still is, in many
-forms of the same, acknowledged indispensable for their removal.
-
-From old notions afloat, that syphilitic patients to be cured must be
-salivated to the extent of furnishing or filling two or three wash-hand
-basins daily with saliva—that the teeth drop out, that the breath
-becomes horribly fetid, and that the consumer of the poison sacrifices
-one third of his probable existence, even though he get well—the
-greatest possible prejudice exists against mercury, and the generality
-of uninformed patients have acquired a most uncompromising dread of the
-remedy. From the frequent difficulty in getting patients to submit
-knowingly to mercurial treatment, many new means have been caught up,
-and some judiciously applied.
-
-This new method has its advantages; but it does not realize all that is
-promised. It consists in advising rest, cleanliness, simple soothing
-applications, and, on the other hand, mild astringent ones, a temperate
-diet, fresh air, an easy mind, sarsaparilla, and other alterative
-medicines. There are many believers in the efficacy of simplicity; and
-the success that follows such treatment of nine tenths of the ailments
-of humanity, bears out the usefulness of the preceding methods; but the
-remaining tithe have alike a claim upon our consideration, and of this
-tithe the syphilitic invalids form a large portion.
-
-The anti-mercurial advocates have, however, a salvo, and admit now
-and then, an exception to exist, that particular cases _do_ require a
-mercurial course, but then it should only be adopted in its mildest
-possible form, merely with a view to act on the general health, rather
-than for any specific property of its own. Again, there are books,
-which are very elaborate, and what is equally important, modern ones,
-written by talented men,[4] which still profess faith in the curative
-powers of mercury, and employ it as the chief agent in the cure of the
-venereal disease. Instead of administering it to the same extent as
-formerly—instead of attempting to produce salivation to the flow of
-quarts—they merely aim at producing an impression on the constitution;
-they are satisfied with a proof that their patient is under mercurial
-influence: this is ascertained by a coppery taste in the mouth, a
-slightly increased secretion of saliva, and the presence of the
-accompanying, but temporary depression.
-
-Now the question to be resolved is, which of the two methods is the
-correct one. The many forms of disease of the sexual structures satisfy
-me, that their treatment should be modified by circumstances; but I
-believe I am wise enough to know, and certainly old enough to have
-observed, that the severer forms of syphilis, and even the milder in
-some constitutions, require the aid of mercury for their cure; in fact,
-_will yield to no other plan of treatment_, thereby admitting the
-_specific virtues_ of the remedy.
-
-The principles, therefore, which I advocate in the treatment of
-syphilis, are precisely those I depend upon in gonorrhœa, or, to
-familiarize the analogy, in a fit of indigestion, or an attack of local
-or general inflammation. Where the health is disturbed, the first
-step is to attempt restoration. The fact is almost too familiar to
-every one to need repetition, that, as is the condition of the health,
-so is the resistance it is capable of opposing to disease. The next
-proceeding is, to attempt the subdual of the prevailing symptoms.
-Syphilis, whether in the form of chancre, bubo, or any of its secondary
-varieties, induces more or less fever, inflammation, and interruption
-to the important offices of digestion, and other vital processes, which
-consequently require the promptest attention. Equally various are the
-local indications of syphilis—the ulcers may be common, superficial,
-phagedenic, or sloughing, each requiring various treatment, as
-hereafter will be specified; but, above all, too much reliance can
-not be placed on the dietetic and physical regimen—two comprehensive
-significations, which are, after all, the Alpha and Omega of the
-Materia Medica. With this declaration, I pass on to the treatment
-in detail of the more frequent and, I may add, leading features of
-syphilis.
-
-_Treatment of Chancre._—_Preliminary remarks._—Chancres are of various
-kinds. The most remarkable are:—
-
-1st. That characterized by its circular form, its excavated surface
-covered by a layer of tenacious and adherent matter, and its hard
-cartilaginous base and margin.
-
-2d. Another form of chancre, unaccompanied by induration, but with a
-very high margin, appearing often on the outside of the prepuce, and
-seldom existing alone, called, from the preceding description, the
-“superficial chancre, with raised edges.” These kinds of ulcers are
-sometimes very tedious, neither getting better nor worse, but resisting
-every plan of treatment for their removal. I have known instances where
-they have existed for several months.
-
-3d. The phagedenic chancre, a “corroding ulcer without granulations,”
-and distinguished by its circumference being of a livid red color. This
-is the kind of chancre that is invariably rendered worse by mercury:
-indeed, cases have occurred where, from the injudicious administration
-of that medicine, the whole of the penis has been destroyed.
-
-4th. A most formidable kind of chancre, denominated the sloughing
-ulcer. It first appears as a black spot, which spreads and becomes
-detached, leaving a deepened and unhealthy looking surface. The sore is
-very painful, and encircled with a dark purple areola. If neglected, or
-improperly treated, the process of mortification goes on until all the
-parts of generation are destroyed.
-
-The last-named chancre is more often the consequence of neglect on the
-part of the patient, than the natural progress of the disease.
-
-Now the usual method adopted by surgeons to remove chancres, has been
-to excise them, or to apply caustic; the latter is the plan I adopt,
-and would recommend; but all chancres are not to be treated alike, some
-requiring antiphlogistic remedies, others soothing, others stimulant.
-Some practitioners rely entirely upon constitutional remedies.
-
-On the first appearance of a chancre, I would enjoin an alteration
-in the diet, regulating it according to the strength of the patient.
-Abstemiousness should be the motto, avoiding extremes, however, lest
-debility should be induced. Quietude and rest, in the recumbent
-position, are two essential adjuncts in the treatment of primary
-syphilis throughout.
-
-With respect to the treatment of the ulcer, characterized by its
-circular form, excavated surface, and hardened base, as detailed, the
-plan I almost invariably adopt is, immediately on its appearance, at
-least as soon as the pimple has broken or desquamated, to smear it with
-a hair pencil filled with the solution of caustic, sometimes twice, at
-least once a day (see Form 27), and to keep it frequently washed in the
-daytime with a lotion of the chloride of soda (see Form 28), or the
-black, red, or blue wash (see Forms 29, 30, 31).
-
-If the patient be strong, and otherwise in good health, I simply
-recommend a dose of purgative medicine, in anticipation of any
-irritation that may arise. After which, I suggest a middle diet to be
-adopted for the next few days. From the sedative and salutary effects
-of the warm bath, I recommend its employment immediately after the
-operation of the medicine, and its repetition at frequent intervals.
-Independently of its effect on the system, it is the best general
-cleanser that can be resorted to. The subsequent treatment is regulated
-by the result of the above, which can be ascertained about the third
-day.
-
-In numberless instances, and where the disease is thus early detected
-and similarly treated, the mere continuance of either the chloride
-lotion, or black wash, the middle diet, an occasional aperient, the
-bath, with as much rest as possible, are all that will be found
-needful to cure the disease, which generally is effected in about a
-week or ten days at farthest. From the universal dread that so sudden
-a disappearance of the sore occasions, lest it should “be driven into
-the system,” and from the apprehension that it is incurable without
-taking mercury, I verily believe that, in many cases, the practitioner,
-participating in the fears of his patient, and anxious to allay them,
-reluctantly administers that mineral; and to such weak judgment may
-be traced the relapses, or the occurrence of other symptoms sometimes
-mistaken for secondary. Even when the case terminates favorably, and
-within the space of time alluded to, I would not be considered as
-recommending a sudden return to free living; on the contrary, I would
-not release the patient from the restrictions imposed upon his diet,
-exercise, and regimen, for at least the same time as was occupied
-in the cure, nor would I predict that, in every instance, secondary
-symptoms should not ensue. Mercury was supposed to possess some
-antisyphilitic property, inasmuch that, when chancre healed during
-its exhibition, secondary symptoms were averted. Facts, however, have
-been wanting to corroborate that supposition; for secondary symptoms
-have appeared despite the external and internal employment of mercury,
-even to the extent of salivation. Authors there are who attach similar
-properties to other medicines, such as nitric acid, sarsaparilla, and
-such like. Now, how do these medicines act upon the system? Or what is
-their tendency of action? Why, by increasing some particular function,
-such as the secretive process of the salivary and other glands; by
-increasing perspiration or absorption, &c. The remedies whereby these
-changes are induced are termed alteratives. I am not going to deny
-that these, or some such changes in the system, are unessential for
-the eradication, particularly of morbid conditions of structure and
-function, dependent probably upon altered condition and diminished
-action in others. On the contrary, they are the only antagonists to
-disease which we possess.
-
-But what I contend is, that, in our selection, we should prefer those
-which produce most speedily and effectively the desired change,
-with the least detriment to the general health. And to this end, I
-invariably enjoin, where practicable, warm or vapor bathing. I have
-elsewhere considered this subject at length, to which I refer the
-reader; but I will fearlessly assert that no one, or any plan of
-treatment, will be found so effectual toward increasing physical power
-to repel disease, or so permanently preservative of health, as the
-modified employment of the warm or vapor bath; and, therefore, in all
-cases of doubt and apprehension, or independent of either, the use of
-the warm or tepid, plain, or salt-water bath, two or three times a week
-for a month, or the vapor bath about every fourth or fifth day for
-the same period, is the best preventive that can be adopted to avert
-secondary symptoms. Where bathing of every kind is impracticable, as
-is the case in some country places, and the same necessity exists, I
-advocate the administration of alterative medicines; nor do I object
-to the employment of mercury, where, under other circumstances,
-without reference to its imaginary efficacy in syphilis, it would be
-prescribed. But of this as we proceed.
-
-Where, at the expiration of a week, the chancre neither recedes nor
-advances, and is the only symptom present, it is to be presumed that
-the condition of the patient’s health has something to do with it,
-and that condition should be minutely inquired into. There may be
-diminished or increased appetite, with imperfect digestion; there may
-be fever, with restlessness at night; there may be torpor or irritation
-of the bowels; or the patient may consider his only ailment to be
-the chancre, the irritation of which may be found to arise from too
-active exertion. To whichever cause it may be ascribed, the treatment
-should be directed. In conjunction with local remedies, which may be
-varied, alteratives may be given—five grains of the blue pill twice
-a day; for instance, the Plummer’s pill in doses of five grains
-every night, the occasional application of an active aperient (see
-Forms 33, 34), the decoction of sarsaparilla (see Forms 49, 50, 51).
-This plan, carefully pursued, seldom fails in setting up a permanent
-cure. The patient should be apprized of the vast importance of quiet,
-rest, and abstemiousness; for, where they can be attended to, the
-duration of the disease will be diminished one half; whereas, he who
-is continually in the erect posture, and subject to much walking
-about, who is indifferent to his diet, and lives as free as formerly,
-incurs the risk of bubo, and all its alarming consequences. Now, in
-no case or description of chancre, do these remarks apply so aptly as
-to the phagedenic and sloughing ulcer; in fact, they are applicable
-to all, but more particularly the two latter, as they are the result
-of already increased action. Mercury, violent aperients, and other
-active remedies, should also be avoided in these two forms of chancre;
-the local appliances should be poultices of bread and water, linseed
-meal, and a solution of opium, or poppy water; the sloughs or mortified
-portions we should endeavor to detach, by the application of a _smear_
-of nitric acid, or the chloride lotion (Form 28), or stimulative
-ointment (Form 38). The superficial sore usually gets well by the same
-means as the ordinary chancre.
-
-Where the chancre is situated under the prepuce, and the latter
-covering is so inflamed and swollen as to prevent its being drawn back
-to exhibit the sore, the discharge should be carefully washed out by
-any of the lotions already recommended, by means of a syringe, several
-times in the twenty-four hours. Much good is often done by varying the
-local remedies, occasionally flouring or filling up the ulcer with
-calomel, tutty powder, blue ointment, or in fact any substance which
-alters the morbid action of the part; but, as a general rule, the
-lotions of soda, lime, zinc, or oxymuriate of mercury, will be found
-sufficient, if persevered in.
-
-_Treatment of Bubo._—Bubo I have already stated to be an inflamed and
-enlarged condition of the inguinal (as its name implies, signifying
-the groin), or, in fact, any other gland, occasioned by the passage of
-the venereal poison from the adjacent ulcer through it, preparatory
-to its contaminating the constitution. But it is as well to know that
-the system may become affected, or, in other words, the poison may
-pass through the glands without involving them in the disease, or that
-the poison may there stop, and be expelled as the bubo is cured. It
-is also observed, that buboes are more frequently consequent upon an
-ulcer seated on the prepuce than on the glans. Buboes are not always,
-however, a sure criterion of the venereal disease, for they will occur
-wherever irritation is superficial and adjacent. Leeches applied to the
-temples will affect the cervical glands, a graze or wound in the leg
-enlarge the inguinal, and a whitlow on the finger, or any inflammation
-of the hand or arm, will very often irritate the glands in the axilla.
-In gonorrhœa, the glands in the groin become swollen and painful,
-from sympathizing with the sensibility of the urethra; but these and
-the preceding may, in general, be distinguished from true venereal
-buboes by their disinclination to proceed to suppuration; whereas, in
-syphilis, that process runs through its several stages with remarkable
-celerity, unless timely prevented. Buboes in the groin are much more
-troublesome, and more likely to betray the disease, than chancres,
-because they constitute an augmentation to the patient’s suffering,
-seldom occurring, unless preceded by a chancre, and because they
-occasion a visible and necessary lameness. They also produce more
-general disturbance of the patient’s health.
-
-In the treatment of a bubo, venereal or not, the same principles
-recommended in the section devoted to the cure of chancre, should be
-followed in this instance—comprising attention to the general health,
-and a subdual of the prevailing symptoms.
-
-In no form of syphilis is rest more essential than in bubo. The patient
-will be apt to plead the necessity of following his business, and the
-utter impossibility of staying at home; that is his affair, mine is
-only to protest against exercise, and urge the importance of rest, and
-even the recumbent posture, and I can assure him, _that_ alone will
-strip the disease of three fourths of its terrors.
-
-Certain local diseases produce more constitutional disturbance than
-others—among them may be classed buboes; it would, therefore, be
-as impolitic suddenly and violently to repel an inflammation of a
-gland or glands, without establishing some outlet for the increased
-action to vent itself, as it would be to check a flux or suppress an
-exanthematous eruption, like measles or scarlatina.
-
-If the bubo is, therefore, painful and inflamed, my advice is as
-follows: Stay at home, and rest; descend to middle diet; take some
-aperient; and should chancres alone be present, and a treatment
-going on for their extinction, continue the same; or, as bubo often
-immediately succeeds the ulcer, and probably may be the first symptom
-noticed, adopt, in addition to that recommended above the treatment as
-advised for chancre, namely, the administration of some alterative—for
-instance, five grains of blue pill every night—or the Plummer’s pill
-every night—the aperient powder every other day; and let the local
-treatment be directed to remove the prevailing symptom, to subdue
-the inflammation, and, if possible, thereby prevent suppuration. It
-was formerly supposed that, unless buboes were allowed to suppurate,
-the system could not escape the venereal taint. Lower somewhat the
-vital powers, or, what may be more intelligible, diminish the general
-inflammatory action, establish some slight drain, by determining the
-secretions to the intestines or skin: and buboes, even when matter
-has absolutely formed, may be fearlessly absorbed, which judicious
-treatment will effect, in nine cases out of ten, without at all
-impregnating the constitution. To attain this object, warm fomentations
-constantly applied, and if possible the warm (hip or full length) bath
-every night. When rest is determined upon, if the swelling is great,
-red, and painful, leeches are eminently serviceable, but they must be
-applied in numbers of at least a dozen at a time, and repeated twice
-or thrice if necessary. Three or four, by the irritation of the bites
-when healing, and especially if the patient will not or can not remain
-quiet, only worry and aggravate the disease. Where the inflammatory
-symptoms are great, where there is fever and much heat of skin,
-bleeding is the speediest and most effectual plan to subdue them; and,
-in my opinion, it is to be preferred before the trouble and bother of
-leeches. Where, however, there is no remarkable excitement, local or
-universal, the topical application of any of the ointments suggested
-will often promote absorption (see Forms 35, 36, 37).
-
-Blisters applied over the bubo, very often disperse the swelling.
-Pressure also, made by means of a pad covered with tin foil (as seen in
-the subjoined cut), and continued for several days, frequently urges
-the absorption of the accumulated deposition in the gland.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Where _bubo_ has been suffered to proceed, and the suppuration appears
-inevitable, it would be highly improper to retard it: poultices and
-warm fomentations should be applied, and when fit, an opening should
-be made to permit the exit from, and prevent the extension of, the
-matter in the surrounding cellular membrane; the operation should not,
-however, be prematurely performed; the skin should be permitted to
-become thin before an opening is made, and that opening should be made
-in the most dependent position, in order to allow complete escape of
-the matter, lest fistulæ and sinuses should form. When an abscess is
-thus established, its healing must be promoted with all expedition,
-and care taken to preserve the strength of the patient. For the former
-purpose, poultices, mild healing ointments, or strapping plaster
-applied near the edges of the wound, should be used. Poultices may be
-applied with a bandage, as seen in the subjoined cut.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-When the abscess appears indolent and not disposed to heal, carrot
-and linseed-meal poultices may be substituted. Astringent ointments
-should also be employed (see Forms 38, 39, 40), or lotions (see Forms
-41, 42), and the topical application of caustic to the edges of the
-wounds, or even paring them with a scalpel. The occasional use of the
-warm or vapor bath will give a healthy tone to the frame, invigorate
-the depressed powers, and promote recovery. The strength should be
-supported by more generous diet, and any of the formulæ comprised under
-the head of tonics, may be taken internally (see Forms 43, 44, 45, 46,
-47, 48). As the patient becomes convalescent, change of air, gradual
-exercise, the cold shower bath, or sea bathing, will be of essential
-service.
-
-_Treatment of secondary symptoms._—Secondary symptoms usually appear
-from the sixth to the sixteenth week, but are not unfrequently
-protracted beyond that period; they are commonly ushered in with
-fever—a general sense of being ill—a quickened pulse, headache, loss
-of appetite, pains in various parts of the body, and restlessness at
-night; in short, there is disturbance of all the vital functions,
-until it is determined which structures are to be the retreat of the
-common enemy. Some authors assign the skin and throat as more liable
-to attack than others; but I think the distinction dependant mainly
-upon the natural or morbid idiosyncrasy of the invalid. At all events,
-the inquiry here would be foreign to the design of this work, and less
-useful than the advice, how best to combat the evils when and wherever
-they occur. I have already stated secondary symptoms to consist of
-eruptions, ulcerations, and disfigurations of the skin, ulcerations
-of the mucous membranes of the mouth, throat, and nose, pains in the
-joints, swellings of the bones and their coverings, and inflammation of
-the various fibrous textures of the body.
-
-_Treatment of syphilitic eruptions._—The cutaneous eruptions of
-syphilis present considerable varieties, assuming a scaly, papular,
-tubercular, or pustular appearance. Formerly it was the opinion that no
-eruption was _venereal_, unless characterized by a scurfy exfoliation,
-and teinted of a copper color. This _test_ is not now relied on. In
-the simpler forms, we find that the skin becomes mottled at first,
-which appearance may partially die away and reappear, deeper in color,
-and the spots become more numerous in extent. The patient should be
-apprized that, when the disease has progressed thus far, it is not in
-its nature to depart unbidden; but it advances usually from bad to
-worse.
-
-The mottled dots enlarge, exfoliate, or scurf, or desquamate, as it
-is called, leaving the subjacent circle thicker and thicker, and
-of the same color as the cuticle which peels off. In the ordinary
-uninterrupted progression, scabs form, suppurate, and constitute
-an ulcer, like a chancre, which ulcer assumes all the varieties of
-chancre. In other cases, the eruption, instead of being scaly, “has a
-raised surface, from which a whitish matter usually oozes.”
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The scaly copper-colored eruption, denominated, according to its
-severity and appearance, syphilitic lepra or psoriasis, is regarded as
-most characteristic of true syphilis, and is the most frequent. The
-annexed is a drawing copied from nature; it is alluded to a few pages
-further on: its pattern is frequently to be met with. A celebrated
-writer, Mr. Carmichael, attaches considerable importance to the
-character and appearance of the eruptions. He divides the venereal
-disease into four species or varieties: 1st, the scaly venereal
-disease, which he considers consequent upon the ordinary chancre;
-2d, the papular, consequent upon gonorrhœal ulceration; 3d, the
-tubercular; and 4th, the pustular, he names from its appearance. These
-distinctions, if correct, must be more interesting to the surgeon,
-than serviceable to the patient, for the principles of treatment must
-be alike in all. Now, although mercury may be denied to possess any
-specific influence over the syphilitic poison, either by its chemical
-action or neutralizing power, except as a counter-irritant to the
-system, yet the inability of nature to shake off the pestilential
-hydra, unassisted by the weapons of the physician, is most apparent;
-and the most powerful of which is, that class of medicines called
-alteratives, none of which are more deserving, none more manageable, if
-the least judgment be displayed, than mercury.
-
-The constitution, when under the influence of syphilitic poison, is
-being led like a willing horse to its own destruction; and unless
-the system be entirely revolutionized, that event is not likely to
-be retarded. Here mercury[5] may lend its powerful aid, and may
-be carried even so far as to produce mild ptyalism or salivation.
-But there are instances where mercury is inadmissible. The patient,
-however, need not despair; extensive resources are still open for
-him—the preparations of antimony,[6] the mineral acids, sarsaparilla
-(Forms 49, 50, 51), iodine (Form 52), and a host of others may be
-resorted to; and last, though not least in importance, is the medicated
-vapor and fumigating bath. From my connexion with an establishment of
-that kind, my disinterestedness might be questioned in advising the
-employment of bathing. As well might the apothecary who deals in his
-own drugs, or the tradesman who vends his own wares, be suspected of
-disingenuousness; the reply I would offer should be, that the reader
-or invalid need not pin his faith on my assertion, unless it so please
-him; or if he does, may the onus lie at my door. But for his sake, and
-to bear out my own assertion, I offer this declaration, that, for the
-last twenty years, in conducting my establishment (wherein more cases
-of syphilitic eruption have presented themselves, than probably have
-fallen under the notice of any other medical man in London within the
-same period), no case, of which I have had the management, has failed
-of being cured.
-
-Where syphilitic eruptions terminate in ulceration, the same
-local treatment should be used as advised for chancres. Among
-the prescriptions will be found formulæ for many useful topical
-applications, such as ointments, lotions, and fumigations, for all
-the external developments of syphilitic disease, with appropriate
-observations appended to each.
-
-_Treatment of syphilitic sore throat._—It has already been mentioned,
-that the order of appearance of secondary symptoms depends more upon
-the modified state of health than any fixed law of disease. Syphilitic
-sore throat may precede or follow the cutaneous eruptions; and it not
-unfrequently happens, that all forms of the disease are present at the
-same time: therefore, although they are here separately considered, it
-will be found that the treatment corresponds nearly in all, the only
-difference being in the local applications.
-
-_Syphilitic sore throat_ consists of ulcerations of the _fauces_,
-_tonsils_, and _soft palate_. The inflammation begins in the part
-affected. There is a redness, and sensation of dryness. A small white
-spot is perceptible, which rapidly spreads, is detached, reappears,
-and in four-and-twenty hours, if seated on the tonsils, a cavity, as
-if a portion of them had been scooped out, is observable. The ulcer
-has a sharp margin, and its excavated surface is covered by a whitish
-or yellowish adhesive matter. At other times, the ulceration will be
-more superficial, but not less rapid in its progress, extending over
-the upper part of the palate, and back part of the throat. Here the
-general treatment is precisely the same as in the other forms of the
-disease, viz., rest, abstemiousness, low diet, aperient, saline, and
-alterative medicines, the blue pill, preparation of antimony, the bath,
-and total exclusion from all excitement. The topical treatment consists
-of fumigations, gargles, styptic lotions, nitrous acid gas, blisters
-over the larynx, rubbing in of any counter-irritating ointment; the
-object being throughout to watch, and endeavor to improve the patient’s
-health, support the strength, and mitigate and remove the local
-symptoms.
-
-In the affections of the nose and palate, the fumigations are
-indispensable; injections must also be used, and styptic lotions
-applied with a camel’s-hair brush. These cases are very tedious, and,
-fortunately, in the present day, of rarer occurrence than formerly; and
-the patient, thus severely attacked, would be more prudent to rely upon
-some confidential medical adviser, than to trust in his own management.
-
-_Treatment of venereal affections of the bones and joints._—Nodes are
-alleged, by medical men of great authority, to be of rare occurrence,
-except the patient has been taking mercury; but the observation is not
-always correct.
-
-Their treatment, of course, must be regulated by various circumstances.
-When the pain and inflammation are severe, leeches, bleeding, warm
-fomentations, or cold evaporating lotions composed of vinegar and
-water, must be resorted to. When they are chronic and painful, without
-redness and inflammation, the greatest relief will be experienced by
-the application of the ointment of iodine and morphine (see Form 53),
-also by the internal employment of iodine in doses of five to ten drops
-twice or three times a day. Where they are very obstinate, blisters
-will be often useful in promoting absorption. When they ulcerate,
-the treatment for chancres must be had recourse to. But the most
-invaluable remedy, alone or in conjunction with any of the preceding,
-is the vapor bath; it seldom fails to give instantaneous relief. I
-have seen patients, who were rendered almost insensible by the pain
-of nodes in the head, chest, and other parts of the body, experience
-an entire remission of the pain, and a diminution of the swelling, by
-the application of one bath; and a course of six or a dozen is rarely
-inefficient in effecting permanent recovery.
-
-It has already been mentioned that rheumatism of the bones and joints,
-and in fact of various parts of the body, is unfortunately but too
-frequently an accompaniment or a consequence of syphilitic disease: and
-an observer will discover that nodes rarely exist without rheumatic
-inflammation (of which by-the-by they are a species) being more or less
-present.
-
-
-
-
- SECONDARY SYMPTOMS.
-
-
-IN the same manner as bubo, which is more usually preceded by
-ulceration, but which may occur without it, secondary symptoms, or
-that form of the disease wherein the constitution is involved, may be
-carried into the circulation without any local effect on the part to
-which the poison was first applied being produced; or, in other words,
-secondary symptoms need not necessarily be preceded by primary. I have
-already stated that secondary symptoms are also much modified, both
-as to the time, form, and severity of their appearance, by the state
-of health of the patient affecting and affected; and hence the varied
-degrees of syphilitic maladies. By referring to past pages, it will
-be seen that the mucous membrane of the throat and nose, the skin or
-surface of the body, and the periosteum and bones, are the structures
-in which secondary symptoms develop themselves, and accordingly I now
-proceed to their several consideration in detail. To illustrate each
-of them practically, I will first select diseases of the skin. They
-consist of four marked species, distinguished as the scaly, papular,
-pustular, and tubercular.
-
-The most frequent form of eruption is the scaly, and called syphilitic
-lepra. It is characterized by dry, flat, and round patches, of
-different sizes, and of a coppery-red color. Each spot is ushered
-in by a minute but hard elevation of a purplish hue, that gradually
-radiates in size until it acquires its limit. It then puts on a scaly
-appearance, and, as it desquamates, with the exception of the centre,
-which is sometimes left white, maintains its copper color. These
-patches may be distinguished from ordinary leprosy by their color,
-and their running on to ulceration, if uncontrolled by medicine, and
-again by their more speedily yielding to judicious treatment; when they
-become paler in appearance, cease to exfoliate, and die away, leaving,
-however, a coppery stain. Syphilitic eruptions occur in all parts
-of the body, and are to be observed on the head, face, back, legs,
-feet, hands, scrotum, &c. (see wood-cut, page 118), but they are much
-modified in their external characters by the region they affect.
-
-The pustular form of syphilitic eruption is also illimitable as to
-situation and extent. The pustules, at the onset, are scarcely to be
-distinguished from the patches of lepra, being of similar color. They
-differ in size, some being very large, and others very small. When they
-have existed about a week, a purulent fluid escapes, which hardens and
-crusts, constituting a conoid tumor, and surrounded by a copper-colored
-areola. This crust after a while drops off, leaving the under surface
-of the same teint as the margin. The pustular form of the disease is
-mostly consecutive to primary infection of the genital organs, and is
-often complicated with affections of the throat, nose, &c.
-
-Syphiloid tubercles ordinarily attack the face, more particularly the
-nose, angles of the lips, ears, &c. They vary in size, are dispersed
-or grouped together, and are of a purplish copper color. Like the
-pustular, they terminate in ulceration, which on healing leaves an
-indelible scar. This and other forms of syphilitic disease are very
-irregular in their attacks, first selecting one spot, then another,
-then several together, so that the body presents often at the same time
-many stages of the eruption. The papular form of eruption is generally
-intermixed with the pustular and tubercular. It is less strongly
-marked, but, like the others, successive in its development, and
-usually complicated with primary symptoms.
-
-There is a form of cutaneous disfigurement, entitled syphilitic
-exanthema, in which the skin is discolored by coppery-red blushes that
-disappear under pressure of the finger. There are also deep and painful
-fissures and excrescences, called _vegetations_, from their resemblance
-to raspberries, strawberries, cauliflowers, and leeks, observed in
-syphilis, and most commonly they are to be found about the lips, nose,
-eyebrows, chin, genitals, &c.
-
-It may not be unimportant to know that syphilitic eruptions are
-contagious by inoculation, and that secondary symptoms may be
-transmitted from one individual to another.
-
-When I was a pupil of the London hospital, a woman and her child
-presented themselves for treatment. The mother was completely covered
-with copper-colored scaly eruptions, obviously and unequivocally
-syphilitic. The child also had venereal sore throat, and ulceration of
-the mouth. The account which the mother gave of herself was, that the
-eruption appeared a few weeks after her confinement; and, upon further
-inquiry, it was discovered that the husband had had a chancre of the
-penis: that was cured, but secondary symptoms showed themselves upon
-him. It was during the presence of the latter that he had intercourse
-with his wife, at about the sixth month of her pregnancy. The surgeon
-of the week gave it as his opinion, that the disease was conveyed by
-the male semen being absorbed by the mother, which was sufficient to
-occasion the disease. The mother, husband, and child, all submitted
-to mercurial treatment and fumigations, and in a few weeks entirely
-recovered.
-
-_Treatment of Secondary Symptoms._—Now in the treatment of these cases,
-all of which are more than _skin deep_, it is evident that, unless
-the cause which produces them be expelled, all local repellants only
-exhaust the physical energies of the patient; for the cure by such
-means but provokes a speedier reproduction of the disease, and hence
-the necessity of constitutional as well as topical remedies. I have
-fully explained my views regarding the employment of mercury; and every
-day’s experience convinces me that, where the constitution is imbued
-with the venereal virus, there is no alternative but to employ the most
-active alteratives, to effect a decisive and speedy change in the state
-of the patient’s health. Various habits require various preparations;
-the blue pill, the oxymuriate, calomel, and the external application
-of the unguentum hydrargyri fortius, are highly useful. I have,
-however, of late, been in the habit of employing the proto-ioduret of
-mercury, with unqualified success; nor do I limit its administration to
-internal exhibition; it may be used externally. The advantage of this
-preparation over others is, that it rarely, if ever, produces ptyalism.
-
-In old and inveterate cases, combined with the use of the warm and
-vapor bath, both of which may be impregnated with it, it has wrought
-wonders; and in cases that had proved rebellious to every other means,
-although sedulously employed, it had effected a speedy and decisive
-cure. In the cure of an elderly person, covered almost from head to
-foot with syphilitic ulceration, the internal and external application
-of the proto-ioduret occasioned, at the end of a few weeks, the
-entire disappearance of the sores, leaving only a slight livid trace.
-In ulceration of the throat, nose, and in fissures of the genitals,
-indolent buboes, &c., the success is no less remarkable than effectual.
-
-The following is the formula, which may of course be altered according
-to circumstances:—
-
- Form 54.
-
-Take of the—
- Proto-ioduret of mercury 20 grains.
- Gum guaiacum, in powder 1 drachm.
- Confection of roses, as much as is sufficient.
-Mix to form 36 pills—one to be taken twice or thrice a day.
-
- Form 55.
-
-For external use, take of the—
- Proto-ioduret of mercury 1 drachm.
- Lard 2 oz.
-Mix.
-A portion to be rubbed over, or to dress the affected parts twice a
-day. If the ulceration be seated in the throat, honey of roses may be
-substituted for the lard.
-
-The decoction, or any other preparation of sarsaparilla, may be taken
-also in conjunction with the treatment just suggested.
-
-An ounce of the sarsaparilla root infused in one pint of lime-water
-(cold) for twenty-four hours, and a wineglassful taken three times a
-day, is a very eligible mode of taking it. Or—
-
-The compound extract of sarsaparilla, dissolved in lime or soft water,
-one ounce to the pint, and taken in similar doses to the last, is a
-very good mode of exhibition.
-
-Bathing is indispensable.
-
-
-
-
- SYPHILITIC LEPRA.
-
-
-A PERSON aged about 29 years suffered under the above disease, and
-presented the following appearances and symptoms: He was covered nearly
-all over with copper-colored spots, the margins of which were both
-elevated and red. The voice of the patient was rather hoarse, and he
-complained also of a tenderness on swallowing: the pain extended to the
-windpipe and tonsils (or almonds) of the ear, as they are called. He
-experienced pain in his limbs, which he described to be worse at night
-when in bed. The spots on the skin every now and then desquamated, or
-peeled, or scurfed off, leaving the cuticle red and shiny underneath,
-and here and there the cutis was ulcerated. On examining the throat,
-the swallow appeared very inflamed, and the “pap” very pendulous. He
-was hot and feverish, and acknowledged that he had had the venereal
-disease about nine weeks ago, and for which he had taken some medicines
-that he bought, and which had cured him. When in bed, he complained of
-a burning, tingling, and itching of the body, wherever it was covered
-with the eruption.
-
-The treatment was as follows: I bled him to the amount of twelve
-ounces, and prescribed a strong aperient powder. On the second day
-there was less irritation, and the spots appeared less red. I advised
-him forthwith to take a vapor bath, and repeat the same on alternate
-days for a fortnight. I prescribed the pills as subjoined, and directed
-one to be taken twice a day, to be succeeded by a dose of the decoction
-of woods, as directed already.
-
- Form 56.
-
-Take of—
- Proto-ioduret of mercury 20 grains.
- Gum guaiacum, in powder 1 drachm.
-To be well mixed together, and made into a mass with syrup, and then
-divided into 24 pills.
-
-The body, on coming out of the vapor bath, or while in it, to be
-sponged over with the following wash made warm:—
-
- Form 57.
-
-Take of the—
- Deuto-chloruret of mercury 1 drachm.
- Eau de Cologne 1 oz.
- Water 1 pint.
-Mix.
-
-Occasionally I order the patient to be placed in a mercurial bath, of
-which there are several kinds, and which can be administered either in
-the form of the fumigation or in a fluid state.
-
-After taking the bath, he could breathe with freedom and comfort; he
-could also swallow without difficulty, and he expressed himself much
-refreshed and invigorated. Many of the eruptive spots on the body had
-exfoliated; and he said he felt a conviction that he should soon get
-well.
-
-At the expiration of a week, when he had taken but three baths, the
-soreness of the throat had left, the pains in his limbs were all
-gone, and he slept well; the ulcers had healed, and the eruption had
-nearly died away. I advised a continuation of all the remedies; and
-after three weeks of such perseverance, he was rewarded by an entire
-recovery. The only alteration I directed to be made in his diet was an
-abandonment of stimulants, such as wine, spirits, or porter.
-
-
-
-
- NODES AND PAINS IN THE BONES.
-
-
-IN long-standing cases of syphilis, where either much mercury has
-been taken, or the constitution weakened by low living or careless
-treatment, a painful affection of the bones, periosteum, tendons, and
-ligaments, frequently arises. Where the inflammation attacks the bone
-or periosteum, it usually exhibits itself in the form of a tumor, that
-is at first hard and acutely painful, then becomes soft, and does not
-always subside without ulcerating, and occasioning a tedious and
-unhealthy sore. These tumors are called nodes, and are extremely rapid
-in growth, very uncertain in their duration, and sometimes disappear as
-quickly as they come. When the inflammation is seated in the ligament
-and tendons, rheumatism is established. Both these affections are very
-harassing to the patient; the pains are severest at night, and wholly
-prevent sleep, the countenance becomes sallow, appetite, strength, and
-flesh fail, and hectic fever completes the list of troubles consequent
-upon these forms of the disease. Nodes and rheumatic pains may exist
-independently of, or in connexion with, other syphilitic symptoms.
-Cases having already been related of gonorrhœal rheumatism, which are
-analogous to those proceeding from venereal absorption, any further
-detail of such would be superfluous. The treatment should also be
-conducted on the same principles in the one as in the other.
-
-The specific virtues of the vapor bath will be attested by one trial.
-I have seen innumerable instances of immediate relief from a single
-application. There are few forms of syphiloid disease more distressing
-than these pains in the bones; the patient is all but distracted with
-the agony he endures. The relief he experiences from the vapor bath
-surpasses belief; it verily appears to be magical. It constitutes the
-best opiate we have.
-
-Temporary relief, however, is not all that we want. It is no use to
-remove the effect, and leave the cause behind. The aid of medicine
-is indispensable. Formulæ of the most appropriate remedies will be
-found among the prescriptions. The general directions as to diet,
-regimen, and clothing, dispersed throughout these pages, must be
-strictly attended to. The stomach must not be at any time overloaded
-with indigestible food. Milk diet is the best; milk thickened with
-farinaceous food, mild tonics to restore the tone of the stomach and
-impart strength, alteratives, sarsaparilla (Form 58), the old Lisbon
-diet drink, and all the suggestions hitherto offered with a view of
-improving the constitution, should be carried into effect.
-
-
-
-
- SYPHILITIC SORE THROAT.
-
-
-THE period that elapses between the appearance of the primary and
-secondary symptoms has already been stated to vary from six weeks
-to six months; and some medical writers assert that, if months may
-elapse, upon the same principle years may, and therefore the patient
-who has once been afflicted with the primary form of the disease is
-never exempt from the liability of the secondary. That syphilis, and
-diseases resembling it, do occur at every period of life, is a fact of
-daily observation; and it is a matter of less moment to know whether
-the invalid has ever had chancre or bubo than is generally supposed,
-for the treatment of every form of syphilis, and complaints putting
-on like appearances, should be conducted on similar principles. If
-mercury do possess anti-venereal properties, it will be found no less
-obnoxious to ordinary sore throats, ordinary ulceration, and cutaneous
-disfigurement. The presence of any of the abovenamed diseases indicates
-a habit predisposed to their occurrence; and that susceptibility may
-be induced by a variety of causes, the most prominent of which are
-those that debilitate the constitution, such as syphilis itself, or
-the remedies exhibited for its extermination, cold, fever, intemperate
-or impoverished diet—all of which more or less abstract from, or
-derange the distribution of, nervous energy. As in the cure of these
-diseases, their removal depends upon an entire alteration of the
-system, upon that principle alone should mercury, or any other remedy
-be administered, not upon its supposed specific neutralizing or
-annihilating antisyphilitic power.
-
-All this, of course, is a question of experience; and as I profess
-that this work should convey the result of mine, I do not hesitate to
-express my conviction that secondary symptoms do present themselves
-years after a primary affection; but at the same time I admit their
-more frequent occurrence to be within three months; and, with regard
-to diseases resembling the above, they are entirely independent of
-such influences, and are the result of circumstances from which no man
-is free. Of syphilitic ulcerations of the throat, which are rarely
-solitary symptoms of the disease, being usually accompaniments to
-articular eruptions or rheumatic pains, there are several forms. They
-are ushered in by feverishness, languor, and a peculiar contour of
-the countenance, particularly expressive of anxiety and debility. Of
-the first form of ulcerated throat, and which is perhaps the least
-frequent, is an excavation of the tonsil, with a tumid and red margin,
-accompanied by a stiffness and uneasiness in swallowing. A more common
-form, and which, from its occasioning little or no inconvenience, is
-seldom discovered by the patient until it degenerates into a worse
-state, is that where the ulceration is more superficial, resembling
-fissures rather than ulcers, and being situated at the back part and
-edges of the tonsils, and low down the throat. From the absence of pain
-and difficulty in swallowing, the medical man is usually the first to
-detect it, when, on opening the mouth, the throat—that is, the hinder
-part of the fauces—will be discovered red and somewhat swollen; and on
-pressing down the tongue with a spoon or spatula, the ulceration will
-be apparent.
-
-The last form—the phagedenic—is the most formidable, both in symptoms
-and effects. It is characterized by fever, and great pain and
-difficulty in swallowing, from the beginning; all denoting acute
-inflammation of the throat. The first appearance of ulceration is on
-the soft palate, where a small aphthous spot is discovered, surrounded
-by a deep erysipelatous redness, that proceeds rapidly to involve the
-neighboring parts, which soon assume the appearance of one extensive
-slough. This latter disease requires prompt and active treatment, else
-the bones of the palate and nose become implicated, exfoliate and
-occasion a permanent deformity.
-
-The process of cure in these cases must be regulated by circumstances.
-In persons of full habit, blood-letting will be requisite to arrest at
-once the inflammation. An active purgative should also be taken; when,
-if the ulceration resist these anti-phlegmonous measures, there is no
-alternative left but to subject the system to the influence of mercury.
-The proto-ioduret pill will be found the best form, and the diet drink
-should be taken in conjunction. The vapor bath, which can be medicated
-with poppies, marsh-mallows, and ivy-leaves, or any other emollient
-herb, will be found to ease deglutition, promote perspiration, and
-afford ease. Local applications, such as gargles, styptics, &c., are
-indispensable. Subjoined are a few formulæ, with remarks:—
-
-Gargle for the milder form of sore throat.
-
- Form 59.
-
-Take of—
- Honey of borax 1 oz.
- Emulsion of bitter almonds 5 oz.
-Mix. To be used six or seven times a day.
-
- Form 60.
-
-Or take of—
- Infusion of bark 6 oz.
- Diluted nitric acid 40 drops.
-Mix.
-
-Where the ulcers have an indolent, or present a sloughy appearance,
-either of the following will prove useful stimuli:—
-
- Form 61.
-
-Take of the—
- Oxymel of Verdigris 1 oz.
-The ulcer to be smeared with this preparation, with a hair pencil,
-twice or thrice a day.
-
-Or, take of the muriated tincture of iron a small quantity, to be used
-in like manner.
-
-Honey of roses, acidulated with muriatic acid, is a very agreeable
-astringent.
-
-In severer cases, such as the phagedenic ulceration, the subjoined
-prescription will be found worthy of a trial:—
-
- Form 62.
-
-Take of the—
- Oxymuriate of mercury 1 grain.
- Mucilage of quince seed 6 oz.
-To be mixed to form a gargle, to be used frequently.
-
-Ulceration of the larynx is an occasional consequence of syphilis; but
-fortunately a rare one, as it is generally fatal.
-
-All the symptoms enumerated in this section have been known to succeed
-gonorrhœa, and demand similar treatment. The advocates for the analogy
-between gonorrhœa and syphilis herein find a ready explanation for such
-an occurrence, which those adverse to the above opinion have no other
-means of controverting than by submitting that its rarity is no very
-substantial proof. Similar results also transpire from the imprudent,
-or too free use of mercury. The following case is a prototype of the
-many:— The patient was a person about thirty years of age, and was thus
-affected: there was considerable inflammation in the entire back part
-of the throat; the tonsils were excavated to some depth by ill-looking
-ulcers, the uvula shared also in partial destruction; the tongue was
-swollen, the tip and front part of it fissured, and on the left side an
-irritable ulcer was apparent; the nose discharged a disagreeable fluid,
-and occasionally gave off crusts of hardened secretion. The body of
-this person, including the head, was thickly sprinkled with venereal
-blotches of the usual copper color. His health was much impaired, and
-he stated the disease to have been of nearly twelve months’ duration
-from the first to the last.
-
-The treatment consisted of the exhibition of mercury in the form of
-the proto-ioduret, and the sarsaparilla. The ulcers were touched with
-nitric acid, and submitted to mercurial fumigation. At the end of
-two months he was convalescent. In cases of ulceration of the throat
-and nose, I have used the nitrate of silver, both in substance and
-solution, with good effect.
-
-
-
-
- ADVICE TO INVALIDS.
-
-
-HAVING now fully considered every form of syphilitic disease
-compatible with the design of this work, a few hints relative to the
-after-management of the patient when relieved from his complaint, to
-guard against a relapse, and to secure an entire restoration to sound
-health, may not detract from its utility. There are many patients who,
-on the disappearance of the more prominent symptoms of their complaint,
-lose no opportunity of rejoicing in their supposed recovery, and
-innocently commit sundry inapparent irregularities, that throw them
-back to their former state of suffering, which a little prudence and
-attention might have prevented. The more severe the disease has been,
-the slower, generally, is the recovery, and also less permanent in
-its result. The mere subsidence of pain, the healing of a wound, the
-disappearance of a cuticular eruption, or the suppression of a morbid
-secretion, are not in themselves sufficient indications of substantial
-recovery. The various physical and mental functions which, during
-illness, are always more or less involved, have yet to regain their
-tone. The digestive powers of the stomach are easily deranged, and
-require watchful management to secure the vantage gained. Equal care
-is essential, lest the intellectual organs be too prematurely called
-into active employment. Convalescence is often protracted to an almost
-indefinite period, frequently from the most trifling errors in diet.
-The stomach of a person reduced to a low state of debility through
-a severe inflammatory disorder, remains for a long time exceedingly
-sensitive, and fails not to evince displeasure when oppressed with
-indigestible, or too great a quantity of food. No cause predisposes the
-patient to a relapse, or retards his recovery, so much as inattention
-to diet. It is a popular error to suppose that the weakness consequent
-upon severe illness is only to be removed by rich and substantial
-food and wines, and other stimulating drinks. Such indiscretion often
-rekindles the disease, or predisposes the system to the supervention of
-some other complaint. The change from the sick-room to the parlor diet
-should be gradual and progressive. The milk and farinaceous meal may be
-varied by degrees to the milder forms and preparations of animal food.
-Solids should be given at first in small quantities; the diet should
-be rigidly adhered to, and in the change from low to full diet, the
-intermediate one should not be skipped over.
-
-With regard to medicines, in no form of disease is it so important, as
-in venereal affections, that they should be continued for some time
-after the disappearance of symptoms. Many a relapse of gonorrhœa and
-secondary symptoms have occurred through the sudden abandonment of the
-means adopted for their cure.
-
-Exercise forms another important part of management in convalescence;
-it should not be suddenly resumed, nor should fatigue by any means be
-incurred. Early retiring to bed, and early rising in the morning, tend
-considerably to promote and preserve health. Warm clothing is very
-essential and necessary for invalids.
-
-The general signs of amendment are as follows: a reduced frequency
-of the pulse, which is always accelerated in acute diseases, the
-absence of thirst, a clean tongue, a moist skin, a good appetite,
-and refreshing sleep; and, lastly, all these are corroborated by an
-improvement in the looks. The improved aspect of the countenance has
-always been regarded as a sure criterion of returning health.
-
-
-
-
- STRUCTURE, FUNCTIONS, AND DISEASES, OF
- THE FEMALE ORGANS OF GENERATION.
-
-
-THE female genitals occupy the same relative situation in the pelvis
-as the male, but they are an antithesis to each other. The male are
-constructed to deposite, and the female to receive; consequently,
-in the female there is a conduit or passage, in place of the male
-penis, termed the _vagina_, leading to the womb—the receptacle for
-the impregnating fluid. The vagina is placed between the bladder and
-rectum. Its entrance is marked by doublings, or longitudinal folds of
-flesh, called _labia_, between the upper part of which is the opening
-of the urethra into the bladder, while below is occupied by the
-aperture, passage, or fissure, as above described. At the roof of the
-vagina is a fleshy ridge, with a pouting apex or point analogous to the
-penis in the male, except being impervious, and called the _clitoris_,
-which possesses the power of erection, or rather of becoming
-intumescent when excited, and also of furnishing a peculiar secretion.
-It is exquisitely sensitive, and believed to be the seat of pleasure
-in the sexual embrace. The vagina consists of a very soft, vascular,
-elastic, and contracting structure, constituting, when its sides are
-collapsed, liliputian rugæ, or ridges, like the impressions left on
-the sand by a receding sea. Its surface is lined by a delicate mucous
-membrane, which secretes a lubricating fluid. It is this membrane
-which is the seat of gonorrhœal discharge, fluor albus, &c.; and it is
-also subject to ulcerations and other diseases. From the clitoris is
-suspended an inner fold, like a graceful mantle, called _nymphæ_, which
-are also extremely sensitive, and appear to serve, as they surround the
-urethra, also for the purpose of directing the flow of urine. Under the
-opening of the urethra, adherent to the external margins of the vagina,
-is a membranous veil, or curtain, with a small central aperture,
-called the _hymen_, the presence of which is looked upon as a test of
-virginity. After the laceration or dilatation of this membrane, which
-takes place through other causes than sexual intercourse, the sides of
-it contract, and form little wing-like slips, to which the fanciful
-name of _carunculæ myrtiformes_ is applied.
-
-The subjoined diagram will familiarize the reader with the situations
-of the female organs thus far given. It exhibits a sectional view of
-the contents of the pelvis, or lower part of the abdomen:—
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. The bladder.
- 2. The urethra, or entrance to ditto.
- 3. The vagina.
- 4. The womb.
- 5. The ovary.
- 6. The fimbria, and fallopian tube.
- 7. The rectum, or lower extremity of the bowel.
- 8. The hymen.]
-
-Much has been said regarding the presence of the _hymen_ in its entire
-state. It has been deemed by many to be there placed as a moral
-evidence of chastity; but its laceration is by no means an infallible
-test of dishonor. In females of feeble or consumptive health, and
-others of delicate constitutions generally, the aperture of the hymen
-may become dilated from natural causes—from too profuse a flow of the
-menstrual flux, from local debility of the part itself, such as exist
-in the disease known by the name of the _whites_; and it is sometimes
-to be traced to the habit of personal and solitary excitement, as will
-be presently alluded to. The membrane is occasionally so dense and hard
-as to resist sexual cohabitation; and only upon dividing it by the
-scalpel, can intercourse be sustained. At other times it is so fragile
-and so vascular as to be torn with the least violence, and profuse
-hæmorrhage to follow.
-
-At the end of the vagina is the _uterus_. It is suspended by what
-anatomists call its broad ligaments, which have certain local
-attachments. It resembles in shape a pear. It is of a peculiar
-structure, capable of great distension, and possessing extraordinary
-properties. It is divided into a body, neck, and mouth, and when
-unimpregnated, is very compact, and occupies but little space. The
-interior is consequently very small, and it secretes and pours forth
-at certain periods a sanguinous discharge, termed the _menstrua_. When
-conception has occurred, the mouth of the womb, which before was open,
-becomes permanently closed until the period of delivery. Connected with
-the womb, and constituting a most important part of its machinery,
-there are discovered in the roof of the interior of the uterus, two
-openings, which are the ends of two tubes or canals, called the
-fallopian tubes.
-
-These tubes have their origin in the _ovaria_, which are two small
-bodies encased in the ligamentous band supporting the uterus, and
-resembling the testicle of the male; hence they have been called the
-female _testes_. These ovaria contain a number of little vesicles of
-the size of mustard-seeds, and some of the size of a pea, in number
-from twelve to fifteen. These vesicles are denominated the eggs of the
-human species. Annexed to the ovaria are observed, surrounding the
-tubes, certain _fimbriæ_, which grasp the ovaria during the copulative
-act, when prolific, and squeeze out, as it were, one of these little
-eggs, and propel it into the uterus.
-
-Still further to facilitate the understanding of the structures
-described in addition to the preceding diagram, the following drawing
-is presented. It exhibits a section of the female pelvis, and explains
-more fully the relative positions of its contents:—
-
-[Illustration:
- _a_—The bony portion of the pelvis separated from
- its junction with its companion.
- _b_—The spinal column of the back.
- _c_—The bladder.
- _d_—The orifice of the urethra.
- _e_—The body of the womb.
- _f_—The neck of the womb.
- _g_—The vagina.
- _h_—The rectum, or end of the intestines.]
-
-The subjoined drawing illustrates the shape and appearance of the womb
-detached from the body:—
-
-[Illustration]
-
-To particularize: The upper part is called the _fundus_; the widest
-part, the _body_; the _neck_, the narrow part; and the lower portion
-the _mouth_, or the _os tincæ_. The connexion of the fallopian tubes is
-well shown.
-
-The uterus, or womb, is described by physiologists as being of a
-spongy structure—a structure that yields with its enlargement—that
-grows with its growth—that resumes the former size when disburdened of
-its contents. It is supplied with blood-vessels, is duly supported,
-has scarcely a cavity when unimpregnated, but is ever in a state of
-preparation for changes. Of conception we shall presently treat.
-
-There is one function too important to omit in this place, and this
-is menstruation—a term indicating a monthly periodical discharge that
-escapes, or which is given off, from the womb. At the commencement of
-this function, woman is said to have arrived at puberty; but there are
-cases of precocity, and others wherein it never occurs, that neutralize
-this assertion; besides, menstruation, being deferred or protracted,
-depends frequently upon peculiarities of health. As soon, however, as
-it occurs, a sensible change takes place in the female economy; and
-certainly the other developments of womanhood rapidly follow.
-
-Menstruation is the monthly discharge of a red fluid, common to females
-from fifteen or sixteen years of age to between forty and fifty; and
-it is held that, while a female menstruates, she is apt, and capable
-also, to conceive. Menstruation is a device of nature to relieve
-the system, or to preserve the balance of the circulation, from the
-non-fulfilment of her intentions, by the absence of procreation. It
-usually continues for four, five, or six days, and seldom exceeds a few
-ounces. Its suppression is usually attended with marked ill health, and
-many of the formidable complaints of females are attributable to its
-irregularities. When anticipated, the female encounters feelings of
-depression and lassitude, and exhibits an aspect of feeble health. As
-a physiological fact, women, before and after menstruation, are more
-desirous of the exercise of sexual privileges, and usually the approach
-of the menstrual flow is accompanied by a sexual orgasm. It has ever
-been deemed, by almost universal consent, prudent for married persons
-and others to abstain from the sexual embrace during that period. If
-only on the score of cleanliness, it should be observed; besides,
-the likelihood of establishing irritability, and the probability of
-interfering with this healthful provision of nature, should deter from
-the indulgence. In some countries, menstruating women are excluded from
-associating with the other sex altogether, and are even forbid mingling
-with household duties. At the close of this article will be found a
-series of prescriptions and suggestions for the removal of the various
-disturbances this function is liable to.
-
-The act of connexion is urged by what is called the sexual propensity.
-It is accompanied by feelings of the intensest kind: the acme of
-enjoyment is at the moment of seminal ejaculation. The penis is excited
-to erection by the influx or rush of blood into its cavernous or
-cellular structure; the scrotum becomes constricted, and compresses
-the testicles; the _vesiculæ seminales_, and the prostate gland, are
-also elevated by the muscles called _levatores ani_, as shown in the
-preliminary anatomical drawings, whence their use may now be better
-understood, as well as those of the perineal muscles, which all more
-or less assist in causing the prompt and forcible ejaculation of the
-spermatic fluid.
-
-“In[7] the female, the sense of enjoyment, _sub coitu_, appears to
-be principally excited by the friction of the _labia interna_ and
-_clitoris_, which are alike in a state of turgescence or erection.
-This nervous excitement, as in the male, often reaches such a degree
-of intensity that a kind of syncoptic state is induced.” A sense of
-contented lassitude follows, and the mind is permitted to return from
-the regions of excited imagination to its ordinary quietude.
-
-The due occurrence of the phenomena just detailed does not necessarily
-secure, although it generally succeeds in producing, a prolific result.
-Health, aptitude, and one important condition, are indispensable; and
-the last is—a positive contact between the male sperm and female ovum.
-
-There are many remarkable eccentricities that embitter married life.
-A union may exist between two parties who are wholly inapt for mutual
-enjoyment. The sensations belonging to the sexual act are involuntary,
-and are provoked independently of the will: hence, in connexion without
-consent, or under feelings of great repugnance, the orgasm is sometimes
-aroused; and yet, where the greatest affection and desire prevail, the
-male oftentimes unseasonably concluding before the female, is a most
-tantalizing source of disappointment. Further allusions will be found
-to this subject under the heads of “Sterility,” and “Impuissance.”
-
-As a preliminary aid to the description of the process of impregnation,
-which ensues, the following anatomical draft is presented:—
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. Section of the womb, upper part.
- 2. Do. of side.
- 3. Do. of lateral covering.
- 4. Do. of lower part of womb.
- 5. Cavity of the womb.
- 6. A prominence leading from the openings of the fallopian tubes.
- 7. The vagina.
- 8 and 9. Fallopian tube cut open.
- 10 and 16. The fimbriated extremity of do.
- 11. The pavilion.
- 12. The ovary.
- 13. Vesicles in do.
- 14. Continuation of ovary.
- 15. Ligament of do.
- 17. Pavilion of right ovary.
- 18. Right ovary.
- 19. Connecting band.]
-
-Man, unlike other animals, is not smitten with desire to propagate only
-at particular periods. In sentient beings, every season is favorable to
-the flame of love.
-
-When conception takes place, the following phenomena are believed to
-occur: The womb is supposed to participate in the excitement of the
-sexual act, and at the moment of the orgasm, to receive the male seed,
-and to mingle with it a fluid of its own. The whole apparatus of the
-uterus appears influenced at the same time,[8] by a kind of electric
-irritability. A vesicle, owing to the ovaria being grasped or embraced
-by the fimbriæ, escapes from its lodgment and enters the fallopian
-tube, where it bursts, and its albuminous drop is conveyed into the
-womb.
-
-From the circumstance of the male semen returning from the vagina after
-copulation, it has been doubted whether it was intended to enter the
-uterus. It certainly can only enter once,[9] and that when impregnation
-takes place; and even then a small portion suffices, for immediately
-after conception the mouth of the womb becomes impermeably closed. The
-mouth of the womb lies horizontally, like the lips of the face, while
-that of the orifice of the urethra is arranged perpendicularly: hence
-the presumption, from this better adaptation to transmit and receive,
-that the semen to impregnate should enter the uterus.
-
-This question is mooted, because it has been supposed by some that
-impregnation ensues from the vapor or odor of the male seed ascending
-to the womb. Contending parties admit, while others deny, that the
-seed may be, and has been, detected in the womb of females and animals
-having been slain (or who may have died) during or soon after the act
-of copulation. Impregnation has followed very imperfect penetration,
-such as in cases of unruptured hymen, or of disproportion of parts,
-and other causes needless to insert here, by which the supposition
-is supported that conception takes place from vaginal absorption;
-but it must be remembered that the seed is projected generally with
-great force, and that the smallest possible quantity is sufficient for
-impregnation; also, that the vagina possesses a constrictive movement
-of its own, whereby the seed is carried into the womb.
-
-After the escape of the “albuminous drop,” the vascular membrane
-which contained it is converted into what is called a corpus luteum;
-denoting thereby—for it assumes the form, after a while, of a fleshy
-nucleus—that the female has either conceived, or has been under the
-influence of strong amatory excitement. This _salvo_ must be admitted,
-for corpora lutea have been discovered in females where intercourse
-was even impossible; but as this detection of corpora lutea generally
-corroborates the surmise that so many conceptions have taken place
-as there are corpora lutea, it is to be presumed that the exception
-must be owing to some similarly powerful mental, as well as physical
-excitement.
-
-When impregnation has taken place, the womb begins to enlarge, and
-become more soft, vascular, and turgid—the wonderful process of fluids
-assuming the form of solids commences, and within a fortnight an
-investing membrane is formed, called the _decidua_ (I will insert as
-few names as possible), consisting of two kinds of folds, one lining
-the womb, and the other containing the _ovum_ which has therein “taken
-root.” The ovum is now a soft oval mass, fringed with vessels, and
-composed of membranes containing the early fœtus. See sketch.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-When opened, the fœtus appears surrounded by three distinct membranes:
-first, _the decidua_; secondly, _the chorion_, the inner fold of the
-former; thirdly, _the amnios_. The decidua, as before stated, lines the
-womb; the two others cover the ovum or fœtus. After a time the amnios
-and chorion become adherent to each other, and a fluid is interposed
-betwixt the amnios and fœtus, called the _liquor amnii_. The fœtus, as
-it advances, is perceived to be hanging by an organized support, called
-the umbilical chord, floating in the liquor before named.[10]
-
-A draft is here presented of an ovum (a section) of a fortnight old;
-and adjoining is one just double its age, where the chord will be
-perceived.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The following further account may aid the description thus far given.
-The ovum, protected by a membrane of its own, called the amnios,
-descends into the uterus, where it takes its hold of the membranes
-already there—the decidua. It pushes its way before, as exemplified in
-the subjoined drawing:—
-
-[Illustration:
- _a_—The decidua lining the womb.
- _b_—Do. protecting the ovum.
- _c_—The upper part of the womb, where the ovum has become adherent.
- _d_—The ovum.]
-
-The next cut shows the advanced condition of the fœtus:—
-
-[Illustration:
- _a_—The womb.
- _b_—The liquor amnii, with the fœtus.
- _c_—The chorion.
- _d_—The decidua.
- _e_—The opening of the fallopian tubes.]
-
-It will answer no practical usefulness to go through the whole minutiæ
-of the various physiological changes that take place relative to fœtal
-growth from the hour of impregnation to that of delivery. What has
-already been detailed, has been offered to unveil a little of that
-singular ignorance that exists generally among non-medical persons
-regarding the history of themselves. “Too much learning is a dangerous
-thing;” and it will readily be allowed, that a sufficient idea that
-certain things _happen_ is oftentimes as useful as to know _how_ they
-happen, especially when it belongs to a department requiring much
-research, time, and ingenuity, thoroughly to understand, and which may
-chance to be foreign to our ordinary pursuit.
-
-The period consumed in gestation is forty weeks, or nine calendar
-months, and the time is calculated from a fortnight after the
-suspension of menstruation. Some married ladies pride themselves upon
-being able to predict to a day—to tell the precise occasion when they
-conceive, and which they date from some unusual sensation experienced
-at the particular embrace which effected the important change. Many
-medical men disallow that such tokens present themselves, and are
-opposed to the belief which many mothers entertain, that nature is so
-communicative; and also are skeptical of those extraordinary influences
-that every day furnish proofs of maternal imagination, occasioning to
-the burden they carry, sundry marks, malformations, and monstrosities.
-Examinations have found that the order of fœtal organization is
-somewhat as follows: the heart and large vessels, the liver and
-appendages, the brain, stomach, and extremities. The determination of
-sex and number has hitherto defied exploration. In the early months of
-pregnancy the womb maintains its natural position; but as it enlarges,
-it also emerges from the pelvis into the abdomen. The moment of its
-slipping out of the pelvis is termed quickening, of which most women
-are sensible—some fainting on the occasion, others being attacked with
-nausea, hysteria, and palpitation of the heart. Quickening usually
-occurs between the fourth and fifth month. The fœtus is then called
-a child—the law ordaining that, if a woman intentionally procure, or
-such parties as may assist in so doing, abortion or miscarriage before
-quickening, it is misdemeanor, if after, murder.
-
-The following diagram is presented to show the situation occupied by
-the womb containing the child just ready to enter the world:—
-
-[Illustration:
- _a_—The womb.
-
- _b_—The vagina.
-
- _c_—The bladder.
-
- _d_—The rectum.]
-
-A full pregnant female, like a very corpulent man, walks very erect:
-hence the popular notion that ladies in the one condition, and
-gentlemen in the other, do not think meanly of themselves, but strut
-along well pleased with their own importance. It is an uncharitable
-idea; the attitude is unavoidable, the head and shoulders being thrown
-back to counterbalance the protuberance in front—to preserve, in fact,
-the centre of gravity, to save themselves from falling.
-
-_Symptoms of Pregnancy._—Mysterious as is the process of impregnation,
-there are many forewarnings which, being generally found correct,
-are useful to be known. Great as are the changes that take place
-in the female economy during child-bearing, and productive as they
-frequently are of serious disturbances to health, it is benevolently
-ordained that women who fulfil their destiny of becoming mothers, have
-better health to sustain them through their travail than the single or
-unprolific. The signs of pregnancy during the first few weeks are very
-equivocal. The first probability is the suppression of menstruation,
-which is accompanied by fulness of the breasts, the nipples of which
-become surrounded by a dark areola; headache, flushing in the face,
-and heat in the palms of the hands, ensue; also sickness in the
-morning, and probably an accession of mental irritability; various
-longings exist—many very ridiculous, others bordering on insanity,
-and some indicating great perversion of temper, habits, in hitherto
-well-conducted inclinations.
-
-There are many phenomena more readily discovered by medical men
-accustomed to the accoucheur’s employment than describable, that
-indicate pregnancy; the sinking of the abdomen, the descent and closure
-of the uterus, the altered facial looks, the state of the pulse, &c.,
-&c.
-
-From the fourth month, when the womb ascends into the abdomen, the
-signs are more positive: the protrusion of the navel, the evident
-enlargement of the belly, the tenderness and fulness of, and occasional
-escape of milk from, the breasts, clearly point out the occasion.
-
-About the fifth month, the movements of the child are very apparent to
-the mother, when all doubt is removed.
-
-There are some conditions of female life that assimilate to pregnancy,
-and which have defied the judgment of matrons, and even medical men,
-but they are rare—such as dropsy of the abdomen, or ovaries, tumors,
-accumulations of wind, &c. These, with the suspension of menstruation
-(which last is but an uncertain sign, for it may depend upon cold,
-fever, or inflammation), have destroyed the anticipations of fond
-wives, and have alarmed those who desire not to become mothers.
-
-_Parturition_ takes place at the end of the ninth month; but children
-born at the end of seven will live, and examples are related of some
-that have “gone” ten. In France, legitimacy is allowed to children born
-on the 299th day of pregnancy.
-
-_Labor_ is distinguished by a softening of the soft parts of the female
-organs of generation, an abundant secretion of mucus, a relaxation
-of the mouth of the womb, and a forcible contraction of its body. The
-expulsion of the child is effected by pains of a straining nature.
-After the birth of the child, the womb contracts to its _normal_ or
-unimpregnated size, giving forth a discharge, called the _lochia_,
-that lasts for several days, and the breasts immediately furnish the
-secretion of milk.
-
-Previously to entering upon the consideration of the diseases arising
-from infection, and for which this book was originally composed, a
-word or two may be said upon a condition of the womb, unfortunately
-of frequent prevalence, called _prolapsus uteri_, or _falling of the
-womb_. Such occurrence may take place with single females as well as
-with married, or those who have borne children. It may be held as the
-result of debility; and according to the degree of descent is the
-inconvenience and suffering. The first drawing exhibits the natural
-position of the uterus:—
-
-[Illustration:
- _a_—The vagina.
-
- _b_—The uterus.]
-
-A partial descent of the uterus gives rise to painful dragging
-sensations about the groins and fundament, and it is usually attended
-by the “whites,” or leucorrhœa, a disease of which mention is presently
-made:—
-
-[Illustration:
- Partial descent of the uterus.
-
- _a, a, a_—Vagina.
-
- _b_—Uterus.]
-
-If _prolapsus_ takes place during pregnancy, the womb impresses upon
-the bladder and rectum, and occasions irritability of both those
-structures; but as pregnancy advances, and as the womb ascends into the
-abdomen, these inconveniences cease, and the womb oftentimes regains
-its tone and position after child-birth. The womb sometimes protrudes
-externally, and is a source of great distress. See drawing:—
-
-[Illustration:
- Prolapsus uteri.
-
- _a, a_—Vagina.
-
- _b_—Uterus.]
-
-The treatment in these cases is chiefly mechanical, beside supporting
-the general health. The first symptoms, however, demand efficient
-attention, and the medical attendant should be made acquainted with
-every particular.
-
-It is a question whether the weakened condition of the supports of the
-womb, and the consequent relaxed state of the vagina, are not owing to
-the manner in which women clothe themselves. The pelvic part of the
-female is kept always in a state of unnatural warmth, from the load
-of petticoats and other unnameable female attire. Contrast but the
-difference between the simple unlined trowsers of the male and five
-or six-fold clothing of the other sex: either the one must yield too
-much warmth, or the other must strike too cold. The sedentary habits of
-women have of course much influence.
-
-When retention of urine follows the falling down or partial descent of
-the womb, the female should lie on her back, press the uterus into the
-pelvis, and urinate in that position.
-
-The womb, beside becoming displaced, is subject to an _eversion_, or
-a turning inside out. Happily, such cases are unfrequent, but any
-disturbance of so important an organ demands the promptest attention.
-
-
-
-
- DISEASES OF WOMEN, AND THE USE OF THE SPECULUM.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THE introduction of the stethoscope and the speculum constitute two
-important epochs in medical science—the former ascertaining, by the
-conveyance of sound, disease in the most hidden and inaccessible parts
-of the human frame, and the latter bringing to view structures which,
-without such aid, are necessarily veiled from our sight. The speculum
-consists of an instrument formed of silver or steel, that without
-pain or inconvenience is passed into the vagina, when, by a simple
-contrivance, it is made to expand and dilate the vaginal passage, and
-thereby expose to view the entire canal, together with the uterine
-aperture. The usefulness of such a method, whereby disease can at
-once be detected, admits of no dispute. It is physically painless;
-and if opposed to female diffidence and modesty, its importance and
-serviceableness should be balanced against the mental distress such a
-procedure may occasion. On the one hand, without its assistance, the
-treatment of the disease is at best but conjectural; on the other, by
-its aid, it is safe and sure—much suspense and suffering is at once
-put an end to. Experience has proved that many local disturbances,
-that were believed to have been merely vaginal irritation, have been
-discovered to depend upon absolute disorganization of the neck and
-mouth of the womb. Deep-seated ulceration has been detected, and
-cancerous enlargements; the disease thereby having been exposed, has
-had the necessary and successful treatment. In Paris, it is considered
-so valuable that a chair, termed a “speculum chair,” has been invented
-solely for its use. See engraving on previous page.
-
-The speculum is now in the hands of every respectable medical man, and
-the class of disorders that hold it in requisition are being better
-understood, and consequently more successfully combated. In no cases is
-it more useful than in secretive irregularities, such as in leucorrhœa,
-gonorrhœa, or syphilitic ulceration. Without further comment, these
-diseases will be considered.
-
-
-
-
- GONORRHŒA IN THE FEMALE.
-
-
-THIS disease is rarely so violent as in man, it being mostly confined
-to the uterine conduit; in fact, except by the discharge, women are
-almost unconscious of its existence, mistaking it, when occurring in
-married life, for leucorrhœa. Occasionally, however, the inflammation
-is highly acute, and a variety of distressing symptoms ensue. There is
-considerable excoriation around, and a swelling of the organs, much
-_ardor urinæ_, and the same constitutional disturbance as in the other
-sex.
-
-The medical treatment of both sexes is constitutionally alike; but
-the female has to depend more upon local treatment than the male.
-Hence the importance of injections. Now here is another source of
-difficulty: women are as averse to the use of the syringe as they are
-to the speculum; and the consequence is, vaginal diseases are generally
-protracted to double as long as they need be. However, as these hints
-are likely to be seen only by those who doubtlessly have, and who
-indisputably ought, to exercise it, namely, influence over the sex in
-persuading them to submit to what common sense bespeaks as most prudent
-and expedient, appropriate formulæ for the suggestions just recommended
-will be found a few pages hence. Frequent ablution, rest, temperate
-diet—the more farinaceous and mucilaginous the better, avoiding
-entirely wines, fermented and spirituous liquors, together with mild
-(Form 63) aperients and salines, constitute the chief means of cure.
-Injections are indispensable.
-
-I have already alluded to the difficulty of getting female patients
-to be their own confessors. If they appoint others, every possible
-information should be furnished, and fastidiousness by no means should
-supplant the avowal of real facts. Although gonorrhœa in women is
-generally less severe than in the male, it is vexingly oftentimes more
-lasting; which is easily accounted for, owing to the extent of surface
-diseased: whereas in man it is limited to the narrow urethra, and
-seldom exceeds an inch or two upward, constituting not one tithe part
-of the space morbidly affected in the former. See, however, the formulæ.
-
-
-
-
- SYPHILIS IN FEMALES.
-
-
-THE principal features of syphilis in women consist of ulcers,
-excoriations, warts, and buboes. Women, of course, are alike liable to
-all the forms of secondary symptoms. Chancres usually appear _within_
-and _on_ the _labiæ_. In the drawing here given, the labiæ are drawn
-aside to expose the ulceration; and they are also found within the
-vagina and surrounding the mouth or protuberance of the womb. It is in
-these cases that the speculum is had recourse to; and in the Parisian
-hospitals every case is subject to such a mode of investigation.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The following three illustrations show what a degree of severity
-ulceration and other changes put on. The first exhibits superficial
-excoriation extending rapidly, and occasionally a swollen appearance of
-the _os uteri_; the second shows extensive chancrous ulceration; and
-the last of a tuberculous character, like little hardened tumors. But
-for the speculum, these conditions might have gone on to worse, and
-led to irremediable mischief: their treatment, independently of local
-means, such as injections, &c., would have been prolonged to an almost
-indefinite time. The use of styptics is demanded in female as well as
-male syphilitic developments, and accordingly the employment of nitrate
-of silver, copper, &c., is advised, as already explained.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The following drawing shows the extent of mischief and annoyance to
-the external organs of female generation consequent upon neglect. The
-external labiæ are studded with chancres. The thighs, buttocks, and
-rectum, are dotted and overspread with excoriations. The person from
-whom this sketch is taken was an unfortunate woman of the town. As it
-is not my intention to particularize cases, although from my peculiar
-province I could fill up as many pages as this book contains, with
-details of such histories, I have only to add, by way of summary, that
-the topical and constitutional treatment being alike in both sexes,
-the only modifications required will be the regulating of the doses of
-the medicines, which must be done with reference to the idiosyncrasy,
-age, and temperament, of the patient. The frail system of woman is less
-able to withstand the dire effects of the disease, or the potent means
-for its extirpation, than her stronger brotherhood, and therefore the
-abler and more experienced the counsel, the fairer the chance of her
-recovery; a hint that the writer feels assured will not be received
-by those to whom his pages are addressed, as a vain appeal to repose
-confidence in other advice than their own.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- LEUCORRHŒA, FLUOR ALBUS, OR THE WHITES
-
-
-THIS is the most prevalent of all derangements of the female economy,
-connected with the uterine system; and from its debilitating effects,
-induces a train of maladies that tend to embitter personal comfort
-more than any other human ill. Leucorrhœa consists of a discharge of
-acrid, or bland, but variously-colored mucus from the vagina, differing
-in intensity according to the cause and duration. It would be idle
-to offer the many arguments set up to prove whence it proceeds, or
-to examine the discussions as to whether it is the produce of the
-uterine vessels, or the vaginal secretives. That both aid in its
-formation is doubtless the case (as the employment of the speculum
-has satisfactorily proved); and equally certain that, according to
-the amount of irritability existing therein, so depends the quantity
-and character of the discharge. It exists in the married and single—in
-the moral and unchaste; and therefore the cause should be cautiously
-divined, it being evident that other than sexual indulgences establish
-this annoying and distressing affliction. It may be fairly conceded
-to be a vitiated secretion, depending upon a weakened state of the
-local vessels, and, moreover, in particular habits, to be a salutary
-evacuation. On the other hand, it must not be denied that it is
-oftentimes, where it occurs to persons living _sub judice mariti_,
-the result of sexual intemperance, or disease springing from an
-indiscriminate indulgence in the same.
-
-However, as my purpose is more with the symptoms and treatment, the
-following may be received as a summary of what occurs, and what should
-be done for the removal thereof:—
-
-In addition to the discharge, which at one time is scanty, at another
-profuse, there are usually severe pains in the loins and lower part of
-the abdomen: there is a sense of bearing down, as though the womb were
-descending and even protruding. The general health of the patient is
-disturbed, loss of appetite, excessive languor, a pale and emaciated
-look, sleepless nights, dark areola around the eyes, various hysterical
-and other nervous affections, and numerous disturbances indicating a
-weakened and impaired state of mind and body. Among other causes beside
-those alluded to, may be enumerated irregular living, late hours,
-mental and bodily fatigue, deficient exercise, impure air, and neglect
-of personal ablution. Among the consequences of a long-continued
-leucorrhœa, an almost certainty of sterility should not be omitted.
-
-_Treatment._—In leucorrhœa, where or where not consecutive to
-gonorrhœa, depending on loss of tone of the secretive vessels of the
-internal organs of generation, the chief indication is to impart
-vigor and restore strength, which it is evident depends much upon an
-avoidance of those causes that first started the disease.
-
-Although leucorrhœa bears a strong resemblance to gonorrhœa, there are
-points by which to distinguish the one from the other. In gonorrhœa,
-the discharge is unceasing, but small in quantity, and is usually
-accompanied by inflammatory symptoms; whereas in leucorrhœa, the
-discharge is irregular and copious, often coming away in large lumps.
-
-The treatment of fluor albus is indicated by the degree of severity
-present. Where the prominent feature is the discharge, the indication
-is to increase the action of the absorbents by restoring the tone of
-the diseased surface, and at the same time to strengthen the system.
-Where the disease is complicated with weakness and relaxation,
-astringents should be given by the mouth, and also administered in
-the form of injections. The alkaline solution of copaiba is a very
-valuable medicament, and may be taken twice or thrice daily. It may
-also be employed as an injection, by adding one or two ounces to a pint
-of water, and a teacupful thrown up several times in the day. There
-are many domestic remedies, which, from their harmless properties, can
-at least do no injury, if they are not productive of good; as, for
-instance, a strong decoction of green tea, an infusion of oak bark, or
-alum-water; or diluted port wine—all to be used as injections, which,
-if it shall so please the patient, may be tried prior to the annexed:—
-
- Form 64.
-
-_Chalybeate Pills, for Leucorrhœa, or other Female Sexual Weakness._
-
-Take of—
- Sulphate of iron 1 scruple.
-Balsam of copaiba and liquorice powder—of each a sufficiency to form
-the mass, which is to be divided into 40 pills, of which 3 or 4 may
-be taken three times a day.
-
-Or, take of—
- Sulphate of zinc 1 scruple.
- Extract of camomile 1 drachm.
- ” gentian 1 ”
- Syrup, a sufficiency.
-Mix, and form 24 pills. Dose—two twice a day.
-
- Form 65.
-
-_Strengthening Mixture._
-
-Take of—
- Infusion of bark 7½ ounces.
- Sulphate of quinine 8 grains.
- Diluted sulphuric acid ½ drachm.
- Syrup of orange-peel 2 drachms.
-Mix. Dose—three tablespoonfuls twice or three times a day.
-
- Form 66.
-
-_Astringent Pills for Leucorrhœa._
-
-Take of—
- Extract of Peruvian bark 1 drachm.
- Gum kino 1 ”
- Alum ½ ”
- Nutmeg 1 scruple.
-Syrup, sufficient to form the mass. Divide into 36 pills. Dose—three
-pills three times a day, to be followed by a teacupful of lime-water.
-
- Form 67.
-
-_Astringent Pills._
-
-Take of—
- Alum 30 grains.
- Catechu 1 drachm.
- Opium 5 grains.
-Mix to form 30 pills. Dose—three twice a day. Useful in chronic
-gonorrhœa and leucorrhœa.
-
- Form 68.
-
-_Astringent Pills for obstinate Gleet, or Leucorrhœa._
-
-Take of—
- Gum kino 1 part.
- Canadian turpentine 4 parts.
-Powder of tormentilla, as much as may be necessary to form a mass.
-Divide the same into pills of 5 grains each, and take from three to
-half a dozen of them night and morning. Continue them for a week or
-fortnight. A very useful remedy.
-
- Form 69.
-
-_Astringent Injections for Leucorrhœa or Gonorrhœa._
-
-Take of—
- The compound solution of alum ½ oz. to 1 oz.
- Water 1 quart.
-Mix.
-
-Injections may be used two or three times a day. If found to irritate,
-they should be diluted with water. Appropriate syringes are to be had;
-but the best are those formed by the Enema apparatus.
-
- Form 70.
-
-_Astringent Injection._
-
-Take of—
- Sugar of lead 1 scruple.
- Water 1 quart.
-Mix.
-
-Or, take of—
- Catechu 1 drachm.
- Myrrh 1 ”
- Lime-water ½ pint.
-Mix.
-
-Or, take of—
- Nitrate of silver 1 scr. to 1 dr.
- Water 1 quart.
-Mix and strain. This lotion is much, and very effectively, used by the
-profession.
-
-Or, take of—
- Sulphate of zinc ½ to 1 drachm.
- Water 1 quart.
-Mix.
-See Forms 11 and 12.
-
-The remaining diseases peculiar to the female pelvic viscera and
-their outlet, are hæmorrhoids, irritability and inflammation of the
-bladder, disordered uterine functions, urethritis, or inflammation of
-the urinary passage, and, lastly, internal and external irritation or
-excoriation. But as these fall within the province of every family
-practitioner, to the consultation of whom no morbid delicacy should
-prevent a patient, having such in their confidence, from resorting, I
-shall conclude this section by appending sundry prescriptions, in order
-that, should prudence not direct the sick one or her friends to call
-in the advised assistance, help may not be entirely withheld, and in
-order that, if the aid offered be not the means of supplying the loss
-of a more proficient and skilful director, it may at least be found
-mitigatory of these interruptions of health and comfort:—
-
- Form 71.
-
-_Pills to promote the flow of the Menstrual Secretion._
-
-Take of—
- Aloetic pills, with myrrh 1 drachm.
- Compound iron pill 1 ”
-Mix to form 24 pills. Take two twice a day.
-
-Or, take of—
- Compound galbanum pills 1 drachm.
- Socotrine aloes 1 ”
-Mix to form 24 pills. Dose—two twice a day.
-
- Form 72.
-
-_Injection for the retention of the Uterine Periodical Secretion._
-
-Take of—
- Liquor of ammonia 10 drops.
- Milk ½ pint.
-To be used morning and evening. This is a remedy that has been used
-by many medical men with very great success.
-
-There are no means so importantly serviceable as the frequent use of
-the warm and vapor bath.
-
- Form 73.
-
-_Stimulating Drops to restore the Menstrual flow._
-
-Take of—
- Compound tincture of aloes 1½ oz.
- Tincture of black hellebore 1 drachm.
- ” castor 1 ”
- ” Lyttæ 30 drops.
-Mix. Dose—a teaspoonful in water three times a day.
-
- Form 74.
-
-_To relieve entire suppression._
-
-Take of—
- Compound galbanum pills 1 drachm.
- Sulphate of iron 1 ”
- Extract of savin 10 grains.
- Of black hellebore 20 ”
-Syrup sufficient to form 36 pills. Dose—three twice a day.
-
-All these medicines must be given with great caution.
-
- Form 75.
-
-_To check an immoderate flow of the Menstrual secretion._
-
-Take of—
- Infusion of roses 8 oz.
- Tincture of opium 30 drops.
-Mix. Dose—three tablespoonfuls three times a day.
-
-Or, take of the tincture of ergot of rye, a teaspoonful in
-water twice a day.
-
-Or, take of the sesqui-chloride tincture of iron, 20 to 30
-drops in water, three times a day.
-
- Form 76.
-
-_For painful Menstruation._
-
-Add to a portion of gruel, upon going to bed, 15 or 20 drops of
-laudanum. This quantity may also be taken in the morning, and repeated
-several days; the bowels in the meantime to be relieved by castor oil.
-
-The warm hip bath, in these cases, is invaluable.
-
-Or, take of—
- The extract of stramonium ½ gr.
- Spanish soap 5 grs.
-Mix to form a pill to be taken twice a day.
-
- Form 77.
-
-_To allay external irritation.—Sedative application._
-
-Take of—
- Oil of almonds 6 ounces.
- Spermaceti ½ ”
- White wax[11] ½ ”
- Rose-water 3 ”
- Orange-flower water 10 ”
-Dissolve the wax in the oil, then add the waters, and constantly
-stir till cold. This is an admirable application for irritation or
-excoriation of the external parts. It is commonly known as “cold cream.”
-
- Form 78.
-
-_To heal Excoriations.—Mild drying ointment._[12]
-
-Take of—
- The oxide of zinc 1 drachm.
- Ointment of spermaceti 1 ounce.
-Mix.
-
- Form 79.
-
-_For obstinate Excoriations._
-
-Take of—
- Ointment of nitrate of mercury ½ ounce.
- Superacetate of lead 1 scruple.
- Spermaceti ointment, or cold cream 1 ounce.
-Mix.
-
-
-
-
- EFFECTS OF INCONTINENCE, CELIBACY, AND MARRIAGE.
-
-
-THE past pages relate chiefly to the diseases of the generative system
-consequent upon contagion, upon accident, and the ordinary wear and
-tear of human life: the following, to the ills that ensue from the
-over-indulgence in, and abstinence from, the proper purposes of the
-reproductive organs, and the benefits derivable from a fulfilment of
-the intentions of their natural functions.
-
-There may be much good policy and correct feeling in objecting to the
-too public inquiry into these matters. The private closet and the
-public eye are two very different tribunals, and what may be approved
-of in the one is very likely to be condemned in the other. The line of
-deciding what shall be communicated and what should be suppressed may
-be drawn too closely; and that knowledge which is acquired by stealth
-is seldom so practical as that obtained by competition. If, therefore,
-the topics herein embraced were to be expunged, and their discussion
-prohibited, the afflicted would have no other resource than to apply
-to the adventuring and ill-educated empiric, instead of confiding his
-troubles to the legitimate professional man. A study, to become useful,
-should be general; and it is to be hoped that the prudish reserve which
-excludes this kind of investigation from our medical schools will be
-laid aside, and truth be obtained by allowable investigation.
-
-The most moral and chaste, at the age of puberty, are assailed with
-feelings and desires, that, though new and unanticipated, yet need
-little interpretation when present, and so urgent and imperious, that
-if not legitimately satisfied, nature and instinct are not slow in
-pointing out a means of gratification.
-
-In the male, imagination commanding a wider range than in the female,
-and fed by associations with, and the usages of, the world, elicits
-consequences explanatory of life’s purposes; and the youth having once
-experienced, perhaps unsolicited, and possibly during sleep, the agony
-of seminal secretion, can rarely withstand the afterward tempting
-pleasure of seeking a self-repetition of such solitary indulgence,
-which the forbidden union of the sexes, at this early period, may urge
-him to.
-
-Setting aside the selfishness and unmanliness of the vice, it
-is important that the wearer of the cap and bells should know
-the consequences of abusing a given function by such a means of
-gratification. There is no mental passion, or physical exertion, that
-produces such temporary nervous prostration as the completion of the
-act of sexual intercourse; and it therefore can be easily conceived how
-debilitating must be the immoderate indulgence of the practice. Health
-consists in a due performance of all the functions of the organs of the
-body, and an undue exercise of them is sure to lead to a disturbance of
-the economy.
-
-In ordinary sexual commerce, particular phenomena ensue, the
-circulation is powerfully roused, the heart thumps violently, the blood
-is driven to the brain, and great mental exaltation is induced, and
-instances have been known of death suddenly crushing the transport.
-The too frequent repetition of such excitement can not fail to
-wear out, and disease the overwrought organs, the heart and brain
-particularly, upon the healthy condition of which the health of the
-entire frame rests; and hence the diseases of the libertine are usually
-consumption, physical weakness, and mental imbecility, all the result
-of disordered circulation and impaired nervous power. If, therefore,
-such consequences follow a waste of the allotted privileges of man, how
-much more severe must they be that arise from nervous exhaustion, that
-which transpires from an absolute stretch of an already overwrought
-imagination, from, in fact, ideal pleasures, instead of those
-springing from the instinctive stimulus imparted by the presence of,
-and cohabitation with, woman. I have elsewhere treated upon the sad
-and withering effects of self-indulgence in a hygæan point of view.
-My object here is to portray the consequences of the like, and the
-more lawful, intemperance of sexual cohabitation in a domestic light,
-in how far it is destructive to the health and happiness of others,
-than the party addressed—the partner of our worldly anxieties, and
-the offspring that issue from our union. How striking is the change
-of _appearance_ only, much less the positive bodily condition of
-married persons of both sexes, within one or two years of their union,
-especially if the match be a youthful one. Let any one, even with a
-limited acquaintance, recollect such of his former female associates,
-whom he knew when single, and mayhap may have indulged with in little
-modest pleasantries; let him recall the gay-lit countenance, the ruddy
-and prominent cheek, the sparkling and lively eye, the plump and well
-filled neck—in fact, let him but compare her then and now, and how
-disheartening the change; the same being may be recognised, but it is
-the same being only in mind, and not in person. There are exceptions,
-as I shall presently show, but this is the too frequent portraiture of
-those who embark in precocious hymeneal contracts, and restrain not
-the marital privileges. The countenance assumes, when thoughtful, the
-careworn aspect; the blanched cheek shows here and there a furrowed
-imprint; the lustre of the eye is dimmed; and, to drop from the
-figurative to the literal, the collar-bones, hitherto “overlaid with
-nature’s plastic moulding,” seem appointed only for union’s sake, lest
-the fabric of neck and shoulders should drop in pieces. Mark also
-the decayed health and spirits; hear the bitter grief of headaches,
-sideaches, nerveaches, and behold, perhaps, the puny offspring “mewling
-and puling in the nurse’s arms.”
-
-The bridegroom wears a sorrowful and thoughtful look. He may possess
-all the comforts which few inherit, but like Pharaoh’s lean kine, as
-chaff thrown before the wind, their purpose is opposed.
-
-This may be held as a ridiculous picture, but I defy denial of its
-unhappily too frequent illustration in real life. A word or two on the
-opposite extreme, _continence_. The reader will observe, in another
-page, the remark that every part, be it flesh, bone, or nerve, has
-its use. The reproductive organs have theirs; but it is not only for
-the propagation of the species—they afford an outlet for accumulated
-secretion—they aid in resolving the animal passions—they are the secret
-incentive to sexual love, and the bond of union between the sexes.
-They give an appetite that, like hunger, must be appeased, or nature
-revolts; and the harmony of society falls before the ungovernable fury
-of maniacal craving. Health, the source of all happiness, without the
-possession of which the world with its beauties would be, for all we
-cared, tenantless, materially rests upon a proper and moderate use of
-the copulative process. Entire continence, a rarity among mankind,
-establishes in both sexes the most miserable perversions of mind
-and body. In man, we have instances recorded of mania, melancholy,
-apoplexy, and foul skin-disorders. Blindness, deafness, and a host
-of evils, some greater, and few less than these just penned. It is
-true, continence is, as remarked, but seldom observed, especially
-in males, who, being denied sexual commerce, are estranged by the
-distressful habit of onanism; and thereby, in some measure, the
-enumerated maladies are avoided; but as masturbation, like other vices,
-grows with unbounded speed, a train of ills, far more distressful,
-await the sufferer, who, in addition, becomes, in the meridian of
-life, deprived of the very power he in youth was so improvident of.
-Continence in females, which all admit to be the brightest ornament a
-woman possesses, is attended with a poor requital; and its prevalence
-(to the honor of our countrywomen be it spoken) is truly attested by
-the miseries of hysteria, and other nervous derangements, that pervade
-the junior and elderly maiden branches of every family, and constitute
-so formidable an enemy to domestic felicity. A wide field is open for
-comment upon this subject, which is better adapted for the moralist
-than the physician. This manual, professing to be but a vehicle for
-topics of a professional nature only, the writer apologises for the
-digression, and can but express his regret, that public opinion
-is unfavorable to the discussion of such matters, which embrace
-considerations highly important to a nation, both in a moral and hygæan
-view. Continent persons but seldom attain old age; whereas, the married
-females, for instance, although exposed to the dangers of pregnancy and
-delivery, live generally longer than those who are unmarried or chaste;
-and provident married men escape the ills and snares that beset single
-_blessedness_, as it is called. Libertinism, on the other hand, in
-whatever way practised, is hurtful and destructive to long life.
-
-Continence may be a virtue, but is not imposed where marriage is
-allowable; and then, if deviated from with moderation only, the
-greatest amount of health and happiness may be elicited, and the
-proper end of it obtained. Matrimony, where succeeded by the birth of
-children, powerfully conduces to the health and happiness of women.
-
-Many female disorders are relieved by marriage. Amenorrhœa and
-chlorosis, disordered conditions of the uterine functions, hysteria,
-scrofula, skin-affections, numerous nervous disorders, and many local
-complaints, yield as soon as pregnancy commences.
-
-Results should, however, be well weighed, before irrevocable steps are
-taken. There are many diseases and structural impediments opposed to
-the matrimonial contract. Malformation and mental imbecility should
-be held as strong interdicts to the conjugal union. People ought not
-to marry before manhood is well developed (the male at least 21 to 23
-years of age, the female 18 to 21). Precocious or late marriages are
-injurious to reproduction. The unnatural union of old and young of
-either sex with the other, entails its own miseries. A curious estimate
-of salacious appetites and power has been drawn up as pervading the
-different temperaments. The temperaments, as elsewhere noticed, are
-four—the Sanguine, Nervous, Bilious, and Phlegmatic. Persons of the
-sanguine temperament are generally of good health, and vigorous in
-amorous pleasures. The nervous are extremely susceptible in their
-sensations, and generally much given to female society. Combined
-with the sanguine, they are capable of great amorous excesses. The
-bilious temperament imparts a jealous bearing in all affairs of sexual
-solicitude, that detracts from the fondness and affection which so
-entwine a woman to a lover or a husband. The melancholic or phlegmatic
-person is frigid and apathetic in his amours; and love becomes with him
-a secondary consideration to advancement in life. These temperaments
-are frequently intermixed, and are much modified by age and health; and
-the salacious powers correspond.
-
-Speculations have arisen among physiologists, as to the effect of
-climate and season, as well as age and temperament, on the reproductive
-powers. Temperate and warm climates are more prolific in exciting the
-copulative desire, than the frigid and uncongenial situations of the
-northern hemisphere. The seasons bear a somewhat near analogy—spring is
-supposed to be more potent than summer, autumn, or winter, in arousing
-the amative propensities, which, like the productions of the earth,
-come, as it were, at that time into a new existence. This observation
-is borne out by the statistical fact of there being a greater number of
-births about Christmas and the new year, than any other period.
-
-Man, however, is allowed to be omnivorous in _all_ his appetites;
-and the uniformity of his sexual greediness is preserved by diet
-corresponding to the season, which renders the whole twelvemonth a
-perpetual spring. Man, as well as other animals, is, when in a state
-of health, capable of procreating upon almost any food. But when there
-is debility of the digestive or generative organs, the injury can be
-repaired by the use of proper stimulating diet, thereby occasioning due
-and sufficient secretions.
-
-Air, exercise, health, and prosperity, are not without considerable
-influences. If seasons are not positively influential, certain it is,
-that particular lunar and solar periods are, taken in conjunction with
-the state of the body.
-
-“Morning,” says a French writer, “is the spring of the journey, when
-all the functions of the body are renovated.” Others declare, that when
-night veils the light of the day, the quietude and secresy thereby
-afforded, offer moments most congenial to the gratification of mutual
-love. Sexual transports should be avoided after a repast, instances
-having been known of apoplexy being induced by the excitement of
-connexion being superadded to the stimulative influence of wine and
-food.
-
-Henry II. consulted one Fernal for the infertility of his queen,
-Catherine de Medicis. The advice submitted, comprised the following
-notifications: Abundant and peculiar nourishment; occasional change of
-residence; the allowing several days to elapse between each conjugal
-act; and lastly, that the most favorable moment for impregnation was
-immediately on the cessation of menstruation. It was not until the
-adoption of these hints, that her majesty conceived.
-
-Professor Dewees, of Philadelphia, enjoins that, for the enjoyment
-of marriage and the production of children, matrimony should not be
-engaged in, until the body is healthily and completely developed; until
-then the most scrupulous continency should be preserved. From the 23d
-to the 25th year is the suggested period for the male; from the 19th to
-the 21st, the female. These observations apply to Europeans chiefly;
-for in India, women become mothers at ten, owing to their early
-development. Precocious marriages bring premature decay on the father
-and mother, and entail on their offspring, diminutive stature, debility
-of body, and imbecility of mind, thus generating consumption, scrofula,
-insanity, &c. Well-regulated marriages contribute to social and lasting
-happiness, and the prosperity of the nation at large; but ill-assorted
-ones, those where the peace of either is infringed by opposing
-tempers, or by the after-discovery of hitherto concealed physical
-incapacities, present a scene of wretchedness and disappointment to
-which death itself were preferable. These remarks might be considerably
-amplified; but enough has been said, to induce those who approach
-to manhood, to be provident of that which, once lost, is, under all
-circumstances, difficult to regain; and those on the eve of embarking
-in the most binding and solemn obligation of all human contracts,
-marriage, to ponder well, ere they compromise the happiness of others
-as well as themselves, by engaging in a compact, they may know
-themselves incapable of fulfilling or of efficiently performing; one
-from which they can not with honor retreat, and one that, once sealed,
-demands a rigid compliance with its recognised duties.
-
-The gist of the present article may then thus be summed up: That
-self-indulgence and excessive sexual cohabitation are hurtful in the
-highest degree; that they induce early impuissance, and bring down a
-load of menial and corporeal ailments. That premature marriages are
-destructive to health and long life, and that weak and sickly children
-are the general result where impregnation of the female follows. That
-entire continence was never ordained, and is alike productive of
-disease. That moderate copulation propagates the human kind, preserves
-health, and promotes longevity, and the sexual capability is thereby
-retained to the latest verge of senility.
-
-That it is unnatural and unjust for impuissant persons to intermarry
-with those having healthy expectations, and the power of enjoyment;
-and that it behooves all who have a doubt as to their own capacity,
-to have that doubt removed; but, if rendered evident, to abstain from
-shipwrecking their own happiness, or from occasioning disappointment to
-others.
-
-
-
-
- THE HEREDITARY TRANSMISSION OF DISEASE.
-
-
-THE topics of Incontinence, Celibacy, and Marriage, having been
-severally considered relatively to their effects on society, viewed
-alike also as to their influence on the health and happiness of the
-sexes in general, another equally engrossing one naturally presents
-itself for inquiry to every thinking and sensible person who may
-contemplate, or be about embarking in what the world deems “a serious
-speculation,” matrimony, namely, the probability of issue, and how far
-the health of the progeny may be influenced by that of the parents.
-That conception requires the necessary aptitudes in both man and wife
-is indisputable; and that although such capacities are rarely absent,
-still all unions are not prolific; hence the inference, that some cause
-must exist to account for such infertility.
-
-It may be local or moral, as elsewhere in this volume explained, which
-not being the main purport of this paper, needs no other allusion
-beyond the mere reference. The prevailing resemblance between parents
-and children in features, form, voice, and even constitutional
-peculiarities, is sufficiently well known to satisfy any one of the
-similar possibility of the transmission of disease, or sound health.
-“It is of great consequence to be well-born; and it were happy for
-human kind, if only such persons as are sound of body and mind should
-be allowed to marry.”
-
-We find in Boethius’s work, “De veterum Scotorum Moribus,” that
-anciently, in Scotland, if any were visited with the falling sickness,
-madness, gout, leprosy, or any such dangerous disease, which was likely
-to be propagated from the father to the son, he was instantly gelded; a
-woman kept from all company of men; and, if by chance, having some such
-disease, she were to be found with child, she with her offspring was
-buried alive. The Spartans destroyed all weakly and deformed children.
-
-Great as the anxiety may be to perpetuate our identities, to create
-new objects on whom we may concentrate all our affections and love,
-and who, when born to us, so instinctively bind us the more to this
-already attractive world, where is the man who does not feel humbled
-and mortified at beholding in his anxiously looked-for offspring,
-the unfolding of infirmity and disease? We are content to encounter
-the ordinary chances of mortality, let but our children bear the
-impress of health, and possess the shape of perfect man; but sad and
-desolating are the reflections that spring from observing in our
-issue the developments of the evils we have nurtured in ourselves.
-How many existing beings are there, inhaling the breath of life, in
-whom every respiration feeds the flame of disease, ignited by those
-from whose loins they sprung, and is hastening them to a premature
-tomb. How many are there, secluded from the enjoyment of that, which
-being deprived of by some scrofulous, pestilential, or other hideous
-deformity, renders them like isolated wanderers on the earth, and for
-ever forbids their participation in the main charm of existence—social
-intercourse. How many living specimens of human prototypes, in whom
-reason is obliterated, or never dawned, drag on an existence inferior
-in enjoyment to the forest-hunted beast, or the animal whose life
-is yielded for the nutriment of man. And are not the diseases that
-involve so calamitous a result, consumption, scrofula, gout, idiocy,
-or insanity, traceable in particular families, to the remotest periods
-of their ancestral records? And should not then a knowledge of cause
-and effect, like that just detailed, induce individuals about to fulfil
-one of the purposes to which they were certainly destined, for the
-perpetuation of their own race, if only from the pride of human nature,
-well to consider the result of such a consummation? The health of
-either party is generally omitted among the categories bandied about
-preliminary to the completion of the other, though decidedly not more
-important, arrangements of the nuptial contract; or if it should not
-be, many infirmities, that are well known to descend hereditarily,
-are (granted in some cases not premeditatedly, but from ignorance of
-such a result) yet carefully concealed. Cutaneous blemishes, incipient
-tubercles, or a scrofulous predisposition, which may be likened to the
-germes of a fruitful plant sown in a torpid soil, lie in ambush, and
-await some genial transplantation to display their productiveness,
-which matrimony, by the analogous change which it effects in different
-constitutions, speedily encourages. In this manner, other morbid
-phenomena are aroused from their lurking place, whether it be in the
-brain, the lungs, or the blood, and transferred to those who succeed
-us.
-
-I need not, therefore, waste a line prefatory to, or apologetic of,
-the following illustrative definition of health, by which any one
-with tolerable acumen may estimate the probable “worth of a life,”
-or, at all events, be spared the plea of ignorance, or misplaced
-confidence, when taking a step of such importance as wedlock. There are
-numerous means of calculating upon the durability of human life, by
-an examination of the countenance, the gait, the attitude, the form,
-the skin, the temperament, the breathing, the speech, the sleep, and
-in fact, to a practised professional eye, there is not much difficulty
-in observing some diagnostic mark, if sickness be secreted in the
-constitution. The countenance in health varies with the age. Health is
-indicated by a plump, not puffy or bloated state of the face, a fresh
-complexion, and an absence of that depression around and particularly
-below the eye, so observable in persons of sick health. The nose should
-not be “pinched,” as it were, at its junction with the face, nor
-should there be deep indentations, called furrows, or wrinkles, at the
-angles of the mouth or eyes, which rarely are manifested in healthy
-individuals, except they be aged through care or time. Many people part
-very reluctantly with each succeeding year, and few conform to the
-outward symbols of age. The era was when age was honorable; now few
-aspire to it, and such is the deception that would be practised, that
-the coffin-plate is the only tell-tale.
-
-If the teeth have dropped out or decayed, the lower jaw will be
-observed to be more elevated, the lips drawn inward over the gums,
-and the chin and nose approximating each other; the cheek bones will
-also be very prominent, and the skin thereon shiny and tightly drawn:
-these are pretty fair characteristics of disease, or old age. The
-temperaments modify the complexion. In the sanguine, it is florid
-and soft; in the bilious, dark and rigid; in the phlegmatic, lax and
-pallid; and the nervous is modified by its general union with the two
-former. In health, the countenance is expressive of contentment and
-gayety, which indicate a happy state of mind, and healthy condition of
-body. In ill-health, it is pale and expressive of languor and sadness,
-signifying discontent and nervous debility. Where asthma exists, or
-other nervous affections of the chest prevail, there is pallidness
-or lividity, a worn-down and distressing look, and in consumption,
-in addition to the above, there are alternately, on the slightest
-exertion, gentle flushings. A bluish tint of the skin denotes some
-organic affection of the heart. In dropsy, the countenance is bloated,
-or of a waxy puffiness; and in acute indigestion, there is a lividity
-of the lips, nose, and cheeks. A slow and cautious step, a bending
-of the body, a laxity and flabby feel of the muscles of the arms,
-chest, and lower extremities, a tumid abdomen, or a swelling of the
-feet and ankles, are no indications of health. Tremulous hands mark
-age, nervousness, or intemperance. Hurried breathing, palpitation of
-the heart, frequent attacks of perspiration, sleeplessness, are all
-symptomatic of weakness, hysteria, or disease. Persons subject to
-bleedings, are usually of a waxy paleness, and soft fibre. Allowances
-must be made for females during the menstrual period, whose complexion,
-at that period, being less clear and fair, is marked by a dark areola
-around and below the eyes, the breath is slightly tainted, and a
-languor is evidenced in all their actions. A voracious or scanty
-appetite, a dry and shrinking skin, a furred and loaded tongue with
-indented sides, signify the digestive organs to be deranged. In
-long-standing dyspepsia, the nose, feet, and hands, are generally cold.
-Emaciation is an infallible diagnostic of disturbed health, and a
-bloated state equally characteristic. Fits, gout, rheumatic disorders,
-asthma, occasional brain affections, diseases of the bladder, &c., can
-not be considered as warranties of health.
-
-Lastly, with respect to intemperance, the bloated appearance, the
-tremulous state of the muscular powers, the fetid breath, and the
-sunken eye, sufficiently identify the cause, to arrest all doubts on
-the subject. Where intemperance exists in married life, it is the bane
-of all comfort and enjoyment; and heaven help the unhappy partner of
-such a companion. There is but one consolation, that every indulgence
-of this insane practice tends to sap and break up the powers of the
-constitution, and hastens the close of such a union. The drunkard
-should be reminded, that “some leaves fall from the tree every time
-that its trunk is shaken;” and the dreary nakedness of winter is
-brought on, long before that season would have commenced in the regular
-course of nature.
-
-
-
-
- IMPUISSANCE, OR IMPOTENCE.
-
-
-UPON pursuing the consideration of the following infirmities of the
-Reproductive System, a few prefatory observations are requisite.
-Perhaps of all the physical powers possessed by man, few are subject
-to so much abuse as the procreative organs—certainly none are more
-required to be, in a hygiænic point of view, held in a sounder
-condition of health, for upon their tone and perfect structure hinge
-the happiness and perpetuation of the human race. In this age of luxury
-and sensuality, however, the world seems untiringly hunting after, and
-more or less obtaining, sexual gratification. There can be no doubt,
-that a greater amount of this species of sensual enjoyment is indulged
-in before manhood arrives, than can be obtained when man should be
-in his vigor. The writer is not insensible to the many alluring
-publications upon this topic, the end and aim of which are not,
-honestly, to afford relief to the diffident sufferer, but to add to
-his misery, by draining his pocket. Of legitimate publications, alas!
-there are but few, for it appears that qualified medical men have, from
-some prudish or other such notions, kept aloof from entering the lists.
-Were it otherwise, many an unfortunate victim might be spared from the
-avaricious clutch of the empiric; but invalids, from such a knowledge
-of the absence of fair and honorable references, are obliged to seek
-(or despair of) relief from the unworthy class in question. How far the
-tendency of the present work may lead to a reformation, is left for the
-reader to decide. The novelty of the present compendium may subject
-it to invidious suspicion; the author but invites comparison, feeling
-convinced that the contents best bespeak its legitimacy and usefulness.
-
-“Increase and multiply,” is the scriptural text. “Plant trees and
-beget offspring,” is the apothegm of the Magi. The perpetuation of
-the species being, with the great Designer of the universe, an object
-of the first interest, all living beings are mentally and physically
-formed with a view to this great end.
-
-In the human species, procreation is effected by a congress of the two
-sexes, and a variety of organs are provided, upon whose condition the
-due performance of coition mainly depends. The male is destined to
-furnish a peculiar fecundating secretion, and is accordingly provided
-with glands to prepare such fluid, and a conduit to convey the same
-to its proper destination; while the female, being the recipient,
-possesses an organ capable of effecting a mysterious yet specific
-change upon the fluid so deposited: a failure, therefore, in any of the
-structures alluded to, is followed by impotence or sterility.
-
-Impotence implies the incapability of sexual intercourse; sterility,
-the inability of procreation; the causes of either of which may be
-deemed organic, functional, or moral. The following section will be
-devoted, firstly, to its consideration in its relation to the male.
-
-
- SECTION I.
-
- IMPOTENCE AND STERILITY OF THE MALE.
-
-WHERE the hindrance to cohabitation arises from organic defect,
-congenital malformation, or diseases of some of the organs of
-generation, the disqualification may generally be considered absolute
-or irremediable. It is remarkable, however, to what extent mutilation
-or disease may occur, without total annihilation of the procreative
-powers; the smallest remnant of the penis, for instance, capable of
-entering the vagina, provided the testes be sound, being sufficient for
-impregnation.
-
-A learned lecturer on medical jurisprudence gives it as his opinion,
-that the smallest quantity of seminal discharge, deposited in the lower
-part of the female generative apparatus, _provided the female be apt to
-conceive_, is sufficient for impregnation: and it is astonishing how
-_minute_ a quantity of this plastic agent is necessary for that purpose
-in some species of creatures. Spallanzani took three grains by weight
-of the male fluid of the frog, and mixing it with seventeen ounces of
-water, found that impregnation of the eggs was produced by as much of
-this exceedingly weak mixture as would adhere to the point of a fine
-needle.
-
-Although, in human formation, it is not essentially necessary that the
-male material should be deposited in the upper part of the vagina of
-the female, yet there is little doubt that the deeper entrance of this
-substance conduces to impregnation.[13]
-
-Malformation of the genital organs has already been stated as a cause
-of impotence. Such cases furnish much uneasiness at first, but are
-easily relievable. I have met with many instances, where consummation
-has been prolonged from months to years, which a slight knowledge of
-the functions of the parturient organs might have relieved in a few
-days; and with respect to the latter, it may be pardonable to mention
-that, as the husband should be the first to instruct his companion in
-what is to be expected, but little disappointment will be experienced,
-except with the vicious and unworthy.
-
-There is room for much ingenuity in these matters; and as marriages are
-made for better or worse, there exist powerful inducements to resort to
-the contrivances of the ingenious and humane.
-
-The following case of malformation fell under my own observation; the
-adjoining delineation is a true picture of the circumstance.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The penis, _b_, at its under surface, was adherent, from birth, to the
-scrotum _c_, consequently, when erection ensued, it presented the form
-of a half circle; the urine escaped near the root of the penis, _a_.
-The penis itself was impervious, but sensible to the amative passion.
-The gentleman submitted to a division of the fold which united the
-penis with the scrotum, which former, on being thus released, assumed
-its proper position; sexual congress was thereby attainable, and during
-erection the orifice of the urethra was drawn sufficiently up to allow
-of the ejection of the semen into the vagina. Of the ultimate result I
-have yet to hear.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-It may appear almost incredible, that the sketch here presented can
-be a true one of the penis and testicles of a young man upward of 19
-years of age. No less was it a source of wonderment to myself than it
-may afford a doubt to others. I carefully examined the individual, and
-saw him urinate; the stream was certainly small, but surprisingly large
-for so minute an organization. He was quite unconscious of amative
-feeling; the testicles were distinctly perceptible by the finger, but
-they certainly were not larger than cherry kernels. The young man, in
-other respects, preserved the male attributes; he had a slight beard,
-and his voice, though not powerful, was by no means effeminate. I had
-several interviews with him, and then lost sight of him.
-
-I have elsewhere portrayed a relaxed state of the testicle, called
-varicocele: the accompanying draught exhibits the same in an aggravated
-form. The patient possessed but little amative power, and had also
-a thickened condition of the prepuce, which produced a perfect
-_phymosis_. The case, however, under treatment became considerably
-relieved. The phymosis required a division of the prepuce, an operation
-productive but of little and momentary pain, or rather twinge, and
-healed in a few days. Children are sometimes not procreated for want
-of sufficient erectile and consequently penetrative power of the male
-organ. Much and often needless misery results from this infirmity.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The loss of erectile power is occasioned through more causes than one.
-Erection ensues independently of the will or imagination, as instanced
-on awaking in the morning—the cause is most probably a distended
-bladder; the phenomena may be a sympathetic irritability of the muscles
-of the perinœum, especially the erectores; there is a general pelvic
-disturbance, the nervous excitement is increased, and the rush of blood
-(obedient to that excitement) is sent to the penis: such, I believe,
-is the sympathy between all these structures. The will exercises the
-same, and the results of the imagination do not materially differ;
-consequently, where the mind fails in producing these effects, local
-excitants may be found to supply its office hence the usefulness of art
-in combating the eccentricities of nature. The mere handling of the
-testicles kindles desire, and in like manner, stimulatives applied over
-the scrotum generate amative heat.
-
-A curve of the penis is sometimes an obstruction to connubial
-intercourse; this arises from adhesion or obliteration of the cells of
-the _Corpora Cavernosa_ on one side only, preventing the uniform flow
-of blood into those structures, and consequently the equal distention
-of the penis. The curve is of course laterally, and occasions in the
-act of coition pain to both parties, or the power of penetration is
-insufficient. Occasionally this malformation is only temporary, and
-consequently remediable.
-
-_Franck_ gives an instance in which so considerable a portion of the
-penis had been carried away by a musket-shot, that when the wound
-healed, the organ remained curved, and yet proved adequate to the
-performance of its functions.
-
-An opinion formerly prevailed, that the existence of the testes was
-unnecessary for effective copulation; but that is no longer a point
-of dispute: their absence, whether natural or artificial, invariably
-rendering the invalid unfruitful. It is not, however, to be inferred,
-that a person is impotent in whom no testicles are discovered in
-the scrotum, instances occurring where they do not descend from the
-abdomen (their embryotic abode) through the whole period of life. One
-testicle, provided it be sound, is sufficient for procreation. Complete
-extirpation of the testes, although destructive of procreative powers,
-does not extinguish venereal desire. Where the genital organs exist,
-but are malformed, or pathologically altered, their virility may be
-nullified.
-
-The most frequent malformation is in the _urethra_, which sometimes
-opens in the perinœum—the part marked _a_ in the annexed cut; at
-others, on the dorsum of the penis, and not unfrequently under its
-surface: so long, however, as the orifice opens in that portion of the
-penis which enters the vagina, so that the _emissio seminis_ may be
-therein deposited, impregnation may and will take place; and even in
-cases where artificial means have been employed to convey the fluid.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-A contracted state of the prepuce, its adherence to the glans, or that
-condition of it termed phymosis, form impediments to the emission of
-the semen which can only be removed by an operation; and if that be
-neglected, the evil continues through life.
-
-Among the diseases which occasion sterility in the male, those
-affecting the penis and those incident to the testicles may be
-enumerated. With regard to the former, there often exists an excess
-or deficiency of muscular or nervous energy, inducing _priapism_
-or permanent erection in some instances, or paralysis or permanent
-flaccidity in others. In _priapism_, the erection is so vigorous,
-and all the parts so distended, that the semen can not pass into the
-urethra; while in _paralysis_, from some inaptitude of nervous or
-muscular powers of the genital organs, the _corpora cavernosa_ receive
-but a limited supply of blood, insufficient to create erection, or
-provoke a seminal discharge.
-
-Strictures of the urethra are among the barriers to sexual intercourse;
-but happily, only in extreme cases, where the urethra is all but
-closed, so as to oppose the passing of the finest bougie.
-
-The testicle is subject to a variety of diseases, wherein such a
-relaxation or obliteration of its structure ensues, that the seminal
-fluid is no longer formed: and where both testicles are alike affected,
-sexual desire is most usually wholly extinguished—the smallest portion,
-however, of either gland remaining uninjured, may still be capable of
-secreting semen sufficient for impregnation.
-
-Impotence may follow accidents to the testicles, such as produced by a
-bruise; or even a testicle, which shall have become inflamed from clap,
-shall become so chronically hardened as to be useless. Bruising the
-testicles was the mode adopted by the oriental courts for destroying
-masculine efficiency in the attendants of the harem.
-
-There are certain conditions of health in which, although the genital
-organs may be perfect, yet, owing to some constitutional frigidity,
-there is an incapability of erection. The offspring of too young, or
-very aged, infirm persons, or of those worn down by debauchery, are but
-too common instances.
-
-The appearance of persons of this temperament is thus described by
-a French writer: “The hair is white, fair, and thin; no beard, and
-countenance pale; flesh soft and without hair; voice clear, sharp,
-and piercing; the eyes sorrowful and dull; the form round, shoulders
-narrow; perspiration acid; testicle small, withered, pendulous, and
-soft; the spermatic chords small; the scrotum flaccid; the gland of the
-testicle insensible; no capillary growth on the pubis; a moral apathy;
-pusillanimity and fear on the least occasion.”
-
-The most frequent cause of impotence, at that period of existence when
-man should be in the zenith of his procreative power, is in a general
-weakness of the generative organs, induced by too early an indulgence
-in coition, the pernicious and demoralizing crime of masturbation, or
-the abuse of venereal pleasures. In these cases, erection will not
-take place, or but feebly, although the mind be highly excited by
-lascivious ideas. The erector muscles are paralysed from over-use,
-and the semen, if any is secreted, from the lax and withered state of
-the testes, is clear, serous, without consistence, and consequently
-deficient of prolific virtue. Sometimes there is a want of consent
-between the immediate and secondary organs of generation; thus, the
-penis acts without the testicles, and becomes erected when there is no
-semen to be evacuated; while the testicles secrete too quickly, and an
-evacuation takes place without any erection of the penis; the latter
-disappointment is of extensive prevalence.
-
-Impotence is sometimes occasioned by particular diseases during their
-continuance, such as nervous and malignant fevers; while, strange to
-relate, an opposite effect is sometimes produced by other diseases,
-such as gout and rheumatism, hæmorrhoids, &c.; and instances are on
-record, that others produce such a change in the constitution, that an
-impotent man may find himself cured of his impotency on their cessation.
-
-Of all the functions of the animal economy, none are so subservient to
-nervous influence as those of generation, which, when the organs are
-perfect, and respond not to the natural application of them, the cause
-may be classed among those impediments termed moral.
-
-As the parts of generation are not necessary for the existence or
-support of the individual, but have a reference to something else in
-which the mind has a principal concern; so a complete action in those
-parts can not take place without a perfect harmony of body and mind,
-that is, there must be both a power of body and disposition of mind;
-for the mind is subject to a thousand caprices which affect the action
-of these parts.
-
-As these cases do not arise from real inability, they are to be
-carefully distinguished from such as do; and, perhaps, the only way
-to distinguish them, is to examine into the state of mind respecting
-this act. So trifling often is the circumstance which shall produce
-this inability depending on the mind, that the very desire to please
-shall have that effect, as in making the woman the sole object to be
-gratified.
-
-
- SECTION II.
-
- IMPOTENCE AND STERILITY OF THE FEMALE.
-
-A FEMALE may be impotent, and not sterile; and sterile, but not
-impotent. Impotence can only exist in the female, when there is an
-impervious vagina; but even this condition does not necessarily infer
-sterility, many cases being recorded, where the semen, by some means
-or another, through an aperture that would not admit a fine probe, has
-found entrance to the vagina and occasioned impregnation.
-
-Impotence may arise from a malformed pelvis, the absence of a vagina,
-adhesion of its labia, unruptured hymen, or one of such strength as
-to resist intromission. In the two former instances, sterility is
-irremediable; but art, and indeed nature, may overcome the latter
-impediments.
-
-Were these pages intended only for the surgery, instead of the
-public, the annexed wood cuts would be unnecessary, medical men being
-conversant with the inconvenience in question; but all the world not
-being blessed with similar anatomical information, the sketches are
-presented. The upper one represents the relative situation of the
-female urethra (1), and the contracted orifice of the hymen (2).
-In the cases of hardened obstruction, where the hymen assumes an
-almost cartilaginous texture, the attempts at marital consummation
-are fruitless, and often give rise to severe local inflammation. The
-infirmity, on the other hand, is easily and painlessly removable by
-surgical skill. The lower drawing represents a hymen with two apertures
-(2), which, if broken down by violence, leaves a troublesome lacerated
-wound. The surgeon’s assistance is indispensable.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Where hermaphroditism exists, the sex is usually more masculine; it is
-a vulgar error to suppose that the two sexes exist entire, and that
-they are capable of giving and receiving the offices of married life.
-The present sketch is merely introduced to show the more frequent
-malformation.
-
-The penis exists, but has no urethra: below is an opening resembling
-the vagina of the female, which is but of short length, at the bottom
-of which (in fact, the perineum) the urethra opens. The testicles are
-entire, and the individual from whom the draft was taken possessed
-somewhat the desire of the male, without the capability of penetration:
-the penis, when excited, from its attachment to the lips of the
-imaginary vagina, and also from its contracted form, presenting merely
-a kind of bulbous tumor. Even where hermaphroditism more closely
-partakes of the female, conception never takes place; hence all such
-parties are sterile.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Nature, as if to atone for denying to some the delights of maternity,
-has been occasionally doubly bountiful to others. The annexed drawing
-exhibits a section of a double uterus. Cases are on record, where both
-have been impregnated.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-In the instance of a deceased married female, that fell under my
-observation, the uterus or womb presented the following appearances:
-The usual cavity was discoverable, but it was filled with a
-_cheesy_-like substance, and also there were some ulcered-looking
-caverns filled with the same material. This female, while living,
-endured continued pains in the uterine region, was insensible to
-marital physical enjoyments, sterile, although a wife several years,
-and the constant sufferer from a vaginal discharge. Her death was
-consequent upon a severe cold that ended in consumption.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-Leucorrhœa is often attended with barrenness; at all events, it is very
-debilitating, and thus impedes conception. A notion once prevailed,
-that women who did not menstruate could not conceive; it has since been
-disproved, except in those instances where menstruation never occurred:
-a single monthly discharge indicates an aptitude for conception. It is
-observed that barren women have very small breasts. Women who are very
-fat are often barren, for their corpulence either exists as a mark of
-weakness of the system, or it depends upon a want of activity in the
-ovaria: thus spayed or castrated animals generally become fat. The same
-remarks apply to the male kind, who are outrageously corpulent. There
-are many other peculiarities in matrimonial life, fertile subjects
-for speculation; such as, for instance, the lapse of time that often
-occurs after marriage before conception takes place, and the space
-between each act of gestation; the solution of which may be, that these
-occurrences are modified by certain aptitudes, dispositions, state of
-health, &c.; the same may explain why persons have lived together for
-years in unfruitful matrimony, and who yet, after being divorced, and
-marrying others, have both had children.
-
-It is not always that the most healthy women are more favorable to
-conception than the spare and feeble. High feeding and starvation
-are alike occasionally inimical to breeding. The regularity of the
-“courses” appears principally essential to secure impregnation; and the
-intercourse is generally held likely to be the more fruitful that takes
-place early after that customary relief.
-
-Women in health are capable of bearing children, on an average, for
-a period of thirty years, from the age of fifteen to forty-five;
-but their incapacity to procreate does not deny them the sexual
-gratification, it being well accredited, that women upward of seventy
-years of age have been known, who have lost but little of the amative
-inclination and enjoyment which they possessed in their early days. Men
-certainly possess their procreative power to a longer period, it being
-common for men to become fathers at eighty, ninety, and one hundred—old
-Parr becoming a parent at the age of one hundred and thirty. Women
-rarely fall pregnant beyond fifty.
-
-Some females endure intense pain during coition, so as to occasion
-fainting or great exhaustion. Such suffering is usually traceable to
-internal ailments—such as _piles_, _fistulous_ _openings_ between
-the _rectum_ and _vagina_, _ulcerated wombs_, _vaginal tumors or
-abscesses_. Cases continually present themselves, where, on the removal
-of the cause, the effect is cured.
-
-The number of children that women have individually given birth to is
-very variable. It is attested, among a collection of facts of this
-nature, that one female gave birth to eighteen children at six births;
-another, forty-four children in all, thirty in the first marriage
-and fourteen in the second; and in a still more extraordinary case,
-fifty-three children in all, in one marriage, eighteen times single
-births, five times twins, four times triplets, once six, and once
-seven.[14] Men have been known to beget seventy or eighty children in
-two or more marriages. With regard to the average proportion of male
-and female births, it appears that the males predominate about four
-or five only in one hundred. The average number of children in each
-marriage is, in England, from five to seven.
-
-To a continual irritability of temper among females may be ascribed
-infertility. Independently of ever fostering domestic disquietude, it
-produces thinness and feeble health; and, where pregnancy does ensue,
-it most frequently provokes miscarriages, or leads to the birth of
-ill-conditioned and puny offspring.
-
-Perhaps one of the most indispensable and endearing qualifications of
-the feminine character is an amiable temper. Cold and callous must be
-the man who does not prize the meek and gentle spirit of a confiding
-woman. Her lips may not be sculptured in the line of perfect beauty,
-her eye may not roll in dazzling splendor, but if the native smile be
-ever ready to welcome, and the glance fraught with clinging devotion,
-or shrinking sensibility, she must be prized far above gold or rubies.
-A few moments of enduring silence would often prevent years of discord
-and unhappiness; but the keen retort and waspish argument too often
-break the chain of affection, link by link, and leave the heart with no
-tie to hold it but a cold and frigid duty.
-
-
- SECTION III.
-
- TREATMENT OF IMPOTENCE.
-
-IN venturing upon this part of the subject, it will be as well, first,
-to distinguish those cases that are curable from those that admit of no
-relief. Among the latter may be enumerated all those arising from an
-original or accidental defect in the organs of generation. Where, also,
-old age is the cause, little is to be done: medicines are of no avail,
-and temporary stimuli not unfrequently worse.
-
-That certain medicaments, aliments, and so forth, do possess an
-_aphrodisiac_ power, is not to be denied; but when adopted by those
-weak beings, whose bodies are either worn out by age or excess, and who
-pin their faith to such restoratives, the little remaining sensibility
-in their frames, the source of life and energy, can not sustain the
-shock of reaction; and the result is, total annihilation or death.
-
-From what has already been stated, it will be perceived, that the mind
-exercises no inconsiderable influence over the functions of the organs
-of generation: and as the state of the mind depends upon the particular
-circumstances under which it may be placed, any attempt to establish a
-code of instructions, applicable to every instance in which a sportive
-fancy, or disturbed imagination, constituted the prevailing cause,
-would be abortive, and might be considered as pandering to a vicious
-and depraved appetite, whereas the object of this treatise is only to
-encourage the diffident, to assist the afflicted, and render a service
-to those legitimately deserving it.
-
-As excess in sexual indulgence impairs the generative power, no less
-injurious may entire abstinence be considered. The due exercise of an
-organ tends to its perfection, as the neglect or misuse of it, to its
-impairment. Besides, there is not any wonderful virtue in abstaining
-from the proper use of the sexes. Why, in the name of morality, were
-such powerful impulses and desires bestowed upon us? Why were such
-wonderful organizations given to us, if they were not originally
-designed to be used by every one who is possessed of them? Society,
-in its present form, is not perhaps constructed with a philosophical
-regard to our own natural instincts, and our own original rights.
-
-Among the causes that induce _impuissance_, or that distressing
-condition known under the cognomen of _nervous debility_, there is
-not one more reprehensive than the unworthy and pernicious practice
-of self-abuse. It is much to be regretted, that some medical writer,
-of talent and estimation in society, has not turned his attention to
-the subject, and given the influence of his name in denouncing to the
-world the misery and devastation which are the unerring consequences of
-this sordid and solitary vice. It is indeed an unpleasant and thankless
-task; and there probably exists in most minds, an unwillingness to
-enter upon a subject in which there is so much difficulty in selecting
-language sufficiently appropriate to exhibit the folly in its true
-colors, without offending the ears of the chaste and virtuous.
-
-But a question of such paramount importance should not be sacrificed
-to any false and prudish notions of delicacy; I shall therefore offer
-such observations, as I may think calculated to check the progress
-of a vice, that has done more to demoralize the human mind than the
-whole catalogue of existing causes besides. It may be deemed an
-exaggeration, when it is stated that full three fourths of the insane
-owe their malady to the effects of masturbation: but the assertion is
-corroborated by one of the first writers on medical jurisprudence,
-and is fully borne out by the daily experience of proprietors of
-lunatic asylums. The practice of self-abuse usually has its origin
-in boarding-schools, and other places where young persons congregate
-in numbers; and there are few of us who may have observed the vice
-practised, although it may be unpleasant to avow as much, that could
-resist the contamination.
-
- “One sickly sheep infects the flock,
- And poisons all the rest.”
-
-And thus it is, though ninety-and-nine be pure and spotless as
-the driven snow, if the hundredth be immoral, the poison is soon
-disseminated, and the whole flock become initiated into a vice, which,
-if indulged in, will blast their intellectual faculties, and probably
-consign them as outcasts of society; rendering them slavering idiots,
-or the inmates of a lunatic asylum. It is not only in private schools
-that this sin rages, our public foundations and colleges are not exempt
-from it. The heads of our universities are particularly scrupulous
-in driving from their neighborhood the frail fair, lest they should
-contaminate the votaries of learning; while a vice far more degrading
-in its practice, and infinitely more baneful in its effects, rages
-within the very sanctuaries of classic lore. Many a brilliant genius
-has sunk into fatuity beneath its degrading influence. Loss of memory,
-idiocy, blindness,[15] total impotence, nervous debility, paralysis,
-strangury, &c., are among the unerring consequences of an indulgence
-in this criminal passion. I need not bring a greater proof of the dire
-effects of an indulgence in the practice of masturbation, than the
-deplorable state of mind to which it reduced one of our greatest poets.
-
-The treatment of this delusive and mentally annihilating propensity,
-falls equally within the province of the philosopher and the physician.
-Without a total abandonment of the practice, the case is hopeless; and
-he to whom the consequences shall have been portrayed and heeds them
-not, is unworthy of our sympathy, but deserves the evils he entails
-upon himself.
-
-Now, as the consequences of all criminalities continue to ensue so
-long as the provocative be kept up, it is very evident that, as a
-first step toward the restoration of order and health, the cause
-must be removed or withheld. The mere will or resolution is seldom
-sufficient: virtue, like vice, has its allurements, and those belonging
-to the former must be called into requisition as antagonists to the
-snares of the latter. Physic can not check bad principles, or bad
-indulgences. No method is or can be superior to that full employment
-of the mental faculties on noble and intellectual subjects, on objects
-worthy the high ends for which Nature has adapted them. And though
-the difficulty will be great in inducing new and good habits, to the
-exclusion of such as are unworthy and degrading, yet the effectual
-accomplishment of such a resolution is not of uncommon occurrence; and
-the sufferer may be placed under circumstances where good habits may
-be more frequently called into action naturally, to the exclusion of
-vicious propensities. The time should be well filled, so as to leave
-no room for flying to the various usual sources of amusement that fill
-up the life of the thoughtless and gay. Every hour and every minute
-should be provided for, so as to exclude the admission of idleness and
-sloth, the forerunners of mental and bodily disease. Studies connected
-with education should be encouraged. Modern languages have a great
-claim on the consideration of all who are engaged in business to any
-extent, and are of incalculable use after they have fulfilled the
-immediate end for which their culture is here recommended. The various
-sciences bearing more or less on the pursuits and employments of
-every man, are earnestly recommended to the choice of the unfortunate
-victim of sensuality. Geology and botany would call him into the
-healthful fields, or fill up his time by his fireside, in studying the
-many excellent works on those subjects: the still higher utility of
-chemistry, as being made of practical use in almost every business,
-and demonstrating the else unintelligible phenomena of a multitude of
-natural processes and changes, may be held up as another inducement to
-call forth his best energies.
-
-Travelling, to those who can afford the expense or the time, is one of
-the best means of conquering this baneful habit. The numerous objects
-thereby presented to the eye of the invalid in the manners, government,
-and productions of art and nature, of the countries he visits, are an
-incessant source of pleasing and useful excitement, and can not fail,
-especially if the traveller be accompanied by an intelligent and moral
-friend, to weaken and eradicate the bad impressions of the past.
-
-To diverge, and at the same time to conclude this part of the
-subject, I have only to offer a few remarks relative to the medical
-and therapeutic treatment of those cases of impuissance, that
-age, disorganization, and total incapacity, do not exclude from
-consideration. I have already expressed my belief that generative
-imbecility is consecutive to general debility; hence, whatever tends
-to improve the latter, tends also to remove the former. The diet,
-therefore, should be full and generous, with a liberal proportion of
-spices; but all stimulating liquids, such as wine, brandy, and the
-rest, should be avoided.
-
-Bathing, in its various forms, constitutes no unimportant feature in
-the treatment; the cold plunging, the tepid shower, the douche, the
-warm and the vapor baths, possess their several influences. The various
-medicines that come under the denomination of aphrodisiacs, are not
-wholly uninfluential, such as stomachics, aromatics, gums and balsams,
-oils, musk, opium, cantharides, strychnine, and others; but as their
-administration can only be permitted under professional direction,
-no real utility can follow any specification or formulary of their
-proportions.
-
-
-
-
- OTHER FORMS OF SEXUAL DEBILITY.
-
-
-INVOLUNTARY seminal emissions are oftentimes very serious, distressing,
-and intractable. They may be produced in two ways—from continence, or
-by a high degree of morbid irritability or weakness. The latter is by
-far the more frequent; for the treatment of the former is obvious,
-and generally effectual. The difference between seminal discharges in
-persons of full health, and those morbidly weak, is very opposite: in
-the former it is consequent upon an erection, followed by an act of
-coitus; while in the latter both are absent. The general debility in
-the generative system, inseparable from morbid irritability, occasions
-both a failure in the erection of the penis, and an inability to
-retain the fluid in the secreting organs. There is no doubt that this
-disposition to seminal emissions, conjoined as it generally is with
-more or less deficiency of the _vis virilis_, is too often owing to the
-habit of self-abuse in early age. The testes usually wither in these
-cases, and the patient becomes nearly, if not entirely, impuissant.
-Sometimes these cases are attended by an excessive irritability of
-the bladder, accompanied by pains in the loins, kidneys, &c. Their
-treatment consists in taking nutritious and digestible food, to impart
-strength and invigorate the constitution. Stimulants are at the same
-time to be carefully avoided, except where great languor and lassitude
-prevail. Abstemiousness in liquids is to be enjoined. Habits of a
-relaxing nature should be avoided; the patient, instead of sleeping
-on a soft, downy bed, should lie on a firm mattress; the air of the
-room should be preserved at a moderate temperature, and but few hours
-should be allotted to sleep; he should pass much of his time in the
-open air in a cool atmosphere; taking frequent and moderate exercise,
-so that it does not occasion fatigue. Cold bathing is a very important
-and essential part of the treatment to be observed; the daily use of
-the _bidet_, or the frequent application of a towel, dipped in cold
-water, to the testes, applied twice or thrice a day, or the _douche
-bath_, will be found of much service. To prescribe formulæ for the
-various temperaments subject to this affection would be to transcribe
-all the tonics from the pharmacopœia: they are severally useful, but
-the various preparations of iron surpass all others. During this
-treatment the state of the mind should not be neglected: no lascivious
-idea should be for a moment encouraged, nor should the imagination be
-permitted to wander over the works of fiction or romance in any way
-connected with matters of love.
-
-It not unfrequently happens that patients affected with these
-complaints are apt to despond, and become miserably depressed in
-spirits; to remove which, every recreation should be encouraged to
-prevent them pondering over their own situation, and, if possible,
-to divert the mind from gloomy ideas: lively and agreeable company
-should be courted; theatres, concerts, or any other rational amusement
-consonant with the principles of the patient, should be visited or
-pursued, and by an uninterrupted perseverance in this mode of treatment
-for a sufficient length of time, I have seen the most beneficial
-results arise. The great art and difficulty in treating these cases
-consist in giving tonics to a certain extent and no further—avoiding
-excess, whereby we stimulate and produce fever; or depletion, and
-induce debility. Early hours, fresh air, exercise, attention to diet,
-the shower bath, topical application of cold, with properly regulated
-sexual intercourse, are rarely ineffectual in curing the disease.
-
-I could narrate many instances wherein the sexual desire declined on
-the intervention of ordinary illness; any powerful mental solicitude
-will suffice, but such a cause is commonly remediable. Where the
-cause is traceable to excesses and pernicious indulgences, if not
-accompanied by disorganization, hope should not be abandoned; but the
-patient should not cling to, or hang his reliance upon, hole-and-corner
-speculators, or their advertised specifics. He should consult men
-legitimately engaged in the profession, in which, perhaps, more talent
-and honor are concentrated, than in any other department of science.
-
-
-
-
- ON PILES OR HŒMORRHOIDS.
-
-
-AS this disease is generally considered to be of a delicate nature,
-and one about which the afflicted are unwilling to speak, we shall
-say a few words on them. Piles constitute a disease that may be very
-slow or very rapid in its progress. The patient complains of an
-occasional itching or soreness at the rectum after an evacuation, more
-particularly if subject to constipation, or if he be an irregular
-liver: when, after a while, he will be surprised on discovering,
-subsequent to some straining effort, a knot of elastic but irregularly
-formed tumors, of a size varying from a hazel-nut to a horse-bean,
-springing out apparently from the rectum, that in a few days, if they
-continue, will become sore, and probably be attended with a discharge
-of blood.
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. Rectum.
-
- 2. Hœmorrhoids.
-
- 3. Perineum.]
-
-Another patient will experience similar symptoms, as regards the pain,
-swelling, and discharge of blood, except that they will be increased
-in severity, and be more transitory in their appearance and stay.
-Upon examination, a perceptible difference will be discovered. In the
-former instance the tumors will be seen to proceed from the outer edge
-of the rectum, and will be found to be covered with the common skin.
-Professional men designate this form of the disease “External Piles.”
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. Inner part of Rectum.
-
- 2. Orifice of Rectum.
-
- 3. External Piles.
-
- 4. Internal Piles.]
-
-In the latter, the tumors are, as it were, squeezed out of the rectum,
-and swell in a very short space of time to an enormous size. They
-are of a much more vivid blood-red color, and will be found to be
-covered only by the lining membrane of the lower gut. These are called
-“Internal Piles.”
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. Inner part of Rectum.
-
- 2. Orifice of Rectum.
-
- 3. Internal Piles.]
-
-Now piles are nothing more nor less than _dilated veins_, like varicose
-veins in the leg or any other part. The office of veins is to receive
-the surplus blood of the arteries, after having parted with that
-necessary supply for the nourishment of every structure they are
-severally distributed to, and to convey it back to the circulating
-organ, the heart—and the mesenteric hœmorrhoidal veins, from their
-dependant and confined position, the circulation in and above them
-being liable to so many interruptions from the frequent hardened state
-of the fæces in the rectum, become distended with blood, which acting
-really like a wedge, dilates them in time to the size we meet them.
-On the removal of the cause, the blood flows on, and the swelling
-subsides, and the patient feels no further inconvenience until a
-recurrence of the pressure. After repeated attacks, the veins become
-inflamed, and lymph, a sort of defensive mucus, is “thrown out” on the
-cellular membrane covering the veins, and becomes organized into an
-indurated texture, which increases with each attack of inflammation,
-and at last gives them that fleshy appearance which resembles a
-specific growth (see annexed cut).
-
-[Illustration]
-
-The distinction between External and Internal Piles is as follows: In
-both instances the same veins are diseased. In external piles, the
-lowermost portion of the hœmorrhoidal veins are dilated, and are thrust
-by the outer side of the rectum, carrying before them the common skin,
-which dilates and constitutes the external coat of the piles. The
-rectum is a portion of gut of four or five inches in length, and of
-nearly a uniform width; the lower end, constituting the orifice, is, as
-it were, tied round with a contracting and yielding band of muscular
-fibres, forming a muscle called the _Sphincter Ani_. It is a muscle
-of great power, and, from its connexion with the neighboring muscles
-of similar strength, helps to afford that support to the contents of
-the pelvis, that otherwise would descend, and be always forming a
-projecting tumor. External piles consist, then, of a protrusion of the
-hœmorrhoidal vein or veins between the cellular union of the sphincter
-with other muscles, constituting, in fact, a hernia or rupture in the
-perinœum. Internal piles is that condition of the hœmorrhoidal veins,
-where, from their dilatation, they become protruded with the fæces,
-when, from the contraction of the sphincter acting like a ligature,
-they can not regain their situation until emptied of their contents.
-Inflammation soon ensues, and the various changes I have and shall
-hereafter consider take place.
-
-Having stated the cause of piles, namely, pressure on, and thereby
-prevention of, the circulation of the blood through the hœmorrhoidal
-veins, it follows that persons mostly annoyed with constipation must be
-the most likely to be afflicted with piles; hence, free and intemperate
-livers, great wine-bibbers, feeble and relaxed constitutions, those,
-again, who take little exercise, and pregnant women, and women who have
-borne many children, seldom escape them. It is rarely that piles attack
-people in the lower class of life, and those who have to work hard for
-their livelihood and are much in the open air, which accounts for the
-prevalence of this disease in the upper ranks of society. The treatment
-of piles is very simple, if proceeded with at the commencement of the
-complaint, the grand object being to prevent constipation. An excellent
-adjunct to the cure of incipient piles, is the warm bath. Its tendency
-to overcome local congestions, and thereby equalize the circulation of
-the blood, is well known. The best medicine a hœmorrhoidal patient can
-take is Turkey rhubarb, to be chewed freely, or castor oil, in doses of
-one or two teaspoonfuls every morning, or some mild electuary, which
-should be continued until the piles subside.
-
-The diet during this treatment should be temperate and laxative. Fruits
-should be used freely, and also coarse bread, rye and Indian mush and
-molasses; wine and exhilarating stimulants being avoided, and, where
-admissible, as much out-door exercise taken as possible. An excellent
-plan is also to inject half a pint or more of cold pump or spring water
-up the rectum every morning, and suffer it to remain for twenty or
-thirty minutes, if possible. Where the piles have been of several days’
-continuance, and are very much swollen, puncturing them with a needle,
-and so relieving the tension by evacuating, or at least diminishing
-their contents, that the obstruction shall be overcome, is serviceable.
-After this, pledgets of lint dipped in cold water, the patient
-preserving the horizontal posture, may be applied, or an astringent
-lotion may be used.
-
-Where there is much swelling and inflammation, leeches applied to the
-neighboring parts will afford relief. It is impolitic, although some
-surgeons recommend it, to apply leeches on the tumor, as the bites
-are oftentimes very difficult to heal. Where the piles will admit of
-it, attempts should be made to empty them, and press them to their
-places, after which a pad may be worn to prevent their descent. In the
-commencement of the disease, where there is much heat and itching, a
-mild and astringent ointment will prove of considerable utility, and a
-wash of powdered opium, dissolved in flaxseed tea, will relieve pain
-and soreness.
-
-A very excellent and practical method in the treatment of piles (the
-internal I am now speaking of) is to deposite a pear-shaped bougie or
-pessary in the rectum, and suffer it to remain as long as possible. The
-wearing of bougies gives no pain or even uneasiness, and the patient
-may pursue his or her ordinary occupation without hinderance: the
-bougie should be worn from one to several weeks. It affords constant
-pressure against and support to the dilated veins, and enables them to
-regain their tone and strength; and I have known numerous instances
-where a lasting cure has been effected. One of the most alarming
-consequences of piles is hœmorrhage or bleeding; and it is really
-wonderful what an extensive loss of that fluid a patient can sustain.
-Day after day, and week after week, have I known instances of constant
-bleeding from internal piles, by which the constitution of the patient
-has been almost broken up. This symptom mostly prevails with females,
-nor is it limited, although more prevalent, to those who are pregnant.
-There is naturally a strong objection on the part of a delicate and
-susceptible female to submit to a professional examination, and
-consequently it is rarely done, until the urgent necessity of the case,
-lest death should ensue, induces the patient to consult her medical
-adviser, that he becomes acquainted with the real nature of the case.
-Where there is ulceration of the piles, and they are very numerous,
-and the bleeding frequent and profuse, the only effectual cure is
-their removal. Where the operation is objected to, the next method is
-to employ astringent enemata, which must be regulated by the medical
-attendant.
-
-The celebrated Weir’s balsam (248½ Grand Street) has the credit of
-effecting miraculous cures. It is a medicine of deserved repute, and
-ranks high with professional men. Pitch pills have been extolled.
-
-Now, where piles, both external and internal, do not yield to the
-means suggested, or the patient may not think proper to avail himself
-of them, the next best step is their removal; and this is done either
-by excision or by ligature. Both processes are safe in the hands of a
-medical man, and are neither attended with any pain nor suffering worth
-notice.
-
-Among the annoyances incident to the rectum, is an occasional
-preternatural contraction of the sphincter muscle. It is generally the
-consequence of local irritation set up by purgatives, by which the
-orifice becomes sore and excoriated, which, if not timely relieved,
-ulcerates, constituting cracks also, and in process of time a portion
-sloughs away, and the adjacent edges unite, and thereby diminish the
-calibre of the opening. This disease _may_ be congenital, that is,
-the individual may be born with a contracted or narrow sphincter. The
-treatment, naturally enough, is to dilate the orifice, which is to be
-attempted by the introduction of bougies, after the mode advised for
-the cure of stricture, of which this in reality is a form. The cracks
-of the sphincter are occasionally obstinate to heal; and the ulceration
-will spread within the rectum. When that is the case, the application
-of any stimulative ointment will promote a healthy action.
-
-In inveterate cases division of the sphincter is necessary, which is
-to be done with a scalpel, and the incision should be made from within
-laterally, by which injury to the perineum is avoided. The operation is
-very simple, and by no means painful or dangerous: the cure is perfect.
-Appropriate medical treatment must not be neglected.
-
-
-
-
- PROLAPSUS OF THE RECTUM.
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-THIS disease is often confounded with piles; and as patients are
-generally diffident in submitting to an examination, any extraordinary
-protrusion of piles they denominate a falling of the gut. _Prolapsus
-Ani_ is distinguished from piles by the muscular coats of the intestine
-descending with the mucous membrane, and forming a bag, like a
-pendulum, to the length of many inches; the rectum, in fact, becomes
-everted, as we see the finger part of gloves when turned inside out;
-and the inner membrane being highly vascular, and the vessels in a
-congested state, it assumes a blood-red appearance. The case is here
-well portrayed. Of course the disease occasions much inconvenience and
-if not abated by appropriate treatment, serious consequences ensue.
-Piles are most commonly the cause of prolapsus, when, from the frequent
-and hard straining, the gut at last descends, bringing the piles with
-it, which will be seen winding around the upper part. When that is
-the case, the best treatment is first to apply a ligature round the
-hœmorrhoids, and then return them and the rectum together. Where
-the gut protrudes from relaxation of the sphincter, the treatment
-depends upon local support, for which there are many contrivances.[16]
-Astringent injections should also be used to give tone to the parts,
-and medicines given to render the alvine evacuations less hurtful.
-Children are very liable to prolapsus, but with them a return of the
-fallen gut, and a brisk purgative is all that is needed to prevent a
-repetition, provided proper attention be paid to the bowels afterward—a
-disturbance of the latter being, in most instances, the cause. Where a
-rectum has been for a long time the seat of disease, excrescences are
-apt to arise, resembling warts: they may be removed without much pain,
-and with perfect safety.
-
-
-
-
- STRICTURE OF THE RECTUM.
-
-
-THE rectum, it is presumed, is known to be the lower portion of the
-intestines that leads to the outlet called, in domestic language, the
-fundament. Now some writers assert that the rectum answers the same
-purpose to the bowels generally, as the urethra does to the bladder,
-while others contend that it is a receptacle for the fæces previous
-to their expulsion. We are all sensible, I think, that it must answer
-both purposes; but it is also evident that it is employed more for
-the former than the latter purpose. The moment the rectum is full,
-there is a desire to empty it, which is the best proof of its office;
-but circumstances oftentimes forbid us, for even hours, obeying the
-summons, which establishes its capability as a recipient. Well, the
-rectum, consisting of muscular and membranous coats, similar to the
-urethra, is alike subject to irritation, inflammation, and ulceration,
-and imitatively gives forth morbid and other secretions. The rectum,
-from its situation and office, is very obnoxious to disease; and in
-addition to those already enumerated, it is extremely liable to become
-strictured.
-
-Neither age nor sex are exempt from this strictural change, although
-it more usually selects the grown up and female portion of society.
-It is, generally speaking, the consequence of constipation, or
-the reverse—diarrhœa or dysentery—or it may follow in the wake of
-child-bearing. Piles are a frequent precursor. The ordinary symptoms
-are at first a slight difficulty in voiding the fæces, which assume the
-form of the passage through which they have to pass, presenting at one
-time a flattened tape-like shape, at others a spiral appearance, and
-again the natural form, but of very small diameter.
-
-As the disease advances, the pain increases, upon going to the
-water-closet, and after the act may be observed a small or copious
-discharge of mucus, or blood, from the anus. If the bowels be
-constipated, there is necessarily a great deal of straining during
-fæcation, that soon establishes spots of inflammation that rarely
-resolve, but run on to ulceration; small lodgments then of fæcal
-matter take place in the cellular membrane; and without detailing the
-pathological phenomena, it may suffice to say, that sooner or later
-the whole rectum becomes diseased, and fistula, with its attendant
-miseries, lends a speedy help to close life’s brief pilgrimage.
-
-Patients afflicted with rectal diseases lose flesh rapidly. From
-the constant pain and annoyance they endure, their general health
-gets undermined, the digestion becomes faulty, the countenance flags
-and looks care-worn, hectic fever awaits the break-up of functional
-regularity, and a lingering exhaustion closes the scene.
-
-Stricture of the rectum is a curable disease; but the less complicated,
-the greater are the chances of recovery. The principles of treatment
-bear a near resemblance to those for stricture of the urethra. After
-having ascertained the situation and size of the contraction, a
-proper-sized bougie may be introduced, and suffered to remain as long
-as it occasions no inconvenience. The introduction should be repeated
-every or every other day, increasing the size of the bougie until the
-dilatation be fully perfected. After vigilance is necessary to prevent
-a recurrence, and the bougie can not with propriety be entirely laid
-aside, or the disease will return with increased violence. There are,
-however, cases that require more imperative means, such as the use of
-the _bistouri_, an instrument for the division of stricture of the
-rectum, which, if the resort be objected to, it behooves persons with
-the premonitory symptoms to attend to them, that the operation may be
-rendered unnecessary. There are many excellent palliative medicines
-that the invalid will derive much comfort from in diseases of the
-rectum; and enemata constitute a powerful means of relief. The title of
-stricture of the rectum is fortunately more familiar than the disease
-is frequent; and what is more consolatory to persons of feeble health,
-the complaint seldom extends beyond two or three inches from the
-orifice, so that it need not be feared beyond the reach of relief. See
-annexed drawing:—
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. Rectum.
-
- 2. Orifice of Rectum.
-
- 3. Stricture of the Rectum, with internal hæmorrhoids in
- the lower portion.]
-
-There are some surgeons who state all diseases to emanate from a
-disordered liver, a weak stomach, or a “broken wind;” and there
-are others in this town who are never consulted but they deem the
-use of the rectum bougie indispensable. The limit to structural
-disorganization of the bowel is not afforded by stricture; there are,
-unfortunately, many diseases springing therefrom, and many totally
-independent of such; but their detail here would exceed the titular
-object of the book. Enough has been stated to convince any person
-teased with any of the enumerated symptoms, that however simple may be
-his malady in his own opinion, it is impolitic to overlook or neglect
-it.
-
-
-
-
- THE URINE.
-
-
-WE shall conclude our treatise by a few remarks on diseases of the
-urine, to which many are subject. Before proceeding to speak of them,
-it is necessary, for a full understanding of the subject, to state,
-that the urine is secreted by two bodies called _kidneys_, placed one
-on each side of the back-bone, as is shown in the cut. After being
-formed, the urine passes through the _ureters_ into the bladder whence
-it is voided, as every one knows, occasionally.
-
-[Illustration:
- 1—1. The Lungs.
-
- 2. The Stomach.
-
- 3—3. The Kidneys.
-
- 4—4. The Ureters.
-
- 5. The Bladder.]
-
-The following diagram shows the bladder and its muscular coats, and
-also its neck imbedded in the prostate gland. The bladder is seen
-distended, and, of course, as detached from the body. The kidneys are
-also seen—one in its natural state, the other divided to show its inner
-structure: the kidneys and their ureters are crossed to save space in
-the sketch.
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. The entire kidney. 2. Its cortical, or secreting part. 3. The
- papilla. 4. The pelvis. 5. The ureter. 6. The bladder. 7. The
- detrusor muscle. 8. The sphincter muscle. 9. Prostate gland.
- 10. Neck of the bladder.]
-
-The bladder and adjacent parts are seen more fully in the diagram at
-the top of the succeeding page.
-
-[Illustration:
- 1. Corpus cavernosum.
- 2. Bulb of urethra.
- 3. Membranous portion of ditto.
- 4. Prostate gland surrounding urethra.
- 5. Seminal vesicles.
- 6. The two vasa deferentia.
- 7. The ureters.
- 8. The bladder.]
-
-It is a very common observation with patients, that they never were in
-better health in their lives than at the moment of consulting their
-medical adviser, except in the very particular malady, such as an
-ulcered limb, a teazing cough, a gleety discharge, or an irritable
-bladder, that they are seeking relief for; “they are quite well,” they
-say, “in every other respect.” When illness attacks an individual, it
-does not always announce its arrival by sound of trumpet. It does not
-always come on like an apoplectic shock: some minor organization is
-generally the first to indicate disturbance in the healthy economy by
-even so simple a presage (I will take for example, more especially as
-the ensuing remarks bear upon the subject) as excretion of disordered
-urine. To resume; the patient will content himself, that the only
-fault in his system is the disordered condition of his urine, and
-he earnestly seeks for something to touch that particular symptom,
-forgetting that trifling as he may fancy it, it is not merely owing to
-the office of the kidneys and bladder, but to the blood itself, whence
-the urine is formed, and to other circumstances in the economy that
-influence it. Therefore, it is not merely the urine which is at fault,
-but the state of it is a pretty good indication of the general state of
-health; and when it becomes vitiated, the urine is generally, unless
-restored to a healthy condition, a forerunner of some more serious
-evil. Still there are many variations in the character and quality
-of the urine, and each depending upon different causes—some upon a
-disordered state of the fluids of the body, some upon one remote cause
-or another, deranging the balance of the circulation, and inducing
-excessive perspiration, and the like; and certainly not the least
-important, nor the least influential, exist in the very structures
-that make (as it were) and receive the urine, namely, the kidneys and
-bladder. I may observe here, that chymists have detected upward of
-twenty different substances, animal and saline, in its composition,
-but in a state of complete solution. Of all these component parts, the
-most important is an animal product named _urea_, which exists in about
-the proportion of one in thirty to the water containing it, while the
-other materials taken collectively, water excepted, yield only about
-double the quantity of the urea: hence, when the urine is disordered,
-its specific gravity[17] is increased or diminished, as the case may
-be; according to the abundance of the urea, and the various proportions
-of the saline ingredients of the urine, so is the urine thick, thin,
-acid, or alkaline, pale, or what is called high colored. The various
-conditions of the urine are ascertained by producing chymically certain
-decompositions, or by suffering the urine to effect its own changes,
-which, on being suffered to “stand,” sooner or later it will.
-
-Healthy urine is perfectly transparent and of a light amber color;
-it yields an odor when warm resembling violets. Its taste (for
-pathologists trust not only to sight and smell) is saltish and
-offensive. As the urine cools, it throws up what may be said to be a
-“urinous smell.” As decomposition proceeds, the urine becomes cloudy,
-thick, with shining floating patches on the surface; and lastly, a
-thick deposite coats the bottom and sides of the vessel, the whole
-giving forth at the same time a fetid ammoniacal exhalation, as is
-perceived on entering public urinals.
-
-The rapidity with which these several mutations occur, affords some
-criterion of the healthy or disordered state of the excretion we are
-talking about, and hence the usefulness of examining especially the
-urine of persons laboring under any disorder of the urinary system and
-functions connected therewith. A patient will complain, for instance,
-of irritable bladder. The symptoms of that complaint, as far as pain
-and frequent desire to micturate exist, very closely resemble those
-affections known by the name of “Diabetes,” but which is distinguished
-from the bladder affection in question by the quantity and character
-of the urine. I purpose herein to enumerate, in as familiar a manner
-as is possible, the various disordered states of the urine which my
-experience has rendered me familiar with, and to present the same as
-heretofore, in the form of cases that have fallen under my notice.
-
-Now, the urinary disorders that I purpose to collect a description of,
-and exemplify, may be thus enumerated:—
-
-First, where too great a quantity of urine is voided.
-
-Secondly, where too little is discharged; and also, where suppression
-of it entirely occurs.
-
-Thirdly, those states where the urine deposites a sediment, of which
-two kinds are mostly prevalent, namely, the Lithates or Acid, and the
-Earthy or Alkaline.
-
-Fourthly, a brief exposition of the many but less frequent morbid
-changes of the urine, in which certain salts and substances, not
-existing in healthy urine, are precipitated or held in solution.
-
-And lastly, to add a few to the number of those already presented
-herein, of the infirmities of those organs which excrete the fluid
-under consideration, namely, the kidneys and bladder.
-
-
-
-
- ON INCONTINENCE OF URINE.
-
-
-ALTHOUGH this is not the professional term for the disease I am
-principally about to speak of, yet under this head will the reader, if
-he be an invalid laboring under a complaint of this character, seek for
-a description of his own case. Incontinence of urine implies a loss of
-the retentive faculty of the bladder; but there is a species of disease
-where micturition is carried to such an extent, that a patient will
-attribute his leaky condition to the above cause. Not so, however,
-is the case; the urine, in the disease alluded to, is generated or
-excreted in great quantity, and the bladder merely fulfils its ordinary
-duty. Of the affection known under the title of incontinence of urine,
-most persons are aware that it is one of more frequent occurrence in
-infancy than in adolescence; but the latter is by no means exempt.
-In childhood it arises, in all probability, from drinking too much,
-and the bladder becomes, during sleep, overloaded, and runs over; or,
-perhaps, from the irritability induced by its distension, becomes
-excited to action, and so empties itself, the drowsy state of the child
-rendering it insensible to the passing circumstances.
-
-The infirmity soon becomes a habit, which is often rendered worse by
-the means taken to check it, namely, chastisement, which is highly
-reprehensible. It is fortunately, however, a disease that wears itself
-out as the child grows up; and it may at all times be materially
-mitigated by a little care and attention, such as inducing the child
-to micturate before going to bed, and even awakening it before the
-anticipated time when it usually is attacked with the incontinence.
-The last fluid meal, which should be a spare one, should be taken some
-hours before retiring to rest; and if the complaint has gained much
-ascendency, medicines which give tone to the bladder should be taken.
-I have known the malady successfully removed, in a very short time, by
-a combination of the sulphate of iron and quinine, and any sedative
-extract, such as henbane or hops, given in small doses in the form
-of pills. Female children are more susceptible of the annoyance than
-males, probably owing to the shortness of the urethra. Every measure
-tending to give strength to the child should be used, such as cold
-bathing, fresh air, or a change of the same, especially if residing
-in the city, to the country. Mechanical contrivances are to be had
-to collect the escape of urine, whereby the offensive odor arising
-from the continually soiled bed-linen may be avoided, and oftentimes
-the fretting consequences of the urine passing over the person, which
-induce excoriations and troublesome sores. There are contrivances for
-both sexes. Where the disease prevails in mid-life, it is generally
-traceable to early improvident habits, and of course is the result
-of irritability and debility of the bladder. There are many patients
-who can somewhat control the functions of that organ while awake, but
-have no power over it when asleep. The treatment depends a great deal
-upon the observance of abstemiousness both in eating and drinking:
-a perseverance in chalybeate remedies, both taken and administered
-internally (I have injected the bladder of a person subject to nightly
-incontinence of urine with various tonic preparations, with very great
-and permanent relief); the use of the warm bath, whereby the skin is
-brought into healthier action (for it is generally arid, and parched
-when much urine is voided), which tends to lessen the duty of the
-kidneys and urinary system, should be adopted; nor should exercise,
-that _pabulum vitæ_ of even all feeble persons, be disregarded. It is
-of the utmost importance for the preservation of health, under all the
-circumstances in which we may be placed. Escaping from this digression,
-I now proceed to follow out the idea of the first paragraph of this
-chapter, to treat of those complaints wherein the urine is voided in
-excess. There is a disease commonly known by the name of diabetes,
-wherein the prominent symptom is a continual aptitude to pass urine,
-and in much greater quantities than the fluid consumed as ordinary
-drink could supply. This is one form of ailment of this class; but
-there is another, happily less inimical to life, and which, in the
-order of its frequency and simplicity, should take precedence. It
-is that state of health, where the patient is of that leaky habit,
-that whatever he takes runs through him, and that very quickly too.
-Of course, such a condition must depend upon a seriously-deranged
-constitution: hence there is present a perpetual thirst, an entire
-perversion of the perspiratory function, and a morbid condition of
-many of the phenomena of life. Where this disease springs up in early
-years, it becomes a habit proper to existence; and although it may not
-seriously disturb the economy of the being so as to lessen the duration
-of one’s stay here, yet it furnishes a source of much solicitude, by
-depriving us of rest, and shutting us out from society.
-
-The patient (for such he or she may be truly called, and the complaint
-invades both sexes) appears to have a perpetual fever. Such is
-the desire for drink, that attested cases record the circumstance
-of individuals consuming from _one_ to _two pailfuls_ of water in
-twenty-four hours! and I positively know an instance, at the moment of
-writing this, of a child, fifteen years of age, consuming during the
-night, notwithstanding a plentiful supply of liquids during the day,
-a large jugful (two quarts) of water: the quantity of urine excreted
-is nearly equivalent. In this case, the perspiration is profuse, and
-the child enjoys tolerably good health, with the exception of being
-occasionally nervous and hysterical. The case is under treatment, and
-the quantity of fluid allowed is being daily diminished. The urine on
-these occasions is aqueous, very pale, and of little specific gravity;
-the properties of the urine otherwise are not altered. These cases
-sometimes exist through life; and if they do not terminate fatally,
-they ultimately enfeeble the health, and predispose the patient, or, in
-other words, render him less able to combat with ordinary complaints
-common to us all, and thereby tend to the break-up of his constitution.
-
-There are many persons tipplers, not for the love of the specific
-liquor, but from being always thirsty; and if we reflect a little, we
-shall soon find how inclined we are to encourage the habit. Since the
-introduction of tea into this country, what inordinate quantities of
-that fluid are consumed by individuals. They must, of course, dispose
-of it, after having drunk it: the stomach can not retain it, and it
-escapes either by the skin or kidneys, more usually the latter. It is
-no uncommon thing for nurses, washerwomen, and other females too, to
-swallow nine or a dozen cups of tea at a sitting: they declare it is
-their best meal.
-
-Man is a great deal more careful of the quadruped world than the class
-he belongs to himself. He will stint his horse drink, who works as much
-beyond his strength as man does under his own, while he, the driver,
-will swill till his mouth can scarcely receive another drop. The moral
-of a volume might doubtlessly be expressed in very few words, but then
-it would not be a volume, and, consequently, would not be purchased or
-read; therefore, the proposition herein intended to be presented to
-the reader would exist unheeded. It is one thing to observe, that we
-all drink too much, or that too much fluids are hurtful to digestion
-and other functions, the public require some illustration (which their
-own reflection would furnish, if they used it), and hence this expense
-of verbosity to prove the fact. As one of the consequences, then, of
-too great an indulgence in fluids (I am here speaking of quantity
-rather than quality), this form of complaint, wherein the patient is
-perpetually desiring to urinate, is decidedly the result; and, as
-all complaints have a beginning, this may be considered as the first
-step toward setting up the several affections of the kidneys and
-bladder hereafter treated upon. How important, then, is the arrest of
-this practice. Where the inconvenience thus detailed is present, the
-quantity of fluids must by degrees be diminished, the general state of
-health must be studied. Dieting and warm-bathing are two sheet-anchors,
-if properly applied. All remedies tending to afford strength to the
-urinary system must be had recourse to; and where the bladder loses
-any of its retentive power, I entertain the greatest benefit from an
-injection.
-
-The next form of urinary disturbance of a proximate nature to the
-one just described, is also where the urine is discharged in large
-quantities; but, unlike the former, excreted in greater abundance than
-the supply. The character of the fluid is also different; it assumes
-two appearances, modifications doubtlessly owing to the constitution
-of the patient and the severity and length of the disease. It is known
-by the name of diabetes: it is happily a complaint the least frequent
-of urinary derangements, else, from its obstinacy and difficult
-management, the slightest urinary disorder would excite much just dread
-and apprehension.
-
-The forms of the complaint thus vary: In the one instance, there is a
-deficiency of the animal matter of the urine, namely, the urea, and in
-the other, a superabundance of it. In the former instance the urine
-is of a pale color, and transparent, and sometimes like clear water,
-with a very faint slight odor; whereas, in the latter it is generally
-of a higher color, and now and then so thick as to resemble brewer’s
-porter: it is decidedly a disease of great debility. The symptoms are,
-a wearisomeness and languor of the whole frame, a dry and crimpled
-state of the skin, a sinking, gnawing pain at the pit of the stomach,
-the bowels are obstinately bound, while a great thirst always prevails.
-The body wastes to a mere skeleton, the discharge of urine being
-almost constant, at least every hour, accompanied with a call that
-must be immediately obeyed: the leading feature in the composition
-of the urine, in addition to the varied presence of the urea, is the
-saccharine matter contained therein. It rarely attacks others than
-those who have led an irregular life, or else have suffered much from
-other kinds of sickness.
-
-Diabetes is supposed to depend upon a perverted action of the kidneys;
-but there is little dispute of its being a malady involving the
-whole process of animal economization. The quantity of urine got rid
-of in a day has been known to amount to ten quarts; as the disease
-continues, the patient becomes much emaciated, the feet swell, and he
-sinks into a state of low hectic fever; the urine discharged continuing
-all this time to exceed nearly double the amount of nourishment,
-liquid or solid, that is taken, has given rise to the idea, that
-water is absorbed from the atmosphere through the body. The disorder
-is generally lingering, and, unless conquered, at last fatal. The
-treatment embraces many remedies—bleeding, emetics, diaphoretics, and
-sedatives, are mostly employed. It being a complaint involving the
-necessity of constant professional watchfulness, a more lengthened
-dissertation upon its peculiarities will but little serve the patient.
-My own opinion is, that the invalid must look for recovery—presuming
-the initiatory symptoms have been duly attacked and subdued—to careful
-diet, fresh air, varied scenery, and cheerful society. Bathing, either
-vapor or warm, is immensely useful; and, among the cases that have
-travelled across my path (for patients laboring under diabetes, like
-any other chronic ailment, generally take the round of the profession),
-I have seen much and great good achieved by the frequent employment of
-the bath.
-
-As diabetes is mostly a sequence of some previous disturbance of the
-urinary system, it the more behooves the afflicted to heed the first
-noticial summons of attack: a handful of water will sometimes quench a
-mouldering ember that, suffered to rise into a flame, an engineful can
-not extinguish. I may add, there is no cause so destructive to virility
-as these drainages from the system through the urethra—an additional
-reason why they should be attended to upon their first appearance.
-
-_Cases where but a small quantity of urine is voided, terminating in
-suppression, of urine._—The most popular scientific synonymes for
-complaints are but little understood by men really of education; for,
-as yet, medical knowledge forms not one of the items of collegiate
-lore, and few anticipate sickness to render such acumen necessary. The
-term “Strangury,” from the frequency of its occurrence, is uppermost in
-most men’s minds; and they use it on all occasions when there happens
-an interruption to the process of making water. It is oftentimes
-misapplied. Strangury implies a difficulty in voiding the urine, but
-it does not include those cases wherein little is voided, because
-there is little to void. The affection I am now about to make mention
-of, is of the latter description. I have stated that the urine is
-subject to a multitude of changes, that the human frame is constituted
-to exist under a variety of circumstances, and that occurrences are
-daily happening, wherein its integrity is put to the test. Excesses,
-termed sensual, and others, which in themselves might destroy life,
-are counterbalanced by what may be styled the _safety-valves_ of the
-system. A violent fit of purging, perspiration, or micturition, is
-often the means of warding off an otherwise fatal blow. The skin, the
-bowels, and the kidneys, are severally to be acted upon as emergencies
-demand: instance the specific operations of diet and medicines. The
-color of the urine is altered by (to give a popular illustration)
-_rhubarb_; its odor, by _turpentine_ (taken internally, or from an
-inhalation of the vapor of them), and by the well-known vegetable
-_asparagus_; and its composition by alkaline and other chymicals. The
-function of cutaneous exhalation is augmented or diminished by warmth
-or cold; and the action of the bowels is suspended or increased by
-innumerable substances, forming portions of our daily food.
-
-Analogous to these effects, is the result of certain conditions of
-ill-health. A patient, laboring under fever or inflammation of any
-important organ, will scarcely rid himself of a wineglassful of
-blood-colored urine in the twenty-four hours; and there are many forms
-of ailments, where the function of separating the urine from the blood,
-or even the function of supplying the kidneys with that vital fluid,
-are suspended, partially or entirely. Few of us have escaped attacks of
-this kind; they are sure to follow long-pursued habits of dissipation,
-or even occasional displays of it; and they are often the result
-of accidents over which we have but little control. A patient will
-complain of a frequent desire to make water; each effort so to do, will
-be accompanied with excruciating pain. A small quantity, or a few drops
-only, will dribble away, excoriating the passage as though vinegar was
-passing over it, and putting on an appearance almost resembling muddy
-port wine, or a thick solution or suspension of brick dust: there will
-be present much fever and constitutional disturbance. The patient may
-have shivering fits, pain round the loins, down the thighs, and over
-the lower part of the abdomen. He will betray a readiness to submit to
-anything, although conscious that his bladder is empty, notwithstanding
-the violent and urgent efforts at straining, which he is continually
-being called upon to make, as though his bladder were distended, and
-ready to burst. On passing the catheter (I am supposing a severe case,
-where retention of urine has at last occurred), not a drop will flow,
-and the danger of the disease is thereby made apparent. Except very
-severe measures be adopted, which it would be idle here to lay down,
-the case is sure to terminate fatally. Instances are recorded, where
-that event has been retarded upward of a week, during which time the
-patient voided not one drop of urine.
-
-The absolute cause of the disease is very obscure; but it has a
-beginning, and to those only who suffer from a long-continued
-diminution in this natural excretion, and who disregard it, is this
-picture presented.
-
-The treatment, in advanced stages of the disease, is strictly
-professional; but the warning of the altered character of a customary
-evacuation, should not for a moment be disregarded.
-
-Suppression of urine is very different from retention: in the former,
-there is none to excrete; in the latter, its escape is impeded. In the
-chapter on stricture, the cause and manner of retention is explained,
-and the mode of relief laid down, whereby the invalid himself has
-a remedy at hand; but, in suppression, the resource is neither so
-ready nor so effectual. It is, therefore, much wiser to notice the
-first alteration, and to be prompt in seeking the nearest aid. Every
-practitioner is acquainted with such. Although such are not ever
-present, even in the most extensive practice, still they do occur; and
-much as this mode of frightening a patient may be condemned, knowing
-the frequently existing disinclination toward “laying up,” yet, if it
-only induce a fellow-mortal to take the tenth instead of the eleventh
-hour, one life may be saved, and the writer can well submit to the
-disapproval and contempt of the thoughtless and indifferent.
-
-
-
-
- THE GRAVEL.
-
-
-UNDER the head of this disease may be classed all those urinary
-affections, wherein a sandy deposite is observed, after the urine
-has stood some time. This sandy excretion varies in its composition,
-in the quantity voided, and in its continuance: and it is also often
-separated, for it is held generally in solution in the urine as it
-comes from the bladder, while in the bladder or in the kidneys; and
-hence we find gravel in the kidneys, in the bladder, and in the
-urine. Where it is precipitated, or formed in the kidneys or bladder,
-it is apt to accumulate, and constitute what is called “Stone” in
-those organs. As I have just observed, the composition of this gravel
-differs, and differs also at different times in the same individual,
-according to circumstances. Stones have been detected that, like the
-rolling snowball, gather up, as they increase in size, whatever comes
-in their way; and, accordingly, as the deposites are principally
-composed of concretions, termed, in chymical phraseology, “Lithates”
-and “Phosphates,” stones are frequently found to be formed, first of a
-layer of one covering, then of another, and so on.
-
-Gravel may exist for years without inducing much disturbance of
-health, or it may produce serious inconvenience in a very short time.
-The urine being acid, holds the salts which it contains in solution;
-and, therefore, if the acid predominate, it becomes, through its own
-excess, thrown down, when it is detected in the form of red sand; but
-if there be an insufficiency of acid, the earths and salts of the
-urine are thrown down, and they exhibit their existence in the form of
-white gravel. Hence the two names “Red” and “White Gravel.” Acidulated
-urine is looked upon as certainly indicative of health, and when in
-excess, of a high tone of health; which, as the degree ascends, is
-marked by inflammation and fever. Alkaline urine betokens feebleness of
-constitution, or interrupted health. High living and an excited life
-induce red gravel; irregular, or an impoverished living, with much
-mental inquietude and physical exhaustion, establish white gravel.
-The fact of gravel being known to exist without forming stone, is no
-justification to suffer it to incur even the chance of such a finale.
-There is no class of diseases so painful and distressing as those
-wherein the function of the kidneys or bladder is interrupted, and the
-majority of these affections are ushered in by a derangement of the
-urinary fluid.
-
-_Cause of Gravel._—The cause of gravel is owing to chymical affinities.
-The urine, among its other constituents, contains _lithic acid_ and
-_ammonia_, which two, in healthy urine, are combined and held in
-solution. If any other acid, as may be instanced in expelled urine,
-possessing a greater affinity for the _ammonia_ than the _lithic
-acid_, be added, the _lithic_ will be thrown down. The same process
-takes place when effected in the system, the source of which new acid
-is the stomach, which, when in an irritable and feeble state, as in
-indigestion, furnishes or abounds with muriatic acid. In like manner,
-the urine containing salts, called phosphate of lime, ammonia, and
-magnesia, on receiving an additional quantity of ammonia,[18] the
-lime, for the less affinity to phosphoric acid than the ammonia,
-is thrown down; and hence a salt, bearing its name, is generated,
-either to be expelled like gravel, or to feed a nucleus already
-existing in the bladder. These chymical changes are produced by the
-causes before enumerated. We are subject to an infinitude of laws:
-we are perpetually changing, and these changes may fairly be stated
-as chymical affinities: it is owing to such, that the absorption of
-fluids, and the deposition of substances, which exist more or less in
-all derangements of health, ensue—to such, that we resist death, and
-to such that we become its prey. Gravel is a disease not so productive
-of fear or suffering, so long as it escapes when formed; but there are
-so many circumstances that may give rise to the formation of stone,
-that sandy urine should always command notice and treatment. A clot or
-point of blood, that may have been discharged from irritation of the
-kidney or bladder, is often found to form the nucleus of a stone: the
-slightest substance, once in the bladder, is apt to form a basis for
-accumulation: a pin, a fragment of a bougie, or any instrument, hair,
-wood, and numberless other things that have found their way into the
-bladder, have given rise to the formidable and distressing complaint of
-stone.
-
-_Treatment of Gravel._—It is not to be anticipated that every person
-is prone to excrete gravelly urine, else certain dietetics, that
-evidently give rise to the same in particular instances, had better
-at once be removed from the list of articles of food, and their use
-prohibited altogether; but there are instances where a constitutional
-disposition exists in particular families, that is even transmitted
-from generation to generation, to calculous diseases, and in those
-cases, every precaution should be taken to avoid even their development.
-
-The antidotes to the disposition to gravelly urine are, exercise,
-temperance, and the adoption of all those means that tend to promote
-a healthy action of the skin and kidneys, namely, the warm bath—it is
-a perfect talisman in these affections—it needs but little eulogy;
-the comfort and relief, where relief is sought, afforded on the first
-experiment, best bespeak its praise. It is decidedly one of the most
-useful adjunctive prophylactic measures we have.
-
-I have already stated, that disorders of the urine arrange themselves
-under two great heads—the acid and the alkaline prevalence. The
-treatment is to neutralize the excess of either: the acid diathesis, as
-it is called, is considered a less healthy deviation than the alkaline,
-and is looked upon as indicative of greater constitutional break-up.
-The medicines most in vogue in gravelly disorders are, turpentine (to
-increase the formation of lithic acid), sulphuric, nitric, and muriatic
-acids; while the antagonists to that form of the disease, wherein
-the above are given, consist of ammonia, potass, and soda. The great
-object, however, is to balance the health, to allay irritation, and
-tranquillize the morbid uproar of the system. Here we have an extensive
-field to select from in the class of sedatives. Opium, perhaps, is the
-best—the most to be depended upon, its properties being best known; the
-warm bath comes next; and lastly, the various tonics and astringents of
-our pharmacopœia, of which quinine, uva ursi, pareira brava, achillæ
-millefoliæ, buchu, &c., &c., stand foremost.
-
-Although the lithic acid deposition is the most frequent, still, as the
-disease advances, there is a strong tendency to the formation of the
-alkaline; and as the remedies for the former are apt to accelerate the
-latter disorder, it is most important that the urine should undergo
-frequent examination to regulate the treatment. To recapitulate the
-substance of this article, it may be stated, that gravel is a disease,
-not dangerous in itself, but that it is always the forerunner, although
-not always productive, of stone; stone being formed by the collection
-and chymical union of the sand itself. This collection takes place
-in the kidney, the ureters (the vessels that convey the urine to the
-bladder), the bladder, and sometimes in the urethra. The stone so
-formed varies in its composition and size, and is one of the saddest
-ills that can befall human nature. Hence the importance of watching,
-and attending to every urinary disturbance, of which gravel forms a
-prominent feature, the treatment of which has been already stated; but
-which, as it involves more practised judgment than a non-professional
-invalid can be supposed to possess, had better be intrusted only to
-professional hands.
-
-
- THE END.
-
-
-
-
- FORMULÆ
-
-
- Form 1.
-
-Four to six drachms of castor oil, the ordinary black draught,
-a dose of salts, or a dose of Weir’s Compound Pills.
-
- Form 2.
-
-The following mixtures lessens the acrimony in making water,
-abdues the irritability, and tends to diminish the discharge:—
-
-Take of—
- Carbonate of potass 1 drachm.
- Nitrate of ditto 1 drachm.
- Mucilage of acacia 5½ oz.
- Hydrocyanic acid 10 drops.
- Syrup of Tolu 2 drachms.
-Mix. Take a tablespoonful in a wineglassful of water twice daily.
-
- Form 3.
-
-Take of—
- Linseed tea ½ pint.
- Spirits of Sweet Nitre 2 drachms.
- Battley’s Sedative 60 drops.
-Mix. Take three tablespoonfuls, twice or thrice daily.
-
- Form 4.
-
-Where it is inconvenient for a patient to carry a bottle about his
-person, the following electuary, combining the essential ingredients of
-the former two, may be substituted:—
-
-Take of—
- Lenitive electuary 2 oz.
- Conserve of roses 2 oz.
- Strong mucilage of acacia 2 oz.
- Nitrate of potass 2 drachms.
-Mix. Dose—Two teaspoonfuls twice or thrice a day.
-
- Form 5.
-
-A good combination, that may be taken even in the inflammatory stage.
-
-Take of—
- Cubebs 2 oz.
- Carbonate of magnesia 1 drachm.
-Mix. Dose—A dessert- or tablespoonful twice or thrice daily.
-
- SPECIFIC REMEDIES.
-
- Form 6.
-
-Take of—
- Balsam of copaiba 1 oz.
- Powder of cubebs ½ oz.
- Mucilage of acacia 6½ oz.
- Spirits of sweet nitre 2 drachms.
- Battley’s sedative 30 drops.
-Or—
- Hydrocyanic acid (Scheele’s strength) 8 drops.
- Syrup of orange-peel 2 drachms.
-Mix. Dose—Two tablespoonfuls, once or twice daily, in water.
-
- Form 7.
-
-_Turpentine Pills._
-
-Take of Venice turpentine 1 drachm, form it into pills by adding as
-much rhubarb as is necessary, and take two, three times a day.
-
- Form 8.
-
-_Turpentine Mixture._
-
-Take of—
- Venice turpentine 1 scruple.
- Mucilage of gum arabic 2 oz.
- Emulsion of bitter almonds 4 oz.
- Syrup of orange-peel ½ oz.
-Mix. Dose—Two tablespoonfuls three times a day. Sedatives may be
-conjoined with the above preparations, if they produce too much action
-of the bowels. To the pills may be added one scruple of Dover’s powder
-to the drachm of turpentine. To the mixture, thirty drops of laudanum.
-
- Form 9.
-
-Take of—
-
- Terebinthin chiœ 1 oz.
- Extract of rhubarb 1½ drachms.
- Camphor 1 drachm.
-Mix and divide into pills of 5 grains each. Dose—Three, three times a
-day.
-
- Form 10.
-
-Take of—
- Cahio turpentine }
- Balsam of copaiba } Of each, equal parts.
- Oil of amber }
-Mix, according to art. The turpentine must be dissolved by warmth. The
-dose is 30 or 40 drops three or four times a day. This medicine is very
-nauseous, but very serviceable in long standing gleets and obstinate
-claps. The best way to remove the flavor left in the mouth after taking
-turpentine, copaiba, and other filthy medicines, is to chew a piece
-of gingerbread or cheese, or suck a lemon, or put some salt upon the
-tongue.
-
- Form 11.
-
-_Injections to diminish the pain on making water._
-
-Take of—
- Rose-water 3 oz.
- Solution of the acetate of morphine 2 drachms.
-Mix.
-
- Form 12.
-
-Take of—
- Goulard water 3 oz.
- Mucilage 4 oz.
- Solution of the acetate of morphine 2 drachms.
-Mix.
-
- Form 13.
-
-_Sedative draught to be taken at bed-time when annoyed with chordee._
-
-Take of—
- Acetated liquor of ammonia ½ oz.
- Camphor julep 1 oz.
- Solution of the acetate of morphine 20 to 25 drops.
-Mix.
-
- Form 14.
-
-Take of—
- Dover’s powder 12 grains.
- James’s powder 5 grains.
-Mix.
-
- Form 15.
-
-Take of—
- Compound camphor liniment ½ oz.
- Laudanum ½ oz.
-Mix, to form a liniment.
-
- Form 16.
-
-_Injection for the ulceration of the glans penis._
-
-Take of—
- Chloride of soda 1 oz.
- Rose-water 5 oz.
-Mix.
-
- Form 17.
-
-Take of—
- Nitrate of silver 1 scruple.
- Distilled water 1 oz.
-Mix.
-
- Form 18.
-
-Take of—
- Calomel ½ drachm.
- Lime-water 4 oz.
-Mix.
-
- Form 19.
-
-_Emetic Powder._
-
-Take of—
- Ipecacuanha powder 1 scruple.
- Emetic tartar 1 grain.
-Mix. To be taken in a glassful of warm water, and repeated in twenty
-minutes, if it do not produce vomiting.
-
- Form 20.
-
-_Iodine._
-
-Take of tincture of iodine twenty drops twice or thrice a
-day in a little water.
-
- Form 21.
-
-Take of—
- Hydriodate of potass ½ drachm.
- Mucilage of acacia ½ oz.
- Camphor julep 5½ oz.
-Mix. Dose—three tablespoonfuls three times a day.
-
-_The Sedative Application to anoint a Bougie with._
-
- Form 22.
-
-Take of—
- Extract of Aconitine 1 grain.
- Oil of Olives 1 drachm.
-Mix.
-
- Form 23.
-
-Or take of—
- Extract of Henbane 5 grains.
- Lard or Olive Oil 1 drachm.
-Mix.
-
- Form 24.
-
-Or take of—
- Acetate of Morphine 3 grains.
- Simple Cerate or Oil 2 drachms.
-Mix.
-
-_Stimulating Application._
-
- Form 25.
-
-Take of powder of calcined alum, and dust the end of a bougie
-previously oiled, and introduce it to the stricture in the usual
-manner, and suffer it to remain until the obstacle be overcome.
-Occasionally the bougie may be smeared with the balsam copaiba,
-where the case is chronic, and there happens to be much secretion
-from the part.
-
- Form 26.
-
-Take of—
- Iodide of potass 1 drachm.
- Mercurial ointment 1 do.
- Simple cerate 4 do.
-Mix. A portion to be rubbed over the scrotum night and morning, as long
-as it can be borne.
-
- Form 27.
-
-_Strong caustic solution of Dr. Doane._
-
-Take of—
- Caustic ⅓ drachm.
- Distilled water 1 oz.
-Mix.
-
- Form 28.
-
-_Wash for Chancres._
-
-Take of—
- The solution of chloride of soda 2 oz.
- Rose-water 4 oz.
-Mix.
-
- Form 29.
-
-_Black wash for Chancres._
-
-Take of—
- Calomel 1 scruple.
- Lime-water 3 ounces.
-Mix.
-
- Form 30.
-
-_Red wash for Chancres._
-
-Take of—
- Bi-chloride of mercury 4 grains.
- Lime-water 4 oz.
-Mix.
-
- Or, Form 31.
-
-_Blue wash for Chancres._
-
-Take of—
- Sulphate of copper 5 grains.
- Distilled water 1 oz.
-Mix and strain.
-
-For dressing chancres, lotions and washes generally answer better
-than ointments; but their alternate use is sometimes serviceable.
-In cracked sores near the prepuce, the blue ointment has wrought
-a cure when all the lotions devised were ineffectual.
-
- Form 32.
-
-Take of—
- Red precipitate of mercury 4 grains.
- Ointment of spermaceti 1 oz.
-Mix.—A little to be smeared over the ulcer, twice a day.
-
- Form 33.
-
-_Active aperient in indolent Chancres._
-
-Take of—
- Calomel 4 grains.
- Powder of jalap 15 to 20 grains.
-Mix.—To be taken in something thick, as jelly, honey, or tamarinds.
-
- Form 34.
-
-_Active aperient, to be mixed in water and (stirring it) to be drank
-off quickly._
-
-Take of—
- Chloride of mercury, or calomel 5 grains.
- Powder of jalap 25 grains.
-Mix.
-
- Form 35.
-
-_Ointment to promote absorption of Bubo._
-
-Take of—
- Iodine of potassium 1 drachm.
- Tincture of iodine 1 drachm.
- Acetate of morphine 10 grains.
-Mix.—Apply constantly a plaister of some of this ointment spread upon
-rag or lint, over the bubo, and occasionally rub a little of it gently
-into the skin.—_Doane._
-
- Or, Form 36.
-
-Take of blue ointment a similar quantity, and use it in like manner to
-the preceding. The reliance to be placed on this ointment is precisely
-the same as the other, namely, to excite absorption. The following
-ointment may also be used for the same purpose.
-
- Form 37.
-
-Take of—
- Calomel 2 drachms.
- Simple ointment 6 drachms.
-Mix.
-
- Form 38.
-
-_Stimulating ointments to promote the healing of indolent ulcerated
-Buboes._
-
-Take of—
- Red precipitate of mercury 5 grains.
- Ointment of spermaceti 1 oz.
-Mix.—The ulcer to be dressed with a small portion of this ointment
-spread upon lint. Or the following, which is stronger:—
-
- Form 39.
-
-Take of—
- Red precipitate of mercury 5 grains.
- Yellow basilicon 2 drachms.
- Ointment of spermaceti 6 drachms.
-Mix.—To be used like the preceding.
-
- Or, Form 40.
-
-Take of nitrated ointment of mercury, diluted with an equal proportion
-of simple ointment.
-
-Or, the unadulterated strong mercurial ointment.
-
- Form 41.
-
-_Styptic application for indolent Ulcers._
-
-Take of—
- Caustic ½ drachm.
-Or, Sulphate of copper ½ do.
- Distilled water 1 oz.
-Mix and strain, and smear the surface of the sore with a hair pencil,
-impregnated with either of the solutions: simple or astringent
-dressings may be applied afterward.
-
- Form 42.
-
-Take of—
- Chloride of soda 2 ounces.
- Rose-water 2 do.
-Mix.
-
- Form 43.
-
-_Preparation of Iron._
-
-Take two drachms of carbonate of iron three times a day, gradually
-increasing the dose to half an ounce, or even an ounce; the bowels
-during the taking of this medicine should be kept open.
-
- Form 44.
-
-_The following is an excellent combination._
-
-Take of compound iron pill two drachms, to be divided into 24 pills—two
-to be taken three times a day.
-
- Form 45.
-
-_Quinine._
-
-Take three grains of sulphate of quinine three times a day. Or,
-
- Form 46.
-
-Take of—
- Compound tincture of bark 2 ounces.
- Sulphate of quinine 12 grains.
- Muriatic acid 20 drops.
-Mix.—Dose, a teaspoonful three times a day, in water.
-
- Form 47.
-
-_Strengthening Pills._
-
-Take of—
- Ioduret of iron ½ drachm.
- Castile soap ½ do.
- Alkaline extract of gentian 1 do.
-Mix.—To form 30 pills—take one twice daily.
-
- Form 48.
-
-_Tonic and Alterative Mixture._
-
-Take of—
- Oxymuriate of mercury 2 grains.
- Muriatic acid 60 drops.
- Tincture of bark 2 oz.
-Mix.—A teaspoonful to be taken twice or three times a day in a little
-water.
-
-These drops are highly serviceable to persons of weak constitutions,
-whom it is desirable to place under the influence of mercury. They
-form the basis of most of the advertised anti-scorbutic drops of the
-patent medicine venders.
-
- Form 49.
-
-_Compound decoction of Sarsaparilla._
-
-Take of—
- Sarsaparilla root, sliced 4 ounces.
- Boiling water 4 pints.
-Macerate for four hours in a vessel lightly covered, and placed
-near the fire; then take out the sarsaparilla and bruise it; return
-it again to the liquor, and macerate in a similar manner for two
-hours; boil it down to two pints, strain it, and then add—
- Sassafras root, sliced ¼ ounce.
- Guaiacum root, rasped ¼ do.
- Liquorice root, bruised ¼ do.
- Bark of mezeroon root 1½ drachm.
-Boil the whole together for a quarter of an hour, and strain.
-Dose, from a quarter to half a pint, three times a day.
-
-To avoid the tediousness of daily preparing the above, many
-manufacturing chemists evaporate a large quantity, and preserve
-the extract, which retains all the virtues of the decoction, and
-is at all times ready for immediate use. Or,
-
- Form 50.
-
-Take of—
- Bruised root of Jamaica sarsaparilla 4 ounces.
- Liquorice root, sliced ½ ounce.
- Lime-water 1 quart.
-Macerate for 24 hours in a dark and cool place—strain and bottle it,
-and take a pint daily in divided doses. This is a very superior form
-of administering sarsaparilla. Or,
-
- Form 51.
-
-Take of—
- Oxymuriate of mercury 2 grains.
- Muriatic acid 5 drops.
- Compound extract of sarsaparilla 2 oz.
-Dissolve the same in one quart of water, and take a wineglassful twice
-a day.
-
- Form 52.
-
-_The Iodide of Potass Mixture._
-
-Take of—
- Iodide of potassium 1 drachm.
- Iodine 2 grains.
- Mucilage of acacia 3 ounces.
- Hydrocyanic acid 12 drops.
- Pure water 5 ounces.
- White sugar ½ ounce.
-Mix. Take a dessert- or tablespoonful twice or thrice daily in a
-wineglassful of water.
-
- Form 53.
-
-Take of—
- Iodide of potassium 1 drachm.
- Acetate of morphine 10 grains.
- Spermaceti ointment 1 oz.
-Mix. Rub a portion, the size of a nut, over the affected part night and
-morning. If much irritation be produced, it must be disused for a time.
-
-Forms 54, 55, 56, 57 see pages 126–128.
-
- Form 58.
-
-Take of—
- Sarsaparilla sliced 1 oz.
- China root 1 oz.
- Dry rind of 20 walnuts.
- Antimony 2 oz.
- Pumice stone 1 oz.
-(Tied in separate bags, and boiled with the other ingredients.)
- Distilled water 10 pints.
-Boil to one half, and strain.
-Dose—An aleglassful twice or thrice daily.
-
-Forms 59, 60, 61, 62 see page 132.
-
-The best aperient for females is certainly a combination of castor
-oil. The following form is a very good one:—
-
- Form 63.
-
-Take of—
- Castor oil 1 oz.
- Mucilage of acacia 2 oz.
- Spirits of sweet nitre 1 drachm.
- Syrup of orange-peel ½ oz.
- Water 1 oz.
-Mix. Take half for a dose.
-
-Forms 64, 65, 66, 67, 68, 69, 70 see pages 156–158.
-
-Forms 71, 72, 73, 74, 75, 76, 77, 78, 79 see pages 158–161.
-
-
-
-
- FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] A wash composed of one part of the chloride of soda, with five
-of water, is as good as can be used; the same may be injected up the
-urethra.
-
-[2] Lining internal structures which have no outlet, as that in the
-abdomen, called the peritoneal.
-
-[3] To enter into a description of the pathological condition of
-the bladder in the several states of irritability, paralysis, and
-inflammation, would be to swell this article to an inordinate length,
-and serve no useful purpose—the symptoms and treatment comprising the
-most essential knowledge for the patient to possess. It may be briefly
-stated, that the bladder is less subject to become disorganized (the
-function being chiefly the disordered symptom), and sooner even regains
-its tone than other organs not less important to life.
-
-[4] Colles, Wallace, Ricord, of the Venereal hospital, Paris.
-
-[5] _Mercury._
-
-The preparations of mercury are various: but those chiefly employed
-in the treatment of syphilis are the oxymuriate, or bi-chloride,
-the submuriate, or chloride, the red precipitate, or the hydrargyri
-nitrico-oxydum, the blue pill, the red sulphate for fumigations, and
-the blue ointment.
-
-Ptyalism or salivation, which implies an extraordinary secretion of
-the salivary and other glands, occasioned by the taking of mercury,
-inasmuch that when carried to an unwarrantable extent, ulceration is
-the consequence, may be produced by the internal exhibition or external
-application of almost any of its preparations. With this view, however,
-the blue pill is usually administered in doses of five grains twice a
-day, or the blue ointment is directed to be rubbed in on the inner part
-of the legs and thighs, in quantities varying from one to two drachms
-night and morning. Mercury, when given to excite ptyalism, is generally
-taken in conjunction with sarsaparilla (see Form 51, or the fluid
-extract). The symptoms whereby the effects of mercury are ascertained,
-are a coppery taste in the mouth, followed by a tenderness of the gums
-on mastication, an increased flow of the saliva, and a peculiar fœtor
-of the breath. It is usual, on the tainted taste being perceptible, to
-diminish or discontinue the further use of the medicine, unless the
-case be very severe, or merely to keep up the effect produced. But it
-can not be denied that, although sufficiently manageable in scientific
-hands, mercury, or any one of its preparations, is too powerful to be
-taken indiscriminately.
-
-[6] _Antimony._
-
-The preparations of antimony consist of the precipitated sulphuret,
-called now the oxysulphuret of antimony, and the powder, as directed to
-be made in the Pharmacopœia, or its secret modification, known by the
-name of “Dr. James’s Powder.” The sulphuret enters into the composition
-of the red or Plummer’s pills, which is an admirable alterative, given
-in conjunction with sarsaparilla, in doses of five grains, once or
-twice a day. The James’s powder, with the like intention, may be taken
-in two or three grain doses twice or thrice a day.
-
-[7] Wagner, translated by Dr. Willis.
-
-[8] Some say eight days after.
-
-[9] Instances of different conceptions following connexion at brief
-intervals are of occasional occurrence.
-
-A case is recorded of a negress having brought forth a negro and a
-mulatto child, and who confessed having received the embraces of a
-white and a negro the same evening. Drs. Dewees of Philadelphia, and
-Francis of New York, adduce similar instances.
-
-[10] The membrane containing the liquid comes away with the after-birth
-or placenta; but when it is brought away with the child’s head, it is
-named a “caul,” to which the ignorant attach a superstitious belief
-that it saves the possessor from drowning, and hence it has been a
-source of traffic between the cunning and the weak-minded. Cauls are
-made by detaching the membrane from the placenta.
-
-[11] Yellow wax may be substituted for the white wax, which renders
-the ointment stronger and better adapted for excoriations that yield a
-discharge.
-
-[12] Every nurse is acquainted with the usefulness of starch, tutty
-powder, Fuller’s earth, &c.
-
-[13] Blundell.
-
-[14] Dr. A. Sidney Doane has recorded a case, in his edition of
-“Good’s Study of Medicine,” where a woman brought forth fifty-seven
-children.—Vol. ii., p. 503.
-
-[15] A patient was admitted into the ophthalmic wards of the Hotel
-Dieu, Paris, with great weakness of sight, amounting almost to
-amaurosis. He confessed that he was in the habit of polluting himself,
-and that he was immediately seized with complete blindness whenever he
-addicted himself to the practice. Cases very similar to the above have
-been noticed by Dr. Doane, of New York, who has paid great attention to
-diseases of this character.
-
-[16] The convertibility of India-rubber to so many useful purposes
-has not escaped the attention of surgeons, and it is found to be
-an excellent material for trusses, pessaries, bougies, &c., and
-consequently much used for them. I find them in my own practice
-far preferable to metallic or any other description. Many cases of
-hæmorrhoids, as well as of prolapsus, that have been given up as
-incurable, on account of the parties objecting to wear metallic
-instruments, or submit to the operation of excision or ligature,
-have speedily yielded to the application of the same manufactured of
-India-rubber; indeed, every day’s experience so convinces me of their
-superiority and efficacy as a remedy in these disorders, that a patient
-afflicted with the most formidable form of either disease need not
-despair of a prompt and certain recovery.
-
-[17] The specific gravity of the urine materially depends upon those
-causes which act diuretically, and upon the quantity of fluids
-swallowed, which, if taken in excess, of course increases the watery
-portion of the urine, and vice versa. The density of the urine is
-ascertained by an instrument called an “Hydrometer,” which, upon being
-immersed in the urine, indicates its specific gravity. The usual
-specific gravity of healthy human urine varies from 1.010 to 1.015,
-while the temperature ranges from 75 degrees of Fahrenheit to 120. The
-quantity averages from two to three pints per diem, but depends not
-only upon the quantity of fluids consumed, but also upon the nature
-of the food, vegetables generating more urine than animal substances.
-In infancy and old age, the temperature of the urine is below this
-standard, but nearly equivalent to each other; whereas it is only at
-the period of puberty that the temperature noted exists.
-
-[18] Furnished in the system by the decomposition of urea.
-
-
- —————————————————— End of Book ——————————————————
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Note (continued)
-
-
-Obvious punctuation errors in the transcribed text have been repaired.
-
-Variations in spelling are common in this book. In the case of medical
-terms in which the ligatures ‘æ’ and ‘œ’ could be used, the variations
-are numerous and noticeable. Thus we find the terms “hemorrhage”,
-“hæmorrhage” and “hœmorrhage” being used interchangeably. Similarly for
-“hæmorrhoids” and “hœmorrhoids” and all the words derived from the
-foregoing terms.
-
-Except as noted below, unusual or variable spelling and hyphenation as
-published in the original book have been retained.
-
- Page 11 — “membraneous” changed to “membranous” (diminishes at the
- membranous portion)
-
- Page 16 — “then,” changed to “them” (that connects them together)
-
- Page 21 — “developes” changed to “develops” (the sooner develops the
- disease)
-
- Page 22 — “ay” changed to “any” (to resist any efforts)
-
- Page 24 — “arm-pits” changed to “armpits” (under the armpits)
-
- Page 29 — “gonorrhæa” changed to “gonorrhœa” (in curing gonorrhœa;)
-
- Page 30 — “head-ache” changed to “headache” (inclination to headache)
-
- Page 50 — “surfacial” changed to “surficial” (surficial and muscular
- membranes)
-
- Page 54 — “fœces” changed to “fæces” (the fœces pass in small
- quantities)
-
- Page 58 — “permaneut” changed to “permanent” (permanent irritability of
- the bladder)
-
- Page 62 — “now” changed to “how” (to show how imperative it is)
-
- Page 80 — “coherd” changed to “cohered” (where numbers cohered together)
-
- Page 85 — “empyrical” changed to “empirical” (by the most empyrical
- measures)
-
- Page 87 — “chancerous” changed to “chancrous” (a chancrous sore)
-
- Page 89 — “accompanying” changed to “above” (Witness the above
- wood-cut.)
-
- Page 102 — “incrustrations” changed to “incrustations” (similar
- incrustations are formed)
-
- Page 107 — “desquemated” changed to “desquamated” (the pimple has
- broken or desquamated)
-
- Page 109 — “raced” changed to “traced” (to such weknesses may be traced
- the relapses)
-
- Page 118 — “desquemate” changed to “desquamate” (exfoliate, or scurf,
- or desquamate)
-
- Page 125 — “are are” changed to “are” (There are also deep and painful
- fissures)
-
- Page 131 — “pecuiar” changed to “peculiar” (a peculiar contour of the
- countenance)
-
- Page 134 — “triflind” changed to “trifling” (trifling errors in diet)
-
- Page 137 — “unimpergnated” changed to “unimpregnated” (when
- unimpregnated, is very compact)
-
- Page 146 — “corpulant” changed to “corpulent” (like a very corpulent
- man)
-
- Page 149 — “ipresses” changed to “impresses” (the womb impresses upon
- the bladder)
-
- Page 167 — “Henry III.” changed to “Henry II.” (Henry II. consulted
- one Fernal for the infertility of his queen, Catherine de
- Medicis)
-
- Page 196 — “protusion” changed to “protrusion” (extraordinary
- protrusion of piles)
-
- Page 200 — “bladders” changed to “bladder” (into the bladder whence it
- is voided)
-
- Page 214 — “pharmacopœa” changed to “pharmacopœia” (of our pharmacopœia)
-
-In anatomical references, the book uses “chord” throughout in place of
-“cord” — see for example “umbilical chord” and “spermatic chord”.
-
-There are seventy-nine treatment recipes/formulæ (“Forms”) in the
-book. All are printed in a similar style. However fifty-five appear as
-footnotes while the rest appear in page text. For ease of reference in
-the transcription, all the footnoted Forms have been gathered together
-and moved to a new FORMULÆ annex at the end of the book. Minor changes
-to the page text consequent on the new arrangement are as follows:
-
- Page 31 — “[See annexed Formulæ 2, 3, 4, 5.]” changed to “[See Forms
- 2, 3, 4, 5 in Formulæ annex.]”
-
- Page 33 — “Subjoined are” changed to “See Formulæ annex for”
-
- Page 34 — “(see note)” changed to “(see Formulæ annex)”
-
-While the original style and content of the seventy-nine Forms has
-been carefully preserved, minor corrections to the layout of some have
-been made so that all are displayed to the reader in a consistent
-format. This avoids small but distracting variations on a page that
-look like errors in transcription. For the same reason, variations in
-the spelling of dosage measures in the Forms have been regularised.
-Thus “table spoonful”, “table-spoonful” and “tablespoonful” all appear
-as “tablespoonful”. Similarly for “teaspoonful” and “wineglassful”.
-Plural forms have been changed in the same way. For consistency, the
-regularising of these words has also been applied to their appearance
-elsewhere in the body text.
-
-Ordinary footnotes have been re-indexed using numbers and moved to a
-FOOTNOTES section placed after the FORMULÆ annex.
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