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are the back, the sacrum, and the hips. They often spread far and eat deep; they are additional sources of irritation and exhaustion to a frame already reduced to the last extremity of feebleness, and the scale which seemed to be equally balanced between life and death, they often turn on the side of death.

3. In severe and protracted cases, and often coming to destroy the hope that was beginning to spring up in favour of the patient, erysipelas is no unusual visitant. It is the outward and visible sign of inward and always most formidable disease. Many and many are the persons it destroys who, but for it, would ultimately gain the victory over a malady with which they have carried on a doubtful contest, perhaps for fourteen or for one and twenty days.

4. Pain, swelling, hardness and suppuration of the glands in different parts of the body are not uncommon. The gland which most commonly suffers is the parotid, although the submaxillary, the axillary, and even the inguinal, are occasionally involved. These glandular affections never take place but in formidable cases, and their occurrence sometimes changes at once the entire character of the disease, and destroys the slightest hope of recovery.

5. Now and then there take place severe pain in the joints, together with tumefaction and excessive tenderness on pressure. These events usually come on towards the close of exceedingly bad cases, and they are often attended with very acute suffering.

Neither the occurrence of the events nor the appearances presented on examination after death, have hitherto been noticed, as far as I am aware, by any author. Every case attended with this peculiar affection that I have seen, has proved rapidly fatal. The condition of the joints, as ascertained by dissection, will be stated in the pathology.

Purulent discharge from the ears, deafness, spasmodic contraction of the extremities, convulsions, all depend upon certain states of the brain, and will be noticed when these states are spoken of. Numerous maladies arising from various degrees and complications of disease in the lungs, heart, pleura, viscera of the abdomen and investing membrane, not belonging to fever, but adding to its evils, are found on examination after death, which often fully account for anomalous symptoms that aggravated the case during life. Of these mention will be made in the proper place.

CHAPTER VI.

OF THE PATHOLOGY OF FEVER.

Importance of connecting the Symptoms with the States of the Organs: Pathology of Fever comprehends the Morbid Changes that take place in the Solids and Fluids of the Body. 1. General Pathology of the Solids, exhibiting a collective View of the Morbid Appearances in the Head, Thorax, and Abdomen. Cuses illustrating such Morbid Appearances in each of these Cavities. 2. Pathology of the Fluids.

THE preceding history of the symptoms of fever can be of no real use unless it be possible to connect it with the events of which those symptoms are the signs. The events consist of certain morbid changes which take place in the series of organs already enumerated. We arrive at the knowledge of these events first by noting the symptoms which occur during life, and their order of succession: and, secondly, by examining the condition of the organs after death in the fatal cases: a comparison of the symptoms, as previously observed, with the state of

the organs as subsequently ascertained, teaches us what the symptoms indicate. By carefully observing the symptoms in a large number of cases, we at length become acquainted with all the important symptoms that arise: by carefully examining the organs after death in a large number of cases, we gradually learn all the important changes in structure which they undergo: and by comparing, in all cases, the morbid symptoms with the altered states, we acquire in the end the power of ascertaining, with a high degree of probability, the presence of an event which we cannot see, by the presence of its sign which we can see.

In proportion as our knowledge becomes perfect, we are thus enabled, during life, and at the bed-side of the patient, to see what is going on within his brain, within his lungs, and within his intestines, with as much distinctness and certainty as we could were the cases in which these organs are enclosed, and the organs themselves transparent. The highly interesting and important fact demonstrated by the examination, in the manner of which we have just spoken, of large numbers of fever patients is, that the changes which take place in the organs are uniform; that the symptoms by which these changes are denoted are likewise uniform, and therefore, that it is possible to arrive at a perfect knowledge of the phenomena of fever.

The present state of our knowledge, it must be

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confessed, is far from being perfect. To a certain extent, however, it is even already sufficiently perfect to afford the physician an invaluable guide in the conduct of his practice; and the steps that are wanting to complete the knowledge we possess (as far as human knowledge can be complete) future labour and perseverance will assuredly supply.

The pathology of fever comprehends the morbid changes that take place in the solids and the fluids of the body. It is probable that the changes in the fluids are wholly dependent upon those which take place in the solids, although the vitiation of the former must necessarily react upon, and increase the derangement of the latter. If it be true, as is highly probable, that the changes in the solids are beyond all comparison of the greatest importance, as not only antecedents, but invariable antecedents, or causes, it may be considered fortunate that our knowledge of their diseases is so much more advanced than our knowledge of the diseases of the humours. The morbid changes of the solids are ascertained with a great degree of exactness, it may almost be said with a great degree of perfection; while those which occur in the fluids are almost wholly unknown. Until very recently physicians satisfied themselves with framing conjectures about their corruption; and knowing with certainty no one vice that they possess, they attributed to them a thousand. Attention is now awakened to the sub

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