A Collection of Tracts, Chirurgical and Medical; viz. I. A New Light of Chirurgery ... II. The New Light of Chirurgery vindicated ... III. A Physico-medical Essay concerning Alkaly and Acid ... IV. Further Considerations concerning Alkaly and Acid ... V. A Treatise of the Gout ... VI. The Doctrine of Acids in the Cure of Diseases further asserted ... VII. A Relation of a sudden and extraordinary Cure of a Person bitten by a Viper ... The second edition [of "Novum lumen chirurgicum"] corrected, etc


Book Description




A Collection of Tracts, Chirugical and Medical; viz. I. A New Light of Chirurgery ... II. The New Light of Chirurgery vindicated from the unjust aspersions of several unknown calumniators,&c. III. A Physico-medical Essay concerning Alkaly and Acid ... IV. Further Considerations concerning Alkaly and Acid ... V. A Treatise of the Gout ... VI. The Doctrin of Acids in the Cure of Diseases further asserted, in answer to Dr. Tuthill ... VII. A Relation of a Sudden and Extraordinary Cure of a Person bitten by a Viper ... All corrected and inlarg'd by John Colbatch, etc


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Drugs on Trial


Book Description

This book describes the main issues of eighteenth-century pharmacology and therapeutics and provides detailed case studies of three key areas: lithontriptics (remedies against urinary stones), opium, and Peruvian bark (quinine).







Doctors and Ethics


Book Description

Medical ethics has been a constant adjunct of Western medicine from its origins in Greek times. Although the Hippocratic Oath has been intensely studied, until recently there has been very little historical work on medical ethics between the Oath and Thomas Percival's Medical Ethics of 1803, which is commonly thought of as the first treatise on modern medical ethics. This volume brings together original research which throws new light on how standards of behaviour for medical practitioners were articulated in the different religious, political and social as well as medical contexts from the classical period until the nineteenth century. Its ten essays will place the early history of medical ethics into the framework of the new social and intellectual history of medicine that has been developed in the last ten years.




Quinine's Predecessor


Book Description

The history of cinchona has traditionally begun with the romantic - and now discredited - story of Francisca Henriquez Ribera, the Countess of Chinchon. According to legend, the Countess became seriously ill during an outbreak of fever in Lima around 1623. Her husband, the Viceroy, learning of a medicinal tree bark used by the local Indians, ordered the bark tested and administered to his wife. Following her prompt recovery, the Countess championed the use of bark among the general populace, and thousands of lives were saved. The drug became known as pulvis Comitissae, the powder of the Countess, and later - misspelled by Linnaeus - as cinchona. In Quinine's Predecessor Saul Jarcho unravels a tangle of myth, hearsay, and fact to establish the definitive history of cinchona bark - the still-important source of modern quinine. Jarcho explains the discovery of the healing property of the substance, also known as Peruvian bark or Jesuits' bark, and traces the routes by which it was transmitted from South America to Spain and other countries. He recounts the controversy and resistance surrounding its acceptance by medical practitioners. And he offers the most complete account to date of the important work of Francesco Torti, who used the bark successfully in treating cerebral and other especially dangerous malarial infections.




Drugs and Narcotics in History


Book Description

A collection of essays exploring the complex history of drugs and narcotics throughout historyfrom ancient Greece to the present dayshows that such substances were sought originally as healing agents, both within and without the medical profession. However, the mood- and mind-altering characteristics of some have led to the widespread abuse and legal controls we see today.