Part 24 (1/2)
III. That it will often produce this effect after every other probable method has been fruitlessly tried.
IV. That if this fails, there is but little chance of any other medicine succeeding.
V. That in proper doses, and under the management now pointed out, it is mild in its operation, and gives less disturbance to the system, than squill, or almost any other active medicine.
VI. That when dropsy is attended by palsy, unsound viscera, great debility, or other complication of disease, neither the Digitalis, nor any other diuretic can do more than obtain a truce to the urgency of the symptoms; unless by gaining time, it may afford opportunity for other medicines to combat and subdue the original disease.
VII. That the Digitalis may be used with advantage in every species of dropsy, except the encysted.
VIII. That it may be made subservient to the cure of diseases, unconnected with dropsy.
IX. That it has a power over the motion of the heart, to a degree yet un.o.bserved in any other medicine, and that this power may be converted to salutary ends.
PRACTICAL REMARKS ON DROPSY, AND SOME OTHER DISEASES.
The following remarks consist partly of matter of fact, and partly of opinion. The former will be permanent; the latter must vary with the detection of error, or the improvement of knowledge. I hazard them with diffidence, and hope they will be examined with candour; not by a contrast with other opinions, but by an attentive comparison with the phnomena of disease.
ANASARCA.
-- 1. The anasarca is generally curable when seated in the sub-cutaneous cellular membrane, or in the substance of the lungs.
-- 2. When the abdominal viscera in general are greatly enlarged, which they sometimes are, without effused fluid in the cavity of the abdomen; the disease is incurable. After death, the more solid viscera are found very large and pale. If the cavity contains water, that water may be removed by diuretics.
-- 3. In swollen legs and thighs, where the resistance to pressure is considerable, the tendency to transparency in the skin not obvious, and where the alteration of posture occasions but little alteration in the state of distension, the cure cannot be effected by diuretics.
Is this difficulty of cure occasioned by sp.i.s.situde in the effused fluids, by want of proper communication from cell to cell, or is the disease rather caused by a morbid growth of the solids, than by an acc.u.mulation of fluid?
Is not this disease in the limbs similar to that of the viscera (-- 2)?
-- 4. Anasarcous swellings often take place in palsied limbs, in arms as well as legs; so that the swelling does not depend merely upon position.
-- 5. Is there not cause to suspect that many dropsies originate from paralytic affections of the lymphatic absorbents? And if so, is it not probable that the Digitalis, which is so effectual in removing dropsy, may also be used advantageously in some kinds of palsy?
ASCITES.
-- 6. If existing alone, (_i. e._) without accompanying anasarca, is in children curable; in adults generally incurable by medicines. Tapping may be used here with better chance for success than in more complicated dropsies. Sometimes cured by vomiting.
ASCITES and ANASARCA.
-- 7. Incurable if dependant upon irremediably diseased viscera, or on a gouty const.i.tution, so debilitated, that the gouty paroxysms no longer continue to be formed.
In every other situation the disease yields to diuretics and tonics.