SECT. VIII.—ON PRURITUS.
If the child be troubled with pruritus, use fomentations, and anoint with plenty of refined oil, in which a little wax has been melted.
Commentary. See Galen (Hyg. v); Oribasius (Synops. v, 8); Avicenna (i, 3, 1); Haly Abbas (Pract. i, 20); Rhases (de Morb. Infant, c. 19); Alsaharavius (Pract. xxvi, 25.)
The account given by Oribasius is similar to our author’s. (Synops. v, 8.)
Alsaharavius properly recommends attention to correct the acrimony of the nurse’s milk; to wash the child with decoctions of roses, myrtle leaves, and the like; if the pustules are of a dry nature, to rub them with oil of sesame or of violets; and, if humid, with an ointment made of wax, litharge, and rose-oil.
Rhases directs the nurse to abstain from sweet and salt things, as they inflame the blood; and to put the child into a bath medicated with mallows, pearl-barley, fenugreek, gourds, &c.
Avicenna and Haly Abbas treat the complaint upon similar principles.