SECT. XXIII.—THE CURE OF QUARTANS.
Those affected with quartans are to be treated gently, without any powerful medicine or evacuation, unless a great fulness of blood prevail, in which case it may be necessary to bleed. The diet should be good and not flatulent, and the belly ought to be loosened by the customary things; and, if these are not sufficient, clysters may be used, at first emollient, and afterwards acrid. They must be prohibited from swine’s flesh, and everything that is viscid and slowly evacuated, and also from all cooling and diluent articles of food. Let them use a thin white wine moderately warm, also pickles and mustard. And after an interval of some days, they should take the composition consisting of three peppers, or that called Diospoliticus. And if they take every day of pepper alone in water, they will do well. But if the patient is at the acme of the complaint, his diet ought to be very light, he should be enjoined to take protracted rest, and to take care of his bowels by using emollient and laxative things. Next, let him use diuretics; and if the symptoms of concoction appear manifest, then he may boldly have recourse to such as evacuate black humours, and that not once only, but frequently. After a powerful evacuation give also the medicine from vipers, and such others as are recommended for these fevers, among which is the well-known and most celebrated of all containing the Cyrenaic juice.
Commentary. This Section is copied from Oribasius (Synops. vi, 13.) Galen, however, is the great authority upon this subject. With respect to venesection, he directs us to have recourse to it only when there is a plethora of blood; but recommends, when a vein has been opened, and the blood found to be black and thick, especially in the case of diseased spleen, to abstract blood until it change its colour. He approves of laxatives, and clysters, at first emollient and afterwards acrid. He forbids those things which were supposed to engender black bile, and recommends a thin white wine. He speaks favorably of pepper. When the disease is come to its acme, he recommends the state of the viscera to be rectified by fomentations and cataplasms, and by administering melanogogues, especially hellebore, in such quantity as to operate powerfully upwards and downwards. He speaks favorably of vipers, and also of assafœtida. (Therap. ad Glauc. i.) The Commentary of Stephanus on this work, lately published by Dietz, contains very sensible remarks on the practice here recommended.
Alexander delivers his opinions regarding the treatment of quartans at so great a length that it is impossible to do justice to them in an abridgment. As usual, he animadverts freely upon the doctrines of Galen, whom he finds fault with for recommending desiccants and calefacients in every species of quartan fever; whereas he maintains that when it arises from adust bile, refrigerants are indicated. He strongly commends emetics at the beginning of a paroxysm. He approves of peppers combined with opium, henbane, and other articles. Synesius and Constantinus Africanus admit the distinction made by Alexander, and nearly follow his principles of treatment. Synesius makes mention of wormwood, which, however, had been recommended by Ruffus. (Ap. Aëtium.) Serenus Samonicus also recommends wormwood: “Mira est absinthi cum simplice potio lympha.”
Celsus gives minute directions for conducting the treatment in all the stages of the complaint. He thus sums up the remedies which he recommends: “In ejusmodi valetudine medicamenta sunt, oleum, frictio, exercitatio, cibus, vinum.”
Serapion mentions black hellebore, agaric, and the lapis lazuli, as medicines which purge black bile. (De Antid. vi, 15.) Averrhoes, however, cautions against using black hellebore for the cure of quartans; expresses himself in dubious terms respecting venesection; and, upon the whole, seems to place his principal reliance in things of a diffusible, attenuant, and penetrating nature. Haly Abbas, Avicenna, and Rhases speak of venesection in much the same terms as Galen, that is to say, they recommend it when symptoms of plethora are present, but say that it may prove prejudicial in any other circumstances. They approve of emetics at the commencement, and of wormwood in the decline of the fever. Avicenna appeals to Galen in favour of the black and white hellebore. Several of Rhases’ authorities in his ‘Continens’ recommend bleeding. They in general approve of the early use of the bath, and of diuretics and sudorifics; and recommend, in the decline of the fever, things of a heating nature, such as pepper, anise, spikenard, ginger, &c.
It remains to be mentioned that amulets were very much used in ancient times for the cure of quartans. Alexander Trallian had great confidence in them. Galen supposed that they owed their virtues to the physical properties of the substances which were appended. Ælius Spartianus, one of the writers of the Augustan History, says, that the emperor Caracalla wished to punish those who made use of amulets. On the περίαπτα, περίαμματα, vel amuleta of the ancients, see Andreas Laurentius (de Mirab. Strum. sanat. p. 83); Rendtorfius (Notæ in Anatolii Fragment. ap. Fabricii Biblioth. Græc. iv, 305); and Wolfius (ap. Act. Lips. 1690.) The practice of using amulets for the cure of diseases must have been very ancient, for it is alluded to by Pindar (Pyth. iii), and Theophrastus (H. P. ix, 10.) The facts recently stated in support of the system of Animal Magnetism have been supposed to give some countenance to the ancient belief in the efficacy of amulets.