SECT. XXX.—ON PERIPNEUMONIA.

Peripneumonia is an inflammation of the lungs, supervening, for the most part, upon violent catarrhs, cynanche, asthma, pleurisies, or other complaints, but being sometimes the original affection. It is accompanied with difficulty of breathing, an acute fever of the ardent type, weight and tightness of the chest, a râle, a seizure of the face with great fulness, the morbific matter being determined upwards like fire. Wherefore the cheeks appear red, the eyes swelled, with falling down of the eyebrows, and the cornea appears somewhat glossy. When the symptoms incline to a more ardent type, it is to be apprehended that the inflammation is of an erysipelatous nature. When the disease originates from the conversion of other diseases into this, we must not have recourse to venesection, more especially if the diseases be of a chronic nature, and if blood had been previously let. But, in the remissions, clysters are to be injected into the bowels, which are moved with difficulty; or, when nothing contra-indicates, large cupping-instruments with scarifications may be frequently applied to the breast and sides. But if the peripneumonia was the original affection, and the strength permit, we must open a vein; or if not, we may cup, proportioning the evacuation of blood to the powers of the patient. Let draughts of the juice of ptisan, or of chondrus with honey, be taken, or from bitter almonds with semilago, or chondrus having some sweet potion mixed with it, such as hydromel, apomel, or hydrorosatum. Fresh butter to the extent of three spoonfuls is also proper. The patient must also drink the propoma of the decoction of figs with hyssop, or of iris boiled in honied water, or of powdered iris, to the amount of two spoonfuls sprinkled upon honied water. This also evacuates downwards. To keep up the strength, he should be made to drink frequently of honied water alone, and with pine-nuts, and the seed of cucumbers. And cupping-instruments and the cerate of privet, having some iris sprinkled upon it; or the cerate of the oil of rue and dried iris; or that made of wax, and rosin, marrow, butter, hyssop, dried iris, and nard ointment, may be applied to the whole chest and sides.

Commentary. The reader is referred to the authorities on pleurisy, as most of them treat of both diseases together.

Hippocrates recommends bleeding, purging, and attenuant drinks as his general plan of treatment. If the appendix to his treatise on the Regimen in Acute Diseases be genuine he approved of carrying venesection the length of inducing deliquium.

Aretæus gives a minute and faithful account of the disease, but his description is too long for our limits. He remarks that as the lungs have but small nerves, there is little pain unless the investing membrane be affected. He states that when the suppuration takes place, a metastasis of the matter to the bladder or belly sometimes occurs and relieves the patient, whereas, if it be determined to the lungs, it is apt to terminate in phthisis. He gives excellent directions for the application of his remedies, which are the same as those now in use, namely, copious bleeding (but so as to avoid deliquium), purging, attenuant and diluent drinks, rubefacients, containing mustard, to the chest, alkaline substances, such as soda, given in the decoction of hyssop; and when the fever has subsided he allows wine devoid of astringency.

Aëtius makes the same remark as Aretæus respecting the metastasis of the matter. His account of the disease is excellent, but like our author’s.

Celsus properly states that the danger is greater than the pain. His account of the treatment is too long for our limits, but is well deserving of attention.

According to Actuarius, in hot affections of the lungs the urine is first a bright yellow, but if the disease gain ground, and dyspnœa and thirst supervene, the urine becomes red and of a dark wine colour. (De Urinis, vii, 5.)

As the Arabians treat the disease like the Greeks, it is unnecessary to say much of their practice. Haly Abbas describes the disease as a hot inflammation of the lungs, for which he recommends bleeding, cooling and diluent draughts, containing linseed, fenugreek, barley, oil of almonds, liquorice, &c.

Rhases describes a species of pneumonia, requiring the use of tonics, analeptics, and wine. He relates the case of a patient who, he affirms, would infallibly have sunk under this disease, if he had not resisted the advice of the other medical attendants, who prescribed the anti-inflammatory treatment and laxatives.

Although our business be with facts and opinions, and not with words, we are confident we shall be excused in giving here a short verbal disquisition on one of the terms which occur in this Section, we mean ῥωγμὸς, translated by us rále. It occurs again at [Book Sixth, Sect. XXXIII], in the description of laryngotomy, and in Aretæus’s description of asthma (Morb. Chron. i, 11.) Cælius Aurelianus thus defines the term: “gutturis stridor quem Græci rhogmon vocant.” (Morb. Acut. ii, 10.) In the Latin translations of the Arabians it is made oregmon. See Rhases (Div. i, 5.) About the terms used by Hippocrates in describing ráles there is some difficulty, owing to the differences of the readings. Thus in the appendix to the work on Regimen in Acute Diseases we read ῥωγμὴ in some MSS., and ῥωχμὴ in others. See Littré (Hipp. t. ii, 464.) In other places he uses ῥέγξις. (Ibid. 262.) In Psellus we read ῥεγμός. (Op. Med. l. 230.) These, as far as we know, are the only terms used by the ancients for the noisy sounds of the respiration in the throat and chest. Ῥόγχος, in Latin rhonchus, we believe, always signifies snoring.