HYSTERIA.

There appears to be with many a greater tendency to hysterical symptoms during pregnancy, than at other times.

Hysterical females are, for the most part, those who live a life of excitement, attending frequently balls, theaters, and public exhibitions late at night, and especially such as are much addicted to tea and coffee drinking, the use of concentrated and stimulating food, and have little exercise in the open air.

Treatment.—Medicines, especially the preparations of opium, also have a tendency to cause hysterical symptoms. Pregnant women should, then, as far as possible, avoid these causes of so pitiable a disease. Whether in pregnancy, or at other times, hysteria cannot come upon those who live correctly, and maintain at all times good and permanent health. I will here further remark, that all novel reading should be avoided during pregnancy; and the less the better, I may say, at all times, of such novels as ninety-nine hundredths of all that are put forth at the present day.