On headach from a blow. We must immediately bleed those who have headach from a blow (unless the injury be superficial), and use suitable embrocations to the head; bathe it with sweet oil; cover it with wool; and make the patients abstain from wine and a rich diet, more especially if they have fever; and, upon the whole, we are to accommodate our treatment as for the inflammation of nervous parts, and especially of the membranes of the brain. If there be a wound it must be treated accordingly.

An emollient application for headach. Of wax, dr. vij; of almond-oil, oz. iij; of turpentine, dr. viij; of scraped verdigris, of Cimolian earth, and of chalcitis, of each, dr. iv; of pumice-stone, dr. iij; of burnt copper and scales of steel (squamæ stomomatis), of each dr. ij; and, if appear to be too hard, soften it with almond-oil.

Commentary. By cephalalgia, as Aretæus remarks, is to be understood an acute pain of the head, and by cephalæa a chronic one. Our author does little more than abridge the contents of the second book of Galen’s work ‘De Med. sec. Loc.’, where this subject is treated of with unrivalled precision. See also Aretæus (de Morb. Chron. i, 2); Oribasius (de Loc. Affect. iv, 1); Celsus (iv, 2); Cælius Aurelianus (de Morb. Chron. i, 1); Octavius Horatianus, (ii, 1); Alexander (i, 10); Pseudo-Dioscorides (Euporist. i, 6); Actuarius (Meth. Med. vi, 2); Aëtius (vi, 40); Leo (Synops. ii, 1); Nonnus (10); Serapion (i, 6); Avicenna (iii, 1, 2); Avenzoar (i, 3); Mesue (de Ægr. Capitis, ii, 1); Haly Abbas (Theor. ix, 3, Pract. v); Alsaharavius (Pract. i, 2, 1); Rhases (ad Mansor. ix, 1, Contin. i, 21.)

In headach from heat, Galen and Alexander concur in condemning the use of poppies, hemlock, and mandragora, unless when compelled to have recourse to them by the continued watchfulness of the patient. Galen directs the application of snow to the head. Avenzoar recommends the affusion of cold liquids from a height upon the head. Serapion mentions oil cooled with ice. When the pain is obstinate, Rhases approves of opening the temporal artery. When the pain is violent, the author of the ‘Euporista’ recommends us to shave the head and bathe it with a decoction of narcotic vegetables. Galen expresses himself very clearly with regard to the sympathy between the head and the stomach, from nervous communication. (Loc. affect. iii, 9.)

For headachs arising from a hot or cold intemperament, Galen recommends the remedies called metasyncritica by the Methodists, for an account of which see Le Clerc. (Hist. de la Méd. ii, iv, 1, 3.) He says, “Ce que Thessalus appelloit metasyncrise etoit un changement qu’ il prétendoit faire dans tout le corps, ou dans quelque partie seulement.” Such rubefacients as mustard, thapsia, &c. belonged to this class. See also Prosper Alpinus (de Med. Method. iii, 15.) The term signifies “altering the system;” and, therefore, we have generally rendered it “alteratives” in the course of this translation. The treatment followed by Philagrius in the hot and fiery intemperament of the head deserves to be noticed. In a case of this description having used many other cooling remedies in vain, he says he shaved the head and applied snow to it, by which means he extinguished the intemperament. (Theophilus, Sch. in Hipp. t. ii, 457, ed. Dietz.) This practice is borrowed from Galen, as above.

Our author borrows his treatment of bilious headach from Galen and Alexander. To his judicious account of headach from wine or a blow, nothing need be added from any other author. Alexander justly remarks that, when it arises from the latter cause, it is very dangerous. He is fuller than our author in treating of headach from sympathy with the liver, for which he recommends local applications of a cooling nature and a generous diet. Similar treatment, he adds, is to be pursued when it arises from a hot intemperament of the stomach, bowels, or spleen.

According to Avicenna and Actuarius, frothy urine, that is to say, urine having bubbles on the surface, is characteristic of cephalalgia.

The Arabians generally treat of the disease by the name of soda.

Headach, says Haly Abbas, is either seated in the head, or arises from sympathy. When seated in the head, it either arises from an intemperament, or organic disease, or flatus, or a blow. One of the most common causes of sympathetic headach is the presence of bilious matters in the stomach, which case is generally relieved by vomiting. Protracted watchfulness induces headach, by occasioning a corruption of the food in the stomach; and protracted sleep in like manner fills the brain with vapours. Excessive evacuation, by producing a dry intemperament, proves a cause of headach. It is in this manner that epistaxis and menorrhagia occasion headach. Haly Abbas, like Galen, mentions as a cause of headach an excessive sensibility of the nerves which connect the brain and stomach. Haly further states that headach will arise from sympathy with the uterus, as after abortions, obstructions of the lochial or menstrual discharge, and the like causes. He remarks that violent headach will sometimes occasion loss of speech, owing to an affection of the nerve which is distributed upon the muscles of speech. His treatment, like our author’s, is varied according to the nature of the exciting causes; and his account of it is so full and judicious, that we regret our limits do not permit us to give a more ample detail of it. His remedies are, general bleeding, cupping the extremities or back part of the neck, anodyne or cold applications to the head, drastic or gentle purgatives, and so forth.

Alsaharavius treats the complaint upon similar principles. When it arises from heat, he recommends the affusion of tepid water over the head, and afterwards applies oils cooled in snow. When connected with bile, he directs the belly to be opened. When it is occasioned by a sanguineous plethora, he recommends general bleeding and the application of cupping-instruments to the nape of the neck.