No ancient author has treated of epilepsy more accurately than the great Methodist Cælius; but his account is so long and minute, that it is impossible for us to do justice to it in an abridgment. The causes of the complaint which he enumerates are drinking too much wine, indigestion, compression of the brain, and frights. He says that the whole nervous system is affected, but especially the part seated in the head. When the patient is an infant, he properly directs us either to change the nurse, or to pay particular attention to her diet. Bloodletting he approves of on a first attack, unless the stomach be loaded with crudities; and if there be pain in any part of the head, he directs leeches to be applied to it. He recommends gargles, and rubbing the skin with substances which occasion an eruption of pustules. He enjoins great caution in the use of hellebore. He approves of gentle exercise, a light diet, abstinence from wine, change of scene, or a sea-voyage. With respect to the modes of treatment pursued by the other sects, he greatly disapproves of the application of fire and other hot things to the head, and of strong sinapisms to the other parts of the body. Escharotics applied to the head, he says, only increase the disorder; and the use of bull’s blood, or that of a man recently killed, and other such ridiculous remedies, he properly treats with contempt. He disapproves of diuretics, and of hellebore, scammony, and the like, when administered indiscriminately. He speaks unfavorably of chalybeates.
The Arabians follow closely the views of their Grecian masters, without suggesting any material improvement. Haly Abbas says that epilepsy is a convulsion which either comes on periodically, or at no stated times; and that it either arises from the brain itself, or from sympathy with the stomach, or with some other parts of the body. It is occasioned, he says, either by a gross humour collected in the ventricles of the brain, or from compression produced by fracture. He makes mention of the epileptic aura, and, like our author, states that the disease is distinguished by foam at the patient’s mouth. He joins Hippocrates in pronouncing such cases as occur before puberty to be not difficult to cure, but those which supervene after that age to be most intractable. When the complaint occurs in an infant, he properly directs us to attend both to the nurse’s and the infant’s diet. In cases attended with plethora he approves of general bleeding, cupping the limbs, and opening the saphena. When the disease is protracted he advises to apply cupping-instruments to the neck, and to give drastic purgatives, such as black hellebore, colocynth, &c. When it appears to proceed from the stomach he approves of emetics. He commends peony applied as an amulet. It is worthy of remark that Andreas Laurentius, in the 17th century, speaks confidently of this remedy. So inveterate is the dominion of superstition and ignorance! Alsaharavius gives a curious account of epilepsy, but mixed with some superstitious notions. He says he had had ocular proof that epileptics are possessed with demons; for that he had known many of them who had a knowledge of things which he was sure they had never learned. Like the others, he speaks of amulets; but his general treatment is sufficiently rational and scientific.
Rhases gives the theories and practice of preceding authors along with his own remarks, which, however, contain no very original opinions. One of his Arabian authorities recommends bleeding at the arm, and also by cupping and opening the occipital arteries, rubbing the head with mustard, purging with hiera, sternutatories, &c. The application of mustard to the head is approved of by most of his authorities.
Like our author, most of the ancient writers approve of Cyrenaic juice, or assafœtida, in cases of epilepsy.
SECT. XIV.—ON MELANCHOLY, MANIA, AND DEMONIACS.
Melancholy is a disorder of the intellect without fever, occasioned mostly by a melancholic humour seizing the understanding; sometimes the brain being primarily affected, and sometimes it being altered by sympathy with the rest of the body. And there is a third species called the flatulent and hypochondriac, occasioned by inflammation of the parts in the hypochondria adjoining to the stomach, by which sometimes noxious vapours or auræ are transmitted to the brain, and sometimes part of the substance of the humour. The common symptoms of them all are fear, despondency, and misanthropy; and that they fancy themselves to be, some, brute animals, and imitate their cries; and others, earthen-vessels, and are frightened lest they be broken. Some desire death, and others are afraid of dying; some laugh constantly, and others weep; and some believe themselves impelled by higher powers, and foretell what is to come, as if under divine influence; and these are, therefore, properly called demoniacs, or possessed persons. The peculiar symptoms of melancholy, from sympathy with the general system, are leanness, darkness, and shagginess; the whole appearance melancholic, either by nature, or acquired by anxiety, want of sleep, the administration of noxious food, or stoppage of the hemorrhoidal, or menstrual discharge. Melancholy, from affection of the hypochondria, is indicated by indigestion, acid eructations, heat and heaviness of them, retraction of the hypochondria, and sometimes inflammation, especially in the beginning; and then, when they increase, melancholic symptoms supervene. These are relieved by digestion, or copious discharges, or flatus, or vomiting, or eructations. When none of these symptoms, or very few of them, are present, melancholic symptoms appearing indicate that the brain is primarily affected, and for the most part from a melancholic humour. When the complaint is occasioned by yellow bile, which, by too much heat, has been turned into black, it will bring on the disease called mania, which occasions ungovernable madness, so that those affected with it will destroy persons who come near them unguardedly.
The cure of melancholy. Those who are subject to melancholy from a primary affection of the brain are to be treated with frequent baths, and a wholesome and humid diet, together with suitable exhilaration of mind, without any other remedy, unless when, from its long continuance, the offending humour is difficult to evacuate, in which case we must have recourse to more powerful and complicated plans of treatment. These cases are to be purged from the first with dodder of thyme (epithymus), or aloes; for if a small quantity of these be taken every day, it will be of the greatest service, and open the bowels gently. After purging, as we have mentioned, give wormwood, sometimes macerating and boiling the herb in water to the amount of two cyathi, and sometimes diluting the juice with water, to the amount of half a drachm, and giving it frequently. Let them drink of the most acrid vinegar before going to sleep, and dip, for the most part, their condiments in it before eating them. But it will be better if to the vinegar be added squills, poley, or the slender birthwort. When you meet with an incipient case of the complaint, from sympathy with the general system (as described above), and the body is firm, you must, by all means, begin with phlebotomy, and after phlebotomy, when the strength is recruited, purge downwards, with the wild cucumber, and the composition from the black hellebore, and promote the hemorrhoidal and menstrual discharges, if the affection be occasioned by retention of them. Diuretic remedies are likewise proper, as also evacuations by perspiration. But if the complaint arise from disorder of the hypochondria, we must attend to them, and foment them with a decoction of rue, dill, wormwood, pennyroyal, the seed of the chaste-tree, and of the fruit of the bay-tree; for these soothe the pains and diminish flatulence. They may be boiled in oil and applied; and the cataplasms of them ought to contain the remedies for flatulence, namely, parsley, or anise, or cumin; and it will not be improper to add cyperus, iris, and frankincense, to the cataplasms. These things are to be allowed to remain in general, even during the day, and whether the patient eat or fast; and, when taken away, apply some other protection, such as a broad piece of wool. Use dry-cupping for flatulence, and cupping with scarifications for pains and inflammations. While directing your attention to the cure, you must not forget mustard, and apply acrid smegmata and calefacient plasters to the back and belly. In chronic cases, the most powerful remedy is evacuation, by vomiting with hellebore. The diet for all melancholics should be wholesome, and moderately moistening; abstaining from beef, roe’s flesh, dried lentil, cabbages, snails, thick and dark-coloured wines, and, in a word, from whatever things engender black bile.
The cure of mania. Persons affected with mania are to be treated like melancholics; and, in particular, we must apply to the head rose-oil, or rose-oil with vinegar, and purge with the bitter antidote called hiera, having previously bled them; and we must use leeches to the head. But nothing is of such service as horse-fennel, either the root or seed drunk in water. A drachm of the root of bryony with water may be taken every day. If the maniacs will not be persuaded to take the purgative medicines, they must be mixed with their food, in a concealed manner, such as with mouthfuls of meat, or dried figs, or dates, or else with their drink. But, above all things, they must be secured in bed, so that they may not be able to injure themselves, or those who approach them; or swung within a wicker-basket in a small couch suspended from on high.
Commentary. Consult Hippocrates (Aphor.); Galen (Comment. in Aphor., de Morb. Vulg.); Celsus (iii, 18); Aretæus (de Morb. Chron. i, 6, and de Curat. Morb. i, 5); Aëtius (vi, 8); Nonnus (32); Oribasius (Synops. viii, 17); Alexander (i, 16); Actuarius (de Dig. Morb. ii, 34); Octavius Horatianus (ii, 2, 5); Mesue (de Ægr. Cap. 34); Serapion (i, 22); Avicenna (iii, 1, 4); Avenzoar (i, 9, 16); Haly Abbas (Theor. ix, 7; Pract. v, 23); Alsaharavius (Pract. i, 2, 27); Rhases (ad Mansor. ix, 13; Contin. 1).