6. Several weeks after I had taken out the lowermost half of the Spinal Marrow, and with it the Cauda Equina, I daily applied, for four days running, Animal Electricity to the Sciatic Nerves, by passing a gold Probe between them and the Os Sacrum, and excited several hundreds of convulsions of the Thighs and Legs, and yet found that, on laying bare the Femoral Nerves, and pinching them, the Muscles were slightly convulsed.
Hence, I apprehend, additional force is given to an opinion I ventured many years ago to propose[3], that the Nerves do not receive their energy wholly from the Head and Spinal Marrow, but that the texture of every branch of a Nerve is such as to furnish it, or that the structure of each Nerve is similar to that of the Brain.
7. From the above Experiments, it appears probable, in the highest degree, that Opium may be absorbed in such quantity as to produce fatal symptoms.
8. The following circumstances concur in rendering inadmissible an opinion lately proposed by M. Fontana, that Poisons operate by changes they produce on the mass of Blood, or on some unknown principle connected with the Blood.
a. If his opinion was just, Poison introduced into a Vein of the extremities, so as to be in contact with this unknown principle, should operate as quickly, and in the same manner as when the Poison is mixed with the Blood near the Heart, which he admits is not the case[4].
b. Cutting the Spinal Marrow in Frogs, before applying the Poison of the Viper to their Legs, prevents it from killing them[5]; which should not happen, if the Poison acted on the Blood alone.
c. He acknowledges that an Animal bit in its Leg by a Viper, instantaneously feels acute pain[6]; and it, in like manner, feels instantly great uneasiness when the Poison is mixed with its Blood[7]. We know for certain, that, through the medium of the Nerves, we are instantly rendered sensible of injury done to the most distant parts of our Bodies.
Are we not, therefore, in the last mentioned Experiment, to conclude, that the uneasiness was produced because the Poison acted upon the Nerves of the Vessels?