In case of excessive swelling a leech may be applied, or the doctor may resort to scarification.

Medicines consist of cathartics, diuretics, diaphoretics, opiates, tonics.

General Treatment.—Frequent baths, plenty of fresh air. Temperature of the room should be uniform. Moderate and subdued light.

Diet should consist of nutritious food, liquid or soft, according to the condition of the patient.

The gravity of each case depends largely upon the extent to which the cornea is involved.

Treatment must, of course, be modified according to the virulence of the inflammation.

To Apply a Leech.—Leeches are applied to relieve congestion. Put one in a small vial with a mouth large enough for the leech to crawl through. Cleanse the patient’s temple, and with a sterile needle scratch the skin until the blood shows. Directly over this place the mouth of the vial. The leech will bite almost instantly, and will drop off when it is gorged. If the occasion requires the leech to be taken off before it is gorged, sprinkle a little salt on its head. Hemorrhage should not be checked unless profuse, in which case a piece of ice or alum applied to the spot will arrest the flow. If possible, the patient should be kept in ignorance of the application.

OPHTHALMIA NEONATORUM.

When the disease develops it will be manifested, as a rule, from three to five days after birth by redness of the eye and a slight discharge. It is the duty of the nurse, as well as of the accoucheur, to examine the eyes of the new-born babe each day during the lying-in period, and at the first sign of trouble, if discovered by the nurse, the attention of the physician should be directed to the matter. During the first two or three days after the disease begins there is usually little or no pus present, and comparatively little swelling of the lids, except in the most violent cases. During this so-called first stage the treatment should be that of an ordinary acute catarrhal conjunctivitis—viz.: iced compresses applied for an hour twice a day if the baby is well and strong; gentle flushing of the conjunctival sac with a warm saturated solution of boric acid. As soon as pus begins to form, the eyes must be cleansed more frequently—every hour during the day and every two hours during the night—and the edges of the lids should be kept constantly anointed with sterile vaselin to prevent their agglutination and the retention of the discharge. Drainage is indicated whenever there is suppuration, and if we can prevent the sticking together of the lids in this way, we allow free drainage and reduce the irritation which invariably results from retention of the discharges in these cases.

In all cases it will be noticed that after the discharge has been washed away from the everted lids there are strings or shreds of mucus in the folds of the conjunctiva. The nurse should endeavor at each cleansing to wash them out by continuous flushing and gentle manipulation of the lids. If she does not succeed in keeping the eyes free from these shreds the physician will remove them at least once a day.