Indeed, the opinion is not very tenable, for a small part of the placenta or decidua would, if the uterus were contracting, be soon expelled, and would then surely cease to have any farther influence; whilst, on the other hand, if the uterus do not regularly contract in size, or recover itself, the hemorrhage will take place from this cause alone, independently of all considerations relating to the placenta.

By attending to this fact, we shall not only refrain from blaming midwives unjustly, but also from adding to the danger, by endeavouring to remove a substance which has no existence in the uterus, and which, even were it to a certainty within, it is there not as a cause of the hemorrhage, but as an effect of the cause which produces that.

This disease may take place at any period of gestation. It may follow abortion in the second month, or expulsion at the full time; but it is dangerous in proportion as we approach to the term of natural labour. It may attack only once or twice, or it may make many attacks for several weeks; and it is wonderful how the system can be supported under these continued and repeated discharges: but we find that an incredible quantity of blood may be lost, if it be discharged at intervals.

We read in a foreign journal of a woman who, in the space of nineteen years, was bled no less than one thousand and twenty times without material injury. Each paroxysm is accompanied by slight pain in the back and belly, with considerable languor and feeling of depression. The discharge continues until the clot escapes out of the uterus, and for some time after that until a new one forms; and during this last process we have a considerable oozing of serous fluid.

The old clot drops out of the vagina the first time that the patient is raised, or, if retained, it breaks down by putrefaction. On examining these clots, they will be found to be pretty firm, and often contain, intermixed, a quantity of whitish matter, proceeding from the morbid condition of the lochia, for the vessels, after bleeding often, throw out a secretion, and bleed no more until the next paroxysm, which may not take place for one or two days.

This complaint either terminates fatally by a convulsion or syncope, or the uterus diminishes in size, and, instead of expelling the contained clot with hemorrhage, the coagulum seems to break down and come away gradually in a fluid form.

In abortion, during the early stages of gestation, we cannot take any other precaution to prevent this than keeping the patient for some time very quiet, as motion, or even any agitation of mind, might interfere with the process of recovery.

In more advanced gestation, as, for instance, in the seventh month, and afterwards, if we should be obliged, on account of flooding, after the birth of the child, to introduce the hand, and extract the placenta, we must be careful not to withdraw it, until we find the uterus contracting round it, which will be a mean, though not an infallible one, of making it go regularly on in the process of restoration to the unimpregnated state.

The best method of treating this complaint is on the very first appearance of hemorrhage, to introduce a firm plug into the vagina, which will prevent it from going to an excessive degree. Afterwards we must take measures to prevent a return.

This is best done by keeping the circulation slow, by means of the digitalis, and putting the patient on a mild vegetable diet. We cannot assist the process of restoration otherwise than by endeavouring to excite the contraction of the uterus. This may be done by injecting an astringent fluid two or three times a day, and by ordering saline clysters, which have also the effect of keeping the bowels open, an object of very great importance. We may also find it useful to excite gentle vomiting by small doses of ipecacuanha.