In India, the native doctors are much more successful in getting out the worms, than Europeans. After long feeling with their fingers, for the body of the worm, they make an incision as nearly as they can judge over its middle, and, pulling the worm by a duplicature of it, draw out both ends of the worm at one time. I have often endeavoured to imitate this practice. My sense of touch was not so delicate, and did not guide me so correctly, as it did the Hindoo doctors; but I always found that when, on cutting down to it, I got on the middle of the worm, and, by the forceps, pulled this out, I could with ease extract a large portion, and, not unfrequently, the whole worm.
Leeches, astringent and sedative lotions, cataplasms, fomentations, &c. were applied, as required by the circumstances of the case. A good deal of attention was paid to the disease, in all its stages; and several experiments were made on the worm, which, however, it is needless to detail here.
After using a variety of articles, in the treatment of the Guinea-worm, and making them enter the system by the absorbents, I think that unctuous substances succeeded the best, particularly mercurial ointment. Passing an electrical shock through the part had no effect.
ULCERS.
In India, we remarked that ulcers, particularly of the legs, were very rarely seen; and that many men in the 88th regiment, who in Europe were always in hospitals with them, were in India quite free from them. In Egypt, they began to re-appear. In the course of six weeks after the army came to Alexandria, there appeared seventy on the general return of the army; and they continued afterwards on the increase.
TETANUS.
Though no case of this disease occurred to us while in Egypt, I met with a severe one on the voyage thither. As I was successful in this case, and by a mode of treatment which, with the theory which gave rise to it, is, I believe, now considered as obsolete, it may not be uninteresting to mention what led me to give it a trial.
In the year 1794, the first tetanic case I met with, occurred at Bergen-op-Zoom. A sergeant of the 88th regiment, after remaining drunk out all night, was in the morning found lying in a ditch. This was in August, and the weather was unusually warm. When brought to the hospital, his jaws were so firmly locked, that the blade of a pen-knife could not be introduced between the teeth. Mercury was had recourse to, but in a few hours the muscles of the neck became convulsed. By the advice of a Dutch physician, a man of great eminence, I immersed my patient four times, in the course of the day, into a bath of broth. He continued in it half an hour each time, and, after he came out, his whole body was rubbed with mercurial ointment. I do not recollect that any thing else was given to him, unless a stimulant enema. Next morning the good effects of the Dutch practice were evident: a violent salivation came on, and, in about three weeks, the man was doing his duty.