Upon the whole, therefore, it will be seen that in ordinary cases a supporting and expectant plan of treatment is all that is required. Abandoning the idea of forcibly controlling the fever or of preventing the relapse, care should be given in the first place to the diet and to judicious stimulation.

Opium or morphia should be used to control pain, excitement, and insomnia, aided, as far as the latter is concerned, by bromide of potassium or the cautious use of chloral. Cooling drinks should be allowed, cool applications made to the head, and the body should be repeatedly sponged with cooling and disinfecting lotions. If the stomach is retentive, quinine in moderate doses may be given in acid solution, alternating with a simple fever mixture; but if nausea and vomiting are present, the first purpose will be to allay them by the appropriate measures already discussed.

Epistaxis is a frequent symptom, but usually requires no special attention. Occasionally it is profuse, and then should be promptly checked, since serious exhaustion may follow its continuance. If, therefore, mild astringent applications do not arrest it, recourse must be had to the tampon saturated with diluted Monsell's solution.

The urine must be closely watched and frequently analyzed in relapsing fever. In some epidemics serious alterations in this secretion are rare; in others it is not uncommon for the urine to be scanty, and to contain albumen or blood. When this latter condition is presented, especially if at the same time uræmic symptoms exist, dry cups should be applied over the kidneys, to be followed by the use of dry heat, and free perspiration should be promoted by hot-air baths or by the hot wet pack. It is probable that jaborandi given in repeated small doses, so as to avoid any depressing effect on the heart, will be found valuable in such cases. Infusion of digitalis, with spirit of nitrous ether or with acetate of potassium, may also be used with advantage.

Absolute rest must be insisted on throughout the entire period of paroxysm and relapse. The records of every epidemic present instances of sudden death from cardiac syncope following trifling exertions. The patients should therefore be kept strictly quiet in bed from the initial rigor until their strength is fully restored after the relapse. As the danger of collapse is especially great at the time of the critical fall in temperature, the patient should be closely watched as the end of the initial paroxysm and of the relapse approaches. If there is any sudden rise of temperature, with head symptoms due to hyperpyrexia, large doses of quinine, ice to the head, cold spraying, or the cold bath must be promptly used. As sweating begins the body must be covered with a warm blanket and warm stimulating drinks be administered. If any marked tendency to collapse is observed, the subcutaneous injection of strychnia or of ether and digitalis, conjoined with diffusible stimulants internally and hot applications externally, are to be employed immediately. The special remedies required for the various complications and sequelæ have already been sufficiently indicated.

I desire in conclusion to acknowledge the important assistance received from Drs. Geo. S. Gerhard, Louis Starr, Charles Shaffner, and R. G. Curtin, who, under the supervision of my colleague, the late Dr. Edward Rhoads, and myself, recorded the histories of most of the cases which serve as the basis of this article, and also tabulated them for statistical purposes.43

43 Reference must also be made to the interesting observations on spirilla published by Mülhaüser in Virchow's Archiv for July 9, 1884, after this article had been printed. His results go to confirm the view that the spirillum of Obermeier is the essential cause of relapsing fever.

VARIOLA.