41 Klinik der Unterleub. Krankheiten, p. 668.

The case will amend more speedily and surely by the adoption of those sanitary measures, as regards clothing, diet, bathing, exercise, and change of climate, which have such important influences upon health. The healthy performance of the functions of the skin is of such paramount necessity in maintaining that of the intestinal canal that the patient should endeavor to avoid any exposure likely to lead to checked perspiration, and should use flannel underwear and stimulate the skin by friction with the hand or the flesh-brush. The diet should be graded to the ability of the stomach to digest and the body to assimilate. Our chief reliance will be upon milk, plain or peptonized, eggs, and beef given in the various forms of acceptable preparations, so as not to impair the tone of the stomach nor clog the appetite by sameness. Such vegetables and fruits as agree with the patient may be allowed. I have tried exclusive diets of milk, farinacea, and meat without marked benefit. All stimulants, tea, and coffee should as a rule be interdicted.

Systematic exercise in the open air and change of climate to a cool, dry, bracing atmosphere will contribute to comfortable existence, if not lead to recovery.

DYSENTERY.

BY JAMES T. WHITTAKER, M.D.


DEFINITION.—Dysentery is the clinical expression of a disease of the large intestine, of specific and non-specific (catarrhal) origin and form; characterized by hyperæmia, infiltration, and necrosis (ulceration) of its mucous membrane; distinguished by discharges of mucus, blood, pus, and tissue-débris; and attended with griping and expulsive pains (tormina and tenesmus).

ETYMOLOGY.—The name is compounded of the two Greek words [Greek: dys enteron], which, though untranslatable literally into English, have long since received the exact Latin equivalent, difficultas intestinorum. With appropriate alteration the same name is still employed in every civilized language in the common as well as the classical description of the disease. The French synonym, colite, locates the anatomical seat of the disease, while the German Ruhr and the English flux express one of its cardinal symptoms, the frequency (flow) of the evacuations.