11 Clinique médicale, vol. ii. p. 302, Graves.
In a recent work12 there is a general adhesion to the modern modifications of the Hippocratic doctrine in regard to the pathogenetic relations of hæmoptysis and phthisis. There is a decided rejection of the causative influence of tubercle in producing hæmoptysis.13 "The connection between pulmonary hemorrhage and tubercle stands on no pathological proof;" "From all the evidence I have been able to obtain on this point, tubercle seems to have been very unjustly credited with hemorrhage."14 He differs from others in attributing much more to the hæmophilic constitution in the production of hæmoptysis. Other phases of the history of hæmoptysis might be given. We shall allude to two only: one is the classification of the varieties. Alexander of Tralles treats of hæmoptysis under three heads: 1, Hæmoptysis by rupture; 2, by erosion; 3, by dilatation. Bricheteau15 makes four divisions: 1, constitutional; 2, accidental; 3, succedaneous; 4, critical and symptomatic. These two classifications show in themselves their origin, in that the one is representative of a local, and the other of a constitutional, pathogenesis.
12 On Pulmonary Hemorrhage, Reginald E. Thompson, London, 1879.
13 Page 32, op. cit.
14 Page 33, op. cit.
15 Maladies chroniques de l'Appareil respiratoire, Paris, 1851, p. 523.
The last historical phase is the therapeutic one. We find in the practice of the present day survivals from the ancient authors. Morton recommended ligatures around the limbs to arrest hemorrhage, and bark to prevent hæmoptysis from becoming phthisis.16 Venesection, which to some extent is a modern remedy, was frequently practised by the older physicians. Erasistratus17 recommended ligatures, applied to the limbs in several places, to prevent the return of the blood to the lungs; Asclepiades thought this practice founded on an erroneous theory, but experience is in its favor. The head should be kept high, the face wetted with water, the room cool, and the patient perfectly at rest. Lietaud (1765) is cautious of employing astringents or purgatives, but recommended ligatures to the limbs and cold to the scrotum. A drachm of rhubarb was given by Fernelius in hæmoptysis. Bryan Robinson18 (1752) relates a case in which an emetic of ipecacuanha, taken three times a week, kept off hæmoptysis for eight years, while tar-water constantly brought it on. Marryat (1758, London) "advises two grains of tartarized antimony, and as much of the sulphate of copper, in half a spoonful of water." Ipecacuanha was frequently employed in hæmoptysis by the practitioners of the centuries preceding the nineteenth.
16 Young, pp. 201, 202.
17 Op. cit., p. 128.
18 Op. cit., p. 156, ed. 1660.