Sympathies.

We shall still follow the division of the sympathies into active and passive, a division which is more remarkable here than in most of the other systems, because the sympathies are much more numerous.

Passive Sympathies.

The animal sensibility is very often brought into action in the skin, by the affections of the other systems. We know that the application of cold to the sole of the foot frequently produces affections of the head; that in many cases, the different species of itching, and even of smarting appear without an injury of the part where the pain is felt. It is useless to cite examples that are known to all physicians. I will confine myself to the sympathies of heat and cold alone, which have not yet been spoken of.

I call by this name the sensation that is experienced upon the skin, when there is not a superabundance or absence of caloric there. There is evidently a material cause for the heat in inflammation and for the cold in the ligature of a great artery. On the contrary, in the cases of which I spoke, it is but an aberration of the internal sensitive principle, which resembles that which takes place when we refer the pain to the extremity of an amputated limb. This is what occurs in many cases of shivering, in which the internal sensitive principle refers to the skin a sensation of which the cause does not exist. By approaching the fire then we do not become warm, because we really were not cold; but we only destroy by a real sensation, the opposite sensation which is illusory that we experience, or rather we turn the perception from this sensation. We know that at the instant of the ejaculation of semen, a sudden and sympathetic chill often extends over the body. We know the cold of fear, which almost always arises, like the sweat produced by this passion, from the sympathetic action exerted upon the cutaneous organ by an epigastric organ affected by the passion.

Observe what takes place in the beginning of most acute local diseases, as in those of the serous and mucous surfaces, of the lungs, of the gastric viscera, &c. &c. The organ which is to be the seat of the disease is at first affected; immediately many sympathetic and irregular symptoms arise in all those which are sound; this is the affection that precedes. When the disease is once developed, and it follows its periods, a new order is established, as it were, in the economy. The relations of the organs seem to change. In the preternatural irregularity of the functions, a kind of regular assemblage of symptoms is manifested, it is this assemblage which characterizes the disease and distinguishes it from every other in which a different order of morbific relations is established between the functions; now the passage from the natural to the preternatural relation of functions is marked by a thousand vague symptoms, which should be attributed to sympathies, and among which appears particularly the kind of shiver in of which I have spoken.

In the beginning of digestion a kind of sympathetic cold is also referred to the skin, which is most often as warm as usual; it is an action exerted by the stomach upon the cutaneous sensibility, an action from which arises a particular sensation, different no doubt from that which the same viscus, when disordered, produces in the head, occasioning head-ache, but which is owing however to the same principle.

The heat is very often sympathetic in the cutaneous organ, less however, as I have observed, than in the mucous system. We know the flushes of heat that so often extend over the skin in an irregular manner, in different fevers, and which are not attended with a greater disengagement of caloric.

Our modern philosophers will not perhaps be able to understand, how it is that whilst in the greatest number of cases, the application of a degree of caloric superior or inferior to that of our temperature, is necessary to produce heat or cold, this sensation can arise in a part though it may not have experienced an increase or diminution of this principle. But in the greatest number of cases has not pain a material cause? And yet all sympathies produce it without this cause. The vulgar, who stop at the diversity of the modifications of feeling, believe that an insulated principle presides over each. Let us disregard all these modifications, in order to see but a single principle in the irregularities as in the regular course of sensibility. That this property, sympathetically altered, gives us the sensation of heat or cold as in the skin, of pulling as in the nerves, of lassitude as in the muscles in the beginning of a disease, &c.; these are but varieties of a single cause, one, of which we are ignorant, but which evidently exists. In general, the sympathies of animal sensibility put into action in each system the sensation which is usual there. The sympathy which, acting upon the skin, creates there a sensation of heat or of cold, would have produced that of lassitude if it had acted upon a muscle.

In order to form an exact idea of heat and cold considered as sensations, let us recollect that they may arise from different causes. 1st. From the increase or diminution of the caloric of the atmosphere. 2d. From the disengagement or the want of disengagement of this fluid in a part of the economy, as in a phlegmon or after the ligature of an artery of a limb. 3d. Sometimes without previous inflammation more caloric is disengaged in the whole body; there is a general increase of temperature; we then feel an internal and external heat; or caloric is disengaged locally in a part of the skin, and the patient feels a heat there as he does who applies his hand upon this place. 4th. Finally, there are sympathies of heat and cold. Some other parts, besides the mucous surfaces and the skin, feel these sympathies; we know the sensation of coldness that is felt to arise from the abdomen to the thorax, &c.