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The debate about when this term first emerged is presented by Irvine Loudon, The tragedy of childbed fever, Oxford University Press, 2000, p. 8.
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2
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Puerperal fever in eighteenth-century Britain
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Margaret DeLacy, 'Puerperal fever in eighteenth-century Britain', Bull. Hist. Med., 1989, 63 (4): 521-56; George W Lowis, 'Epidemiology of puerperal fever: the contribution of Alexander Gordon', Med. Hist., 1993, 37: 399-410; Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above, passim. See also Stanley A Seligman, 'The lesser pestilence: non-epidemic puerperal fever', Med. Hist., 1991, 35: 89-102.
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Delacy, M.1
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Epidemiology of puerperal fever: The contribution of Alexander Gordon
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Margaret DeLacy, 'Puerperal fever in eighteenth-century Britain', Bull. Hist. Med., 1989, 63 (4): 521-56; George W Lowis, 'Epidemiology of puerperal fever: the contribution of Alexander Gordon', Med. Hist., 1993, 37: 399-410; Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above, passim. See also Stanley A Seligman, 'The lesser pestilence: non-epidemic puerperal fever', Med. Hist., 1991, 35: 89-102.
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Med. Hist.
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Margaret DeLacy, 'Puerperal fever in eighteenth-century Britain', Bull. Hist. Med., 1989, 63 (4): 521-56; George W Lowis, 'Epidemiology of puerperal fever: the contribution of Alexander Gordon', Med. Hist., 1993, 37: 399-410; Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above, passim. See also Stanley A Seligman, 'The lesser pestilence: non-epidemic puerperal fever', Med. Hist., 1991, 35: 89-102.
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Med. Hist.
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Seligman, S.A.1
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5
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note 1 above, Group B streptococcus has also been implicated
-
Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above, pp. 1-13, 189-212; Group B streptococcus has also been implicated, see D I Lansing, W R Penman, and D J Davis, 'Puerperal fever and the Group B beta haemolytic streptococcus'. Bull. Hist. Med., 1983, 57: 70-80; Seligman, op. cit., note 2 above, DeLacy, op. cit., note 2 above, pp. 526-9.
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Med. Hist.
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Loudon1
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6
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0020731482
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Puerperal fever and the Group B beta haemolytic streptococcus
-
Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above, pp. 1-13, 189-212; Group B streptococcus has also been implicated, see D I Lansing, W R Penman, and D J Davis, 'Puerperal fever and the Group B beta haemolytic streptococcus'. Bull. Hist. Med., 1983, 57: 70-80; Seligman, op. cit., note 2 above, DeLacy, op. cit., note 2 above, pp. 526-9.
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Bull. Hist. Med.
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Lansing, D.I.1
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Davis, D.J.3
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0020731482
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note 2 above, DeLacy, op. cit., note 2 above
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Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above, pp. 1-13, 189-212; Group B streptococcus has also been implicated, see D I Lansing, W R Penman, and D J Davis, 'Puerperal fever and the Group B beta haemolytic streptococcus'. Bull. Hist. Med., 1983, 57: 70-80; Seligman, op. cit., note 2 above, DeLacy, op. cit., note 2 above, pp. 526-9.
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Bull. Hist. Med.
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Seligman1
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Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above; idem, Death in childbirth: an international study of maternal care and maternal mortality, 1800-1950, London, Clarendon Press, 1992; idem, 'On maternal and infant mortality, 1900-1960', Soc. Hist. Med., 1991, 4 (1); 29-73. See also, J S Lewis, In the family way: childbearing in the British aristocracy, 1760-1860, New Jersey, Rutgers University Press, 1986. For interesting comment, see also
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Idem, Death in Childbirth: An International Study of Maternal Care and Maternal Mortality
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9
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On maternal and infant mortality, 1900-1960
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Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above; idem, Death in childbirth: an international study of maternal care and maternal mortality, 1800-1950, London, Clarendon Press, 1992; idem, 'On maternal and infant mortality, 1900-1960', Soc. Hist. Med., 1991, 4 (1); 29-73. See also, J S Lewis, In the family way: childbearing in the British aristocracy, 1760-1860, New Jersey, Rutgers University Press, 1986. For interesting comment, see also
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Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above; idem, Death in childbirth: an international study of maternal care and maternal mortality, 1800-1950, London, Clarendon Press, 1992; idem, 'On maternal and infant mortality, 1900-1960', Soc. Hist. Med., 1991, 4 (1); 29-73. See also, J S Lewis, In the family way: childbearing in the British aristocracy, 1760-1860, New Jersey, Rutgers University Press, 1986. For interesting comment, see also
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In the Family Way: Childbearing in the British Aristocracy
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Lewis, J.S.1
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W F Bynum and Roy Porter (eds), Cambridge University Press
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Angus McLaren, The pleasures of procreation: traditional and biomedical theories of conception', in W F Bynum and Roy Porter (eds), William Hunter and the eighteenth-century medical world, Cambridge University Press, 1985, pp. 323-41.
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McLaren, A.1
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London, printed for J Walter, There is a much more detailed description in Denman's later edition: idem, Essays on the puerperal fever, 2nd ed., London
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Eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century descriptions of the symptoms and course of puerperal fever were usually minute and detailed. William Campbell was born in Scotland. He practised man-midwifery in Edinburgh, and was physician to the Edinburgh Infirmary during the 1820s. For other descriptions of the symptoms and progress of puerperal fever, see Thomas Denman, Essays on the puerperal fever and puerperal convulsions, London, printed for J Walter, 1768, pp. 8-10. There is a much more detailed description in Denman's later edition: idem, Essays on the puerperal fever, 2nd ed., London.
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printed by J Cooper for J Walter, 1773, pp. 9-12
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printed by J Cooper for J Walter, 1773, pp. 9-12;
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23
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85039474597
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Philadelphia, printed by John H Oswald
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G E Mitchell, Inaugural essay, on the puerperal state of fever, Philadelphia, printed by John H Oswald, 1805, pp. 11-13;
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John Armstrong, Facts and observations relative to the fever commonly called puerperal, London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1814, pp. 1-12;
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A C Baudelocque, Treatise on puerperal peritonitis, transl. G S Bedford, New York, Elliot and Palmer for Collins and Hannay, 1831, pp. 154-79.
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See, for example, Campbell's discussion of the attempts of William Hunter to treat by various different methods: Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 14; on the symptoms and "character" of fevers more generally, see William Fordyce, A new inquiry into the causes, symptoms and cure of putrid and inflammatory fevers, London, printed for T Cadell, J Murray and W Davenhill, 1777, pp. 12-14; For an example of a particularly intractable case, see Samuel Cusack, A brief notice of the disease popularly termed puerperal fever, Edinburgh (extracted from the Edinb. med. surg. J., no. 98), 1829, pp. 26-7.
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Edinburgh (extracted from the Edinb. med. surg. J., no. 98)
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See, for example, Campbell's discussion of the attempts of William Hunter to treat by various different methods: Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 14; on the symptoms and "character" of fevers more generally, see William Fordyce, A new inquiry into the causes, symptoms and cure of putrid and inflammatory fevers, London, printed for T Cadell, J Murray and W Davenhill, 1777, pp. 12-14; For an example of a particularly intractable case, see Samuel Cusack, A brief notice of the disease popularly termed puerperal fever, Edinburgh (extracted from the Edinb. med. surg. J., no. 98), 1829, pp. 26-7.
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Cusack, S.1
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85039470049
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note 1 above
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Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above, p. 190; Denman refers to puerperal fever as "very often fatal", Denman, 1st ed., 1768, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 5. See also Manning, op. cit. note S above.
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A Brief Notice of the Disease Popularly Termed Puerperal Fever
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Loudon1
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op. cit., note 5 above
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Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above, p. 190; Denman refers to puerperal fever as "very often fatal", Denman, 1st ed., 1768, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 5. See also Manning, op. cit. note S above.
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Denman Refers to Puerperal Fever as "Very Often Fatal", Denman, 1st Ed.
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32
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note S above
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Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above, p. 190; Denman refers to puerperal fever as "very often fatal", Denman, 1st ed., 1768, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 5. See also Manning, op. cit. note S above.
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Denman Refers to Puerperal Fever as "Very Often Fatal", Denman, 1st Ed.
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Manning1
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op. cit., note 5 above, John Clarke was born in Wellingborough
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Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 102-5. John Clarke was born in Wellingborough; he became a member of the Corporation of Surgeons and established a surgical practice in Chancery Lane. He lectured on midwifery at St Bartholomew's Hospital. He became MD in 1791 and Licentiate in Midwifery of the Royal College of Physicians in London in 1787. He was physician to the Lying-in Hospital in Store Street, and the Asylum for Female Orphans in the 1780s and 1790s.
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Clarke1
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85039466313
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note 2 above
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Seligman, op. cit., note 2 above, p. 89; DeLacy, op. cit., note 2 above, p. 521. For a list of puerperal fever epidemics, see August Hirsch, Handbook of geographical and historical pathology, transl. Charles Creighton, London, New Sydenham Society, 1885, vol. 2, pp. 422-4. See also, Fleetwood Churchill (ed.), Essays on puerperal fever and other diseases peculiar to women, London, printed for the Sydenham Society, 1849, p. 6.
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Practical Essays
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Seligman1
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35
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85039466313
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note 2 above
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Seligman, op. cit., note 2 above, p. 89; DeLacy, op. cit., note 2 above, p. 521. For a list of puerperal fever epidemics, see August Hirsch, Handbook of geographical and historical pathology, transl. Charles Creighton, London, New Sydenham Society, 1885, vol. 2, pp. 422-4. See also, Fleetwood Churchill (ed.), Essays on puerperal fever and other diseases peculiar to women, London, printed for the Sydenham Society, 1849, p. 6.
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Practical Essays
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DeLacy1
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36
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12444324468
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transl. Charles Creighton, London, New Sydenham Society
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Seligman, op. cit., note 2 above, p. 89; DeLacy, op. cit., note 2 above, p. 521. For a list of puerperal fever epidemics, see August Hirsch, Handbook of geographical and historical pathology, transl. Charles Creighton, London, New Sydenham Society, 1885, vol. 2, pp. 422-4. See also, Fleetwood Churchill (ed.), Essays on puerperal fever and other diseases peculiar to women, London, printed for the Sydenham Society, 1849, p. 6.
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Handbook of Geographical and Historical Pathology
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Hirsch, A.1
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London, printed for the Sydenham Society
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Seligman, op. cit., note 2 above, p. 89; DeLacy, op. cit., note 2 above, p. 521. For a list of puerperal fever epidemics, see August Hirsch, Handbook of geographical and historical pathology, transl. Charles Creighton, London, New Sydenham Society, 1885, vol. 2, pp. 422-4. See also, Fleetwood Churchill (ed.), Essays on puerperal fever and other diseases peculiar to women, London, printed for the Sydenham Society, 1849, p. 6.
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Essays on Puerperal Fever and Other Diseases Peculiar to Women
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London, S Highley, Mention is also make of this text in Alexander, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 3
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Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 8, 12-13. Campbell refers to works by M Malouin and Jean Astruc. Moore appears also to have consulted this text, but in its second edition of 1718: G Moore, An enquiry into the pathology, causes, and treatment of puerperal fever, London, S Highley, 1836, p. 5. Mention is also make of this text in Alexander, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 3. See also Michael Ryan, A manual on midwifery, London, printed for Longman etc., 1828, p. 319. Loudon quotes the first edition of 1716, op. cit., note 1 above, p. 15.
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Moore, G.1
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Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 8, 12-13. Campbell refers to works by M Malouin and Jean Astruc. Moore appears also to have consulted this text, but in its second edition of 1718: G Moore, An enquiry into the pathology, causes, and treatment of puerperal fever, London, S Highley, 1836, p. 5. Mention is also make of this text in Alexander, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 3. See also Michael Ryan, A manual on midwifery, London, printed for Longman etc., 1828, p. 319. Loudon quotes the first edition of 1716, op. cit., note 1 above, p. 15.
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John Mackintosh, A treatise on the disease termed puerperal fever, Edinburgh, W Blackwood, 1822, p. 5. John Mackintosh was born in Scotland and obtained his MD from Edinburgh University. He practised man-midwifery in Edinburgh, and was physician to the Edinburgh Infirmary during the 1820s.
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Mackintosh, J.1
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William Hey was practising as a man-midwife in Leeds during the second decade of the nineteenth century; John Armstrong was practising in Sunderland at around the same time. Both wrote treatises based on observations from their own practice: William Hey, A treatise on the puerperal fever, illustrated by cases, which occurred in Leeds and its vicinity in the years 1809-1812, London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown 1815; Armstrong, op. cit., note 5 above.
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note 5 above
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William Hey was practising as a man-midwife in Leeds during the second decade of the nineteenth century; John Armstrong was practising in Sunderland at around the same time. Both wrote treatises based on observations from their own practice: William Hey, A treatise on the puerperal fever, illustrated by cases, which occurred in Leeds and its vicinity in the years 1809-1812, London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown 1815; Armstrong, op. cit., note 5 above.
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Armstrong1
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85039478022
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note 11 above
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Mackintosh, op. cit., note 11 above, pp. 1-5. Alexander refers to epidemics in Dublin in 1767, Edinburgh in 1773 and 1821-2, London in 1787-8, Leeds in 1809, Paris in 1829, Glasgow in 1819 and Manchester, where he himself was based, in 1828-9; Alexander, op. cit., note 5 above.
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85039479939
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note 5 above
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Mackintosh, op. cit., note 11 above, pp. 1-5. Alexander refers to epidemics in Dublin in 1767, Edinburgh in 1773 and 1821-2, London in 1787-8, Leeds in 1809, Paris in 1829, Glasgow in 1819 and Manchester, where he himself was based, in 1828-9; Alexander, op. cit., note 5 above.
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Alexander1
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See, for example, Charles White, An appendix to the second edition of Mr. White's treatise on the management of pregnant and lying-in women, London, printed for E and C Dilly, 1777, pp. 15-16.
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Jean Donnison, Midwives and medical men, 2nd ed., London, Historical Publications, 1988; Adrian Wilson, The making of man-midwifery, London, UCL Press, 1995; Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above; idem, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; idem, 'Medical practitioners 1750-1850 and the period of medical reform in Britain', in A Wear (ed.), Medicine in society, Cambridge University Press, 1992.
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Donnison, J.1
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London, UCL Press
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Jean Donnison, Midwives and medical men, 2nd ed., London, Historical Publications, 1988; Adrian Wilson, The making of man-midwifery, London, UCL Press, 1995; Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above; idem, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; idem, 'Medical practitioners 1750-1850 and the period of medical reform in Britain', in A Wear (ed.), Medicine in society, Cambridge University Press, 1992.
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note 1 above
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Jean Donnison, Midwives and medical men, 2nd ed., London, Historical Publications, 1988; Adrian Wilson, The making of man-midwifery, London, UCL Press, 1995; Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above; idem, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; idem, 'Medical practitioners 1750-1850 and the period of medical reform in Britain', in A Wear (ed.), Medicine in society, Cambridge University Press, 1992.
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Jean Donnison, Midwives and medical men, 2nd ed., London, Historical Publications, 1988; Adrian Wilson, The making of man-midwifery, London, UCL Press, 1995; Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above; idem, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; idem, 'Medical practitioners 1750-1850 and the period of medical reform in Britain', in A Wear (ed.), Medicine in society, Cambridge University Press, 1992.
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Jean Donnison, Midwives and medical men, 2nd ed., London, Historical Publications, 1988; Adrian Wilson, The making of man-midwifery, London, UCL Press, 1995; Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above; idem, Medical care and the general practitioner, 1750-1850, Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1986; idem, 'Medical practitioners 1750-1850 and the period of medical reform in Britain', in A Wear (ed.), Medicine in society, Cambridge University Press, 1992.
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W F Bynum, 'Physicians, Hospitals and career structures in eighteenth-century London', in Bynum and Porter (eds), op. cit., note 4 above, pp. 105-28; Donnison, op. cit., note 17 above, pp. 53-71.
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W F Bynum, 'Physicians, Hospitals and career structures in eighteenth-century London', in Bynum and Porter (eds), op. cit., note 4 above, pp. 105-28; Donnison, op. cit., note 17 above, pp. 53-71.
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For example, Charles Meigs, Females and their diseases, Philadelphia, Lea and Blanchard, 1848; Peter de Sales La Terrière, A dissertation on the puerperal fever, Boston, printed by Samuel Hall, 1789; and Mitchell, op. cit., note 5 above.
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For example, Charles Meigs, Females and their diseases, Philadelphia, Lea and Blanchard, 1848; Peter de Sales La Terrière, A dissertation on the puerperal fever, Boston, printed by Samuel Hall, 1789; and Mitchell, op. cit., note 5 above.
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See, for example, Sir Richard Manningham, The symptoms, nature, causes and cure of the febricula, London, for J Robinson, 1746. On the cause of puerperal fever in the "sudden removal of pressure from the blood vessels at the time of delivery", see Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above; p. 55. On fever as a stagnation of the blood brought about by the cold fit, see J Leake, Practical observations on the child-bed fever, London, for J Walter, 1772, p. 85. See also J Leake, Medical instructions towards the prevention and cure of chronic diseases peculiar to women, 6th ed., London, printed for R Baldwin, Murray and Egerton, 1787, and idem, A lecture introductory to the theory and practice of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, printed for R Baldwin, 1776.
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See, for example, Sir Richard Manningham, The symptoms, nature, causes and cure of the febricula, London, for J Robinson, 1746. On the cause of puerperal fever in the "sudden removal of pressure from the blood vessels at the time of delivery", see Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above; p. 55. On fever as a stagnation of the blood brought about by the cold fit, see J Leake, Practical observations on the child-bed fever, London, for J Walter, 1772, p. 85. See also J Leake, Medical instructions towards the prevention and cure of chronic diseases peculiar to women, 6th ed., London, printed for R Baldwin, Murray and Egerton, 1787, and idem, A lecture introductory to the theory and practice of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, printed for R Baldwin, 1776.
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See, for example, Sir Richard Manningham, The symptoms, nature, causes and cure of the febricula, London, for J Robinson, 1746. On the cause of puerperal fever in the "sudden removal of pressure from the blood vessels at the time of delivery", see Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above; p. 55. On fever as a stagnation of the blood brought about by the cold fit, see J Leake, Practical observations on the child-bed fever, London, for J Walter, 1772, p. 85. See also J Leake, Medical instructions towards the prevention and cure of chronic diseases peculiar to women, 6th ed., London, printed for R Baldwin, Murray and Egerton, 1787, and idem, A lecture introductory to the theory and practice of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, printed for R Baldwin, 1776.
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See, for example, Sir Richard Manningham, The symptoms, nature, causes and cure of the febricula, London, for J Robinson, 1746. On the cause of puerperal fever in the "sudden removal of pressure from the blood vessels at the time of delivery", see Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above; p. 55. On fever as a stagnation of the blood brought about by the cold fit, see J Leake, Practical observations on the child-bed fever, London, for J Walter, 1772, p. 85. See also J Leake, Medical instructions towards the prevention and cure of chronic diseases peculiar to women, 6th ed., London, printed for R Baldwin, Murray and Egerton, 1787, and idem, A lecture introductory to the theory and practice of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, printed for R Baldwin, 1776.
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See, for example, Sir Richard Manningham, The symptoms, nature, causes and cure of the febricula, London, for J Robinson, 1746. On the cause of puerperal fever in the "sudden removal of pressure from the blood vessels at the time of delivery", see Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above; p. 55. On fever as a stagnation of the blood brought about by the cold fit, see J Leake, Practical observations on the child-bed fever, London, for J Walter, 1772, p. 85. See also J Leake, Medical instructions towards the prevention and cure of chronic diseases peculiar to women, 6th ed., London, printed for R Baldwin, Murray and Egerton, 1787, and idem, A lecture introductory to the theory and practice of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, printed for R Baldwin, 1776.
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See, for example, Leake, Practical observations, op. cit., note 27 above, pp. 81-97.
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See, for example, John Aitken, Principles of midwifery: or puerperal medicine, 3rd ed., London, J Murray, 1786, pp. 171-82; Denman, 2nd ed., 1773, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 17-23.
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Herman Boerhaave, Aphorisms: concerning the knowledge and cure of diseases, transl. by J Delacoste, London, William and John Innys, 1724; idem, Academical lectures on the theory of physic, 6 vols, London, W Innys, 1742-46; G A Lindeboom, Herman Boerhaave: the man and his work, London, Methuen, 1968.
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Herman Boerhaave, Aphorisms: concerning the knowledge and cure of diseases, transl. by J Delacoste, London, William and John Innys, 1724; idem, Academical lectures on the theory of physic, 6 vols, London, W Innys, 1742-46; G A Lindeboom, Herman Boerhaave: the man and his work, London, Methuen, 1968.
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Herman Boerhaave, Aphorisms: concerning the knowledge and cure of diseases, transl. by J Delacoste, London, William and John Innys, 1724; idem, Academical lectures on the theory of physic, 6 vols, London, W Innys, 1742-46; G A Lindeboom, Herman Boerhaave: the man and his work, London, Methuen, 1968.
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Ibid. The material on inflammations is contained mainly in vol. 3. See Aphorism 370, p. 245; Aphorism 371, p. 248; Aphorism 372, p. 252; Aphorism 375, p. 261; Aphorism 376, p. 268; Aphorism 377, p. 270; and van Swieten's commentaries on these.
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Ibid. The material on inflammations is contained mainly in vol. 3. See Aphorism 370, p. 245; Aphorism 371, p. 248; Aphorism 372, p. 252; Aphorism 375, p. 261; Aphorism 376, p. 268; Aphorism 377, p. 270; and van Swieten's commentaries on these.
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Ibid. The material on inflammations is contained mainly in vol. 3. See Aphorism 370, p. 245; Aphorism 371, p. 248; Aphorism 372, p. 252; Aphorism 375, p. 261; Aphorism 376, p. 268; Aphorism 377, p. 270; and van Swieten's commentaries on these.
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Ibid. The material on inflammations is contained mainly in vol. 3. See Aphorism 370, p. 245; Aphorism 371, p. 248; Aphorism 372, p. 252; Aphorism 375, p. 261; Aphorism 376, p. 268; Aphorism 377, p. 270; and van Swieten's commentaries on these.
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Ibid. The material on inflammations is contained mainly in vol. 3. See Aphorism 370, p. 245; Aphorism 371, p. 248; Aphorism 372, p. 252; Aphorism 375, p. 261; Aphorism 376, p. 268; Aphorism 377, p. 270; and van Swieten's commentaries on these.
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vols 4, 5, and 6
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Ibid., vols 4, 5, and 6, see especially, vol. 5, Aphorisms 572 and 573, p. 28.
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Ibid., vols 4, 5, and 6, see especially, vol. 5, Aphorisms 572 and 573, p. 28.
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See, for example, reference being made to the basis in Harvey's findings of inflammatory theory, as late as the 1820s: William Stoker, A dissertation on the institutes of medicine, Dublin, R Milligen, J Gumming, and Hodges and M'Arthur, 1826, p. lxvii.
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op. cit., note 33 above
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Boerhaave, Academical lectures, op. cit., note 33 above; see also John Hunt, Observations on the circulation of the blood, London, printed for J Johnson, and C Elliot, Edinburgh, 1787.
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Roy Porter (ed.), Amsterdam, Rodopi
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Roselyne Rey, 'Vitalism, disease and society', in Roy Porter (ed.), Medicine in the Enlightenment, Amsterdam, Rodopi, 1995; E Haigh, Xavier Bichat and the medical theory of the eighteenth century, Med. Hist. Supplement, No. 4, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 1984. On the medical perspective.
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London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, On the medical perspective
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Roselyne Rey, 'Vitalism, disease and society', in Roy Porter (ed.), Medicine in the Enlightenment, Amsterdam, Rodopi, 1995; E Haigh, Xavier Bichat and the medical theory of the eighteenth century, Med. Hist. Supplement, No. 4, London, Wellcome Institute for the History of Medicine, 1984. On the medical perspective.
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'Sauvages's nosology: medical enlightenment in Montpellier', in Cunningham and French (eds), note 24 above, on p. 131
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Julian Martin refers to the British Newtonian physicians Pitcairne, Cheyne, Keill, Arbuthnot, Hales, Jurn and Wainewright, in 'Sauvages's nosology: medical enlightenment in Montpellier', in Cunningham and French (eds), op. cit., note 24 above, pp. 111-37, on p. 131.
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William Cullen, First lines of the practice of physic, 4 vols, London, printed for J Murray; Edinburgh, printed for William Creech, 1777-1784, vol. 1, pp. 54-5.
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See also, C Clayson, 'William Cullen in eighteenth century medicine', in A Doig, J P S Ferguson, I A Milne, and R Passmore (eds), William Cullen and the 18th century medical world, Edinburgh University Press, 1993, pp. 87-97;
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On the nature of the blood, see William Cullen, Institutions of medicine. Part I: Physiology, 3rd ed., Edinburgh, Charles Elliot; London, T Cadell, 1785. pp. 192-4. On the changes which take place in inflammation, see also Cullen, First lines, op. cit., note 43 above, pp. 181-5; Fordyce, op. cit., note 6 above, pp. 23-4.
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On the nature of the blood, see William Cullen, Institutions of medicine. Part I: Physiology, 3rd ed., Edinburgh, Charles Elliot; London, T Cadell, 1785. pp. 192-4. On the changes which take place in inflammation, see also Cullen, First lines, op. cit., note 43 above, pp. 181-5; Fordyce, op. cit., note 6 above, pp. 23-4.
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On the nature of the blood, see William Cullen, Institutions of medicine. Part I: Physiology, 3rd ed., Edinburgh, Charles Elliot; London, T Cadell, 1785. pp. 192-4. On the changes which take place in inflammation, see also Cullen, First lines, op. cit., note 43 above, pp. 181-5; Fordyce, op. cit., note 6 above, pp. 23-4.
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Ibid., pp. 190-204.
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Ibid., pp. 191-6, 204-5.
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Ibid., pp. 192-200.
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84943230325
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Ibid., pp. 197-202. Cullen also mentions other rarer terminations: "schirus [sic], or indolent hardness", and, in the case of inflammation of internal organs, the production of a "viscid concretion" and a "thin serous fluid", pp. 201-2.
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Fordyce, op. cit., note 6 above, pp. 43-6. On the "cold" and "hot fits" see also p. 48.
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Fordyce, op. cit., note 6 above, pp. 43-6. On the "cold" and "hot fits" see also p. 48.
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123
-
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85039480727
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London, for J Robinson
-
Sir Richard Manningham, The symptoms, nature, causes and cure of the febricula, 2nd ed., London, for J Robinson, 1750, p. 29. Sir Richard Manningham was physician to the lying-in Infirmary of London during the mid-eighteenth-century. A number of other eighteenth-century writers were expressing similar ideas. Jean Astruc's influential A treatise on the diseases of women, of 1762 (op. cit., note 22 above), presented puerperal fever as an essentially inflammatory condition caused by suppression of the lochia following delivery. He added that the disease can become putrid through a simple process of suppuration. In his treatise of 1793, John Clarke explained how the inflammatory characteristics of puerperal fever could produce the typical symptoms of the disease: pain in the lower abdomen, diminution of the lochia, suppression of the milk, and more generalized systemic symptoms such as heat; rapidity, strength and fullness of the pulse; white, dry tongue; thirst; headache; vomiting and diarrhoea. Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 62-80. See also John Aitken, Principles of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, J Murray, 1786, pp. 171-8; Denman, 2nd ed., 1773, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 3. For examples of discussions of inflammation in inaugural dissertations, see Henricus Slaughter, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, de febre puerperali, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1780; Thomas Evory, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, defebre puerperarum, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1782.
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The Symptoms, Nature, Causes and Cure of the Febricula, 2nd Ed.
, vol.1750
, pp. 29
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Manningham, S.R.1
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124
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-
85039466313
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op. cit., note 5 above
-
Sir Richard Manningham, The symptoms, nature, causes and cure of the febricula, 2nd ed., London, for J Robinson, 1750, p. 29. Sir Richard Manningham was physician to the lying-in Infirmary of London during the mid-eighteenth-century. A number of other eighteenth-century writers were expressing similar ideas. Jean Astruc's influential A treatise on the diseases of women, of 1762 (op. cit., note 22 above), presented puerperal fever as an essentially inflammatory condition caused by suppression of the lochia following delivery. He added that the disease can become putrid through a simple process of suppuration. In his treatise of 1793, John Clarke explained how the inflammatory characteristics of puerperal fever could produce the typical symptoms of the disease: pain in the lower abdomen, diminution of the lochia, suppression of the milk, and more generalized systemic symptoms such as heat; rapidity, strength and fullness of the pulse; white, dry tongue; thirst; headache; vomiting and diarrhoea. Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 62-80. See also John Aitken, Principles of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, J Murray, 1786, pp. 171-8; Denman, 2nd ed., 1773, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 3. For examples of discussions of inflammation in inaugural dissertations, see Henricus Slaughter, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, de febre puerperali, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1780; Thomas Evory, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, defebre puerperarum, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1782.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 62-80
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Clarke1
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125
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85039464500
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London, J Murray
-
Sir Richard Manningham, The symptoms, nature, causes and cure of the febricula, 2nd ed., London, for J Robinson, 1750, p. 29. Sir Richard Manningham was physician to the lying-in Infirmary of London during the mid-eighteenth-century. A number of other eighteenth-century writers were expressing similar ideas. Jean Astruc's influential A treatise on the diseases of women, of 1762 (op. cit., note 22 above), presented puerperal fever as an essentially inflammatory condition caused by suppression of the lochia following delivery. He added that the disease can become putrid through a simple process of suppuration. In his treatise of 1793, John Clarke explained how the inflammatory characteristics of puerperal fever could produce the typical symptoms of the disease: pain in the lower abdomen, diminution of the lochia, suppression of the milk, and more generalized systemic symptoms such as heat; rapidity, strength and fullness of the pulse; white, dry tongue; thirst; headache; vomiting and diarrhoea. Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 62-80. See also John Aitken, Principles of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, J Murray, 1786, pp. 171-8; Denman, 2nd ed., 1773, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 3. For examples of discussions of inflammation in inaugural dissertations, see Henricus Slaughter, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, de febre puerperali, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1780; Thomas Evory, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, defebre puerperarum, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1782.
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Principles of Midwifery, 3rd Ed.
, vol.1786
, pp. 171-178
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Aitken, J.1
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126
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-
85039485998
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2nd ed., note 5 above
-
Sir Richard Manningham, The symptoms, nature, causes and cure of the febricula, 2nd ed., London, for J Robinson, 1750, p. 29. Sir Richard Manningham was physician to the lying-in Infirmary of London during the mid-eighteenth-century. A number of other eighteenth-century writers were expressing similar ideas. Jean Astruc's influential A treatise on the diseases of women, of 1762 (op. cit., note 22 above), presented puerperal fever as an essentially inflammatory condition caused by suppression of the lochia following delivery. He added that the disease can become putrid through a simple process of suppuration. In his treatise of 1793, John Clarke explained how the inflammatory characteristics of puerperal fever could produce the typical symptoms of the disease: pain in the lower abdomen, diminution of the lochia, suppression of the milk, and more generalized systemic symptoms such as heat; rapidity, strength and fullness of the pulse; white, dry tongue; thirst; headache; vomiting and diarrhoea. Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 62-80. See also John Aitken, Principles of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, J Murray, 1786, pp. 171-8; Denman, 2nd ed., 1773, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 3. For examples of discussions of inflammation in inaugural dissertations, see Henricus Slaughter, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, de febre puerperali, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1780; Thomas Evory, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, defebre puerperarum, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1782.
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Principles of Midwifery, 3rd Ed.
, vol.1773
, pp. 3
-
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Denman1
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127
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85039482238
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Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie
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Sir Richard Manningham, The symptoms, nature, causes and cure of the febricula, 2nd ed., London, for J Robinson, 1750, p. 29. Sir Richard Manningham was physician to the lying-in Infirmary of London during the mid-eighteenth-century. A number of other eighteenth-century writers were expressing similar ideas. Jean Astruc's influential A treatise on the diseases of women, of 1762 (op. cit., note 22 above), presented puerperal fever as an essentially inflammatory condition caused by suppression of the lochia following delivery. He added that the disease can become putrid through a simple process of suppuration. In his treatise of 1793, John Clarke explained how the inflammatory characteristics of puerperal fever could produce the typical symptoms of the disease: pain in the lower abdomen, diminution of the lochia, suppression of the milk, and more generalized systemic symptoms such as heat; rapidity, strength and fullness of the pulse; white, dry tongue; thirst; headache; vomiting and diarrhoea. Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 62-80. See also John Aitken, Principles of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, J Murray, 1786, pp. 171-8; Denman, 2nd ed., 1773, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 3. For examples of discussions of inflammation in inaugural dissertations, see Henricus Slaughter, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, de febre puerperali, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1780; Thomas Evory, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, defebre puerperarum, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1782.
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Dissertatio Medica Inauguralis, de Febre Puerperali
, pp. 1780
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Slaughter, H.1
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128
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85039469425
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Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie
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Sir Richard Manningham, The symptoms, nature, causes and cure of the febricula, 2nd ed., London, for J Robinson, 1750, p. 29. Sir Richard Manningham was physician to the lying-in Infirmary of London during the mid-eighteenth-century. A number of other eighteenth-century writers were expressing similar ideas. Jean Astruc's influential A treatise on the diseases of women, of 1762 (op. cit., note 22 above), presented puerperal fever as an essentially inflammatory condition caused by suppression of the lochia following delivery. He added that the disease can become putrid through a simple process of suppuration. In his treatise of 1793, John Clarke explained how the inflammatory characteristics of puerperal fever could produce the typical symptoms of the disease: pain in the lower abdomen, diminution of the lochia, suppression of the milk, and more generalized systemic symptoms such as heat; rapidity, strength and fullness of the pulse; white, dry tongue; thirst; headache; vomiting and diarrhoea. Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 62-80. See also John Aitken, Principles of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, J Murray, 1786, pp. 171-8; Denman, 2nd ed., 1773, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 3. For examples of discussions of inflammation in inaugural dissertations, see Henricus Slaughter, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, de febre puerperali, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1780; Thomas Evory, Dissertatio medica inauguralis, defebre puerperarum, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1782.
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Dissertatio Medica Inauguralis, Defebre Puerperarum
, pp. 1782
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Evory, T.1
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129
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85039474332
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note 27 above
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Leake, Practical observations, note 27 above, pp. 81-97. John Leake was born in Ainstable in Cumberland. He obtained his MD from Rheims in 1763. He was made a licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians of London in 1766, and became First Physician of the Westminster Lying-in Hospital. He died in 1792. See also: Evory, op. cit., note 53 above, pp. 19-34.
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Practical Observations
, pp. 81-97
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Leake1
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130
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85039474119
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note 53 above
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Leake, Practical observations, note 27 above, pp. 81-97. John Leake was born in Ainstable in Cumberland. He obtained his MD from Rheims in 1763. He was made a licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians of London in 1766, and became First Physician of the Westminster Lying-in Hospital. He died in 1792. See also: Evory, op. cit., note 53 above, pp. 19-34.
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Practical Observations
, pp. 19-34
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Evory1
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131
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85039475637
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note 5 above
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Hulme, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 147-75. Nathaniel Hulme was born in Yorkshire in 1732. He obtained his MD from Edinburgh University in 1765. During the 1770s he was physician to the Charterhouse and to the London Lying-in Hospital.
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Practical Observations
, pp. 147-175
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Hulme1
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132
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12444323439
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Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above
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Leake, Observations on the child-bed fever (1772), in Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above, p. 145. John Clarke discusses how "from the sudden removal of pressure from the blood vessels at the time of delivery, a greater proportion of fluids than circulate there in a natural state may rush upon some particular part": Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 55; see also Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above pp. 196-201.
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(1772)
Observations on the Child-bed Fever
, pp. 145
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Leake1
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133
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op. cit., note 5 above
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Leake, Observations on the child-bed fever (1772), in Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above, p. 145. John Clarke discusses how "from the sudden removal of pressure from the blood vessels at the time of delivery, a greater proportion of fluids than circulate there in a natural state may rush upon some particular part": Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 55; see also Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above pp. 196-201.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 55
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Clarke1
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134
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note 5 above
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Leake, Observations on the child-bed fever (1772), in Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above, p. 145. John Clarke discusses how "from the sudden removal of pressure from the blood vessels at the time of delivery, a greater proportion of fluids than circulate there in a natural state may rush upon some particular part": Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 55; see also Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above pp. 196-201.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 196-201
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Campbell1
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135
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85039466313
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note 56 above
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Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, p. 145. For Cullen's discussion of inflammation of the intestines, which may have influenced Leake, see Cullen, op. cit., note 43 above, pp. 315-18.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 145
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Leake1
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136
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note 43 above
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Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, p. 145. For Cullen's discussion of inflammation of the intestines, which may have influenced Leake, see Cullen, op. cit., note 43 above, pp. 315-18.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 315-318
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Cullen1
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137
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note 56 above
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Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, p. 146. Moore, in his treatise of 1836, summarized earlier perspectives on inflammation, observing that some had attributed it to an "increased action" of the blood vessels, whilst others had seen it as the consequence of the "act of dilatation" of vessels, which are acting "with less force than the trunks from which they are derived". He pointed out that these hypotheses are complementary rather than contradictory. Moore, op. cit., note 10 above, pp. 94-5.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 146
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Leake1
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138
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85039466313
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note 10 above
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Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, p. 146. Moore, in his treatise of 1836, summarized earlier perspectives on inflammation, observing that some had attributed it to an "increased action" of the blood vessels, whilst others had seen it as the consequence of the "act of dilatation" of vessels, which are acting "with less force than the trunks from which they are derived". He pointed out that these hypotheses are complementary rather than contradictory. Moore, op. cit., note 10 above, pp. 94-5.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 94-95
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Moore1
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139
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85039466313
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note 56 above
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Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, p. 146. On the stagnation of the blood brought on by the cold fit, see also original version op. cit. note 27 above, pp. 83-5. See also Leake, A lecture, op. cit. note 27 above, p. 16, and Leake, Medical instructions, op. cit., note 27 above, p. 159.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 146
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Leake1
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140
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85039466313
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note 27 above
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Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, p. 146. On the stagnation of the blood brought on by the cold fit, see also original version op. cit. note 27 above, pp. 83-5. See also Leake, A lecture, op. cit. note 27 above, p. 16, and Leake, Medical instructions, op. cit., note 27 above, p. 159.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 83-85
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141
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84923546807
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op. cit. note 27 above
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Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, p. 146. On the stagnation of the blood brought on by the cold fit, see also original version op. cit. note 27 above, pp. 83-5. See also Leake, A lecture, op. cit. note 27 above, p. 16, and Leake, Medical instructions, op. cit., note 27 above, p. 159.
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A Lecture
, pp. 16
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Leake1
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142
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9744266187
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op. cit., note 27 above
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Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, p. 146. On the stagnation of the blood brought on by the cold fit, see also original version op. cit. note 27 above, pp. 83-5. See also Leake, A lecture, op. cit. note 27 above, p. 16, and Leake, Medical instructions, op. cit., note 27 above, p. 159.
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Medical Instructions
, pp. 159
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Leake1
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143
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85039468740
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note 5 above, 1st ed.
-
On these issues and on the dangers of "tight binding" the abdomen, see Denman, op. cit., note 5 above, 1st ed., 1768, p. 19; 2nd ed. 1773, p. 7. On binding of the abdomen, see also
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(1768)
Medical Instructions
, pp. 19
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Denman1
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147
-
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85039464611
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Ibid., p. 150; La Terrière, op. cit. note 21 above, p. 8; pp. 15-17; Mitchell, op. cit. note 5 above, p. 5: p. 19. Mitchell's work - like La Terrière's - is noted here in acknowledgement of the fact that British and North American treatise writers had a profound influence on each other during this period. On North American medicine, see Helen Brock, 'North America, a western outpost of European medicine', in Cunningham, and French (eds), op. cit., note 24 above, pp. 194-216.
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Medical Instructions
, pp. 150
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-
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148
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85039466790
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note 21 above
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Ibid., p. 150; La Terrière, op. cit. note 21 above, p. 8; pp. 15-17; Mitchell, op. cit. note 5 above, p. 5: p. 19. Mitchell's work - like La Terrière's - is noted here in acknowledgement of the fact that British and North American treatise writers had a profound influence on each other during this period. On North American medicine, see Helen Brock, 'North America, a western outpost of European medicine', in Cunningham, and French (eds), op. cit., note 24 above, pp. 194-216.
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Medical Instructions
, pp. 8
-
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Terrière, L.1
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149
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85039483955
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note 5 above
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Ibid., p. 150; La Terrière, op. cit. note 21 above, p. 8; pp. 15-17; Mitchell, op. cit. note 5 above, p. 5: p. 19. Mitchell's work - like La Terrière's - is noted here in acknowledgement of the fact that British and North American treatise writers had a profound influence on each other during this period. On North American medicine, see Helen Brock, 'North America, a western outpost of European medicine', in Cunningham, and French (eds), op. cit., note 24 above, pp. 194-216.
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Medical Instructions
, pp. 5
-
-
Mitchell1
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150
-
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85039468259
-
-
'North America, a western outpost of European medicine', in Cunningham, and French (eds), note 24 above
-
Ibid., p. 150; La Terrière, op. cit. note 21 above, p. 8; pp. 15-17; Mitchell, op. cit. note 5 above, p. 5: p. 19. Mitchell's work - like La Terrière's - is noted here in acknowledgement of the fact that British and North American treatise writers had a profound influence on each other during this period. On North American medicine, see Helen Brock, 'North America, a western outpost of European medicine', in Cunningham, and French (eds), op. cit., note 24 above, pp. 194-216.
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Medical Instructions
, pp. 194-216
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Brock, H.1
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151
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note
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Alexander Gordon was Physician to the Aberdeen Infirmary in the mid-1790s and had an important private practice as a man-midwife in Aberdeen.
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152
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85039478569
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note 5 above
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Gordon, op. cit. note 5 above, p. 119. For a clear exposition of Gordon's ideas on the inflammatory nature of puerperal fever, see pp. 52-5.
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Medical Instructions
, pp. 119
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Gordon1
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155
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85039478569
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note 5 above
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Gordon, op. cit. note 5 above, p. 9. See also, Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 12: "the blood drawn from women in pregnancy is generally covered with a buff, the red globules having fallen to the bottom of the cake".
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Medical Instructions
, pp. 9
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Gordon1
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156
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85039466313
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op. cit., note 5 above
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Gordon, op. cit. note 5 above, p. 9. See also, Clarke, Practical essays,
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Practical Essays
, pp. 12
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Clarke1
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158
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85039466313
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-
Ibid., pp. 195-6. On the inflammatory nature of puerperal fever, see also pp. 197-201. Campbell cites in support of his view of puerperal fever as an inflammatory complaint, William Hunter, John Hunter, Denman, Leake and Gordon.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 195-196
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-
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159
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85039466313
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note 23 above
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See, for example, Ferguson, op. cit. note 23 above, pp. 98-100. Moore, op. cit., note 10 above, p. 106.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 98-100
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Ferguson1
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160
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note 10 above
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See, for example, Ferguson, op. cit. note 23 above, pp. 98-100. Moore, op. cit., note 10 above, p. 106.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 106
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Moore1
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161
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0344054860
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[sic], London, J Hodges, on suppression of the lochia
-
In his treatise of 1768, Thomas Denman stated that these predisposing factors could include difficult labours, and constipation, see note 5 above, pp. 17-19. Henry Manning suggested that they might include "accidents after delivery", "sudden frights" and "too hasty a separation of the placenta", op. cit., note 5 above, p. 397. In 1751, Burton observed that inflammation of the uterus could be caused either by damage inflicted by the midwife, or by the suppression of lochia, thus demonstrating the links between the mechanistic way of thinking and the notion of suppressed fluids; John Burton, An essay towards a complete new system of midwifry [sic], London, J Hodges, 1751: on suppression of the lochia, see pp. 334-40; on inflammation of the uterus, pp. 335-7. Burton's ideas are also cited by Hulme, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 88-146, The French physician, Astruc, observed in 1762 that the excitability which caused inflammation was occasioned by allowing cold air into the uterus (which would cause it to contract spasmodically), by a pre-existing diarrhoea, by damage to the uterus during childbirth, or by "passions of the mind", thus raising echoes of the "non-naturals" discussed by earlier authors. Astruc, op. cit., note 22 above, pp. 227-30.
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(1751)
An Essay towards a Complete New System of Midwifry
, pp. 334-340
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-
Burton, J.1
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162
-
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85039471389
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note 5 above
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In his treatise of 1768, Thomas Denman stated that these predisposing factors could include difficult labours, and constipation, see note 5 above, pp. 17-19. Henry Manning suggested that they might include "accidents after delivery", "sudden frights" and "too hasty a separation of the placenta", op. cit., note 5 above, p. 397. In 1751, Burton observed that inflammation of the uterus could be caused either by damage inflicted by the midwife, or by the suppression of lochia, thus demonstrating the links between the mechanistic way of thinking and the notion of suppressed fluids; John Burton, An essay towards a complete new system of midwifry [sic], London, J Hodges, 1751: on suppression of the lochia, see pp. 334-40; on inflammation of the uterus, pp. 335-7. Burton's ideas are also cited by Hulme, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 88-146, The French physician, Astruc, observed in 1762 that the excitability which caused inflammation was occasioned by allowing cold air into the uterus (which would cause it to contract spasmodically), by a pre-existing diarrhoea, by damage to the uterus during childbirth, or by "passions of the mind", thus raising echoes of the "non-naturals" discussed by earlier authors. Astruc, op. cit., note 22 above, pp. 227-30.
-
An Essay towards a Complete New System of Midwifry
, pp. 88-146
-
-
-
163
-
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85039471389
-
-
note 22 above
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In his treatise of 1768, Thomas Denman stated that these predisposing factors could include difficult labours, and constipation, see note 5 above, pp. 17-19. Henry Manning suggested that they might include "accidents after delivery", "sudden frights" and "too hasty a separation of the placenta", op. cit., note 5 above, p. 397. In 1751, Burton observed that inflammation of the uterus could be caused either by damage inflicted by the midwife, or by the suppression of lochia, thus demonstrating the links between the mechanistic way of thinking and the notion of suppressed fluids; John Burton, An essay towards a complete new system of midwifry [sic], London, J Hodges, 1751: on suppression of the lochia, see pp. 334-40; on inflammation of the uterus, pp. 335-7. Burton's ideas are also cited by Hulme, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 88-146, The French physician, Astruc, observed in 1762 that the excitability which caused inflammation was occasioned by allowing cold air into the uterus (which would cause it to contract spasmodically), by a pre-existing diarrhoea, by damage to the uterus during childbirth, or by "passions of the mind", thus raising echoes of the "non-naturals" discussed by earlier authors. Astruc, op. cit., note 22 above, pp. 227-30.
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An Essay towards a Complete New System of Midwifry
, pp. 227-230
-
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Astruc1
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164
-
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85039480024
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note
-
Robert Ferguson was born in India in 1799. He obtained his MD from Edinburgh in 1823. He became a licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians in 1824; physician to the Westminster Lying-in Hospital; Professor of Midwifery at Kings College in 1831; Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1837, "Physician-Accoucheur" to the Queen in 1840 and "Physician- Extraordinary" to the Queen in 1857.
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165
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12444249908
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Clinical reports of difficult cases in midwifery
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Ferguson, op. cit., note 23 above, p. 106. On the dangers of retained placenta, see Robert Lee, 'Clinical reports of difficult cases in midwifery', Lond. med. Gaz., 1838-39, 2:554-62; 665-70; 713-17; 872-7; 908-10;
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(1838)
Lond. Med. Gaz.
, vol.2
, pp. 554-562
-
-
Lee, R.1
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168
-
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85039467798
-
-
on "severe labours", pp. 205-10; on the effects of cold, pp. 211-12. On the link between puerperal fever and damage caused during labour, see
-
Severe Labours
, pp. 205-210
-
-
-
169
-
-
85039466313
-
-
op. cit., note 5 above
-
Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 17.
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Practical Essays
, pp. 17
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-
Clarke1
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170
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85039466313
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op. cit., note 5 above
-
Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 19-20. For a later discussion of the same issue, reaching very similar conclusions, see Armstrong, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 42-44. 75 Ibid., p. 20. On the dangers of "the too early use of cordials and stimuli" see also, Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 212.
-
Practical Essays
, pp. 19-20
-
-
Clarke1
-
171
-
-
85039466313
-
-
note 5 above
-
Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 19-20. For a later discussion of the same issue, reaching very similar conclusions, see Armstrong, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 42-44. 75 Ibid., p. 20. On the dangers of "the too early use of cordials and stimuli" see also, Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 212.
-
Practical Essays
, pp. 42-44
-
-
Armstrong1
-
172
-
-
85039466313
-
-
Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 19-20. For a later discussion of the same issue, reaching very similar conclusions, see Armstrong, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 42-44. 75 Ibid., p. 20. On the dangers of "the too early use of cordials and stimuli" see also, Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 212.
-
Practical Essays
, pp. 20
-
-
-
173
-
-
85039466313
-
-
note 5 above
-
Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 19-20. For a later discussion of the same issue, reaching very similar conclusions, see Armstrong, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 42-44. 75 Ibid., p. 20. On the dangers of "the too early use of cordials and stimuli" see also, Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 212.
-
Practical Essays
, pp. 212
-
-
Campbell1
-
174
-
-
85039466313
-
-
op. cit., note 5 above
-
Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 20-1. On the likelihood that midwives will cause damage to the "os uteri", see Astruc, op. cit., note 22 above, pp. 227-30. On damage caused during delivery, see Baudelocque, op. cit., see note 5 above, pp. 54-64; on retention of placenta, pp. 98-110.
-
Practical Essays
, pp. 20-21
-
-
Clarke1
-
175
-
-
85039466313
-
-
note 22 above
-
Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 20-1. On the likelihood that midwives will cause damage to the "os uteri", see Astruc, op. cit., note 22 above, pp. 227-30. On damage caused during delivery, see Baudelocque, op. cit., see note 5 above, pp. 54-64; on retention of placenta, pp. 98-110.
-
Practical Essays
, pp. 227-230
-
-
Astruc1
-
176
-
-
85039464081
-
-
Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 20-1. On the likelihood that midwives will cause damage to the "os uteri", see Astruc, op. cit., note 22 above, pp. 227-30. On damage caused during delivery, see Baudelocque, op. cit., see note 5 above, pp. 54-64; on retention of placenta, pp. 98-110.
-
Practical Essays
, pp. 54-64
-
-
Baudelocque1
-
177
-
-
85039465226
-
-
Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above
-
Hulme, A treatise on the puerperal fever (1772), in Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above, esp. pp. 69, 103; Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, p. 145. This view was also held by Joseph Clarke, physician at the Dublin lying-in hospital in the late eighteenth century, see his 'Observations on the puerperal fever', Edinburgh Medical Commentaries, 1790, 15: 299, reprinted in Churchill (ed.), pp. 351-62, esp. pp. 355-6.
-
A Treatise on the Puerperal Fever (1772)
, pp. 69
-
-
Hulme1
-
178
-
-
85039477194
-
-
note 56 above
-
Hulme, A treatise on the puerperal fever (1772), in Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above, esp. pp. 69, 103; Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, p. 145. This view was also held by Joseph Clarke, physician at the Dublin lying-in hospital in the late eighteenth century, see his 'Observations on the puerperal fever', Edinburgh Medical Commentaries, 1790, 15: 299, reprinted in Churchill (ed.), pp. 351-62, esp. pp. 355-6.
-
A Treatise on the Puerperal Fever (1772)
, pp. 145
-
-
Leake1
-
179
-
-
12444278104
-
Observations on the puerperal fever
-
reprinted in Churchill (ed.)
-
Hulme, A treatise on the puerperal fever (1772), in Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above, esp. pp. 69, 103; Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, p. 145. This view was also held by Joseph Clarke, physician at the Dublin lying-in hospital in the late eighteenth century, see his 'Observations on the puerperal fever', Edinburgh Medical Commentaries, 1790, 15: 299, reprinted in Churchill (ed.), pp. 351-62, esp. pp. 355-6.
-
(1790)
Edinburgh Medical Commentaries
, vol.15
, pp. 299
-
-
-
181
-
-
85039483813
-
-
Ibid., p. 106. For a much later, nineteenth-century perspective on the affection of the intestines in puerperal fever, see John Burns, The principles of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1814, p. 427.
-
Edinburgh Medical Commentaries
, pp. 106
-
-
-
182
-
-
12444259619
-
-
London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown
-
Ibid., p. 106. For a much later, nineteenth-century perspective on the affection of the intestines in puerperal fever, see John Burns, The principles of midwifery, 3rd ed., London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1814, p. 427.
-
(1814)
The Principles of Midwifery, 3rd Ed.
, pp. 427
-
-
Burns, J.1
-
183
-
-
85039464417
-
-
Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above
-
Thomas Kirkland, An essay on childbed fevers, etc., in Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above, pp. 291-2.
-
An Essay on Childbed Fevers, Etc.
, pp. 291-292
-
-
Kirkland, T.1
-
186
-
-
85039466313
-
-
op. cit., see note 5 above
-
Clarke, Practical essays, op. cit., see note 5 above, pp. 51-170.
-
Practical Essays
, pp. 51-170
-
-
Clarke1
-
187
-
-
12444252856
-
-
op. cit., note 27 above
-
Leake, Practical observations on the child-bed fever, op. cit., note 27 above, pp. 49-50, 80, 84-5, 145. See also Aitken, op. cit., note 32 above, pp. 171-8.
-
Practical Observations on the Child-bed Fever
, pp. 49-50
-
-
Leake1
-
188
-
-
85039467709
-
-
note 32 above
-
Leake, Practical observations on the child-bed fever, op. cit., note 27 above, pp. 49-50, 80, 84-5, 145. See also Aitken, op. cit., note 32 above, pp. 171-8.
-
Practical Observations on the Child-bed Fever
, pp. 171-178
-
-
Aitken1
-
189
-
-
85039480736
-
-
see note 5 above
-
Gordon, op. cit., see note 5 above, p. 53. Gordon gave a number of cases of the latter type of crisis: in the case of Janet Cormack, a release of purulent matter took place through the umbilicus; in the case of Thomas McRoberts' wife, there was an erysipelas of one of the arms accompanied by a severe diarrhoea, and in the case of Isaac Allen's wife there was a " discharge of purulent matter from the urethra". Ibid: on Cormack, pp. 41-2; on McRoberts, pp. 44-7; on Allen, pp. 47-9.
-
Practical Observations on the Child-bed Fever
, pp. 53
-
-
Gordon1
-
190
-
-
85039474852
-
Discharge of purulent matter from the urethra
-
on Cormack, on McRoberts; on Allen
-
Gordon, op. cit., see note 5 above, p. 53. Gordon gave a number of cases of the latter type of crisis: in the case of Janet Cormack, a release of purulent matter took place through the umbilicus; in the case of Thomas McRoberts' wife, there was an erysipelas of one of the arms accompanied by a severe diarrhoea, and in the case of Isaac Allen's wife there was a " discharge of purulent matter from the urethra". Ibid: on Cormack, pp. 41-2; on McRoberts, pp. 44-7; on Allen, pp. 47-9.
-
Practical Observations on the Child-bed Fever
, pp. 41-42
-
-
-
192
-
-
85039478779
-
-
see note 2 above
-
See, for example, DeLacy, op. cit., see note 2 above, pp. 521-56. Loudon, op. cit., see note 1 above, passim, esp. pp. 11-12.
-
Practical Observations on the Child-bed Fever
, pp. 521-556
-
-
DeLacy1
-
193
-
-
85039481624
-
-
see note 1 above, passim
-
See, for example, DeLacy, op. cit., see note 2 above, pp. 521-56. Loudon, op. cit., see note 1 above, passim, esp. pp. 11-12.
-
Practical Observations on the Child-bed Fever
, pp. 11-12
-
-
Loudon1
-
194
-
-
12444301695
-
Ergotism and erysipelas: Saint Anthony's Fire
-
K Kiple, (ed.), London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson
-
K Kiple, 'Ergotism and erysipelas: Saint Anthony's Fire', in K Kiple, (ed.), Plague, pox and pestilence, London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1997, p. 37.
-
(1997)
Plague, Pox and Pestilence
, pp. 37
-
-
Kiple, K.1
-
195
-
-
85039480287
-
-
note
-
It is uncertain who was actually the first to make this link, but it was certainly made by Thomas Denman, 2nd ed., 1773, op. cit., see note 5 above, p. 13. Gordon himself refers to puerperal fever as being "of the nature of ... erysipelas [rather than] phlegmon", adding, however, that the usual cures for erysipelas were not effective in this disorder. Gordon, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 55.
-
-
-
-
198
-
-
0018127604
-
Fevers and science in early nineteenth century medicine
-
L G Wilson, 'Fevers and science in early nineteenth century medicine', J. Hist. Med., 1978, 33: 386-407, pp. 394-8; D C Smith, 'Gerhard's distinction between typhoid and typhus and its reception in America, 1833-1860', Bull. Hist. Med., 1980, 54: 368-85, p. 369.
-
(1978)
J. Hist. Med.
, vol.33
, pp. 386-407
-
-
Wilson, L.G.1
-
199
-
-
0019149159
-
Gerhard's distinction between typhoid and typhus and its reception in America, 1833-1860
-
L G Wilson, 'Fevers and science in early nineteenth century medicine', J. Hist. Med., 1978, 33: 386-407, pp. 394-8; D C Smith, 'Gerhard's distinction between typhoid and typhus and its reception in America, 1833-1860', Bull. Hist. Med., 1980, 54: 368-85, p. 369.
-
(1980)
Bull. Hist. Med.
, vol.54
, pp. 368-385
-
-
Smith, D.C.1
-
202
-
-
12444309232
-
-
Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above
-
Charles White, A treatise on the management of pregnant and lying-in women (1773), in Churchill (ed.), op. cit., note 9 above, p. 260; White, op. cit., note 16 above, p. 30.
-
(1773)
A Treatise on the Management of Pregnant and Lying-in Women
, pp. 260
-
-
White, C.1
-
211
-
-
12444313872
-
-
London, T Tegg
-
Samuel Ashwell, A practical treatise on parturition, London, T Tegg, 1828, pp. 493-4. The influential French treatise by Baudelocque also presented this disease as "puerperal peritonitis". Baudelocque, op. cit., note 5 above; on "the lesions observed in the peritoneum after death", see pp. 273-90.
-
(1828)
A Practical Treatise on Parturition
, pp. 493-494
-
-
Ashwell, S.1
-
212
-
-
85039482288
-
-
note 5 above; on "the lesions observed in the peritoneum after death"
-
Samuel Ashwell, A practical treatise on parturition, London, T Tegg, 1828, pp. 493-4. The influential French treatise by Baudelocque also presented this disease as "puerperal peritonitis". Baudelocque, op. cit., note 5 above; on "the lesions observed in the peritoneum after death", see pp. 273-90.
-
A Practical Treatise on Parturition
, pp. 273-290
-
-
Baudelocque1
-
213
-
-
85039483500
-
-
op. cit., note 95 above
-
White, A treatise, op. cit., note 95 above, p. 213. White did, however, write a new edition of this work in 1777, to which he added an Appendix dealing entirely with the nature of puerperal fever: White, op. cit., note 16 above.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 213
-
-
White1
-
214
-
-
85039474722
-
-
note 16 above
-
White, A treatise, op. cit., note 95 above, p. 213. White did, however, write a new edition of this work in 1777, to which he added an Appendix dealing entirely with the nature of puerperal fever: White, op. cit., note 16 above.
-
A Treatise
-
-
White1
-
215
-
-
79955153903
-
-
note 5 above
-
Butter, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. viii, 18.
-
A Treatise
-
-
Butter1
-
216
-
-
79955153903
-
-
note 5 above
-
Walsh, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 16. Philip Pitt Walsh was physician to the General Lying-in Hospital, Consulting Physician to the General Lying-in Dispensary and Physician to the British Lying-in Hospital.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 16
-
-
Walsh1
-
217
-
-
85039468980
-
-
see note 80 above
-
Kirkland, op. cit., see note 80 above, pp. 286, 292.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 286
-
-
Kirkland1
-
219
-
-
85039482361
-
-
note 56 above
-
Walsh also suggests that inflammatory symptoms may accompany "diseases of debility", which are usually viewed as putrid types - or fevers of the classification "typhus": Walsh, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 16. He further refers to a "want of firmness and strength in the coats of the vessels, and of course in the solids at large" as a circumstance which will predispose to inflammation (p. 19). The explanation offered by John Leake for the origin of puerperal fever clearly linked inflammatory and solidist explanations of disease. He argued that "neither inanition nor plethora is natural to the body in a healthy state; ... the one extreme is as hurtful as the other, and will produce irritation in as high a degree; for in plethoric habits, where the vessels are overcharged, and violently upon the stretch, all the symptoms of irritability are evidently increased": Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, pp. 154-5. Another important insight into the link between inflammatory and vitalist explanations of puerperal fever is offered by Whitehead, who, in presenting a translation of a report by the French physician Doulcet, argued in one of his own footnotes that laxity of fibres - a typically solidist explanation - predisposed to inflammation, by allowing the pooling of blood in flaccid arteries: John Whitehead, A report made by order of government, of a memoir, containing a new ... method of treating the child-bed or puerperal fever, made use of by the late M. Doulcet, London, Frys and Couchman, 1783, ftn on pp. 23-4.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 154-155
-
-
Leake1
-
220
-
-
12444337460
-
-
London, Frys and Couchman, ftn on
-
Walsh also suggests that inflammatory symptoms may accompany "diseases of debility", which are usually viewed as putrid types - or fevers of the classification "typhus": Walsh, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 16. He further refers to a "want of firmness and strength in the coats of the vessels, and of course in the solids at large" as a circumstance which will predispose to inflammation (p. 19). The explanation offered by John Leake for the origin of puerperal fever clearly linked inflammatory and solidist explanations of disease. He argued that "neither inanition nor plethora is natural to the body in a healthy state; ... the one extreme is as hurtful as the other, and will produce irritation in as high a degree; for in plethoric habits, where the vessels are overcharged, and violently upon the stretch, all the symptoms of irritability are evidently increased": Leake, op. cit., note 56 above, pp. 154-5. Another important insight into the link between inflammatory and vitalist explanations of puerperal fever is offered by Whitehead, who, in presenting a translation of a report by the French physician Doulcet, argued in one of his own footnotes that laxity of fibres - a typically solidist explanation - predisposed to inflammation, by allowing the pooling of blood in flaccid arteries: John Whitehead, A report made by order of government, of a memoir, containing a new ... method of treating the child-bed or puerperal fever, made use of by the late M. Doulcet, London, Frys and Couchman, 1783, ftn on pp. 23-4.
-
(1783)
A Report Made by order of Government, of a Memoir, Containing a New ... Method of Treating the Child-bed or Puerperal Fever, Made Use of by the Late M. Doulcet
, pp. 23-24
-
-
Whitehead, J.1
-
221
-
-
85039470591
-
-
note
-
John Alexander was Licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians and Medical Officer to the General Dispensary for Children during the 1830s.
-
-
-
-
223
-
-
85039462452
-
-
note 29 above; see also White and Butter, both cited in note 5 above
-
Kirkland, op. cit., note 29 above; see also White and Butter, both cited in note 5 above.
-
-
-
Kirkland1
-
224
-
-
85039483613
-
-
note 29 above
-
Kirkland, op. cit., note 29 above, esp. pp. 1, 13-27, 31-2.
-
-
-
Kirkland1
-
232
-
-
85039463152
-
-
note 5 above
-
White, op. cit., note 5 above; Butter, op. cit., note 5 above, esp. pp. 4, 15-18. A member of the Corporation of Surgeons of London, Charles White was vice-president of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Manchester. He practised midwifery in Manchester for part of his career. William Butter was born in the Orkneys in 1726. He obtained his MD from Edinburgh University in 1761, and became a licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians of London and a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
-
A Dissertation on the Sensible and Irritable Parts of Animals
-
-
White1
-
233
-
-
85039465561
-
-
note 5 above
-
White, op. cit., note 5 above; Butter, op. cit., note 5 above, esp. pp. 4, 15-18. A member of the Corporation of Surgeons of London, Charles White was vice-president of the Literary and Philosophical Society of Manchester. He practised midwifery in Manchester for part of his career. William Butter was born in the Orkneys in 1726. He obtained his MD from Edinburgh University in 1761, and became a licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians of London and a Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh.
-
A Dissertation on the Sensible and Irritable Parts of Animals
, pp. 4
-
-
Butter1
-
234
-
-
85039463152
-
-
note 5 above
-
White, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 7. The inaugural dissertation of Patrick Keary discusses the putrid nature of the disease and cites the work of White: Patrick Keary, Dissertatio medico inauguralis, defebre puerperarum, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1774.
-
A Dissertation on the Sensible and Irritable Parts of Animals
, pp. 7
-
-
White1
-
235
-
-
85039475757
-
-
Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie
-
White, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 7. The inaugural dissertation of Patrick Keary discusses the putrid nature of the disease and cites the work of White: Patrick Keary, Dissertatio medico inauguralis, defebre puerperarum, Edinburgh, Balfour and Smellie, 1774.
-
(1774)
Dissertatio Medico Inauguralis, Defebre Puerperarum
-
-
Keary, P.1
-
240
-
-
85039477331
-
-
op. cit., note 95 above
-
White, A treatise, op. cit., note 95 above pp. 205-6;
-
A Treatise
, pp. 205-206
-
-
White1
-
241
-
-
84885886133
-
-
op. cit., note 16 above
-
See also Appendix op. cit., note 16 above, pp. 27-8.
-
Appendix
, pp. 27-28
-
-
-
242
-
-
85039475515
-
-
op. cit., note 95 above
-
White, A treatise, op. cit., note 95 above, p. 206.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 206
-
-
White1
-
246
-
-
85039477453
-
-
Ibid., pp. 207-9.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 207-209
-
-
-
247
-
-
85039474722
-
-
note 16 above
-
White, op. cit., note 16 above, pp. 18-27.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 18-27
-
-
White1
-
248
-
-
84903027852
-
-
Ibid., p. 28; White, A treatise op. cit., note 95 above, pp. 262-3.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 28
-
-
-
249
-
-
85039468942
-
-
op. cit., note 95 above
-
Ibid., p. 28; White, A treatise op. cit., note 95 above, pp. 262-3.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 262-263
-
-
White1
-
250
-
-
85039483500
-
-
op. cit., note 95 above
-
White, A treatise, op. cit., note 95 above, p. 213.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 213
-
-
White1
-
251
-
-
79955153903
-
-
note 5 above, Preface
-
Butter, op. cit., note 5 above, Preface, pp. viii, 11-15.
-
A Treatise
-
-
Butter1
-
253
-
-
0004324399
-
-
note 29 above
-
Kirkland, op. cit., note 29 above, p. 31.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 31
-
-
Kirkland1
-
254
-
-
85039477687
-
-
note 80 above
-
Kirkland, op. cit., note 80 above, p. 293; see also pp. 293-97. For an example of a case explained by putrid effluvium, see Churchill (ed.), ibid., p. 298.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 293
-
-
Kirkland1
-
255
-
-
85039465928
-
-
Kirkland, op. cit., note 80 above, p. 293; see also pp. 293-97. For an example of a case explained by putrid effluvium, see Churchill (ed.), ibid., p. 298.
-
A Treatise
, pp. 298
-
-
Churchill1
-
256
-
-
85039483067
-
-
note
-
John Whitehead was born in Lancashire. He obtained his MD from Leyden in 1780. He became a licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians of London in 1782.
-
-
-
-
257
-
-
85039477382
-
-
note 106 above
-
Whitehead, op. cit., note 106 above, p. 32.
-
-
-
Whitehead1
-
258
-
-
85039478490
-
-
Ibid., p. 24.
-
-
-
-
259
-
-
85039475122
-
-
note 79 above
-
Burns, op. cit., note 79 above, p. 428.
-
-
-
Burns1
-
260
-
-
85039466323
-
-
Ibid., p. 428. The French physician, Baudelocque, argued for the influence of a number of factors that had come to be seen as causative elements in the process of putrefaction: poor quality food, alcohol, constipation, "impure matter" in the alimentary canal, retention of the urine, and "impurity" of the atmosphere: Baudelocque, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 64-8, 96-8, 112-153.
-
-
-
-
261
-
-
85039476579
-
-
note 5 above
-
Ibid., p. 428. The French physician, Baudelocque, argued for the influence of a number of factors that had come to be seen as causative elements in the process of putrefaction: poor quality food, alcohol, constipation, "impure matter" in the alimentary canal, retention of the urine, and "impurity" of the atmosphere: Baudelocque, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 64-8, 96-8, 112-153.
-
-
-
Baudelocque1
-
262
-
-
85039477175
-
-
note 5 above
-
Armstrong, op. cit., note 5 above, p. viii; on the inflammatory nature of the disease, see Preface, esp. pp. vii-viii, and pp. 14-22; on the contagious nature of puerperal fever, see pp. 12, 33-4.
-
-
-
Armstrong1
-
263
-
-
85039465875
-
-
note 13 above, Preface
-
Hey, op. cit., note 13 above, Preface. William Hey was surgeon to both the General Infirmary and the House of Recovery in Leeds.
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Hey1
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264
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op. cit., note 27 above; Hulme and Gordon both cited in note 5 above
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It is likely that Hey and Armstrong were particularly heavily influenced by those of their predecessors who had emphasized what they saw as an inflammatory nature to puerperal fever: among others, Leake, Hulme, and most particularly, Gordon. Leake, Practical observations, op. cit., note 27 above; Hulme and Gordon both cited in note 5 above.
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Practical Observations
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Leake, H.1
Leake, G.2
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270
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85039480430
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note 5 above
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Gooch, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 2, 62. Robert Gooch was born in Yarmouth in 1784. He obtained his MD from Edinburgh University in 1807, and was a licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians. He was physician to the Lying-in Hospitals of London and Westminster during the 1820s, and later became physician to the City of London Lying-in Hospital. He lectured on midwifery at St Bartholomew's Hospital. He died in 1830. Irvine Loudon has suggested that Fleetwood Churchill in his treatise of 1849 was the first to propose the name "puerperal peritonitis". Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above, p. 8.
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Practical Observations
, pp. 2
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Gooch1
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271
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note 1 above
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Gooch, op. cit., note 5 above, pp. 2, 62. Robert Gooch was born in Yarmouth in 1784. He obtained his MD from Edinburgh University in 1807, and was a licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians. He was physician to the Lying-in Hospitals of London and Westminster during the 1820s, and later became physician to the City of London Lying-in Hospital. He lectured on midwifery at St Bartholomew's Hospital. He died in 1830. Irvine Loudon has suggested that Fleetwood Churchill in his treatise of 1849 was the first to propose the name "puerperal peritonitis". Loudon, op. cit., note 1 above, p. 8.
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Practical Observations
, pp. 8
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Loudon1
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272
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Gooch, ibid., pp. 62-3. The same view is expressed by Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 11.
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Practical Observations
, pp. 62-63
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Gooch1
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273
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note 5 above
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Gooch, ibid., pp. 62-3. The same view is expressed by Campbell, op. cit., note 5 above, p. 11.
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Practical Observations
, pp. 11
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Campbell1
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275
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85039472967
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note
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William Campbell was physician to the Edinburgh Infirmary. Samuel Cusack was a member of the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland. He was "Superintending Accoucheur" to the Wellesley Dispensary for Lying-in Females on Mercer Street, in Dublin. Robert Lee was born in Melrose, Roxburghshire in 1793. He obtained his MD from Edinburgh in 1814 and became a licentiate of the Royal College of Physicians in 1823. He became physician to the British Lying-in Hospital in 1826, Regius Professor of Midwifery to the University of Glasgow in 1834, Professor of Midwifery at St George's Hospital later the same year, and Fellow of the Royal College of Physicians in 1841.
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277
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note 6 above
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Cusack, op. cit., note 6 above, pp. 2-5.
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Cusack1
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278
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12444308163
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On puerperal fever - Letter from Dr. Samuel Cusack to the editors
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For further discussion of Cusack's view, see Samuel Cusack, 'On puerperal fever - letter from Dr. Samuel Cusack to the editors', Dublin Journal of Medical Science, 1836, 9: 162-5.
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(1836)
Dublin Journal of Medical Science
, vol.9
, pp. 162-165
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Cusack, S.1
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283
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85039469320
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note 23 above.
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Ferguson, op. cit., note 23 above. For an introduction to the schema, see pp. 1-2. The direct quotations are taken from p. 21. In discussing his other "forms" of puerperal fever, Ferguson, in common with other late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century writers, identified the inflammation as being of an "erysipelatous" form: ibid., p. 28. Ferguson included one case study - number XXXIII - with the clear purpose of illustrating this link between puerperal fever and erysipelas. Lucy Roberts had symptoms of puerperal fever, accompanied by an "erysipelatous blush ... on the right hip". The erysipelas spread to the limbs and an abscess broke out on the arm. The patient recovered, but only after several weeks. Ibid., pp. 168-75. On the erysipelatous nature of puerperal fever, see also Gordon, op. cit, see note S above, p. 55. Also George Weatherhead, An essay on the diagnosis between erysipelas, phlegmon and erythema, London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1819, pp. 14-18; Moore, op. cit., note 10 above, pp. 142-8; and Lee, Pathological and practical researches, op. cit., note 73 above, p. 66. Lee cites other authors who argue that puerperal fever represents erysipelas, among them Pouteau, Home, and Young of Edinburgh, Gordon, Pinel, Bayle, Garsc and Laënnec, see pp. 66-70.
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Pathological and Practical Researches
-
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Ferguson1
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284
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85039480498
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Ferguson, op. cit., note 23 above. For an introduction to the schema, see pp. 1-2. The direct quotations are taken from p. 21. In discussing his other "forms" of puerperal fever, Ferguson, in common with other late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century writers, identified the inflammation as being of an "erysipelatous" form: ibid., p. 28. Ferguson included one case study - number XXXIII - with the clear purpose of illustrating this link between puerperal fever and erysipelas. Lucy Roberts had symptoms of puerperal fever, accompanied by an "erysipelatous blush ... on the right hip". The erysipelas spread to the limbs and an abscess broke out on the arm. The patient recovered, but only after several weeks. Ibid., pp. 168-75. On the erysipelatous nature of puerperal fever, see also Gordon, op. cit, see note S above, p. 55. Also George Weatherhead, An essay on the diagnosis between erysipelas, phlegmon and erythema, London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1819, pp. 14-18; Moore, op. cit., note 10 above, pp. 142-8; and Lee, Pathological and practical researches, op. cit., note 73 above, p. 66. Lee cites other authors who argue that puerperal fever represents erysipelas, among them Pouteau, Home, and Young of Edinburgh, Gordon, Pinel, Bayle, Garsc and Laënnec, see pp. 66-70.
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Pathological and Practical Researches
, pp. 168-175
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-
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285
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85039471015
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see note S above
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Ferguson, op. cit., note 23 above. For an introduction to the schema, see pp. 1-2. The direct quotations are taken from p. 21. In discussing his other "forms" of puerperal fever, Ferguson, in common with other late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century writers, identified the inflammation as being of an "erysipelatous" form: ibid., p. 28. Ferguson included one case study - number XXXIII - with the clear purpose of illustrating this link between puerperal fever and erysipelas. Lucy Roberts had symptoms of puerperal fever, accompanied by an "erysipelatous blush ... on the right hip". The erysipelas spread to the limbs and an abscess broke out on the arm. The patient recovered, but only after several weeks. Ibid., pp. 168-75. On the erysipelatous nature of puerperal fever, see also Gordon, op. cit, see note S above, p. 55. Also George Weatherhead, An essay on the diagnosis between erysipelas, phlegmon and erythema, London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1819, pp. 14-18; Moore, op. cit., note 10 above, pp. 142-8; and Lee, Pathological and practical researches, op. cit., note 73 above, p. 66. Lee cites other authors who argue that puerperal fever represents erysipelas, among them Pouteau, Home, and Young of Edinburgh, Gordon, Pinel, Bayle, Garsc and Laënnec, see pp. 66-70.
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Pathological and Practical Researches
, pp. 55
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Gordon1
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286
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12444318493
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London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown
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Ferguson, op. cit., note 23 above. For an introduction to the schema, see pp. 1-2. The direct quotations are taken from p. 21. In discussing his other "forms" of puerperal fever, Ferguson, in common with other late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century writers, identified the inflammation as being of an "erysipelatous" form: ibid., p. 28. Ferguson included one case study - number XXXIII - with the clear purpose of illustrating this link between puerperal fever and erysipelas. Lucy Roberts had symptoms of puerperal fever, accompanied by an "erysipelatous blush ... on the right hip". The erysipelas spread to the limbs and an abscess broke out on the arm. The patient recovered, but only after several weeks. Ibid., pp. 168-75. On the erysipelatous nature of puerperal fever, see also Gordon, op. cit, see note S above, p. 55. Also George Weatherhead, An essay on the diagnosis between erysipelas, phlegmon and erythema, London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1819, pp. 14-18; Moore, op. cit., note 10 above, pp. 142-8; and Lee, Pathological and practical researches, op. cit., note 73 above, p. 66. Lee cites other authors who argue that puerperal fever represents erysipelas, among them Pouteau, Home, and Young of Edinburgh, Gordon, Pinel, Bayle, Garsc and Laënnec, see pp. 66-70.
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(1819)
An Essay on the Diagnosis between Erysipelas, Phlegmon and Erythema
, pp. 14-18
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Weatherhead, G.1
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287
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85039480888
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note 10 above
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Ferguson, op. cit., note 23 above. For an introduction to the schema, see pp. 1-2. The direct quotations are taken from p. 21. In discussing his other "forms" of puerperal fever, Ferguson, in common with other late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century writers, identified the inflammation as being of an "erysipelatous" form: ibid., p. 28. Ferguson included one case study - number XXXIII - with the clear purpose of illustrating this link between puerperal fever and erysipelas. Lucy Roberts had symptoms of puerperal fever, accompanied by an "erysipelatous blush ... on the right hip". The erysipelas spread to the limbs and an abscess broke out on the arm. The patient recovered, but only after several weeks. Ibid., pp. 168-75. On the erysipelatous nature of puerperal fever, see also Gordon, op. cit, see note S above, p. 55. Also George Weatherhead, An essay on the diagnosis between erysipelas, phlegmon and erythema, London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1819, pp. 14-18; Moore, op. cit., note 10 above, pp. 142-8; and Lee, Pathological and practical researches, op. cit., note 73 above, p. 66. Lee cites other authors who argue that puerperal fever represents erysipelas, among them Pouteau, Home, and Young of Edinburgh, Gordon, Pinel, Bayle, Garsc and Laënnec, see pp. 66-70.
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An Essay on the Diagnosis between Erysipelas, Phlegmon and Erythema
, pp. 142-148
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Moore1
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288
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85039475759
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op. cit., note 73 above
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Ferguson, op. cit., note 23 above. For an introduction to the schema, see pp. 1-2. The direct quotations are taken from p. 21. In discussing his other "forms" of puerperal fever, Ferguson, in common with other late-eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century writers, identified the inflammation as being of an "erysipelatous" form: ibid., p. 28. Ferguson included one case study - number XXXIII - with the clear purpose of illustrating this link between puerperal fever and erysipelas. Lucy Roberts had symptoms of puerperal fever, accompanied by an "erysipelatous blush ... on the right hip". The erysipelas spread to the limbs and an abscess broke out on the arm. The patient recovered, but only after several weeks. Ibid., pp. 168-75. On the erysipelatous nature of puerperal fever, see also Gordon, op. cit, see note S above, p. 55. Also George Weatherhead, An essay on the diagnosis between erysipelas, phlegmon and erythema, London, Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme and Brown, 1819, pp. 14-18; Moore, op. cit., note 10 above, pp. 142-8; and Lee, Pathological and practical researches, op. cit., note 73 above, p. 66. Lee cites other authors who argue that puerperal fever represents erysipelas, among them Pouteau, Home, and Young of Edinburgh, Gordon, Pinel, Bayle, Garsc and Laënnec, see pp. 66-70.
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Pathological and Practical Researches
, pp. 66
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Lee1
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291
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The contagiousness of puerperal fever
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Oliver W Holmes, The contagiousness of puerperal fever', Medical Classics, 1937-37, 1: 211-43.
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Medical Classics
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Holmes, O.W.1
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reprinted from the N. England Q. J Med. Surg., 1843, 1 (4): 503-30;
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N. England Q. J Med. Surg.
, vol.1
, Issue.4
, pp. 503-530
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293
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Puerperal fever as a private pestilence
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idem, 'Puerperal fever as a private pestilence', Medical Classics, 1936-37, 1: 211-68.
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(1936)
Medical Classics
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Holmes, O.W.1
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0003648083
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transl. K Codell Carter, Madison, University of Wisconsin Press
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I Semmelweis, The etiology, concept and prophylaxis of childbed fever, transl. K Codell Carter, Madison, University of Wisconsin Press, 1983.
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On the analogy between puerperal fever and surgical fever
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James Young Simpson, 'On the analogy between puerperal fever and surgical fever', Edinb. mon. J. med. Sci., Nov. 1850: 414. See also James Young Simpson, 'On the communicability and propagation of puerperal fever', Proceedings of the Medico-Chirurgical Society, April 1851, reprinted in the Edinb. mon. J. med. Sci., July 1851: 72. Both reprinted in the Obstetric memoirs and contributions of James Y Simpson, Edinburgh, A & C Black, 1855-56.
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Simpson, J.Y.1
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On the communicability and propagation of puerperal fever
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April
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James Young Simpson, 'On the analogy between puerperal fever and surgical fever', Edinb. mon. J. med. Sci., Nov. 1850: 414. See also James Young Simpson, 'On the communicability and propagation of puerperal fever', Proceedings of the Medico-Chirurgical Society, April 1851, reprinted in the Edinb. mon. J. med. Sci., July 1851: 72. Both reprinted in the Obstetric memoirs and contributions of James Y Simpson, Edinburgh, A & C Black, 1855-56.
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(1851)
Proceedings of the Medico-chirurgical Society
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Simpson, J.Y.1
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297
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reprinted in the July
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James Young Simpson, 'On the analogy between puerperal fever and surgical fever', Edinb. mon. J. med. Sci., Nov. 1850: 414. See also James Young Simpson, 'On the communicability and propagation of puerperal fever', Proceedings of the Medico-Chirurgical Society, April 1851, reprinted in the Edinb. mon. J. med. Sci., July 1851: 72. Both reprinted in the Obstetric memoirs and contributions of James Y Simpson, Edinburgh, A & C Black, 1855-56.
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(1851)
Edinb. Mon. J. Med. Sci.
, pp. 72
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Both reprinted in the
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James Young Simpson, 'On the analogy between puerperal fever and surgical fever', Edinb. mon. J. med. Sci., Nov. 1850: 414. See also James Young Simpson, 'On the communicability and propagation of puerperal fever', Proceedings of the Medico-Chirurgical Society, April 1851, reprinted in the Edinb. mon. J. med. Sci., July 1851: 72. Both reprinted in the Obstetric memoirs and contributions of James Y Simpson, Edinburgh, A & C Black, 1855-56.
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(1855)
Obstetric Memoirs and Contributions of James y Simpson
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Edinburgh, A.1
Black, C.2
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