Tes iatrikes kartos, or, A treatise de morborum capitis essentiis & pronosticis adorned with above three hundred choice and rare observations ... / by Robert Bayfield ...

About this Item

Title
Tes iatrikes kartos, or, A treatise de morborum capitis essentiis & pronosticis adorned with above three hundred choice and rare observations ... / by Robert Bayfield ...
Author
Bayfield, Robert, b. 1629.
Publication
London :: Printed by D. Maxwel and are to be sold Richard Tomlins ...,
1663.
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Subject terms
Head -- Diseases -- Etiology -- Early works to 1800.
Medicine -- Early works to 1800.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A27077.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Tes iatrikes kartos, or, A treatise de morborum capitis essentiis & pronosticis adorned with above three hundred choice and rare observations ... / by Robert Bayfield ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A27077.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 18, 2024.

Pages

CAP. LXXIII. De Proptosi, seu Uveae procidentiâ

〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, is here taken for a starting, or fal∣ling out of the Membrane named Uvea, when the Horney tunicle is either loosed or bro∣ken by a wound or an ulcer; and as this ma∣lady appeareth greater or less, so there are num∣bred divers kinds thereof, having names given

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unto them from the likeness of those things which they do represent.

Si enim parva uveae portio procidat 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 dicitur, quòd formam capitis muscae habeat: But if the greatest part of the Uvea issueth forth, so that it over-reacheth the eye-lid, representing an Apple hanging by the stalk, it is then called 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 is, when the Uvea being so far thrust out of the eye-lids, becometh hard, and the hornie coat round about being brawnie, presseth it down, as if it were the head of a nail.

The cure of this disease is difficult, and the more when the Uvea comes most forth; si verò minor sit, ut in myocephalo, curationem admit∣tit.

Proptosis medicamentis astringentibus sine aspe∣ritate (qualia in Corneae ruptura suprà fuere propo∣sita) curatur; and if it be not removed by these, then it is requisite that we make use of the in∣cision knife.

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