A systeme of anatomy, treating of the body of man, beasts, birds, fish, insects, and plants illustrated with many schemes, consisting of variety of elegant figures, drawn from the life, and engraven in seventy four folio copper-plates. And after every part of man's body hath been anatomically described, its diseases, cases, and cures are concisely exhibited. The first volume containing the parts of the lowest apartiments of the body of man and other animals, etc. / by Samuel Collins ...
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- Title
- A systeme of anatomy, treating of the body of man, beasts, birds, fish, insects, and plants illustrated with many schemes, consisting of variety of elegant figures, drawn from the life, and engraven in seventy four folio copper-plates. And after every part of man's body hath been anatomically described, its diseases, cases, and cures are concisely exhibited. The first volume containing the parts of the lowest apartiments of the body of man and other animals, etc. / by Samuel Collins ...
- Author
- Collins, Samuel, 1619-1670.
- Publication
- In the Savoy [London] :: Printed by Thomas Newcomb,
- MDCLXXV [1685]
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- Subject terms
- Anatomy, Comparative -- 17th century.
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http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A34010.0001.001
- Cite this Item
-
"A systeme of anatomy, treating of the body of man, beasts, birds, fish, insects, and plants illustrated with many schemes, consisting of variety of elegant figures, drawn from the life, and engraven in seventy four folio copper-plates. And after every part of man's body hath been anatomically described, its diseases, cases, and cures are concisely exhibited. The first volume containing the parts of the lowest apartiments of the body of man and other animals, etc. / by Samuel Collins ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A34010.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 22, 2025.
Pages
Page [unnumbered]
AN INDEX OF Words and Memorable Things Contained in both VOLUMES.
A.
- ACide Recrements vitiate the nervous Liquor, and may be discharged by Vomiting. 1158
- Acidity is an imperfect degree of Concoction. 307
- Acidity is produced by the fusion of saline Ele∣ments. Ibid.
- The acide Spirits of Vegetables, resemble the acide parts of the Blood. 1148
- Action and Passion are different Modalities of the same Entity. 231
- Acute Fevers proceed à prohibita transpira∣tione. 57
- Adipose Ducts of the Caul, resemble Net∣work. 183
- Adipose Ducts associate with the Blood-ves∣sels. 184
- The Origen of the Adipose Ducts are the Sto∣mach and Guts. 186
- Aethereal particles made up of regular Angles, move with great swiftness in right lines. 64
- Aethereal Bodies, being subtil, do insinuate into varionr Liquors. 28
- Agents and Patients do mutually act, as con∣form in Texture, wherein the small particles of Agents are suitable in shape and size with the Pores of Patients. 37
- Air is exalted by Celestial Emanations. 29
- Air is of an expansive Nature, and is light in its own Nature, and groweth ponderous, as embodied with steams, as their vehicle 34
- Air is called by Mr. Hook, Tincture of Ear∣thy and watry bodies dissolved into it. 30
- Air is rendred fermentative, as affected with the effluxes of Vegetables. 31
- The manner how Air incorporated with steams is conveyed from the surface to the inward recesses of the Body. 395
- Air being of an expansive Nature, much ad∣vanceth the growth of Plants. 39
- The Air-vessels of Plants 821 and how they are encircled with lignous Processes, and how they have an entercourse with Sap-vessels, and their uses. 822, 823
- The passage how Air is conveyed into the Mouth of Birds. 1099
- The Air is forced into the Lungs by the weight of the Superincumbent Atmosphaere, and the Air by its elastick Particles, assisteth the in∣flation of the Lungs. 832
- Air insinuates into the inward part of the Brain, and mixeth with the Succus nervo∣sus. 1001
- The Air consisting of various steams, embodi∣ed with the Blood, (made up of Heteroge∣ous Particles) hath great contests, by which the different parts are brought to a due temper, and in some sort assimilated. 41
- The attraction of Aliment is not found in the Stomach but Mouth. 201
- Attraction of Aliment cannot proceed from a Vacuum. 291
- The Aliment is protruded into the Stomach. 292
- The Aliment is prepared in the Mouth with Salival Liquor, and as inspired with Airy and Aethereal Particles. 297
- The Aliment is not only acted with serous and nervous Ferments, as proper Menstru∣ums in the Ventricles, but also exalted with vital heat, tanquam Bal. Mar. whereby the Aliment is extracted in the Stomach by Colliquation. 297
- Liquid Aliment having enlarged Pores, is more easily concocted then solid. 310
- Aliment is concocted in the Stomach without corruption. 312
Page [unnumbered]
- Aliment putrified depraveth the mass of Blood. 314
- The Aliment is concocted, by a perfective, not corruptive Fermentation. 315.
- The Extraction of Aliment in its intestine motion, resembleth the fermentation of ve∣getable juyce. 314
- The alimentary Liquor is extracted by proper Ferments, and afterward the Faeces are se∣parated by a kind of precipitation. 318
- All antoides its Figure. 636, 637
- Amnios its substance, Figure, and use. 637, 638
- Anasarca seated in the muscular parts, and differeth from an Ascitis in the parts affect∣ed, and produces a Laesa Sanguificatione. 134
- Anasarca coming from purulent Matter. 137
- Remote causes of an Anasarca. 137 Ab ex∣cretis & à Retentis. 138
- The curatory and preservative Indications of an Anasarca. 138
- In an Anasarca the curatory Indication may be satisfied by Purgatives, Diureticks, Su∣dorificks, &c. 139
- Diet-drinks, Chalybeats, Topicks, Frications, Fomentations. 140
- In an Anasarca blistering Plaisters are un∣safe. 141
- Anfractus of the Brain resemble the Inte∣stines. 982
- The Animal Liquor. 1001, 1002, 1003
- Animal Spirits, and their seat and producti∣on. 1004 Of their Origen. 1137
- According to Dr. Willis, the different affecti∣on of Animal Spirits may be illustrated by Light. 1147
- The Animal Spirits do not differ from the Vi∣tal, according to Descartes, and are in truth the more refined Particles of the ner∣vous Liquor. 1005
- Sylvius his Opinion, how the Animal Spirits are generated in the Cortical vessels of the Brain, and are the more mild parts of the Animal Liquor, and of the manner how the Animal Spirits are generated. 1006 and of their subject, and the Animal Spirits do not subsist of themselves. 1007
- The progress of the Animal Spirits, according to Dr. Willis, and the outmost Spirits have no retrograde motion in the Brain. 1016 of the regular and irregular motion of the Animal Spirits. 1139
- Ani Procidentia, and its cause, according to some Anatomists. 1067
- Annular Process, or Pons varolii, 1019
- Animal Spirits have no reflux. 1090
- Animal Liquor is the efficient cause of the ratio∣nal, sensitive, and motive operations. 1089
- The manner how the Animal Liquor is propa∣gated, and of its progress. 1090
- Appetite of Hunger. 279
- Appetite of Thirst. 282 Lost Appetite of Thirst and its causes. 286
- Pathology of the Appetitive Faculty, 287
- The Diseases of the Appetitive Faculty of the Stomach. 287
- The lost Appetite. 289 The lessened Appe∣tite. 288
- The Doglike Appetite, 289
- The depraved Appetite. Ibid.
- Apepsia is made à vitiata Conformatione, aut mala temperie, aut a fermentis male dispositis. 321
- pepsia proceeding from an ill tone of the Stomach. 321
- Appetite of Man is double, to be like his Ma∣ker, and beget somewhat like himself. 511
- Of an Apoplexy, and its seat, and causes. 1126 and of many cases of it. 1127 And how Opiates produce an Appoplexy. 1128, 1129
- Of the degrees of an Apoplexy. Ibid.
- Apthae, the Ʋlcers of the Tongue and Mouth cured. 156
- The Architectonick power in the Seed, giveth a due Magnitude, Number, Figure, Situa∣tion, Connexion, &c. to the Foetus. 622
- Arteries of the Heart, and the Orifice of the pulmonary Artery, and of the Aorta; and the coronary Artery; and the first produ∣ction of Arteries, 779
- The substance and coats of the Arteries. 780
- The motion of the Arteries. 781
- The manner of the pulsation of Arteries, ac∣cording to Dr. Harvey. Ibid.
- The Systole, or motion of the Arteries is made by fleshy Fibres. 783
- The Pathology of the Arteries, their obstructi∣on. 784
- An Aneurisme, and the cause of its produ∣ction. 785
- The laceration, and great pulsation of the Ar∣tery. 786
- Arteries of the one side of the Brain do inos∣culate with those of the other. 987
- Arteries of the Brain do not inosculate with the Jugular veins. 988
- Articulation of Words, how they are made by diverse stops, modelling the expired Air. 1149
- Ascitis and its causes, antecedent, continent, and Procatarctick. 167
- Ascitis coming from purulent Matter, from the suppressed Menstrua, from a rupture of the Bladder, and from serous Recrements. 168
- An Ascitis proceeding from broken Lymphae∣ducts. 169
- In an Ascitis, Purgatives too strong, are ve∣ry improper. 169 Diureticks are more safe Ibid.
- Asthma, its description, causes, and indicati∣ons. 858, 859
- Atheromes. 143
- Atrabilarian humor, and how the Spleen is con∣ceived to be the subject of it. 1150
- Auricles of the Heart, their Figure and Con∣nexion. 719
- And of their Vessels, Fibres, Cavities, and Ʋses. 720
Page [unnumbered]
B.
- OF the Bark of Plants and its Cuticle, or thin covering. 52
- The Bark is invested with a Cuticle (resem∣bling that of Man's Body) which is reticu∣lar, made up of divers Semi-circles, filled up with Bodies of various shapes and sizes, and the Cuticle is furnished with divers Cells, investing the Convexe part of the Cortex, 52
- The Bark in its inside is composed of diverse Rings of Sap-vessels, and is fastened to the Wood by the interposition of many cortical Fibres, somewhat resembling the Membranes, affixing the Skin to the Membrana Mus∣culorum Communis. 53
- Belchings proceeding from crude and flatulent Matter. 343 So our Belchings are the ef∣fects of an ill Concoction. 307
- Belchings derived from bilious and pancrea∣tick Recrements. 343
- The Muscles of the Belly. 198
- Bile is full of Salt. 461
- Aruginous Bile resembleth the Yolks of Eggs. 465
- Several sorts of Bile proceeding from diverse degrees of heat. 465
- Bile is vitiated by the acide juyce of the Spleen, Ibid.
- Bladder of Gall in Man, 453, to 455
- Bladder of Gall in other Animals. 455, 456
- Bladder of Ʋrine 498 to 500.
- Bladder of Ʋrine in other Animals. 501, 502
- Bladder of Gall, its Figure, and outward and inward Membrane. 453
- The dimensions, colour, and denominations of the Bladder of Gall; The protuberance, and folds in the neck of it. 454
- The variety of vessels belonging to the Bladder of Gall. Ibid.
- The Glands, and use of the Bladder of Gall. 455
- Two or three bilarian vessels do accompany one Branch of the Porta. 458
- Many strange passages out of the Bladder of Gall into the Guts. 458
- The Coats, Connexion, Dimensions and Figure of the Bladder of Ʋrine. 499
- The Cavity, Perforations, and bottom of the Bladder of Ʋrine. 500
- The neck of the Bladder is endued with fleshy Fibres. Ibid.
- The body of the Bladder of Ʋrine is endued with circular and oblique Fibres. Ibid.
- The vessels, and use of the Bladder. 500, 501
- The Diseases of the Bladder if Ʋrine, In∣flammations, Apostemes, Ʋlcers, Scirrhus, and their Indications and Cures. 503, 504
- Bleeding proper in the small Pox upon great difficulty of breathing. 64
- Bleeding is not to be celebrated in the Small Pox, accompanied with a malignant Fever. 64
- Blood is refined in the Spleen. 411 Of Blood 41 And its disaffections. 1150
- Blood is not made in the Liver. 462
- Blood, and how it is generated and repaired by Chyle, 462
- Blood is composed of many parts, 135
- The Blood is produced in an Embryo, by the heat of the ambient parts, 462
- Blood is percolated in the Glands of the Liver, 463
- Blood is also refined in the Glands of the Vi∣scera, 464
- The Blood in the Jaundies is mixed with Bile in the Vena Cava, 468
- Blood is depurated in the Kidneys, by their Structure, and by proper Ferments, 478, 479
- The manner how Blood is depurated in the Kidney, which is assisted by Inspiration, 479
- The over-fretting mass of Blood is the cause of a difficult Respiration in the Lungs, and ill symptomes of the Heart, 1206
- The Blood claimeth the Primogeniture in a Humane Foetus. 624
- The first motion and progress of the Blood in a Foetus, Ibid.
- The Blood is the first principle of life, heat, in∣testine, and local motion, 625
- Blood consisting of saline and sulphureous parts, of Acides, and Alcalys, hath intestine mo∣tion (in the ventricles of the Heart) pro∣moted by various Ferments, 26
- The Blood is exalted by Air, received into the Lungs, as impregnated with various steams, 40
- Blood, how it is supported by Chyle, and refi∣ned in the Glands, 41
- Blood is composed of Aliment, and excremen∣titious parts, 42
- The alimentary parts of the Blood is made up of a Christalline or serous part, and a Red Cras∣sament, 42 and both are composed of diffe∣rent Elemnts, Ibid.
- The difform parts of the Blood, that cannot be assimilated, are secerned in the Glands, and discharged by excretory Ducts, 42
- Blood is vitiated by pituitous Matter, and by fixed Salt and Sulphur, 136
- Blood embodied with effete Air, hath its reak discharged through the Bronchia of the Lungs, and Aspera arteria, 43
- The distemper of the Blood maketh a timerous disposition, 1149
- The Blood how it is moved, and by it the Ven∣tricles of the Heart are distended in their Diastole, and emptied in their Systole, and the manner how the Blood is moved in the vessels, 739
- Borellus Opinion that the constrictive power of the Heart, is less then the resistence of the Blood, and the reason of the Opinion, 740
Page [unnumbered]
- The quantity of Blood which passeth through the Heart every pulsation, 739 and how it is received in its Diastole, and discharg∣ed in its Systole, 739 and how the whole mass of Blood passeth through the Heart twelve times in an hour, and how it is performed in various Channels of Arteries and Veins, 740
- The motion of Blood beginneth first in the Veins, and doth not pass in an Embryo through the Lungs, 741
- The motion of the Blood made in the Heart, its progress is assisted by the contracti∣on of the Arteaies, 742. And how the veins concur, 753
- And the ascent of Blood is not made good only by the valves of the Veins, 743
- The main end of the motion of Blood is San∣guification, and the manner of production of Blood, 744
- The ends of the motion of Blood, and its con∣stituent part, 745
- The various constitution of Blood, and its first rise, 746
- The Albuminous Liquor, and Red Crassament, and crust of the Blood, and how it consist∣eth of many White Filaments, and how it is made Red, 747
- The sulphureous, saline, airy, and spirituous parts of Blood, 748
- The Caput mortuum of Blood, and how the volatil parts are depressed by the more gross, and how it is heightened by intestine and local motion, 749 The various principles of Blood, and how a comminution is made of its various Elements against the sides of the Ven∣tricles of the Heart, 750, And the Active and Passive Elements of Blood, 751
- The Compage of the Blood when it is coagula∣ted, 757.
- The bilious constitution of the Blood, and its oily Particles, the cause of an intermittent Tertian Fever, 758
- Blood concreted, is composed of many white Filaments, 770
- Blood-vessels of other Animals are like those of Man, 793
- Bodies porous broken into small Particles of a sphaerical Figure, and affected with various Angles are subject to intestine motion, 64
- The Bodies of Animals are more or less perfect, as they hold greater or less similitude with that of Mans, 1092
- The body of Man is composed of three Aparti∣ments, erected upon the Thighs and Legs, as joynted Columns, and the Feet as Pede∣stals, 1077
- The bodies of Birds in slight are supported by Air, and how they are equally ballanced, and of their center of parity, 497
- Bones are the centers of motion, and supporters of the Body, and of their description, and how the Muesles are conjoyned to Bones, as so many Hypomoclia, 1213
- The origination and frame of Bones, and of their Cells, the receptacles of Marrow, 1214
- Bones are accommodated with Veins and Arte∣ries, and how they enter by small Forami∣na into Bones, and how Blood is transmit∣ted by Arteries into the substance of Bones, and the Medulla, and returned again by Veins, 1215
- The alimentary Liquor of Bones, and the man∣ner how their Marrow is nourished, 1216
- The nutrition of Bones is performed by Blood Ibid.
- The entrance of the Arteries may be seen in ca∣rious Bones, 1217
- Bones are composed of a double substance, and great ones are endued with large Cavities to render them light, 1217
- ...The body of the Bone is furnished with two extremities, called 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉; and 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, and of the Origen and description of an Apophysis, 1215
- A process of the Bone hath several names from variety of Figures; and how a deep Sinus is called Acetabulum, and a superficial is named 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, And how the Figure of a Sinus is various, Ibid.
- The Labra of the Sinus of Bones are circular, and the Supercilia are more deep in great articulations, and of the use of the Proces∣ses of Bones, 1218
- A double conjunction of Bones, one by Arti∣culation, and the other by Ʋnion, and of the various kinds of Articulations in refe∣rence to Motion, 1219
- The Bone of the Occiput is fastened to the first Verteber by a double articulation, 1220
- The First Verteber is tied to the sides of the Second by a double Arthrodia; and the man∣ner how the Eeleven Vertebers of the Tho∣rax are conjoyned to their Processes; and how the Twelth Verteber of the Thorax, and every Verteber of the Loins hath a loose articulation, 1220.
- Of the diverse manner how the Vertebers are articulated, 1221, 1222
- The Bones of the upper Jawe are many, and how it is endued with a double substance, and of the greater Cavern of the upper Man∣dible, and of the conjunction of its Bones to the adjacent contiguous Bones, 1223.
- The First Bone of the upper Mandible is con∣nected to four Bones, and of the connexion of the Second Bone of it to the Fore∣head, 1224.
- Of the nature of the third Bone of the upper Jawe, and of the connexion of it to the adjoyning Bones, and of the conjunction of the fourth Bone to many other Bones, 1225
- The fifth Bone of the upper Jawe is composed of two Bones, and of its Origen, 1226
- The Bone of the lower Mandible is short in Man, and of a solid substance, and full of Sinus, and is one entire Bone, and beset with a Process called by the Greeks 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, and of the Figure of the hinder Process,
Page [unnumbered]
- and of the Cavity of the lower Jawe, and how it is endued with four holes, 1228
- Of the roughness and many Cavities of the lower Jawe, as so many loculaments of the Teeth, 1229
- Of the First Formation of the lower Mandi∣ble in a Foetus, Ibid.
- The Os Hyoides is composed of many Bones and of the middle Bone and its Figure, Ibid.
- And the Bones seated on each side, resemble Horns, and of the four Cartilages united to those bones, and of the use of the Os Hy∣oides, 1230
- Of the Bones of the Scapula, Shoulder, or Arm; of the seat of the Scapula, and how it is made for the inarticulation of the Shoulder, and implantation of Muscles, and of the Si∣nus, Processes, and Appendices, and of the Base, and lower side of the Triangles, and of its upper side; and of the two Appendices of the Scapula, 1231
- A Cartilage appendant to the Base of the Sca∣pula, and of its Neck, and Sinus, covered and deepened by a Cartilage; and of the Ligaments, orbicularly encompassing the Joynts, and of the three Processes of the Scapula, 1233
- The Bone of the Shoulder or Arm, and its Ap∣pendix, and Heads, and of its description, and how the hinder part of the Shoulder-bone hath two Prominencies, attended with so many Sinus, 1232
- The lower part of the Shoulder-bone is articula∣ted with the Ulna and Radius, and of a Sinus appearing in the middle of the Bone, with its Prominencies, resembling the little wheel of a Pulley, 1234
- The head of the Shoulder-bone is received into the Sinus of the Radius, where it is so firm∣ly articulated, that it cannot slip out of the Socket in Flexion and extension, 1234
- The Figure of the body of the Shoulder-bone, in which some small holes are found about the Sinus for the implantation of Ligaments, 1235
- The two Bones of the Cubit, the First is the Ra∣dius, the Second is the Ulna, endued with two Processes, and of a Sinus seated in the middle of the Processes of the Ulna, 1235
- The Sinus is lined with a Cartilage, and of the articulation of the Radius with the Shoulder-bone, making Pronation, and Supination; and of the progress of the Radius, 1236
- A Sinus engraven in the outside of the Ulna, passing transversly, and of a Sinus engraven in the Radius near the Wrist, 1236 Part of the Wrist articulated with a Sinus of the Ʋlna, which is conjoyned to the Wrist by the interposition of a Cartilage, and how the articulation of it is performed by three Bones, 1237
- The Tendons of the Muscles pass through the an∣nular Sinus, and of the three parts of the Hand, Ibid.
- The Wrist is framed of two ranks of Bones, and of the seat of its four Bones, and how the articulation of the first Bone is made with the Radius; and of the connexi∣on and articulation of several Bones of the Wrist, 1238
- The connexion of the sixth Bone of the Wrist with two of the Metacarpium, and of the seventh Bone of the Wrist, how it is articula∣ted with the First, Second, Sixth and Eighth Bone, and how the Eighth Bone of the Wrist is conjoyned to the Second and Third Bones, and to two Bones of the Metacarpium, 1239
- The Metacarpium is made up of four Bones, and how they support the Bones of the Fin∣gers, and the Bones of the Metacarpium are endued with various surfaces, and are conjoyned to the Bones of the Fingers, by the interposition of Cartilages, 1240
- The Bones of the Fingers are not perfectly round, and how the Thumb answereth the four Fin∣gers, and their first Bones are the most large, and support the rest, and one part of the Car∣pus is encrusted with a Cartilage; and of the articulation of the first Bone of the Thumb, and how its third Bone is different in stru∣cture from the first and second; and how the third Bone bath two Sinus; and how the first joynt of each Finger consists in a Head and Sinus, 1241
- The first joynt of the Fingers hath the most laxe Articulations; The Second and Third Joynts of the Fingers are capable of Flexion and Extension, 1242
- The Bones of the Fingers, called Sesamina, are lodged among the tendons of Muscles, 1242 and about the Joynts of the Thumb and Fin∣gers, 1243
- The rudiments of the Carpus, Metacarpium, and Fingers, Ibid.
- Of the Bone of the Clavicle, Sternon, and Ribs, and of the connexion of the Clavi∣cles, and how they are articulated with the Sinus of the Process of the Scapula, and with the third Bone of the Sternon; and the head of the Clavicle is triangular, how the head of the Clavicle is encom∣passed with a Cartilage, and how it is en∣dued with an unctuous Matter, and how the part of the Clavicle adjoyning to the Ster∣non, is more spungy then the other, 1244
- The Figure of the Clavicle, and of the articu∣lation of the Clavicles with the Scapula, and how they come to maturity, 1245
- Of the seat and Bones of the Sternon in Chil∣dren; and of its first Bone, Ibid. And of the Second and Third, 1246
- ... Of the Ensiforme Cartilage, and its Figure, and how the Ensiforme Cartilage is immove∣able, and of its Cavity.
- Of the Origen of the Sternon, 1246
Page [unnumbered]
- Of the various Bones encircling the Thorax, and the number of the Ribs, and how the larger have most long Cartilages, and those of the upper Ribs have Interstices, and the other have no spaces; and of the various surfaces of the Ribs, and their outward Region is endued with Protuberancies, 1247
- The asperity of the Ribs, and their division, and articulation with the Sternon by Carti∣lages, 1248
- Of the spurious Ribs, and of the different sub∣stance, and how the double joynts of the nine upper Ribs, and how the three lower Ribs have but one Joynt; and of the articulation of the first Rib, 1248
- The use of the articulation of the Ribs, of their connexion to the Sternon by Cartilages, and of the Cavities of the Sternon, made after the manner of obtuse Angles; and how the Sinus of the sixth and seventh Rib is smaller then the rest, and of the use of the Ribs, 1249
- Of the Origen of the Ribs in a Foetus, and their progress in various Moneths, 1251
- The Ossa innominata, and of their connexion, and Bones, 1251
- The Os Ilium, and its connexion with the Os Sacrum, and of the Protuberancies, and Si∣nus of this Bone, and the Os Sacrum, and how the connexion of the Os Ilium with the Sacrum, is made by a Symphysis, 1251
- The Os Coxendicis, and the socket of the Os innominatum, and the connexion of the Thigh-bone with the Os Coxendicis by a double Ligament, and the many little holes, out of which the Ligaments arise, 1252
- The round Cavity of the Coxendix is enclosed with a slippery Cartilage, and of the Super∣cilia, relating to the Sinus of the Ischium, 1252
- The acute Processe of the Coxendix emit∣teth a Ligament, and of the Appendix of the Ischium, and how the double Bone of the Os Pubis in Children is conjoyned by a Car∣tilage, and how they are united per Sym∣physin, 1253
- A Prominence of the fore-part of the Os Pubis, and of its unevenness in reference to its An∣terior, and P••sterior p••rt; and of the dif∣ferences of the Os innominatum in Men from Women, 1253
- A Question may be started, Whether the Bones of the Os innominatum do part in the birth of the Child; and of the Origen of the Os innominatum in a Foetus; and how the Os Illium is incircled with a cartilaginous Margent, and of the Origen and Processes of the Os innominatum in the Third, Fourth and Fifth Months, 1254
- Of the Bones of the Thigh, Leg, &c. and how the Foot, according to the Antients, is com∣posed of three parts of the Thigh-bones, and its Surface, Appendix, and Head incrusted with a Cartilage; and of a Sinus seated in the middle of the top of the Head, and of the Ligaments of the Thigh-bone, 1255
- And of the manner of the articulation of the Thigh-bone per Enarthrosin, which is loose, and of the Processes of the Thigh-bone, 1255
- The Trochanter Major, and how many Muscles take their rise out of the Trochanters, and of the two Heads of the inferior Region of the Thigh-bone, and how the lower Joynts of it are onely capable of Tension and Flexion, and how the Sinus is engraven in the heads of the Thigh-bone, and of the Ligaments fa∣stening the Os tibiae to it, 2256
- The Os tibiae is endued with a kind of trian∣gular Figure, and its Cavity filled with Mar∣row, and of its two oblong Sinus, in whose middle is seated a Protuberance, 1256
- A Ligament coming out of a Protuberance of the Os tibiae, and how its Sinus are enlarg∣ed by Cartilages, which by way of Ligaments encompass the Joynt orbicularly, 1257
- The upper and lower Appendix of the Os tibiae Ibid.
- The Sinus, or Os Fibulae, into which a Protu∣berance of the Os Tibiae is received, and of a Ligament, conjoyning the Os Fibulae to the Tibia, Ibid.
- The Os Fibulae, and Tibiae are disjoyned, and how they are articulated with the Talus, and how the two heads of the Fibula are enter∣tained into the Sinus of the Tibia, and of the Patella, and its tender Region, incrust∣ed with a Cartilage, and of its Sinus fitted to the head of the Thigh-bone, to which it is fastened by Tendons of Muscles, 1253
- The Foot is composed of the ranks of Bones, and the Tarsus is made up of seven Bones, and of the head of the Talus received into the Sinus of the Tibia; and how the Bone of the Talus seemeth to be adorned with a qua∣drangular Figure, 1259
- The joynt of the Talus with the Tibia, is bent and extended without any great lateral mo∣tion, and out of the rough Sinus of the An∣kle-bone a Ligament is emitted, fastening the Talus to the Os Tibiae, and the round Sinus of the Talus is made for the reception of tendons of Muscles; And the round head of the Talus being incrusted with a Car∣tilage, is received into a Sinus of the Os Naviculare, 1259
- A double articulation of the Os Tali, and of Cartilaginous Ligaments, fastening the Ta∣lus to the Os Calcis, which is the Second Bone of the Tarsus, and the Posterior part of the Os calcis is brought backward, that the Os tibiae might be supported in a perpendicular line, and for the better inser∣tion of the Musculus Gasterocnemius; and of the rough surface of the Os Calcis, and of the connexion of the Os Calcis with the Talus, 1260
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- The upper region of the Os Calcis is endued with a Convex Surface, and the lower Re∣gion of the Os Naviculare with a concave: Of the Os Cubiforme, and of the reason of its denomination, and of its connexion with the Os Cuneiforme, and contiguity with other Bones, and of the Ossa Cuneiformia, which make the Convex part of the Foot, 1261
- The Prominencies and Sinus of the Ossa Cu∣neiformia, which are mutually tied by Car∣tilages; and of the Bones of the Metatar∣sus, whose upper heads are received into the Sinus of the Bones of the Toes, and of the articulation of the Bones of the Metatarsus, with those of the Toes, and of the Bones of the Metatarsus relating to the great Toe, 1261
- The Bones of the Metatarsus adjoyning to the little Toe, and of the Bones of the first joynt of the Toes, and the Bones of the second joynt, and of the small Bones, called Sesa∣moidea, lodged among the Tendons of the Foot.
- The First rudiments of the Bones of the Thigh, Tarsus, Metatarsus, Toes, and of the Meta∣carpus, and Fingers, and of the Ossa Tibiae, and Fibulae, and Patella, how they appear in the Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, and Se∣venth Moneths, 1262, 1263
- Bradupepsia is performed by a slow operation of the Stomach, 321. Of the Brain and its Origen, 993
- Of the Fabrick and substance of the Brain, which is made of minute Fibres, and the substance of the Brain is made up of many Globules in Animals, 994. and are a com∣pany of vessels, 995
- The Figure, and uses of the Fibres of the Brain, Ibid.
- The Hemisphaeres of the Brain and their situa∣tion, 996
- The Cortex of the Brain, its Blood-vessels, and Gyres, 997. and of their rise, and causes, Ibid.
- The Cortex is intermingled with the medullary parts of the Brain, and of its cineritions colour, and its cause, and of the Compage, and how the Cortex resembleth the frame of a Pomgranet, 998
- The cortical Glands of the Brain, and of their seat and Blood-vessels, &c. 1000. And of the use of the said Glands, 1001
- The Brain is the seat of the more noble operati∣ons of the Soul, 1072
- The contraction of the Brain, and its Compage is fibrous, as well as the Medulla spinalis, and the Brain as fibrous, is capable of di∣verse motions, 1086
- The Brain and Nerves seem to resemble an in∣verted Tree, 1089
- The Brain of Beasts, 1092
- The Bodies of Animals, are more or less perfect, as they hold greater or less similitude with that of Mans, Ibid.
- The descript••on of the coat of the Brain of Ani∣mals, and of the Cortex and falciform Pro∣cess of the Brain of Brutes, 1092. And how it is furnished with nervous Ligaments and Cells, and hath a power to contract and dilate it self, 1093
- Of the Corpus callosum in Beasts, and how the natiform Processes in Man are larger then those of Beasts, and the testiform very small, 1093
- Of the Cerebellum of Brutes, and how the Coats and Processes of the Brain of Beasts much resemble that of Man, 1093
- ... The Brain of Birds, and of its Coats and Situ∣ation, and of its anterior Coat.
- The Hemisphaeres of the Brain of Birds, and how it hath no Anfractus, and each Hemis∣phaere hath an adjoyning oval Prominence; and of two small Processes in the inward re∣cesses of the Brain, and how the streaky Mem∣brane supplyeth the defect of many Processes in the Brain of Birds, 1099
- And in each Hemisphaere of the Brain, a Cavi∣ty may be seen leading into the Infundibu∣lum, 2000
- The principal part of the Brain of Birds is cortical, and full of Globules, bedewed with nervous Liquor, and hath Ventricles, and four Sinus, and Processes accrescing to the Medulla oblongata, 2000
- The under Processes of the Brain of Birds are substituted instead of the Corpus callosum, and of the Blood-vessels, 2001
- The Brain of Fish and its Processes are akin to those of the Brain of Man, and of the first formation of the Brain of Fish, and how its Processes are sometimes regular, and other times irregular, and of the cause of the dif∣ferent Processes, and the end of the different Figures, and the Brain of Animals is fra∣med of many Globules, 1108
- The nature of the Globules of the Brain of Fish, and how they are akin to Glands, and of the Analogy of the Brain of Fish with that of Man; and the partition interceding the Processes supply the defect of Anfractus; and of the division of the Medulla oblongata, and Spinalis, 1109
- The different Processes of the Brain of several Mackrels, 1110
- ... The uses of the Processes of the Brain of Fish,
- The Brain of a Thornback, Fireflair, Skait, 1111
- The Brain of a Cod, Dogfish, 1112
- The upper and lower Region of the Brain of a Skait, 1113
- The upper and lower Region of the Brain of a Kingston, and of the upper and lower Re∣gion of the Brain of a Codlin, and of the Brain of a Lamprey, 1115
- The Brain of an Ʋmber, 1116
- Of the transparent substance encircling the Brain of a Carp, and of its upper Region, 1117
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- Of the Brain of another Carp, and of the Brain of a Rochet, and of a Place, 1118
- The Brain of a Dabb, Flounder, Soul, Turbat, 1119
- The upper and lower Region of the Brain of a Whiting, and of a Pearch and Gudgeon, 1120
- The Brain of an Eele, and of the Medulla oblongata and Spinalis of diverse Fish, 1121
- The upper and lower Region of the Brain of a Dory, and the Brain of a Gurnard, Smelt, 1122
- The Brain of a Pope, Garfish, Grey Mullet, Salmon Peal, Horse-Mackrel, 1123
- The Brain of a Pike, Tench, Pearch, 1124
C.
- CAncer ulcered, and its cures, 150
- Carus and Coma, and of their seats and causes, 1130
- Carunculae Myrtiformes, 562. Clitoris, its Muscles and Vessels, 561
- Caul, and its Situation, Connexion, and the upper and hinder leafe of the Caul, 179
- The Magnitude, Figure, and its manner of Production, Substance, and Surfaces of the Caul, are full of variety, 180
- The Caul hath many Membranes, the streiners of the Blood, 181
- The vessels of the Caul, 187. The uses of the Caul, 189
- The Nerves and lacteal vessels of the Caul, Ibid.
- The Caul expanded in Inspiration, and contra∣cted in Expiration, Ibid.
- Ʋses also of the Caul. 110, 199
- The Glands of the Caul, 188
- The Pathology of the Caul, and its Inflammati∣on, Abscess, Ʋlcers, and Steatoms, &c. 192
- An ulcered Caul producing an Ascitis, 193
- Hydatides, and Tympanitis of the Caul, 194
- A Scirrhous Caul, 193
- Center of Gravity in a standing posture, passeth through the middle of the Trunk, and be∣tween the Thighs and Legs, and Feet, ma∣king right Angles with the Area, 107
- Cerebellum, and its Figure, Ʋnevennesses, Lamellae, Processus Vermiformes, and its vessels, 1029. And how the nervous Fibrils resemble a Tree; and of the lateral parts re∣sembling two Lobes; and of the Distention and Contraction of the Processus Vermifor∣mis, and of the Glands of the Cerebellum, and of its vessels and Neck, 1030
- The Processes of the Cerebellum, are endued with diverse shapes and Sizes; And how Brutes have fewer Processes, and of a diffe∣rent progress from those of Man; and how Brutes have no Lamellae in the Cerebellum, and how in Man it is endued with various Processes in the inward Recesses, 1031
- The use of the Processes of the Cerebellum, and how they are repositories of Vessels, which are attended with many minute Glands; and of its vessels and divarications, 1032
- The Nerves of the Cerebellum, and how some conceive the Processes are distended and con∣tracted upon the elevation and depression of the Cerebellum, and how it is like the Brain, and of its connexion, and Pedunculus, how it is made up of three Processes, and of the annular Process, or Pons varolii, 1033
- The use of the various parts of the Cerebel∣lum, and of its Nerves, assigned by Dr. Willis to be the instruments of involuntary motion, 1034. But in truth diverse of its Nerves are Organs of voluntary Motion, Ibid. And how the involuntary motion of the Heart proceedeth from Nerves of the Brain, 1035. And how Respiration being partly a natural action is derived from the Nerves of the Me∣dulla oblongata; and how the fountain of involuntary motion is not derived solely from the Cerebellum, but chiefly from the Brain, 1036
- The Cerebellum of other Animals, 1037, 1038
- Of the Cheeks, 202, 203
- Of the Muscles and Glands of the Cheeks, 243
- Of the Chine, and of its description, and first rise, 1059.
- Of the parts of every verteber of the Chine, and of its various Bones, as some imagine, and how its cartilaginous substances are turned into Bone, and of the completion of a Ver∣teber, and how the whole Systeme of Verte∣bers are turned into Bone, 1060
- How the Vertebers of the Chine grow bony, and how the various Processes of the Vertebers are adorned with variety of shapes and sizes, and how their articulations grow more firm after the Birth, 1061
- The Chine is straight after Birth in order to progressive motion, and the Figure of the parts of a Verteber is various; and how the Processes are seated in the outside of the Ver∣tebers, after the manner of Carved work; and of the oblique ascendent, and descendent Processes; and of the Dentiforme Process, and of the Fistula Sacra, a Cavity of the Chine, in which the Medulla Spinalis is lodged, 1062
- The Epiphyses of every Verteber, and their per∣forations, and how the external parts of the Vertebers are solid, and the inward more spungy, and the Ligaments of the Vertebers are strong and semi-circular, 1063
- A description of the Verteber of the Chine, called Atlas, and of the Sinus of the first Verteber, and of the Dentiforme Process, 1064, and of the Verteber of the Chine, called by the Greeks 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, and of its Verteber na∣med Axis; and of the motion of the Muscu∣li superiores, & inferiores, turning the Face in several postures. The Vertebers of the Chine belonging to the Back, and of their Processes, and how the body of every Verte∣ber
Page [unnumbered]
- hath a large Sinus, 1066
- The Vertebers relating to the Loins, and how they are eminent for thickness, greatness, and many perforations, Ibid.
- Part of the Chine called Os Sacrum, and its perforations; and of another part of the Chine called Os Coccygis; and of its sub∣stance in Infants, 1067
- The various uses of the Chine, 1068
- The Pathology of the Chine, and the luxation of the first verteber of the Chine, and of the cause and impotence of the whole Body, Ibid.
- ...The luxation of the vertebers of the Neck, and the luxation of the vertebers of the Back, and a kind of luxation called 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, and an∣other luxation, named 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, and how great luxations of the vertebers of the Loins are attended with death, and if they be less they are accompanied with suppression of Ʋrine, 1069
- Choler, and its differences, 459
- Choler is endued with greater or less degrees of Acrimony, as embodied with acide Liquor, coming from the Spleen, 460
- Choler acquireth grossness by its long stay in the Bladder of Gall, 460
- Choler being most thick, is associated with the Blood, and carried by the Branches of the Porta into the Glands of the Liver, Ibid.
- Choler, and its composition, 46. And other times proceed from Humors, 340
- Chorion, and its Figure, and it is various in several Animals, 635
- The rudiment of Conception is from the embo∣dying of both the Seeds, 612
- A Woman is destitute of Coyt••dones. 632
- The Choroeidal Plexe is a Systeme of many parts, and of its Origen, Membranes, and Vessels, 1012
- The many ranks of Arteries, are accompanied with jugular Veins in this Plexe, and of its use, 1013
- Chewing of Aliment, 245 to 248. The uses of Chewing, 246
- Chyle, how it is produced, and exalted by diffe∣rent Ferments in various parts of the Body, 26
- Chylification, 296 to 298
- The Matter of Chylification, 309 to 311
- The manner of Chylification, 312 to 318
- The Pathology of the concoctive Faculty 319 to 328
- The cure of the ill concoctive Faculty of the Stomach, 325 to 328
- Chyle in the manner of its production holds some Analogy with the operation of Chy∣mestry, 317
- The Chyle associates with a Liquor, distilling out of the Nerves in the Guts, 347
- The Chyle, how it is concocted in the Mouth, Stomach, and Guts, and its distribution through various lacteal vessels. &c. 411.
- And how it is assisted by the Lympha, 682
- Crude Chyle is not easily assimilated into Blood, 135
- Crude Chyle is mixed with Blood in the Heart, 135
- The Connivent Valves of the Guts, 350
- The concoctive faculty of the Guts is made by the bilious and pancreatick Liquors as Fer∣ments, 363
- The manner how th•• 〈◊〉〈◊〉 is cocted in the Guts, 365
- The depraved concoctive Faculty of the Guts, 370
- The Caeliack passion cured, 371
- The deproved concoctive faculty of the Guts, is cured by testaceous Powders. 371
- The Colick passion, 379
- Colick passion is distinguished from the pain of the Kidney, 380
- Colick passion proceeding from an inflammation of the Guts, 381
- Colick pains arising out of the acrimony of Mi∣cous Matter of the Guts, 347
- Colick pains derived from sharp Humors, lodg∣ed between the Coats, 381
- Colick pains coming from the inflation of the Guts, 383
- Colours of the Face, Colours discerned by touch, 864. And the causes of White and Red in the Face, 865. Different colours are pro∣duced by Light allayed with various shades, 864
- Colours of the Face proceeding from several Liquors, 865
- Colours seem to be derived from Light, sport∣ing upon the Protuberancies, and Cavities of Bodies, 895
- Concretion proceeding from Acide Liquors, 426 427
- Of Convulsions, and Convulsive motions, and of their difference, and remarkable instan∣ces of great Convulsions, 1171
- How Convulsive motions are nearly related to Convulsions, and of their difference, taken from their causes, and how they are derived from the Brain, 1172
- The nature of Epileptick Convulsive motions, and their subject, Origen, and how the mid∣dle and terminations of the Nerves are con∣cerned in Convulsions, 1173
- The Procatarctiok, and continent cause of Con∣vulsive Motions, 1174
- Of Convulsive motions in Children, and how they affect various parts, and the reasons why they are subject to this Disease, and of the Blood of Embryos depraved in the Womb, 1185. and how it is debased by a due secre∣tion, not made in the Glands of the Cutis and Viscera, and of the manner of Convul∣sive motions, and of their causes, 1186. and how they proceed from the Brain, and of their Reason, and how they proceed from Fevers, 1185
- The reason why Children are subject to Convul∣sive motions, and how the ill mass of Blood, concurreth to them, 1188
- ... The application of Leeches may be made to the
Page [unnumbered]
- Jugulars; and of cephalick Waters, Pow∣ders, Apozemes, Amulets, Blistering Plai∣sters, Powder of Gutteta, and Cephalick infusions, 1189
- The Bathing of the Chine with Spirits, and Oil, &c. are very proper in this Disease, 1190
- Corpus callosum, and how it may be divided from the Cortex, and how the two Hemis∣phaeres are united in the Corpus callosum; and of the Rise, Connexion, Figure, and of the use and substance, 1008
- The Corpora striata are Origens of the Me∣dulla oblongata, and of their Connexion and Figure, Streaks and Ʋse, and of their structure, and how they are the Origens of the Medulla Spinalis, 1015
- Corrosive Salt of Steel do precipitate the acide juyces of the Body, 311
- A Cough and its causes, Prognosticks and Indi∣cations, 838, 839, 840. And its Cures, 849, Of a Chincough, and Convulsiv moti∣ons, 849. And their causes, Indications, 850, 851, 852, 853
- Creeping of Animals, which is performed by mo∣ving their Bodies on the ground, and ma∣king many Arches, 127
- The first kind of creeping may be Ʋndulation, 128
- The second kind is Fluctuation, Ibid,
- The third kind of creeping may be made by ex∣tension, and contraction, 128
- Creeping made by Spines, as in Serpents, 129
- Creeping made by one great Arch, 131
- Creeping made by Traction, 132
- The Cuticula and its production, and how it is repaired, 47
- Cuticle and Bark of Trees, 51
- Cuticle and Bark of Plants, 52, 53
D.
- THe deferent Vessels (being an elongation of the seminal Ducts) and their origi∣nation, and insertion, 528
- Deferent Vessels are in part receptacles of Se∣men, 531
- The deferent Vessels or Oviducts of Women, 593 to 603
- Deglutition, and its Diseases and Cures, 260 to 264
- Of the Delirium and its seat, and how it is a Symptome rather then a Disease, 1139. and of its Causes and Cure, 1140
- Delirous dispositions may be illustrated by Chy∣mical Liquor, extracted by Distillation, 1147
- Dense parts in Bodies, 13, 14
- Diarrhaeas, and Dissenteries are suppressed by Astringents in the Small Pox, 62
- Difficulty of Breathing proceeding from Chyme lodged in the substance of the Lungs, 320
- Dissimilar parts, 26
- Diseases, determine through the Skin by a free Perspiration, 48
- Drink being made of subtle saline parts is scon cocted, 309
- Dropsy, 166. And how it cometh from an ex∣uberant Liquor, contained in the Pericar∣dium,
- In Dropsies, Chalybeats are proper, as refining the Blood, 170
- In a Dropsy a Paracentesis relieveth, when the Viscera are sound, 171
- Dura Menynx, and its part, and how it is not only compounded of Blood-vessels, 979, but of nervous Fibrils as proper Ingredients; and the Brain of Fish is covered with a com∣pany of minute Filaments, and how the Dura Mater is strengthened by numerous Fi∣laments, running in various positions, 980
- The Dura Mater is beset with many carnous Fibres, Ibid. And of their Rise, Progress, and how they run counter to the Blood-ves∣sels, and how many minute Glands are in the Dura Mater among the capillary Vessels near the third Sinus, and how the carnous Fi∣bres are a cause of the motion of the Dura Menynx in Sneezing; and of the descri∣ption of the nervous Fibres, and of its Parenchyma, 981
- The serous Vessels of the Dura Mater, and of the orbicular Glands in its outward surface, and of the Glands seated between the Coats, and how the Dura Menynx covereth the Cerebellum, and of its Blood-vessels. The serous Vesicles of it in a Doe, 980
- The situation and connexion of the Dura Me∣nynx, and of its Perforation, and Origen of this Membrane, according to Hypocrates, 982
- The motion of the Dura Menynx is conceived by some to be akin to the motion of the Heart; and of the Convulsive motions of this Membrane, 985
- Dysenteries, or Ʋlcers of the Guts, 374
E.
- OF the Ear and its parts, and Cartilage, and seat 929
- The inward Ear and auditory passage, the Mem∣brane of the Tympanum and its descripti∣on, and external Muscle of the Ear, 931
- The internal Muscle of the Ear, and its Tym∣panum and Bones, 930. The Origen of the Bones, and the higher and lower hole of the Tympanum, and the Labarinthus of the Ear, 933
- A Cavity of the Ear (called Coclea) consist∣ing of many Flexures, and their end, and the use of the Cavities of the Ear, 934
- The diseases of the Ear (and its Cures) The cau∣ses of a lessened Hearing, of the obstructions of the Auditory passage, and its Cure, 939
- The disaffection of the Ear produced by a re∣laxed Tympanum, and of its thick∣ness, and of the Hearing vitiated by noise, and of their Causes and Cures, and of the inflammation of the Ear, 940. and of its
Page [unnumbered]
- Cures, and of Ʋlcers of the Ear and their Cures, 941
- Earth divested of saline and sulphureous Par∣ticles, is again rendred fertile, as inspired with Airy and Aethereal Particles, 38
- The Effluvia of the Blood are discharged by the extremities of the Arteries, 33
- The Effluvia will infect the Air at a great di∣stance, Ibid.
- The Effluxes of Animals, Vegetables, and Mi∣nerals, 36
- Effluxes move in a circle, 37
- Eggs of Beasts, 643
- Glands of the Membrane encircling the Eggs of Fish, 656
- Eggs of Birds and their different Liquors, 648
- Eggs of Fish, 656
- Eggs of Silkworms, 661
- The impregnated Eggs of Women, are carried through the Oviducts into the body of the Womb, 601
- Eggs or Seeds of Plants, 671 to 675
- Empyema, or purulent Matter lodged in the Cavity of the Breast, flowing from an inflam∣mation of the Pleura, Lungs, Muscles of the Larynx, &c. 704. The continent cause and Diagnosticks of an Empyema, 705. Its Prognosticks, 706
- In a desperate Empyema, an Apertion of the Thorax may be made between the Ribs, 707
- Epiglottis, and its Compage, and glandulous substance, 815
- Enterocele and its Cure, 553
- Epididymides, 526
- Epiplocele 552
- Expulsive Faculty of the Stomach, 329
- Pathology and Cures of the Expulsive Faculty of the Stomach, 334 to 344
- Expulsive Faculty of the Stomach is perform∣ed by a more strong contraction of the Fi∣bres then the Retentive, 329
- The first requisite of the Expulsive Faculty is the slipperiness of the inward Coat of the Stomach, 329
- A Second requisite of the Expulsie Faculty of the Stomach 331
- The Expulsive Faculty of the Stomach is disaf∣fected by the ill tone of its Fibres, 334
- The Expulsive is disordered by a compression of the Fibres of the Brain, by a quantity of extravasated Blood, 335
- The depraved Expulsive Faculty of the Sto∣mach, made by over-contracted Fibres in Vomiting and Purging, 336
- Of the Eyes and their description, Eyelids, Muscles, 876. Supercilia, excretory Vessels arising out of the Cilia, and diverse kinds of excretory Vessels of the Glands of the Eyes, 877. And a Duct passing out of the Glandula lacrymalis into the Nostrils, and of the use of the Glands of the Eyes, and their Figure, 878
- The Muscles of the Eyes, 979
- The Membranes of the Eyes, the Adnata, Cor∣nea, and of its Figure, Surface, and Ori∣gen, 880. Of the Uvea (called Iris, from its various colours) and of its seat; and of the Pupil of the Eye, 883. And of the various Dimensions, Motion, the Proces∣sus Ciliares, 884. And their Origen, and Ʋses; and of the Tunicle of the Eye, called Retina, 885
- The watry humor of the Eye, and its configu∣ration and use, 886
- The Cristalline Humor of the Eye, and of its Membrane, Figure, Seat, and Transpa∣rency, 887. The formation of the Cristalline, and of the vitreous Humor, 889
- The diseases of the Eye-lids, and of their Red∣ness and Thickness, Tumors, Scabs, and Causes of these Disaffections, 909
- The diseases of the Glands of the Eyes, (and their Cures) of an Inflammation, Abscess, Ʋlcer, and Absumption, &c. 910
- The Excrescence of the Glands, and its Cures, and Epiphaera, proceeding from an Afflux of Humors into the great Angle of the Eye, 911
- The diseases of the Muscles of the Eyes of their Resolution, Convulsion, Palsey, and tremb∣ling motion; And of Solutae unitatis, 912
- The diseases of the Adnata, and of its Inflam∣mation, called 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, and another called 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, and the Cure of an Inflammation, &c. 913. And of an Unguis Oculi, and its Cause and Cure, 915
- The diseases of the Cornea (and their Cures) the disaffection of the Transparency, and its Causes, and the Cure of an Albugo, 917
- The Ʋlcers and Rupture of the Cornea, and their Cures, 919
- The Cancer, and Cause, and Applications in its beginning, 919
- The diseases of the Uvea (and their Cures) and of the too great Perforations of it, (cal∣led) 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 921. And the overmuch con∣traction of the Pupil, 922
- The diseases of the watry Humors of the Eye, and their Cures; and of a Cataract, 923
- The Prognosticks of a Suffusion (and its Cures) in which a Vein may be opened, 924. The manner of Couching a Cataract, 925
- The diseases of the Aranea, and the cristal∣line and vitrious Humor, and their Cures, and of the grossness of the Aranea, and Rupture; and of a 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 or ill colour of the cristalline Humor, the cause of a 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉 926. The grossness of the Vitre∣ous Humor, 927
- The diseases of the optick Nerves, and the Re∣tina (and their Cures) The Gutta Serena and its Causes, 927
- The Cure of it, 928. The wrinkles of the Re∣tina and its cause, and the Density of this Coat, 926
Page [unnumbered]
F.
- OF the Face, Eyes, Nose, Lips, 862. and the description of the Face, and of its Lineaments, finishing Lines, Symmetry, and Elegancy, 863
- Faculty, and the meaning of it, 290
- Falciforme Process, and of its Figure and Ʋse, 983
- Of the Falling Sickness, and of its Names, Di∣agnosticks, description Fits, and their de∣grees, 1175
- Of the subject of this Disease, and how in it the Coats of the Brain cannot be every where vellicated; the Nerves, and the fibrous parts of the Brain are primarily concerned in Convulsive motions, and of the Animal Spi∣rits; the subject of this Disease, accord∣ing to Dr. Willis, 1176. And of its true subject, and of its various Symptomes, and their causes, 1177. An Epilepsy coming from an Abscess, Polypus, and wound of the Brain, and from the fracture of both Ta∣bles of the Skull, 1179
- A Falling sickness proceeding from an ulcered Pancreas, Spleen, Worms, and from the diseases of the Stomach and Guts, 1180
- Of the Indications, and of specifick Medicines (in this Disease) and how they operate by secret qualities, 1181. And how the Cure of this disease is performed by sweetening the Blood, and by corroborating Cepha∣licks, Vomitories, Apozemes, Bleeding, and Topicks, 1182
- And by Suffumigations, Sternutatories, Pow∣ders, Conserves, Electuaries, Pills, Apo∣zemes, Amulets, Emplaisters, and how Mer∣curial Medicines weaken the Nerves, and how a Salivation may be raised in a strong constitution of Body, 1183
- Fat is originally oily and Fluide, and after∣ward concreted, 181
- The Fat of the Caul hath many Cells and mi∣nute Glands, Ibid.
- Fat is not produced by Heat, but rather by Cold, 75
- Fat is not produced by nervous Liquor, but by the oily part of the Blood, 76
- Feathers of Birds, and their Analogy with Hair, and description of a Quil, and of a its filamentous parts, and structure of a Filme, its Blood-vessels and Pith, and Figure of the Stemm, 945. Its Surfaces, and Margents, and oblong and broad Filaments and Fringes of the Stemm, and of the co∣lours of Feathers, and their production, 946. And uses of Feathers,
- Ferments of the Stomach, some work by Se∣cretion, others by Precipitation, 301
- Ferments are active Bodies, affected with spi∣rituous, saline, and sulphureous parts, ex∣alted by heat. 301
- Of the nervous Liquor, a Ferment of the Stomach, 301
- Ferments work upon some Bodies of agreeable temper, though in the main of an opposite, Ibid.
- Ferments are most in Bulk and great in Virtue, 302
- Ferments work in Bodies opened by airy and aethereal Particles, Ibid.
- Ferments compounded of small Parts, are easi∣ly brought into action, by reason they cannot oppose the contest of contrary Agents, 302
- Ferments endued with Angles do more easily in∣sinuate themselves into laxe Bodies, Ibid.
- Ferments agreeing in Figure, have a dispositi∣on to motion, Ibid. The serous Ferment of the Stomach is severed from the Blood, 305
- Serous Liquor is ministerial to the concoction of Aliment in the Stomach, Ibid.
- The serous Ferment of the Stomach, is not act∣ed with acide, but saline Particles, which is evident in the Stomach of Fish, 308
- The various Ferments of the Stomach, do em∣body with the homogeneous part of Aliment, and precipitate the Heterogeneous, 309
- ...Fermentation is double in concoction, the first perfective in the extraction of Aliment;
- The Second corruptive in point of excrements, the reliques of Concoction, 317
- Fermentation doth not only consist in Acids, but in mutual opposition of contrary Agents, proceeding from Heterogeneous Elements, 402
- Ferments of the Kidneys, 479
- The Fluor Albus, or Whites, and their diffe∣rence from the Menstrua, 584
- The cause of the Fluor Albus, which contain∣eth many kinds of Recrements, 584. And how it is conveyed into the Cavity of the Womb, Ibid.
- Natural and artificial Fermentation of Liquors, how they hold Analogy with those of Man's Body, 17
- Artificial Fermentation in point of Aliment, as that of Doe, Beer-Wort, &c, 18, 19
- The Fermentation in point of Aliment, and the Cures of it, 20, 21
- Fermentation in Animals hath great affinity with Vegetables, 21
- Various Ferments productive of intestine mo∣tion, in reference to alimentary and vital Liquor, 22
- The different operation of Ferments, some by ebullition, others by precipitation, Ibid.
- Ferments which are most potent, consist of dif∣ferent Elements, working briskly in contrary Agents, Ibid.
- Fermentation is made by an expansive, and al∣so by a precipitating power, 25
- The first Ferment of Chyle is Salival Liquor in the Mouth; The second are the serous and nervous Liquors in the Stomach; The third is the pancreatick juyce; The fourth is nervous Liquor in the Glands of the Me∣sentery, 27
Page [unnumbered]
- The Fermentative Power of aethereal and airy Particles advancing the Chyle and Blood of Humane Bodies, 28
- The descript on of a Fever, and the cause of it, and Borellus his Opinion, 753 And the causes of a Fever, 755
- Fevers proceeding form a Succus Pancreati∣cus, 759. And Fevers that are continued have no perfect intermission, but remission only, 759
- The kinds of continued Fevers, and their seve∣ral steps and crisis, 760, 761
- The nature and symptomes of malignant Fevers, and how the Blood is putrefied, and the bond of mixtion dissolved in them, 762 And the way how infection is made, 763
- Of a Quartan intermittent Fever, 764 And of its Cure, 765
- The Cures of intermittent Fevers, 766. And the Cures of continued, 767
- A great instance of Poison, imitating the types and periods of malignant Fevers, Ibid.
- The Fibres of the Brain are implanted into the Cortex, and propagate the Processes of the Brain into the Medulla Spinalis, 1071.
- The Fibrils of the Brain and Cerebellum are composed of many Filaments, 1191
- The Fibrils are rendred Tense in the exercise of Sense and Motion, 798
- The numerous Fibrils of the Brain coagulated into Trunks about the Medulla oblongata, 1085
- The progress of the Fibres of the Brain, 1090
- Fistulas are to be made Green wounds before they can be cured, 147
- Fleshy and tendinous Fibres, how they differ in colour and consistence, 100
- Flowers, the preservatives of Seeds, 664
- Cups, the preservatives of Flowers, 664
- ...Variety of Cups in the same Page.
- Flowers have various shapes and sizes, 665
- Fluide part, 3
- Fluor Albus, 584 to 587
- Flying of Birds, in which the wing is enlarged by Tensors, and by Flexors contracting the Cubite, and Flexors contracting the third Bone of the wing, 119. And the Adduct∣ors, or pectoral Muscles are the elevators of the wings, 119
- In Flying the wings resemble Oars, and Trains (Rudders of Vessels) governing them in flight, 120
- Flight is managed by condensing the Air, caused by frequent strokes of the wings made by Ad∣ductors and Abductors, 120
- The Flux Pox is to be cured by gentle Sudori∣ficks, mixed with cooling and incrassating Medicines, 65
- In Flying Birds have various postures; upward, downward, and obliquely, 121. Soaring is caused by depressing the Wing, and ob∣liquely by one wing. Ibid.
- In flying the chief motion of the Wing is made downwards, and the elevation is made in order to it, 121
- The flying of Insects, and their wings are dres∣sed with many rows of Fibrils, and are co∣vered with sine Feathers or Down, and their Wings are carried up and down by Addu∣ctors and Abductors, 123
- ...Finns in Fish do somewhat resemble Wings, and are both instituted by nature for motion,
- Flying and Swimming have somewhat of Ana∣logy, 126
- The Fornix, its Connexion and Rise, Surfaces, &c. 1014, 1015
- Fraenum of the Yard, 537
G.
- PArts of Generation in Man, 511, to 526
- Parts of Generation in the Males of Beasts, 542, 546
- Parts of Generation in the Cocks of ••irds, 547
- Parts of Generation in the Males of Fish, 548 to 550
- Parts of Generation in the Males of Insects, 550
- Parts of Generation in a Woman, Mons ve∣neris, Labia pudendi, Nymphae, Clitoris, Hymen, Carunculae Myrtiformes, 559 to 562
- The Principles and manner of Generation, 617 to 624
- Generation of diverse parts of the Body is ac∣complished by various accretions, proceeding from different Salts, 620
- The power of the imagination in giving a Fi∣gure to the Foetus, in reference to Generati∣on,
- Generation of a Humane Foetus, 624
- The order how the several parts are formed, 624 to 629
- Generation of a Foetus in Birds, and its va∣rious processes and parts, 648 to 654
- Parts of Generation in Birds, 654 to 659
- Parts of Generation in Animals and Insects, 660 to 663
- The manner how Insects are Generated, 662
- Parts of Generation in Plants, 664 to 678
- The several steps in the Generation of a Foetus, 525, 626, 627, 628.
- Glands of the Liver, 435 to 439
- Glands leaning upon the Kidneys, 472
- Glands of the Yard, 536
- Glands of the Uterus, 569
- Glands are reductive and excretory, conglobated or conglomerated, 43
- Glands that are Secretory, are formed of va∣riety of vessels of different shapes and sizes, 43
- The Glandula Pinealis, and of its situation, figure, substance, dimensions, and vessels, 1020. And of its use, 1022
- Glands of the Plexus Choroides, and the Glands of the Cerebellum, 1023
- The Glandula pituitaria, and its seat, figure, substance, and use, 1024. And Diemer∣broeck's Opinion concerning the use of this
Page [unnumbered]
- Gland, 1025
- Another use of the Glans Pituitaria, 1026
- Gulet, 252
- The Muscles of the Gulet, 253
- Gulets of Beasts, 254
- Gulets of Birds, 255
- Gulets of Fish, 256
- Gulets of Insects, 257
- Pathology of the Gulet, 260 to 263
- The Gumms, Teeth, Palate, and Tongue are instruments of Mastication, 207
- Guts or Intestines 344 to 354
- Guts of Beasts, 355 356
- Guts of Birds, 357, 358
- Guts of Fish, 358 to 361
- Guts of Insects, 362
- The concoctive Faculty of the Guts, 363 to 366
- Expulsive faculty of the Guts, 366 to 370
- Pathology of the Guts, and its Cure, 370 to 384
- The Guts described, 344
- The Guts are made hollow, and endued with various Maeanders, 344
- The First Tunicle of the Guts, and why called Tendinous, Ibid.
- ...The Second Tunicle of the Guts is endued with two ranks of Carnous fibres,
- The Carnous fibres of the Guts, the cause of their peristaltick motion, 344
- The Third coat of the Guts is nervous, and may be called Glandulous, as beset with ma∣ny Glands, Ibid.
- The Gut called Duodenum, 348
- The Gut called Jejunum, Ibid.
- The Guts called Ilia, whose Valves stand more close then those of the Jejunum, Ibid.
- The Caecum, so called from its one Orifice, 350
- The situation and progress of the Colon. 353
- The Guts are beset with numerous Glands, 354
- The Guts and Stomach have the same structure, and one continued Cavity, 363
- The concoctive faculty of the Guts is also per∣formed by the serous and nervous Liquor, as proper Ferments, 365
- The inward nervous coat of the Guts, receiveth the Appulses of the Contents, 368
- This coat of the Guts is irritated by the sharp and saline Particles of the bilious and pan∣creatick Recrements, 368
- Inflammations of the Guts, and Ʋlcers, 373 374
H.
- OF the Hair (as an outward covering of the Head) and the opinion of the An∣tients concerning it, and how Hair is gene∣rated, Non per appositionem, sed intus susceptionem alimenti, 942. The first pro∣duction of the Hair, and of its Figure, 943
- The colours and use of Hair, and how it is nourished, 944
- The Hair of Insects, and how the Silkworms are covered with down, and Flies with Hair; and a Silver Moth dressed with Feathers or Down; And Spiders covered with short Ha••r, 951. Wandring Mites are beset with light Hair; And the Legs of Crab-like In∣sects with Brisles,
- Happiness in conforming our desires to Gods Will, 512
- Of Hearing, and the manner how it is celebra∣ted, 935
- The Flexors of the Head, called Musculi Ma∣stoeidei, and of the Tensors of the Head, Complexi, Splenii, recti Majores & Mino∣res, and their originations and insertions, 1064
- Of the motion of the Musculi superiores, & in∣feriores of the Head, and how the Head is not moved circularly; and the lateral moti∣on is made by one Mastoidean Muscle,
- Heart, its Coat, (and the use) and the situa∣tion, 714 And its Connexion, Dimensions, Figure, Surface, Fibres, Tendons, Ventri∣cles, 715. And the Fibres do somewhat re∣semble a Skain of Thread. The several ranks of Fibres, and their progress, and insertion, 716. The spiral Fibres besetting the Cone, 717 And its Parenchyma, is different from that of other Viscera, 717
- The Heart and its motion, walls, and various ranks of Fibres, 725
- The motion of the Heart illustrated by Borellus, by a Clew of moistened Thread, 726 And the outward perimeter of the Rope observeth the same dimensions in motion, and the in∣ward Spires are acted with unequal Corruga∣tions, as they come near the center, 727 And the Analogy between the fleshy Fibres of the Heart, and the threads of the Rope, 728
- ...The reason why the Fibres of the Heart are spi∣ral.
- In the Heart many tendinous Fibres are insert∣ed into the carnous, 729 And the manner of its motion, Ibid.
- The Heart in point of motion, hath the Cavities of the Ventricles lessened, 730 Which is per∣formed by carnous Fibres, acted by animal Li∣quor and Spirits, rendring them tense 731
- The motion of the Heart and its Pathology, its Syncope, Lypothymy, and their causes, 732, 733
- The palpitation of the Heart, and its causes, 734, 735
- The Cures of the palpitation, 736 The Con∣vulsive motions of the Heart, and their cau∣ses, 737
- The diseases of the Heart, an Inflammation, Abscess, Ʋlcers, and their Cures, 769
- The obstruction of the Ventricles of the Heart, 770
- A Polypus of the Heart, and its kinds and cau∣ses, 771
- The Hearts of great Animals, 773
- The Hearts of Birds, 774
- The Hearts of Fish, 777
- The Hearts of Insects, 778
Page [unnumbered]
- Heat of the Stomach and its Pathology 299, to 301
- Hernia varicosa, 554
- Hernia ventosa, and its Cure, 555
- A Hiccop is a Convulsive motion of the Stomach, 340
- A Hiccop derived sometimes from Inflation, and othertimes from the putrefaction of the Inte∣stines, and from the Inflammation of the Li∣ver, 342
- A Hiccop from the Convulsive motion of the Midrisse, 342
- Hiccop from a pestilential Fever, Ibid.
- A Hiccop from an ill Succus nutricius, Ibid.
- Diverse more causes of Hiccops and their Cures, 343
- Holes of the Guts, which are the terminations of the excretory vessels of the Glands, 354
- Horror and Rigor in intermittent Fevers, pro∣ceed from the vellication of the carnous Mem∣brane, caused by sharp steams of the Blood, 77
- Hunger, 279 to 281 The requisites of Hunger, 281
- The object of Hunger, 280
- Hydatides of the Scrotum, and their cause, 555
- Hydrocele, and its Cure, 554,
- Hymen, or a Membrane seated in the Vagina Uteri, 562
I.
- JAundies, and its Causes and Cure, 467, 468, 469, 470.
- Muscles of the lower Jawe, 244, 245, 246
- Iliack passion coming from the distortion of the Guts, 375
- ...The Iliack passion coming from one part of the Guts, shooting it self into another,
- The Iliack passion when the lower part of the Guts is thrust into the upper, 376
- The Iliack passion, when the upper part of the Guts is thrust into the lower, Ibid.
- The Iliack passion proceeding from a cartilagi∣nous Matter stopping the Flux, 377
- Impure mixtures, and their sad consequents, 510
- Inflammation of the Skin, proceeding from the Blood stagnant in the Cutaneous Glands, 57
- Inflammation of the inward and noble parts, indicate Bleeding in the Small Pox, 63
- Inflammation of the Membrana carnosa in the Neck, 77
- Infundibulum, and of the Glands adjacent to it, and their use, and the end of the Infun∣dibulum, 1022
- The manner how the Imagination concurreth to the production of Monsters, 622
- Inosculations of Arteries with Arteries, and Veins with Veins in the spermatick Vessels, 517
- Inosculations of the Epigastrick, and mammary Nerv••s, 89
- In Inspiration the dimensions of the Thorax are enlarged, and narrowed in expiration, 829
- In Inspiration the Air is immitted into the Lungs, 831
- And Borellus his experiment, how much the Breast is dilated in Inspiration, 831
- Itch and Scabs, and their cause salt Particles, and the infection it produces, 60, 61
- ...The cure of Itch and Scabs,
K.
- KIdneys, and their Situation, Connexion, Figure, Surfaces, and Membranes, 473 474
- The texture and colour of the Kidneys, Ibid.
- Kidneys of Beasts, 480
- Kidneys of Birds, 481
- Kidneys of Fish, 482
- Stones of the Kidneys, 489 to 492
- The Stones of the Kidneys, and their Causes and Cures, 491, 492, 493, 444
- The Blood-vessels, Nerves, and Ʋrinary-vessels of the Kidneys, 476, 477
- The Glands of the Kidneys, and their Figure, and Connexion, 477, 478
- The Globules of the Kidneys are composed of many Glands, 478
- The Pathology of the Kidneys, Iscury, Dia∣betes, 483, 484
- Inflammation, Abscess, Ʋlcers, and Gangreen of the Kidneys, and their Cures, 487
L.
- LAbia pudendi, 559
- The Origen of the Lacteal vessels out of various Guts, 354
- ...Leprosy 〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉〈 in non-Latin alphabet 〉, and their Cures 72, 73
- A Lethargy is accompanied with a Fever, 1125
- The nature of a Lethargy, and of its seat, sym∣ptomes, and causes, 1131, 1132
- Letters, how they are formed, 237, 238
- Leucophymatia, proceeding from crude Chyme lodged in the Muscles, 320
- Lienteria, proceeding from want of Ferments of the Guts, 370
- Ligaments of the Womb, 573
- Broad Ligaments of the Womb, Ibid.
- Round Ligaments of the Womb, 574
- Of Light in order to Seeing, and of its descri∣ption, and of the nature of a Ray, trans∣mitted through a Similar in a right line, and of the reflexion of Rays in an opaque Body, 890
- The Figure of Rays, and how they are emit∣ted Hemisphaerially; and points, relating to lucide Bodies, are not purely Mathematical; Rays are infinite in number, minute in qua∣lity, and quick in motion, and make it in right lines in a Homogeneous medium, and are reflected from an opaque Body, and re∣fracted in a heterogeneous Medium, 891
- Rays of Light are inflected in a Plane, as well as a sphaerical Body, and are diffused into an Orbe, 892
Page [unnumbered]
- The Ray of Light is made in a right line, and the Ray of Incidence and reflexion make equal Angles; The beginning of reflected Rays make a kind of Arch, and the manner of Rays reflected from on opaque Body, 893
- A right motion of Rays of Light degenerates into a circular, as encountring into an opaque Body, and refraction of Light is made in different transparent Mediums, and a rare Medium giveth a less opposition to a Ray, 894
- Linea Alba is a contexture made up of diverse tendinous Fibres, 950
- Lips are a spungy flesh invested with a thin Skin 203
- The Lips are furnished with many pairs of Muscles, 204
- The Lips have an orbicular Muscle, interlined with many Glands, 205
- The Lips are perverted with Spasmus Cynicus, and Palsey, 206
- Liquors acted with vital and animal Spirits, are the immediate Organs of the Soul, 202
- Liquors of Man's Body, 198 to 202
- The Liquors of Animals are rendred Fermen∣tative, as inspired with Air, 38
- The various choice of the Liquors of the Body, 1084
- The Liquors are received into the extremities of the Vessels, as they hold Analogy with them in size and shape, 1084
- Liquors impregnated with volatil Salt, and em∣bodied with oily Particles, 1147
- Description of the Liver, and its Surfaces, Si∣tuation, Connexion, Ligaments, Motion and Figure, 428 429
- The Membrane, Arteries, Veins, Capsula com∣munis, and Sinus of the Liver, 430, 431, 432
- The excretory vessels, and Porus Bilarius, and Capsula Communis of the Liver, 433 434
- The Glands of the Liver, 435 436
- In Fish the Glands resemble Trefoil 437
- The Globules of the Liver consist of many Angles, Ibid.
- The use of the Liver, 462
- Inflammation and Mortification, Dropsy and Jaundies, 466 467
- The Scirrhus of the Liver, and the Hydatides, 470 471
- Pathology of the Liver, and its Cures, 465 to 471
- Livers of Beasts, 447 to 449
- Livers of Birds, 449 to 450
- Livers of Fish, 451 452
- Lungs, their Situation, Lobes, Connexion, Fi∣gure, and Membranes, 796
- Hypocrates, Cicero, and Malpighius his Opi∣nion of the Lungs, 796
- In the Lungs the vesicles of Air are appendant to the Tracheae, their Seat, Connexion, Sub∣stance, Figure, and Ʋse, 798. The vessels of the Lungs, 799
- ...Lungs of greater Animals,
- Lungs of Birds, 804 805
- Lungs and Gills of Fish, 806
- Lungs of Frogs, Lizards, Vipers, &c. 808
- Lungs of Insects, 809
- ...The Lungs have no proper principle of Motion, as destitute of fleshy Fibres.
- The Lungs in their Systole and Diastole, do not keep time with the pulsa••••••n of the Heart, 830
- Of the Pathology of the Lungs and its Cures, Of an Inflammation and its causes; and sometimes a Peripneumonia is accompanied with a Pleurisy, and othertimes a Hemiple∣gia, and Apoplexy follow it. The Progno∣sticks, Indications, and Cures, 842 843
- An Abscess of the Lungs and its causes, 845
- The Structure, Coats, and Rise of the Lymphae∣ducts of the Liver, 439 to 441
- The Colour, Rise, and Composition of the Lym∣pha, 441 to 444
- The Motion and Ʋse of the Lympha, 443
- Hydatides coming from a quantity of Lympha, 446
- Pathology of the Lymphaeducts 444 to 447
- The Lymphaeducts are broken by a quantity of Lympha; The depraved action of the Lym∣phaeducts, 445
- Lymphaeducts, their rise and progress from the Liver, 390
- The broken Lymphaeducts are a cause of a Drop∣sie, 446
- The Lymphaeducts corroded by Ʋlcerous Mat∣ter, 396
M.
- OF a Mania or Madness, and how it is akin to Melancholy; of its Definition, Subject and Symptomes, illustrated by Mi∣neral Waters, 1156. And how the Ani∣mal Spirits move in Mad persons, and of the cause of this Disease, 1157. And of its Origen and evident causes, 1158.
- Of Madness succeeding Melancholy, or a Phren∣sy, flowing chiefly from an ill mass of Blood, and from an ill Pancreas, 1159
- Madness is sometimes Hereditary, and of its causes, and is propagated from the vene∣nate nature of Blood, 1160
- And how in this Disease the poison coming from the biting of a Mad Dog, is conveyed to the Heart, Ibid.
- The symptomes of Madness, and Aetiology; and the cause of the Rage in Madness; and how the Brain is swelled in this disease, and cometh sometimes from the putrefaction of the Coats, and substance of the Brain, 1161
- The Indications of Madness, and how Bleed∣ing out of the Jugular, and Temporal Arte∣ry are very proper; and also Vomitories are very advantageous in this disease, 1162
- Mercurial Medicines, and strong Purgatives, Chalybeats, clarified Whey prepared with Cephalicks, Electuaries, Apozemes, &c. 163
Page [unnumbered]
- In Madness, Hyponoticks may be administred, as also Cupping-Glasses, Leeches, and at∣tractive Medicines to a wounded part; as also Cauteries, 1164
- Mamillary Processes and their Perforations, and how they cannot be truly called Nerves; and of the Cavities of the mamillary Processes 1040
- Marriage is of Divine Institution, 513
- Marrow proceeds from the oily Particles of the Blood, and of its use, 1214
- Measles, and their Cure, 62, 63
- Mediastine, is a duplicature of the Pleura, and of its structure, 695, And of its vessels and uses, 696
- The Medium of Flying and Swimming agree, as fluid, and differ in consistence, 126
- The Medulla oblongata and its appendant Pro∣cesses, its Connexion; The Thalami nervo∣rum opticorum, and the rise of the optick Nerves, 1017
- The Natiforme Processes are larger then the Te∣stiforme, and of their covering, and colours of the inward Protuberancies; and some Physicians conceive the Natiforme and Testi∣forme Processes to be the Origens of the Ce∣rebellum, and of the use of these Processes, 1018
- A Process of the Medulla oblongata, called the Pons Varolii, or annular Process, which is a part of the Medulla oblongata, and of its use; and of the fourth Ventricle of the Brain, 1019
- Of the Medulla Spinalis, or ••ith of the Back, which hath not the nature of Marrow, and is an elongation of the Medulla oblongata, and is composed of four orbicular Processes, and how the Medulla Spinalis is not the Ori∣gen of the Brain, as Learned Malpighius would have it, 1070
- The Fibres of the Medulla Spinalis are illu∣strated by Malpighius, according to a Cab∣bage, but this seemeth to be strange, by rea∣son the alimentary Liquor out of the Me∣dulla Spinalis, is different in order from that of a Cabbage,
- The Medulla Spinalis is acted by Liquor co∣ming from the Brain, 1072
- The Medulla Spinalis and Brain have their Conception at the same time, Ibid.
- The Medulla Spinalis is double, and of its substance, 1072
- The Coats of the Medulla Spinalis, and is di∣vided into equal parts, 1073
- And is parted by the Pia Mater, Ibid.
- Each side of the Medulla Spinalis hath proper Channels to convey the Latex nervosus; and the Medulla Spinalis is like the Brain in substance and vessels, 1074
- The various Blood-vessels of the Medulla Spi∣nalis, and how the Arteries come from the ascendent and descendent Trunk of the Aor∣ta, and how the Arteries meet in a common Trunk, and of the Spinal Artery 1075
- The vertebral Arteries in Beasts unite in the Medulla Spinalis; The third branch of the vertebral Artery is dispensed into the Chine. The Arteries of the Chine do often inoscu∣late, and resemble a chain of Rings, and Arteries of the Spine are implanted into the Rete mirabile, and the Arteries meet and make numerous Anastomoses all along the Chine, 1076
- The use of the inosculations of the Spinal Ar∣teries, and of the Sinus of the Medulla Spi∣nalis; and of their use, and of the first ve∣nous Channel belonging to the Sinus; and of the other venous Channel, and of the en∣tercourse of the Sinus, and of the veins of the Medulla Spinalis, 1078
- The Sinus of the Medulla Spinalis are like Veins, and of their elegant divarications, and how they are propagated from the Sinus, Muscles are the efficient cause of local Mo∣tion, 1089
- Of Melancholy and its description, difference, and of various Fancies, and how it is called Ʋniversal, or Particular, and of its Symp∣tomes, 1146
- The antecedent and continent cause of Melan∣choly, and of the cause and manner how Me∣lancholy operates, 1148
- And of Melancholy coming from an Atrabi∣larian Humor, and from the Praecordia and Blood, 1149
- Some conceive the Melancholy is seated in the Womb, and how it proceedeth from sanious Matter, 1150
- Melancholy also cometh from an obstruction of the Uterus, 1151
- Of the Cure of Melancholy by good Diet, and by Correcting the acide disposition of the Blood by Antiscorbuticks, and by Chalybeats, 1153
- And by other methods of Physick and Medicines, 1155
- Melicer des, 142
- Membrana Adiposa, 73. And is accommodated with many Cells, 75. And Carnous in Bruits, 74, Its Situation and Connexion, 76
- The Membrana Musculorum communis, the common covering of the Muscles, 78, 79, 80
- Membranes are contextures of carnous Fibrils, 201
- Membranes endued with minute Pores, may be colatories of the Blood, 182
- Membranes may be colatories of the Blood, 76
- Membranes encircling the Foetus, 635
- Membranes of the Ovaries of Fish, 636
- Menstruous Flux, and its cause, manner time, &c. 576 to 578
- Pathalogy of the Menstruous Flux, 579
- The suppression of the Menstrua, 580
- The immoderate Flux of the Menstrua 582
- The menstruous Flux suppressed, and its causes and Cures, 579, 580, 581, 582
- The menstruous Flux immoderately flowing, and its cause, and a Gangreen of the Womb as a consequent of it, 582, 583
- The depraved Flux of the Menstrua, 583
- Menstruous Blood cannot be the matter of a Foetus, 604
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- Membranes of the Mesentery 384
- Description of the Mesentery, Ibid.
- Origen of the Mesentery, 385
- Vessels of the Mesentery, Ibid.
- Mesenterick Plexes of Nerves, 386, 387
- The Mesenterick lacteal Vessels of the First and Second kind, 388
- The use of the Mesenterick milky vessels, 389
- The manner of conveying Chyle through the Mesentery, Ibid.
- Mesenterick Glands, 390, 391
- Inflammation, Abscess and Ʋlcer of the Mesen∣tery, and their Cures, 392, 393
- The Hydatides and serous Tumors of the Me∣sentery, 393
- The lost and lessened distribution of the Chyle through the Mesentery, 394
- The Cures of Mesenterick diseases, 396
- The diseases of the Mesenterick Glands, 397
- Midriff, 684. and its Situation, Connexion, and Figure, 681, and its structure, Mem∣branes, Fibres, Vessels, Perforations; and how it is made a double Muscle by Bartho∣line, 686
- Midriff is countermanded in its motion by the abdominal Muscles, as its Antagonists, and of its Diastole and Systole, 688
- The Pathology of the Midriff, and of its in∣flammation and wounds, 689
- Midriffe of greater and less Animals, Beasts, Birds and Fish, 690, 691, 692, 693
- Milts of Fish supply the place of Testicles, and have Vessels, Glands, and the manner of pro∣duction of Seminal Liquor in them, 549
- Minerals divested of their qualities, are revi∣ved by new impregnations of Air, 38
- Mons Veneris, 559
- The Mouth is arched above with the Palate, and floored below with the Tongue, 219
- Mouth, and its Inflammations, Ʋlcers, Gan∣greens, 251
- Mucous Matter lining the Guts, 347
- The Muscles are rendred stiff by the spirituous Particles of Animal Liquor, 1091
- The Muscles, 80 to 115, and their composition of tendinous and carnous Fibres, 80 to 111
- Muscular motion and its manner, as the Muscle is contracted by various carnous Fibres, in∣serted into a Tendon, 99
- The Diseases of the Muscles, 133, to 143
- Muscles of the lower Jaw, 244
- Muscles of the Yard, called Erectores, 537
- Muscles of the Yard, called Acceleratores Uri∣nae, 537
- Muscles of the Belly and their several motions, 87
- The Muscles called the oblique descendent, and their description, Ibid.
- The description of the oblique ascendent, and transverse Muscles of the Belly, 88
- Muscles of the Belly called Pyramidal, and their progress and rise, 90
- The use of the abdominal Muscles, and how by a different progress of their Fibres, as by a various bandage, they keep the inward parts of the Abdomen in their due places, 94
- The description of the abdominal Muscles in reference to their Situation, Figure, Con∣nexion, Ʋses, and Actions, 98
- The motion of the Muscles of the Belly, 96
- Muscular motion somewhat resemble to artifi∣cial motion by Levers, 100. And it is some∣what like the motion of a Pulley, Ibid.
- Motion is founded in somewhat immoveable as a Center, 100
- The Muscle, according to Steno, acquireth greater dimensions, 101
- Muscles are lessened in motion, 102
- Muscles are abbreviated in motion, as one ex∣tremity is brought toward the other, 102
- Muscular motion, according to some, is made by Inflation; and is truly inforced by the ir∣ritation of the Fibres, caused by the spiritu∣ous elastick parts of nervous Liquor, 182
- Muscles of the whole Body are antagonists to the Muscle of the Heart, 103
- The motion of the Muscles quickeneth the mo∣tion of the Blood by compressing the Blood-vessels, 103
- Muscular Motion is not performed by Explo∣sion, 104
- Muscles do naturally contract themselves, 105
- In a Muscular tonick Motion, one Muscle bal∣lanceth another, Ibid.
- Antagonist Muscles are prevalent in motion, as they are acted with greater Appulses of Animal Spirits, 105
- Muscular Motion is performed by the Commands of the Will, as the prime efficient cause, 106
N.
- NAtiforme Processes, 1018
- Nauseousness of the Stomach, 337
- The Origen of the Nervous Liquor, and of its constitution, 999
- Nervous Liquor is a Ferment of the Stomach, 301 to 305
- Nervous Liquor is necessary in point of Nu∣trition, 303
- Nervous Liquor issueth out of the wounds of Tendons, Ibid.
- The Nervous Liquor appears upon a Ligature made upon the Nerves, Ibid.
- Nervous Liquor may be proved by the multi∣tude of Nerves, implanted into parts desti∣tute of motion, 303
- Nervous Liquor is impregnated with volatil sa∣line parts, doth easily insinuate it felf into the Compage of Meat and Drink, Ibid.
- Nervous Liquor inspired with Air in the cor∣tical Glands of the Brain, obtaineth ela∣stick parts, and is active in Fermentation, 304. And is impregnated with the influ∣ences of the Planets, 1026
- Nervous Liquor being endued with active prin∣ciples, is the cause of muscular motion, 305
- ...Nervous Bodies of the Yard, their Fibres, Pro∣gress
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- and Dimensions, 534
- Nervous juyce exalteth the Liquors, passing through the Viscera and Muscles of the Bo∣dy, 203
- The Nerves having no Cavities, are not capa∣ble of Valves, 104
- The Nervous Liquor made in the Brain, is carried by Nerves into all parts of the Body, 200
- The Nervous Liquor exalteth the Blood in the Spleen and Kidneys, 199
- The nervous Liquor enobleth the Salival, in the Mouth and Chyle in the Stomach, and Guts, 200
- Nerves arising from the Brain within the Skull, and the nervous Fibrils coming from the Cortex, are united in the Medulla oblon∣gata, 1039. The description of a Nerve, and the treble substance of Nerves, of which the soft tender substance is seated in the middle of the Nerve, 1039
- The olfactory Nerves of other Animals, of Birds, 1042. And of Fish, 1043, 1044
- The optick Nerves of Man, and other Animals, and their rise, and are not mutually embodi∣ed, as some conceive, 1045, And of Fish and Birds, 1045, 1046
- Of the Motory, and pathetick Nerves of the Eyes, and their Origen, and their First and Second Branch, and the rise of the Pathe∣tick Nerves, of the Seat and Origen of the fifth pair of Nerves, 1047
- Of the largeness of these Nerves, and of the First Branch of Nerves, and of their Se∣cond, and their progress. 1048
- The Sixth pair of Nerves, Ibid.
- The Seventh pair of Nerves. 1049
- The Eighth, Ninth, and Tenth pair of Nerves. and of the accessory Nerve; and of the Gan∣glioforme Plexe of the Par vagum, and the use of the knots in the Body of the Nerves, and of another Plex of the Par vagum, uni∣ted with the intercostal Nerves. 1050
- Nervous Fibrils twining about the carotide Artery, are sometimes inserted into its Coat, And a Plex of the Par vagum, out of which many Fibres are propagated to the Heart, and how the Par vagum dispenseth many Fibres into all the regions of the Heart, and how a Branch of the Par vagum encircleth the Pulmonary Artery; and of the lesser Car∣diack Plex of the Par vagum, 1051
- Of the Branches of the Par vagum implant∣ed into the Stomach, and the cause of the Sympathy between the Heart, Larynx, and Stomach, and of the rise of the upper and lower Stomacick Branch, 1051
- The Ninth pair of Nerves, and those of the Tongue derived from them, and association of a Branch of the Ninth pair, with one of the Tenth, 1053
- A Branch of the Ninth pair is distributed in∣to a Muscle of the Larynx, and another Branch is dispersed into the Muscles of the Os Hioides, 1053
- The Tenth pair of Nerves hath many Fibres from the Spine, Ibid.
- The manner how the nervous Liquor maketh its progress through the Processes of the Brain, 1071
- Of the Neck and its use, 1063
- Of the Nerves sprouting out of the Medulla Spinalis; the Description, Substance, Ori∣gen of the Nerves, and Compage of the Me∣dulla Spinalis, 1079
- The reason how the Medulla Spinalis is the Pa∣rent of many pair of Nerves, and how every Verteber hath a pair of Nerves, and of the First and Second pair of Nerves, and a Branch of the First pair is inserted into the Flexors of the Neck, and of the Second pair of vertebral Nerves, belonging to the Neck, and of the Origen of the Second, 1080
- The Third pair of spinal Nerves relating to the Neck, which is divided into four branches, and the Muscles into which the Eibres of the third pair are inserted, and of the fourth pair of vertebral Nerves belonging to the Neck, and of the fifth pair of spinal Nerves, 1081
- The sixth, seventh, and eighth pair of spinal Nerves relating to the Neck, and of the First pair of Nerves belonging to the Back, and the Twelfth pair of Nerves. And of the First pair of Nerves relating to the Loins; and of the Second and Third, 1082, And of the Fourth and Fifth pair of vertebral Nerves; and of the five pair of Nerves ari∣sing out of the Os Sacrum, and the last of the vertebral Nerves is single, and there∣fore called Sine pari, 1083
- Of Nervous Liquor, its Materia substrata, and manner of it, and is improved by mo∣tion, and impregnated with volatil Salt in the Brain, 1084
- The Nerves are rendred stiff and plump by Animal Spirits, 1090
- The Nervous Liquor and Animal Spirits of Man, are more spirituous and excellent then those of Beasts, 1094
- The Nerves of the Brain of Fish do sprout out of the Processes of the Medulla oblongata, 1109
O.
- OPaque and dense Bodies, 13, 14, 15, 16
- Organick parts 3
- Ovaries and Eggs of Birds, 646 to 648
- Ovaries of Fish, 654 to 659
- Oviducts of Fish, 658
- Coats of the Oviducts of Fish, 656
- The Glands of the Oviducts of Fish, 658
- Ovaries of Silk-worms, 660
- The Tunicles, Air-vessels, and carnous Fibres of the Ovaries, 661
- Ovaries or Testicles of Women, and their De∣scription, Figure, and Protuberancies, 588
- ...The Coats of the Ovaries, and their Substance,
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- and preparing Vessels, 589
- The difference between the Testicles of Men, and Women, Ibid.
- The Glands and Lymphaeducts of Ovaries, 590
- The Vesicles of Ovaries, are Eggs furnished with diverse Liquors, 591
- Ova or Eggs are found in all kinds of Animals, Ibid.
- The difference between the Vesicles of Ovaries and Hydatides, 592
- The Oviducts or Deferent Vessels of a Woman, 593
- The Eggs or Vesicles of the Testicles pass through the Oviducts to receive a greater perfection in the Uterus, 593
- The Ova are parted from each other by an inter∣vening Glandulous substance, Ibid. And are carried through the small passage of the Ovi∣ducts. Diemerbroeck opposeth the Hypo∣thesis of Eggs and Oviducts in Women with many Arguments and the Authors reply, 594 595 596
- The spirituous parts of the semen do ascend the Oviducts and impraegnate the Ova or Eggs of Women, 597
- The contraction of the Carnous Fibres of the Womb and Oviducts carry the Seed upward to the Ovarys, and is Confirmed by Fallopius who saw Seed in the Oviducts, 600
- The Authors Opinion how the semen ascends the Oviducts to the Ovarys, 601
- The impraegnated Ova or Eggs are carried through the Oviducts into the bosome of the Uterus, 661
- The Oviducts are not ligaments, as some would have it, 602
- The Description of the Oviducts, 602
- The Fimbriae and progress and coates of the O∣viducts, 603
- The Globules of the Ovarys are a Company of Glands, 607
- The Diseases of the Ovarys or Testicles of Wo∣men, and their tumors, proceeding from va∣rious matter, 614 615
- An Inflammation, Abscess, Ʋlcer, and Hyda∣tides of Ovarys, 615
- A Dropsy, Atheromes, Steatomes of the Ova¦rys, 616
- Of Osteology, 1213
P.
- THe Pair of the Head, proceeding from sharp fumes of the Stomach, and the Au∣thors Opinion concerning it, 985
- Inflammation, and the description of the pain of the Head, 994 and of its Causes, the ill Nervous Liquor, and watry recrements of the Blood, 922
- Palate of Man and other Animals, 219 to 224
- The Palate of Man is garnished with many Glands, and resembleth a Tree, 219. The use of the Palate, 223
- Pancreas, 398 to 402
- Pancreas of Beasts, 403 404
- Pancreas of Eirds and Fish, 404
- The substance, Figure, situation, and Mag∣nitude of the Pancreas, 398
- Diseases of the Pancreas, 405 to 410
- The Insertion of the Pancreas into the Du∣odenum, 399
- A Woman having two Pancreatick Ducts, Ibid.
- The Pancreatick Ducts in various Animals, 400
- The Pancreatick Duct in Barbils and Carps are inserted into the Stomach, Ibid.
- The Pancreatick Glands are so many strainers of the Blood, Ibid.
- The Pancreatick Juice is sometimes Insipid, 401
- The Intestine motion of the Chyle proceeding from the Pancreatiek Juice mixed with the saline parts of Bile, as Dr. Graaf will have it, 401
- Inflammations, Abscesses, Ʋlcers, Steatomes, Cancer, S••irrhus of the Pancreas, and the Ob∣struction of the Panecreatick Duct, 405 406
- Convulsive Motions of the Pancreas, coming from an ill Panecratick Juice, Ibid.
- Diseases proceeding from want of excess of Pan∣creatick Juice, Ibid.
- Pancreatick Liquor being sour, is the cause of a Rheumatism, Arthritis, Diarrhaeas, Dy∣senteries, &c. 408
- Pancreatick Liquor being Acid and mixed with Bile, produceth Atrabilarian Humours and is the Cause of Hypocondriacal Diseases, 409
- The Cure of Diseases relating to the Pancreas, Ibid.
- Parastates and deferent Vessels, 526 to 529 to 538
- Parastates or Epididymides, and their Origen, Figure, Connexions, substance, and flexures, &c. 526, 527
- Passio Caeliaca being the weakened Concoctive faculty of the Guts, 370
- Penis or Yard, 534
- Diseases of the Penis and its Cures, 557 558
- Diseases of the Penis, as distortion, Priapism, Inflammations, Ʋlcers, Gangreens, and Mor∣tifications, 557 558
- Perforations of the abdominal Muscles by sper∣matick Vessels, 88
- The Pericardium or Capsula of the Heart, its structure Origen, Membranes, Connexi∣on, Vessels, Figure, 709
- Of its Liquor and Origen, 710
- The Diseases of the Pericardium and its Cure, of an Inflammation, and its causes, and the Pericardium adherent to the Heart 712
- The Pericardium of other Animals, 713
- The Pericranium, its situation, and Compo∣sition, and its continuation to the Dura Mater by Fibrils, and of its Blood Vessels, and Nerves, 953. How the Pe∣ricranium is sensible as a Contexture of Nerves, and of the Periostium, its situati∣on, Blood Vessels and Nerves, 954
- ...The Peristaltick motion of the Guts being in∣versed
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- causeth Vomiting, 336
- Of the Palsey, and how the functions of Sense and motion are lessened, and abolished in it, and the cause of the resolution of the Nerves, and how the Origen of the Nerves, may be stopped by a gross Nervous Liquor, and of the Cause of it, 119••. And the Origen of the Nerves are straightned by the Tumors of the adja∣cent parts, and in this Disease the progress of the Fibrils may have their Filaments o∣verclose; and the solution of the unity of parts may be a cause of the Palsey. And a Palsey often succeedeth an Apoplexy; and the cause of a Palsey is more or less univer∣sal, and the cause why sense remaineth, when motion is taken away, and how the Compres∣sion of the Corpora Striata hindereth the progress of the animal Liquor, and of the seate of the Palsey, 1192. Of the various Causes of a Palsey, 1193.
- A Palsey is sometimes a consequent of other Dis∣eases, 1194
- As to the Cure of a Palsey, a Consequent of an Apoplexy, Bleeding, Vomitings, Purgatives, Cephalick Medicines, as also Vesicatories are profitable; & sometimes a Palsey succeeds Con∣vulsive Motions, & Epileptick Fits, and some∣times pains of the Stomach and Guts, 1194
- An Arthritis sometimes degenerates into a Pal∣sey, and how Scorbutick habits of Bodies are obnoxious to it, and sometimes it proceeds à Soluta unitate Cranij, 1195
- A Palsey coming from a bruised Medulla Spina∣lis; and an ill Mass of Blood is the ante∣cedent cause of it, and the locomotive faculty is lessened, and abolished by the defect of animal Spirits, and of the cause of tremulous Motions, and of the many kinds of a Palsey, 1196
- In one kind the sensitive faculty is lost, and the motive preserved; and how the motion is taken away by the paucity, or indisposition of ani∣mal Spirits, 1197
- The Prognosticks of a Palsey, 1197
- An habitual Palsey claims a peculiar Cure, and a respect must be had to the Sex res Naturales. In the Cure of this Disease Medicines prepa∣red with Cephalicks, Antiscorbuticks, Chaly∣beates, as also Vomitaries, Purgatives, Alte∣ratives as Cephalick Electuaries, Apocemes, destilled Water, &c. are proper 1199. As also Spirits of Salt Armoniack succinated, Harts-Horn, Sut, Blood, and Tinctures of Turpentine, Antimony, Amber, or Elixir Proprietatis, Bezoar Minerale, Trochises and Pills, na∣tural Baths, Antiscorbutick Juices, Electua∣ries, and Diet Drinks are proper, 1200
- As also Pills made of Milleipedes and testaceous Powders, and Diaphoreticks are also very useful, and Mercurial Medicines may be advised in a stubborn Palsey. And Topicks may be applied, when universal evacuations have been made, 1201
- The Cure of Diseases relating to the Pan∣creas, Ibid.
- Passio Caeliaca being the weakned concoctive Fa∣culty of the Guts, 370
- The manner how purging Medicines do ope∣rate. 337
- The requisites of a Peristaltick motion, 367
- The diverse kinds of the Peristaltick motion, Ibid.
- The Peristaltick motion of the Guts (proceeding from a stupide Nervous Coate) doth indicate Cephalicks. 371
- Perspiration being too free causeth a great faint∣ness, 57
- Phrenitis, how it is a high Degree of a deliri∣um, and its Description, 1140. Of the es∣sence of this Disease, and in what it con∣sists, and whence it proceeds, 1141
- Phrenitis, coming from an Ʋlcer of the Du∣ra Mater, and from an inflammation of the substance of the Brain, and from the Plex∣us Choroeides, 1142. And from recrements, vitiating the Nervous Liquor, and of the evident Causes, and Diagnosticks of Phrensy, 1143
- The Pia Mater may be inflamed without the Tumour of the Brain, 1141
- Pia Mater, and its Blood Vessels, and serous Vesicles, and the use of it, 986
- The Figure of this Membrane and Progress of its Blood Vessels, and how it may be se∣vered from the Brain in its putrefaction, 997
- And how the Arterys of one side of the Brain do inosculate with those of the other, 987
- The Arterys do not inosculate with the Jugular Veins, 988
- Pipes of the Air and sap are so many prepa∣ring Vessels seated in the Cups, leaves of Flow∣ers, and Stamina, 668
- Placenta Uterina, its Origen, Situation, Co∣lour and figure, 630
- The Surfaces and Glands and Vessels of the Pla∣centa, 631 632
- The Placenta is furnished with many Fibres; and of the uses of the Placenta, 634
- Pleura, its situation, figure, Connexion, and Membranes, 694 and its Fibres, Perforati∣ons, Origen, duplicature (making the Me∣diastine) and uses, 695
- Pleurisy, its description, differences, 700 and causes, Prognosticks, indications, and Cures, 702 703
- The various kinds of Plastick Vertues in the semen, 619 620
- Porus Bilarius, 457 458 459
- Porus Bilarius, and its Description, and how the Branches of the Vena Porta are encircled with one common Capsula, 457
- The Vessels of the Porus Bilarius and Porta have no inosculation, 458
- The Porus Bilarius hath no Valves, but only an oblique insertion into the Duodenum, 458
- ... Pot••lent matter requireth less Concoction then
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- esculent, 309
- The Small-Pox, attended with a great pain of the Head and a great Cough, 55
- The beginning of the Measles and Small-Pox, 56 and the state 57
- Small-Pox and its Cure, 62 to 68
- Pretious Stones how they are fluide in their Origen, and of their Geometrical figures and Transparences, 881 882
- Progressive motion relating to Man, 107 115
- Progressive motion of four-footed Animals, 115 to 118
- Progressive Motion, and how it is managed by several motions of the Limbs, making vari∣ous angles with the Area and Trunk of the Body, 106
- In Progressive Motion, the Foot is moved from the Heel to the Toes upon the Floor somewhat after the manner of a sphaerical Body moving upon a plain. And the Heel receiving the weight of the Body in a new step, and after∣ward the Foot being clapped to the Floor, maketh a kind of acute angle with it, and an obtuse with the bended Trunk, and a right one with the Leg, 107
- Progressive Motion is celebrated, by the various flexions, and tensions of the Thighs, Leggs, and Feet, 107
- In Progressive Motion the center of gravity is transferred from Limb to Limb alternately 108
- In Progressive Motion, the weight of the Body resteth perpendicularly upon the hinder Limb, and the Body being bent forward, and the weight being carried beyond the perpendicular, must necessarily tumble, unless the center of gravity be received by the fore Limb, 108
- Progressive Motion being made upon diverse semicircles, cannot be styled a true right mo∣tion, but rather mixed, Ibid.
- Progressive Motion, and its several centers, O∣rigens, Insertions, and actions of Muscles, 109
- In Progressive Motion, the upper Bones making various articulations are the centers of it, 109
- In Progressive Motion, the Thigh is elevated by the Musculus Psoas and Iliacus Internus, 110
- In this Motion, the Os Ilium, Sacrum, and Coccyx are centers of it, 111
- In it the flexors of the Leg put it back, and in it the share Bone, Coxendix, are centers of mo∣tion, 111
- In Progressive Motion, the first deportment of the fore Limb is made by the flexure of the Thigh and Leg, 113
- Progressive Motion, in Four-footed Animals hath more centers of motion then in Bipe∣des, 115
- Progressive Motion in Brutes is formed by the decussation of the fore Limb with the hinder, 115
- ...In it, in Six footed Creatures, three Feet re∣main the Centers of motion while the other are moved.
- Prostats, their structure, dimensions, Vessels, &c. 532 533
- Psora, and it Causes and Cure, 61
- Pthisis or Consumption, of a Consumption or Atro∣phy, and its Causes, 846 847
- Purgatives affect the Nervous Fibres of the Guts, 369
- In Purging the Fibres of the Stomach commence their motion about the Orifice, and so move downward to the bottom of the Stomach, 330
R.
- OF Rare parts, 6
- Rarefaction, 9, 10, 11, 12
- Receptacle of Chyle, 679 its Origen, Figure, and Cavity, 680
- Renales Glandulae, their Situation, Figure, Magnitude, Coates and uses, 472 473
- Of Respiration, and of its efficient Cause; and Retentive Faculty of the Stomach, 290 to 295
- Pathology of the retentive Faculty, 294 to 296
- The Retentive is seated in the Fibrils of the Coates of the Stomach, 291
- Rheumatism, its Types and Periods, and its Matter, 151
- The Causes of a Rheumatism, the serous Parts of the Blood, different kinds of Salts, A∣cides and Alcalys, 152
- The antecedent Procatarctick, and continent cause of a Rheumatism, 153
- Diverse other causes of a Rheumatism, ill Blood, and Nervous Liquor, 155
- Rheumatism flowing from concreted saline and Earthy parts, and is also derived from sulphu∣reous and flatulent Matter, 156
- Pain in a Rheumatism coming from disaffected, Nervous Fibres, 157
- An Ʋniversal Rheumatism derived from all the Muscles disordered, 157
- The Curative, preservative, and vital Indicati∣on in a Rheumatism, 158
- Bleeding and Purging Medicines may be pro∣per in their season in a Rheumatism, 158 and in its Cure diverse Medicines propounded, 159
- A Rheumatism and joint Gout do not differ essentially, but in parts affected, 160 Na∣ture, and Organs, and how the interco∣stal Muscles contribute to it, 824 825
- Of the Matter, and efficient cause of Respirati∣on, 830
- And of the uses of Respiration, 835, 836, 837
- Rete Mirabile, and the reason of its Denomi∣nation, dimensions, of the plexes of Arterys, how they are inosculated, 1027
- And the use of inosculation of Arterys, 1028
- Of the Ribs and their articulations, and the oblique insertion of the Cartilages into the Ribs, 826
- The Rim of the Belly hath its process more close in Man then Bruits, 514
- ...The Rim of the Belly, its situation, and Fi∣gure,
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- 106
- Pathology of the Rim and Cavity of the Belly, and its Inflammation, 164 the several sorts of Ruptures, and tumors in the Belly, 165 166
- Rotation of the Thorax is so called improperly, because it is not carried circularly, but only backward and forward. 97
- The Rotation of the Loines and Thorax and by what Muscles it is performed, 97
S.
- SOft parts of the Body are first formed out of the Colliquated Seed, 1623 1624
- Salival Liquor is fermentative as made up of various Elements, 26, 27
- Salival Liquor is a kind of Ʋniversal Men∣struum embodying with diverse Liquors, 27
- The parts of Salival Liquor and its Compositi∣on, Ibid.
- Sanguineous parts, 2
- Salts being fixed are volatized by the effluxes of Air, 38
- Sap Vessels pass longwise, and transversely in annular Fibres, and diametral rays, 31
- Sap is exalted with Air in its motion upward and horizantally through the Vessels of the Bark and Wood, 38
- Sap Vessels, their Figure, and divarication, 794
- Between the Sap Vessels are seated many Areae as so many Cisterns of different Liquors, 795
- Sarcocele and its Cause and Cure, 553 554
- Of the Scurvy, and how it is an Ʋniversal Disease, and of the first seat of the Scurvy, and of the Symptomes of the Scurvy, in the Head, Thorax, and the lowest venter, 1202 And of the Symptomes of the Scurvy in the habit, and ambient parts of the Body. And how the Air and gross Aliment is a cause of the Scurvy, and of the ill ferments of the Stomach are remote Causes of this Dis∣ease, 1203
- The ill Mass of Blood, and Nervous Liquor are antecedent Causes of the Scurvy, 1204
- The Scurvy is the Parent of many Diseases, and the Spleen is often sound in it, and of some Symptoms of the Scurvy and their Aeti∣ology, 1206
- The seat of this Disease is sometimes a Corrup∣ted Caul, and other times an ill affected Pan∣creas, 1207
- The Original Cause of the Scurvy is an ill Chyle, 1207
- The great Cause of the Scurvy is the discrasy of the Blood, 1208
- Good Air and Aliment contribute much, to the Cure of the Scurvy, Ibid.
- In this Disease, Purging and Vomiting Medi∣cines discharge the recrements of the Stomach, and bitter Medicines corroborate it, 1208
- Diureticks, Diaphoreticks, Vomitorys, Purging Pills, and Purging Medicines prepared with Antiscorbuticks, and alteratives made of Ape∣rients, &c. are very useful in this Disease, 1209
- Antiscorbutick infusions, Apocemes, Juices, Sy∣rupes, destilled Waters, &c. 1210
- Medicated Ale, Testaceous Powders, Electua∣ries, Lime Water, Purging and Diuretick Mineral Waters, Chalybeat Preparations, &c. are very proper in this Disease, 1211
- Medicines proper for the Scurvy, complicated with an Asthma, as also Cephalicks mixed with Antiscorbuticks are very useful in this Malady, 1212
- Gargarismes for the Mouth, and Diet Drinks for pain of the Limbs, are advantagious in this Disease, 1212
- The Cure of Scabs, Freckles, Morphew, Itch, &c. 68, 69, 71
- Of the Scales of Fish, which invest their Skin, and of their situation Figure, Magnitude, Colour, Substance, and their formation, 949.
- The use and Scales of diverse Fish, 950
- Secundine of the Seeds, as also the Chorion and Amnios, 672
- Seminal Liquor of a Woman, 604 to 607
- Elements and parts of the ••eed of Man, 617
- Womens Seed is more watry and Crude than Mans, 617
- Mans and Womans Seed espouse a Ʋnion be∣fore Conception, 618
- The several kindes of Plastick Vertue in the Seed, 619, 620
- Seed containeth the Ideas of all parts of the Body, 621
- Fibres of the Seed have dispositions and Fi∣gures, 623
- The Concretive Power of Seed in relation to the formation of several parts of the Body consisteth in the Fibres of the Seed derived from various salts, 623
- The seminal matter contained in the Eggs of Insects, 662
- Seeds of several Insects are different, 662
- Faeminine Seed, 604
- The union of the Seed of Man and Woman produceth the like in the Foetus, 604
- The Faeminine Seed is a passive or less active principle and is much exalted by the Masculine in generation, 606
- The Matter of Faeminine Seed and the man∣ner how it is produced in the Ovarys, 606
- The Semen of a Woman is different from that of Man, 607
- The Materia Substrata of Seed is the serous part of the Blood and Nervous Liquor, 607
- The Masculine Seed hath some parts spiritu∣ous and volatil and others more fixed, 617
- The Faeminine Seed is more watry and Crude and less spirituous, then that of Man, Ibid.
- The manner how Masculine and Faeminine Seed espouse each other after coition, 618
- The Seed is first immitted into the Vagina not into the Body of the Womb, 618
- The accretions belonging to the Plastick Ver∣tue, do not proceed from pure salty but as mixed with other Elements, 620
- ...The seminal Liquor is made up of Alcalys and
Page [unnumbered]
- Acides, 620
- The seminal Ideas are modelled by the parts through which they pass, 621
- The Plastick Vertue doth first shew it self in the Colliquated parts of the Seed, 623
- The seminal Liquor is Fibrous, 623
- The seminal Fibres have diverse dispositions and Fibres, 623
- The Concreted power of the Seed, seated in these Fibres, is acted with diverse kinds of salts, 623
- The order how the parts of the Body are for∣med out of the Seed, Ibid.
- Seminal Vessels, and their Common Duct, 523
- Seminal Vesicles, their structure, length, ma∣ny cells and use, 529
- Seminal Vesicles and their Glandulous sub∣stance, 531
- The seminal Vesicles supplied the place of Te∣sticles, whereupon a Man enjoyed a Wo∣man without Testicles, 532
- The seminal Liqu•••• of Man, its Description, and Liquors of which it is made, and how derived from all parts of the Body; where∣upon the Liquors (constituting the semen) receive their Figures and likeness, 539
- The Materia Substrata of semen and its parts, 504 541
- Of sight, in which various Images of things are arayed with beams of Light, which de∣cussate each other about the Cornea, 895
- Rays of the sight are made good by an expe∣riment, and the Rays must intersect each o∣ther, or meet, which is inconsistent with the Nature of right Lines; diverse experiments relating to seeing, 896. An experiment proving the intersection of the visible Rays, fetched from Nature, and the intersection of Rays, produce the perception of the Ob∣ject in due order and situation, and a right Ray moveth more strongly then an oblique, 897
- The Rays of sight represent every point of the object, and are direct, reflexe, and refracted. And a Ray called Orthogonos, maketh no refraction, and of the point of Incidence, and of refraction toward the perpendicular, and of the Incident Ray, and of the re∣fracted Ray, 898
- In Sight are made diverse refractions of Rays, and the Ray passing through the Eye to the Cornea, is refracted to the perpendicular, and the Ray passing through the Cornea to the watry Humor is refracted from the per∣pendicular and the Ray of Refraction at the Cristalline Humor, and at the vitreous, and the manner of Refraction at the Re∣tina, 899
- The visible Rays are conceived to be five; And they do not terminate in Mathemati∣cal, but Physical points. And the Retina is the immediate Organ of sight, and the Fi∣brils of the Retina are not transmitted through the Humours to the more remote tunicles of the Eyes, 900
- How the vitreous Humour contributeth to sight, and the various modelling of the Cristal∣line Humour is made by the motion of the cili∣ary processes; and how an object transmit∣ted through a Hole of the Wall is lively Paint∣ed upon a Paper, 901
- Glasses do much contribute to the more plain Reception of an Object; And the Images of things are best seen in a Paper (seated near a hole in an obscure place) which dis∣appear in a light Room: The cause of a disorderly position of a visible Object, 902
- The Image in reference to sight is obscured by a thin Plate; and a large hole rendreth the Image confused, 903
- The manner how the Image is obscured by a darkned point of a Convex Glass; and a visible Object emitteth Rays in every point; and many Rays may be refracted into one point of a Convex Glass, 904
- A hole made through the hole of a Wall, somewhat resembleth the pupil of the Eye and the Paper placed at a due distance from the Eye resembleth the Retina, and the hole without a Glass giveth an obscure resem∣blance of an Object, 905. The motion of the visible Rays is pyramidal; and the Rays are intersected, before they enter in∣to the pupil of the Eye; and the disorder∣ly situation of the Object maketh it con∣fused; and the reason of the motive Pow∣er of the Uvea and ciliary processes, 906
- A short model of sight; and variety of appa∣rencies proceed from different dispositions of Diaphanous Mediums: and different colours may be feched from several lights and shades, caused by diverse prominencies, and Cavities of Bodys, 907
- The Rays after intersection are contracted in∣to a Cone, in the pupil of the Eye; And the Rays are rendred stronger, as united in the parabolical figure of the Cristalline Hu∣mour; and the Image of the object is brought to a due situation, upon the Retina, 908
- Of the manner of sensation, 1054, 1055 1056, 1057, 1058, 1059
- Dr. Willis Opinion about sensation, 1087 and the Nature of it, 1088
- The manner of sensitive perception, 1089
- Septum Lucidum, 1008
- How the serous Liquor, or recrements of the Brain come as some would have it, and in truth distill out of the Glands of the Choroidal Plex, 1041
- The manner how the serous Liquor is percola∣ted in the Brain, 1071
- Septum of the Yard, 534
- The serous Vessels seated among the Anfractus of the Brain, and of their Figure, 999
- Of the four sinus of the Brain, and of the two Lateral, and how they meet in one, (called the Torcular) and of the third sinus, 983
Page [unnumbered]
- Outward Skin, its produced by seminal and repaired when lost by Nervous Liquor, 47
- Inward Skin is a contexture of diverse Ves∣sels, and fixed by diverse Vessels, and the Membrana Musculorum Communis the Coates and Parenchyma of the Skin, and Glandulous covering, and their Ducts, 49, 50, 51
- Of the Skin of Fish, and Shells, and of the Skin of Insects, 49
- The Diseases of the Skin, 54, to 62
- The Cure of the Diseases of the Skin, 62, to 71
- Of the Skull, its Origen, and how it is fram∣ed, conjoyned by Sutures, and their several kinds of Coronal, Lamdoidal, &c. 955
- The sagittal, and their uses; and of the Spurious Sutures, and Commissures of the Scull, 956
- The Tables of the Scull, and Arteries Per∣forating the Dura Mater and Scull, and of its Nutrition, 957
- The Meditullium of the Scull is full of Liquor (derived from the Blood) and how it is endued with Blood Vessels, 958
- Of the Glands of the Meditullium, and how they may be discovered in Hydropique Bo∣dies. The different thickness, and Figure of the Scull, 959. And how it doth not configure the Brain, and of the use of the Scull, 960
- The Bones of the part of the Scull called Synciput, and of their Origen, 962. And of the Bones of the Occiput, and of its Composition, Figure, Connexion, and Sinus, and of the processes of the Occiput, and of its holes, 963. And of the rudiment of these Bones, and the manner how they are formed, 964
- Of the Bones of the Scull, belonging to the Temples, and of their situation, &c. 964. Of the Perforations of these Bones, and of their Origens, and of the Origen of the Processus Zigomaticus, Processus Styloi∣des, and of the Os Squammosum, 965
- Of the Sculls of Beasts, of their diverse In∣teguments, Tables, Meditullium, and Su∣tures, 966
- Of the Sculls of Birds, of diverse Coates, Ta∣bles, &c. 969
- Of the Sculls of Fish, and their Sutures, &c. 970
- Of the Diseases of the Scull (and their Cures) of the wounds of the Scull, the Cause of a fissure, and of various kinds of fractures, and the manner how to discover, and the Scull is to be laid bare, and when the Trepan is to be applied, 971
- And a care must be had in the application of the Trepan, lest the neighbouring parts be wounded, and the Blood is not immediate∣ly to be stopped upon the application of the Trepan, and drying Medicines are to be applied upon fractures of the Scull. The second kind of fracture called Contusio, 974. And the kinds of it; and the third kind of wound of the Scull, called depressi∣on, in which the Trepan may be used, 975, The fourth kind of wound of it cal∣led Sedes, and of its diverse kinds and Cures, 976. The fith kind of fracture nam∣ed, Contrafissura, and its various kinds 977
- The Prognosticks relating to the wounds of the Scull, and of a small fissure of the Scull proveth often dangerous, and how the wounds of both Tables are often fatal, and of the ill symptoms of a wounded Scull, 978
- The semen hath its Goodness from the Dis∣position of the Testicles, 515
- Similar parts, 3
- The fourth sinus, and the uses of the sinus, and of the Arterys, and Veines of the Du∣ra Menynx, and how the Blood is convey∣ed out of it into the sinus, 984
- A passage going from the Lateral sinus into the Jugular Vein; and how the Vertebral, Venous Branches in the Loins, are imme∣diately derived from the spine, 1078
- Of Sleepy Diseases, and their Causes, and as coming from a kind of Mineral Parti∣cles, 1125
- The Nature of Sleepy Diseases, 1129. And of their Cures, by Vomitories, Cupping Glasses, Vesicatories, strong Purgatives, Julaps, Suffumigations, Oyntments, Garga∣rismes, Sternutatories, 1133. As also Bleeding may be advised, Electuaries, Apo∣sems, Powders, &c. 1134
- Of Smelling, and its Nerves, their temper object, and its faculty, 371 and the causes of various smells, 372
- Soft Parts, 4, 5
- Solid Parts, 3
- Solid Meats give a more substantial Nou∣rishment, P. 61, and require a greater heat then liquid, to open their more close Pores, 311
- Sounds, and their several kinds, and De∣scription, and of Vocal sounds, 935
- The Soul keepeth its Court in the Head, and of the more Noble Operations of the Soul and the seat of the fancy, and its Operations, 1087
- The sensitive Soul of Brutes is not capable of reflex acts, 1094
- The sensitive Soul of subservient to the Ra∣tional, and of its seat, 1165
- Speaking, 236 to 234 and its Prognosticks, Indications, 856, 857
- Spermatick Parts, 2
- Spermatick Arteries, 513, 514
- One Spermatick Artery was found in an ex∣ecuted Person, 515
- The Spermatick Veins and their Maeanders, Valves and varicose Tumors, 516
- Spitting of Blood and its causes, 854, 855,
- Spittle and its several kinds, 239 to 243
Page [unnumbered]
- Spleen, 411, to 416
- Spleens of Fish and other Animals, 416 to 420
- Spleens of Beasts, 421 to 422
- Spleens of Birds, 422
- Pathology of the Spleen, 423, to 427
- Situation, Connexion, Colour, dimensions and Perforations, and greatness of the Spleen, 412
- The Arteries, Veins, Nerves, and Nervous Fibres of the Spleen, 413
- Nervous Fibres terminating into the Glands of the Spleen, 414
- Spleen hath Lymphaeducts, 414
- Membranous Cells and sinus of the Spleen, 415
- Glands of the Spleen, 416
- The use of the Spleen to prepare a ferment for the Liver, 420
- Inflammations, Preternatural greatness, putre∣faction, Dropsie, Hydatides, and Scirrhus of the Spleen, 424, 425, 426
- Spungy substance of the Yard, 335
- The Stamina or threads of Plants, 665, 666
- Steatomes, 142
- Stomach of Man, 264, to 268
- The Coates of the Stomach, 265, to 267, and its various Fibres, Ibid.
- Stomachs of Beasts, 269 to 271
- Stomachs of Birds, 272 to 275
- Stomachs of Fish, 276, to 279
- Diverse causes of an ill tone of the Stomach, 322
- The Serous Ferment of the Stomach, 305 to 308
- The Nervous Ferment of the Stomach, 301
- Stomacick pains proceeding from sour Pancre∣atick Liquor, whereupon ariseth a Doglike Appetite, 407
- Stones of the Kidney, 488, to 492
- Stone of the Kidney and its Cure, 493
- Of Stupidity, and Mopishness, and how it is a consequent of habitual madness, and its description by symptoms, and of its Causes, 1165
- Stupidity may also proceed from too great a quantity, ill conformation, Texture, and narrow Interstices of the Nervous filaments, 1166
- The evident causes of Stupidity, and how the vital and Nervous Liquor grow effaete in this Disease, and of the ill consequents of Opiats, and deep thoughts, 1167
- The distinction of this Disease, and of the Causes and Prognosticks, 1168
- The Method of Curing it, by Bleeding, Fonta∣nels, Purging Medicines prepared with Ce∣phalicks, Cephalick Apozemes, Spirits, Ma∣gistral Destilled Waters, Electuaries, &c. 1169
- Ale Medicated with Cephalicks, and of Topicks, 1170
- The Succus Nervosus is first generated in the Brain, &c. 1072
- Swimming of Fish, which having more hea∣vy Bodies do move in more solid Bodies then Air, 125
- The Swimming of Fish, is chiefly performed by the motion of their Tails, caused by Tensors and Flexors seated in their hinder R••gion, 125
- Swimming of Fish, 124 to 126
T.
- TAsting is not seated in the Palate, 223
- Tasting floweth from saline and sul∣phureous Particles, making appulses upon the Nerves seated in the Tongue, 231
- The Subject of Tasting is the Membrane of the Tongue beset with Nervous Fibrils, 231
- Tasting is not seated in the Papillae of the Tongue, 232
- Various kinds of Tasts and their causes 233, 234, 235
- Tasting is disordered and vitiated by many ways, 249
- Fibres of the Tongue consigned to Tasting, 225
- Teeth, 207 to 211
- Pathology of the Teeth, 211, to 219
- Teeth and its several kinds, and how they are fastned to the Gooms, 207, of Teeth their ru∣diment and substance, 209
- Diseases and pains of the Teeth, and their Causes, 215, discolouring of the Teeth, 212
- Nodes of the Teeth, 213
- A fungous Bone of the Teeth, Cured by a Cantery, 213
- Teeth defective, or excessive in Number, 214
- Convulsive Motions, and Vomitories in breed∣ing of Teeth, 216
- Blistering Plaisters proper in ill breeding of the Teeth, 217
- Tendon how it is Compounded of Nervous and Ligamentous Fibrils. 100
- Testicles of Man, 515, to 526
- Diseases of the Testicles, 552, to 556
- The Tunicles of the Testicles, Bursa, Dartos, Erythroeides, Vaginalis, Albuginea, 518, 519
- The Testicles have a pulpy and Glandulous substance, 520
- Testicles are systems of many Vessels, &c. 521
- Testicles have Lymphaeducts, demonstrated by an experiment, 522
- The Testicles and their Parenchyma, and of other Viscera, 524, 525
- The Diseases of the Testicles and Scrotum, In∣flammations, Tumors, Epiplocele, En∣trocele, Sarcocele, and their Cures, 552, 553, 554
- Testicles or Ovaries of Women, 588, to 592
- Diseases of the Testicles or Ovaries of Wo∣men, 614
- Cartilaginous Tumors, and many other Swel∣lings, Inflammations, Ʋlcers, and Abscesses, and Hydatides of the Testacles 614, 615
- ...Dropsies, Atheromes, Steatomes, Obstructions,
Page [unnumbered]
- of the Testicles from a viscide Matter, 616
- The manner how the Impraegnated Egg of the Testicles is carried out of the Ovary into the Oviducts, 619
- Testicles or Ovaries of Beasts, 684
- Testiforme processes, 1018
- Thirst, 282, to 286. The requisites of Thirst, 282, Thirst lost, 286
- Thymus, and its situation, rise, Membranes, Structure, Figures, and Fibrils, 697. Its Vessels, Parenchyma, and uses, 698
- Thoracick Chyliserous Ducts are sometimes dou∣ble, and of their Ʋnion by cross Branches, their Valves, insertion and uses, 681
- The Tongue of Man and its structure and va∣rious Coates, 224
- And of its Fibrils, consigned to Tasting, 225
- The Tongue is endued with Cartilaginous Pro∣cesses inserted into the Glandulous Coat, 232
- The Tongue is furnished with diverse Muscles and many ranks of Fibres, 226, 227
- Diseases of the Tongue, Apthae, Inflammations and Ʋlcers, 249
- Transparent Bodies, 13, 14, 15 16
- Of Transparency, 308
- Tumors are to be opened, when they cannot be discussed, 146
- Tumors of an Erysipelas, Oedema, Scirrhus, Cancer, &c. 147, 148, 149, into Tumors, when hollow, cleansing and drying Medi∣cines are to be injected, 147
- Tympanitis, 171 A Bastard Tympanitis pro∣ceeding from a Flatus lodged in the Sto∣mach and Guts, 171
- Tympanitis, arising from watry vapours, is of a gentle emollient Nature without great pain, 175
- A true Tympanitis, caused by a meer Flatus lodged in the Belly, is veryrare, 177
- An instance of a Tympanitis, commonly deri∣ved from wind and watry Humors, 178
- A strang History of a Tympanitis taken out of Smetius, 177
U.
- VAcuum improbable, 7, 8
- Vapours of a Malignant Nature, are dispelled by saline Steems, 34
- Vapours, the Materia Substrata of a Flatus 336
- Vapours differ according to several subjects, 137
- Vegetables are a fine composition of Bark, Wood, and Pith, 31
- Vegetables have a thin Coate, made up of ma∣ny minute filaments, interspersed with nu∣merous Perforations, 31
- Vegetable Juices are inspired with Air, 32
- The Veins relating to the Heart, the Veins im∣planted into the Cava, the Annular fleshy Fibres of the Cava, 787
- The first production of the Veins, their sub∣stance, Coats and frame, 788
- The fleshy Fibres of the Cava, the Valves and their use, their Figure and Number, and how the motion of the Blood is first per∣formed in the Veins, 787
- The Pathology of the Veins and its Cures: The Obstruction of the Veins 790. Their Compression, various Tumors, 791
- The right Ventricle of the Heart and tricuspi∣dal Valves, 721
- The left Ventricle and its Figure, 722. Its fur∣rows, and mitral and semilunary Valves, 723. The Fibres of the Semilunary Valves, 724
- Ventricles of the Brain, which seem to be four, but in truth, are two, and their seat, and how they are equal to each other, and how they are severed by the Speculum Lucidum, 1009
- The Third and Fourth Ventricle, and of a si∣nus called Calamus Scriptorius, and the round process to which the Cerebellum is affixed, 1010
- Salt Water found in the right Ventricle, 1011
- Of a Vertigo or Meagrum, often a fore-run∣ner of Sleepy Diseases, and how it proceeds, and of its Paroxysme and evident Causes, 1135. Of the inward Causes, making an irritation of the Nervous Fibrils, 1136. And of the essence and of its seat, and conti∣nent Cause of a Vertigo, and of its manner how it is produced, and as it is inveterate, 1137
- The Indications and Cure of this Disease, 1133
- The Viscera and Muscles are Systemes of Ves∣sels, 201
- Voice is Organized by the Wind-pipe, Larynx, Arch of the Palate, Gooms, Teeth, Uvula and Nose, 236
- Vomiting and Purging are performed by the various Motion of Fibres in the Stomach and Guts, 329
- In Vomiting the Fibres of the Stomach begin their Motion about the right Orifice, and then move toward the left, 330
- Vomiting a kind of Convulsive motion of the Stomach, 331
- Vomitings are derived from Inflammations, Ab∣scesses, Ʋlcers, proceeding from ill Humors, troubling the Nervous and Carnous Fibres of the Stomach, 338
- Vomiting coming from Poysonous Medicines, 339
- Vomiting coming from Colick pains, and from Gravel, and Stone, 339
- Vomiting proceeding from the Abscesses of the Intestines, Mesentery, Liver, Caul, &c. 339
- Vomiting and Purging Medicines, Cure belch∣ings coming from a foul stomach, 344
- Ʋreters, 494 to 495
- Ʋreters of other Animals, 496
- Ʋreters and their Pathology, 497, 498
- The Ʋreters, their Description, Number, O∣rigen, and Progress, Connexion, Figure, Membranes, and use, 494, 495
- The Ʋreters and their Diseases, Obstructions, Ischury, &c. 495
Page [unnumbered]
- The unnatural expansion of the Ʋreters, 498
- The Ʋrethra and its seat, spungy and Membra∣nous substance and Fibres, 535
- Ʋrine, its Origen and parts, 505
- Ʋrine, 505, to 509
- The watry parts, the Consistence, Quantity, and Quality of Ʋrine, 506
- The Colour and cause of Crude, and gross Ʋ∣rine, 507
- The Hypostasis and Contents of Ʋrine, 508
- The Ʋterus, and its Vagina, according to its seat, magnitude, substance, inward surface, and Carnous expansions Contracting the O∣rifice of the Vagina, 563, 564, with the Vessels and Action of the Vagina, 565, 566
- The inward parts of the Ʋterus, and its situ∣ation, Connexion, Figure, 566, 567
- The Ʋterus of Women is void of Hornes, and hath a simple Cavity without Cells, 567
- The Neck, Orifice, and inward Cavity of the Ʋterus, 568
- The substance of the Ʋterus groweth more thick in the time of the Foetus, 568
- The Coates and Glands of the Ʋterus, 569
- The Fibrous and Carnous Compage of the Ʋ∣terus, 570
- The Vessels, vid. Arterys, Veins, Nerves, and Lymphaeducts of the Ʋterus, 570
- Diseases of the Ʋterus, or Womb and their Causes, 608
- Inflammations, Carnous Tumors, Abscesses, Ʋl∣cers of the Womb, 608, 609, Gangreens, Cancers, Dropsies, of the Ʋterus or Womb, 610, 611
- Ʋterus of Beasts, and its Vagina, Orifice, Ca∣vity, Connexion, Glands, Coats, Cornua and Body, 640, 641, 642
- Ʋterus of Birds, and of its situation, Coats, Glands, &c. 644, 645
- The Coats of the Ʋterus of Fish, the Chorion and Amnios, 658
- The Figure of the Ʋterus or Womb in little Worms, 660
- The Ʋmbilical Vessels of Plants, 672
- The Ʋvula is Composed of a Glandulous sub∣stance & of its use according to D. Holder, 222
W.
- THe Weight of the Body is equally received on both Limbs in an erected posture, by the Muscles put into a Tonick motion, 113
- Whispering, 237
- Wind and its Causes, 177
- Winds have their Origen from various Exha∣lations, 34
- Wind receiveth its different sort from variety of Vapours, 173
- Wind how it is produced, 174
- Wind proceeding from exalted Vapours caused by an intrinsick heat, 174
- The Wind-pipe, 810, 811, 812
- Of the Larynx or Head of the Wind-pipe, and of its Figure, Composition, the Buckler Cartilage; and its four processes 813, and the Muscles of the Larynx, and the several Cartilages, 814
- The Wind-pipe of other Animals, 816
- The Wind-pipe of Birds, 817, 818
- The Wind-pipe of Fish, 819
- The Wind-pipe of less perfect Animals, 820
- Wine contributes to the Concoction of Aliment, 310
- Wine turneth acide in the Stomach when its parts are brought to a Fluor, Ibid.
- Wine is kept sweet by its united saline and sulphureous parts, 310
- Wine resembleth the Heterogeneous parts of Blood, when extraneous Ingredients are cast into it, 1204
- Wine and Blood are debased, when their active, and spirituous principles are over∣powred by gross ferments, 1204
- Wine and Blood are dispirited by too great an Ef∣fervescense caused by exalted Oily Particles, and Wine and Blood turn Acid, when the saline parts overact the sulphureous, Ibid.
- Wine and Blood grow Mucilagenous as over fermented, 1205
- The Wing of Birds is extended and expanded by Muscles called Tensors, and the various Motions of the Wings, 948
- Woman and the end of her making and man∣ner of Production, 510
- The first Woman full of Beauty and perfection, Ib.
- A Woman Created to propagate Mankind, 559
- Woman is Created after Gods Image and full of Beauty and Vertue, Ibid.
- Wombs seated about the Seeds of Plants, 668
- Wombs of Plants are furnished with variety of Vessels, 671
- Cells of the Womb in Plants are filled with Congulated Liquor, 671
- The Motion of the Womb upward is improbable, 575
- The Diseases of the Womb are Inflammations, Abscesses, Ʋlcers, Gangreens, Cancers, Drop∣sies, &c. and their Cures.
- The Womb is not carried upwards in Hy∣sterick Fits, 612
- Diseases of the Womb, or Hystorick Fits at∣tributed by Sylvius to the Pancreas, 613
- Wood is a Compage made of many small Tubes, 31
- Words, 236
Y.
- YArd or Penis, its Situation, Figure, Stru∣cture, Nervous Bodies and their Fi∣bres, Progress, and dimensions, 534
- The Yards spungy substance, 535
- The Arterys of the Yard lacerated by strong Compression, 535
- The Glans of the Yard and its spungy substance, 536
- The Prepuce of the Yard, and its Fraenum and Connexion, 537
- The Muscles of the Yard, called Erectores, and Acceleratores Urinae, 537
- Erection of the Yard, and its cause and man∣ner how it is performed, 538
- Diseases of the Yard, Distortion, Priapisme, Inflammation, Ʋlcer, Gangreen, and Mor∣tification, and their Cures, 557, 558
The End of the Second Volume.