Ars chirurgica a compendium of the theory and practice of chirurgery in seven books ... shewing the names, causes, signs, differences, prognosticks, and various intentions of curing all kinds of chirurgick diseases ... : to which is added Pharmacopoeia chirurgica, or, The medical store, Latin and English ... / by William Salmon ...

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Title
Ars chirurgica a compendium of the theory and practice of chirurgery in seven books ... shewing the names, causes, signs, differences, prognosticks, and various intentions of curing all kinds of chirurgick diseases ... : to which is added Pharmacopoeia chirurgica, or, The medical store, Latin and English ... / by William Salmon ...
Author
Salmon, William, 1644-1713.
Publication
London : Printed for J. Dawks ... and sold by S. Sprint [and 6 others] ...,
M.DC.XCVIII [1698]
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Subject terms
Medicine -- 15th-18th centuries.
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A60561.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Ars chirurgica a compendium of the theory and practice of chirurgery in seven books ... shewing the names, causes, signs, differences, prognosticks, and various intentions of curing all kinds of chirurgick diseases ... : to which is added Pharmacopoeia chirurgica, or, The medical store, Latin and English ... / by William Salmon ..." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A60561.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 5, 2024.

Pages

I. Salivation by Internals.

LXVII. The gentlest of all in∣ternal Salivatories is Mercurius dulcis, which may be given à ℈ j, ad ʒ ss, or ℈ ij. every night going to bed, till such time as the Flux begins to rise; then you must cease, till you see how it comes forward: if it rises well, give no more, if not, advance another Dose; and be sure you wait so long, till you see there can be no danger upon the exhibition thereof.

LXVIII. The next to this is Turpethum Minerale, then Au∣rum Vitae, and after, Arcanum Corallinum, white Precipitate, red Precipitate, the Princes Pou∣der, and Precipitate per se, to which you may add Arcanum Jovis; but this last, because it operates slowly, must be given longer, and sometimes to gr. x, xij, or more: all, or any of these which you shall make choice of, must be used with the same Caution which we gave in the preceding Section, concerning Mercurius dulcis. See more of this way, in the Third Edition of Our Synopsis Medi∣cinae, lib. 6. cap. 6. sect. 156, ad Sect. 120.

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