Platerus golden practice of physick: fully and plainly discovering, I. All the kinds. II. The several causes of every disease. III. Their most proper cures, in respect to the kinds, and several causes, from whence they come. After a new, easie, and plain method; of knowing, foretelling, preventing, and curing, all diseases incident to the body of man. Full of proper observations and remedies: both of ancient and modern physitians. In three books, and five tomes, or parts. Being the fruits of one and thirty years travel: and fifty years practice of physick. By Felix Plater, chief physitian and professor in ordinary at Basil. Abdiah Cole, doctor of physick, and the liberal arts. Nich. Culpeper, gent. student in physick, and astrology.

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Title
Platerus golden practice of physick: fully and plainly discovering, I. All the kinds. II. The several causes of every disease. III. Their most proper cures, in respect to the kinds, and several causes, from whence they come. After a new, easie, and plain method; of knowing, foretelling, preventing, and curing, all diseases incident to the body of man. Full of proper observations and remedies: both of ancient and modern physitians. In three books, and five tomes, or parts. Being the fruits of one and thirty years travel: and fifty years practice of physick. By Felix Plater, chief physitian and professor in ordinary at Basil. Abdiah Cole, doctor of physick, and the liberal arts. Nich. Culpeper, gent. student in physick, and astrology.
Author
Platter, Felix, 1536-1614.
Publication
London :: printed by Peter Cole, printer and book-seller, at the sign of the Printing-press in Cornhill, near the Royal Exchange,
1664.
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Subject terms
Medicine
Link to this Item
http://name.umdl.umich.edu/A90749.0001.001
Cite this Item
"Platerus golden practice of physick: fully and plainly discovering, I. All the kinds. II. The several causes of every disease. III. Their most proper cures, in respect to the kinds, and several causes, from whence they come. After a new, easie, and plain method; of knowing, foretelling, preventing, and curing, all diseases incident to the body of man. Full of proper observations and remedies: both of ancient and modern physitians. In three books, and five tomes, or parts. Being the fruits of one and thirty years travel: and fifty years practice of physick. By Felix Plater, chief physitian and professor in ordinary at Basil. Abdiah Cole, doctor of physick, and the liberal arts. Nich. Culpeper, gent. student in physick, and astrology." In the digital collection Early English Books Online 2. https://name.umdl.umich.edu/A90749.0001.001. University of Michigan Library Digital Collections. Accessed June 14, 2024.

Pages

The Causes.

The Membranes only are sensible, * 1.1 which are about the Cavities and the pain is from them, either from the Membrane most outward, before the drum, or from that within, be∣hind the drum, being dilated by the Nerve; and then the pain is with noise. The Diseases that cause this pain in the Membranes are cold or hot distemper or Ma∣lignant, a stretching, or manifest hurt of the Mem∣brane.

A hot distemper causeth itching in the Ears, * 1.2 but an Inflamation causeth pain, that is pricking, beating or shooting with burning. This pain is as the blood that flowes thither is hotter, or more inflamed. And they have a little feaver with shivering and with Head-ach. And when the Inflammation turnes to an impostume the pain encreaseth, and when it breaks the pain ceaseth, and bloody matter comes first, then concocted or discoulered: this matter retai∣ned causeth itching and new pain, and corrupting caus∣eth worms somtimes. We thought this matter had come from an Ulcer without the canal of the Eare, because the Ear being pressed near therto, it came forth. The cause of this hot distemper is either pains from outward injuries, that causeth the defluxion into the part: or fulness and heat of blood in the Veins, that flows upon the part, with a Feaver and Head-ach go∣ing afore.

A cold distemper from cold Air outwardly or wind disturbs the Mem∣branes in the outward Cavity of the Ear and causeth pain, * 1.3 or cold water in the Ear: It is somtimes in the in∣ward Chamber of the Ear from the defluxion of a wa∣terish humor, such as we see fall cold from the Nose, which distempers the inward Membranes.

An evil qualitie that causeth the pains in the Head and bony parts in the french Pox and other diseases, * 1.4 may hurt these Membranes in the Cavities of the Ears, and cause a pricking pain.

The itching in the outward part of the Ear or tickling comes often from irritation, * 1.5 or provokling, as from hot blood, boyling in the Vessels of these Membranes, or from matter, or chol∣lerick filth in the Ear, or other things fallen into the Ears, which chiefly offend the outward Mem∣brane.

A stretching by which these Membranes seem to be as it were pulled from the bones to which they are joy∣ned, causeth a stretching pain in the Ears, this same thing is from wind, from which there is rather a strange noise, then a pain, as we shewed in the hurt of hearing, * 1.6 except it sil the inward Chamber of hearing so that pressing the Membranes it causeth a kind of pain. Or being bred under the Membranes of both Cavities internal and external (as wind, may bred in the whol body and is most constrai∣ned between the Membranes) it cause a twiching and tearing pain, by drawing the Membranes from the bones. I have known this distension in the Ears with much pain by consent of the Membranes through the whol body, come from straining much in going to the stool, and in pissing forth a stone from the neck of the Bladder, and in great and loud Vociferation and whooping, and also in difficult Child bearing, as in one who had no pain during her travil, but in her ears. And she was dul of hearing all the time of her lying in and long after.

A manifest hurt from outward in∣juries or things fallen in or thrust into the ears, * 1.7 which prick or cut the Mem∣branes causeth pain. And if there were violence and blood comes forth, there is a mani∣fest wound; And Inflammation come, the pain is in∣creased, and the more, if an Impostume follow, which being broken, matter cometh forth.

Notes

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