id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt miua.2187904.0001.001 Peters, John C. A treatise on apoplexy: with an appendix on softening of the brain, and paralysis. Based on Th. J. Rückert's Clinical experience in homoeopathy. By John C. Peters, M.D. 1853 .txt text/plain 30341 1603 66 frequent occurrence in Apoplexy, is the rupture of a bloodvessel in, or about the brain; and the result in recovery or death gives the case of a man seized with Apoplexy, while crossing a river in an open boat, keeping his eyes fixed upon a senses, wholly unconscious of surrounding objects, his countenance livid, the vessels of the face and head turgid with blood, WEST gives the case of a child attacked with diarrhoea, producing great exhaustion; and while suffering from this affection, he suddenly became comatose, cold and almost pulseless, sopor; in a family of six persons, four of whom were children, it caused pain in the pit of the stomach, a sense of impending suffocation, and violent efforts to vomit; which symptoms did not commence, in any case, under twelve hours after CASE 14.-An old man, aged 84, remained in the following state, on the third day after an attack of Apoplexy. ./cache/miua.2187904.0001.001.pdf ./txt/miua.2187904.0001.001.txt