the perineum. The child by its own gravity, had fallen, until the resisting perineum checked it. The bulging tumour was, of course, the unruptured amnion. Slight twitchings of single muscle were noticed. In fifteen or twenty minutes, she complained of sharp pains, running from before backwards and upwards (very marked in Gelsemium). Hence the medicine was discontinued.
The pulse increased to 80, and genuine pains began to announce the distension of the perineum. The labour was successfully terminated. One month later, no traces of albuminuria were to be found. In a subsequent conversation, the patient related that, at times, when in her dreamy state, she had felt, as though her head was ‘growing big’. Such ominous symptoms may well lead one to fear puerperal convulsions.
E.A. Farrington Case of intermittent fever
The patient got a little cold on Feb. 21, 1896. Next day at about 2 p.m. the patient got fever. There was no well marked chill during the commencement of the fever but great heat lasted throughout the night. On the next morning the temperature was slightly above the normal point. The next paroxysm began at about 2p.m. before the complete pyrexia of the previous one and the temperature was high throughout the night and the next day with considerable fall towards the morning.
The fever had perfect remission at 7:30 p.m. During these three days the fever was of a simple continued type and a few doses of Belladonna, Bryonia and Nux Vomica were administered according to symptoms and circumstances. The fever was not checked by the remedies and took an intermittent type.
On Thursday morning at about 9 a.m. the patient got fever with slight ague. At 1:30 p.m. temperature was 104°F. Pulse very hard