Merck's 1899 Manual
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Chapter 102 : Cod-Liver Oil.
Columbin.
Digitalis: where circulation is feeble.
Eucalyptus: in place
Cod-Liver Oil.
Columbin.
Digitalis: where circulation is feeble.
Eucalyptus: in place of quinine.
Extract Malt, Dry.
Gaduol: in cachoxias.
Glycerinophosphates.
Hemo-gallol: as a highly efficacious blood-producer; non-constipating.
Hemol.
Hydrastis: in place of quinine.
Iron: in anemic subjects.
Levico Water.
Magnesium Hypophosphite.
Maltone Wines.
Manganese: alone or with iron.
Morphine: subcutaneously, if due to onanism or hysteria.
Nux Vomica: most powerful general tonic.
Orexine: for building up nutrition when appet.i.te lacking.
Pota.s.sium Hypophosphite.
Quinine: general tonic.
Sanguinaria: when gastric digestion is feeble.
Sarsaparilla: if syphilitic taint is present.
Sea-bathing: in chronic illness with debility.
Sodium a.r.s.enate.
Turkish Baths: if due to tropical climate, with caution; in townspeople, when they become stout and flabby.
~Decubitus.~--_See Bed-Sore._
~Delirium.~--_See also, Cerebral Congestion, Fever, Mania._
Acetanilid.
Alcohol: when delirium is due to exhaustion.
Antimony: along with opium in fever, such as typhus.
Baths, Cold: in fever.
Belladonna: in the delirium of typhus.
Blisters: in delirium due to an irritant poison, and not to exhaustion.
Bromides.
Camphor: in 20 grn. doses every two or three hours in low muttering delirium.
Camphor, Mon.o.brom.
Cannabis Indica: in nocturnal delirium occurring in softening of the brain.
Chloral Hydrate: in violent delirium of fevers.
Cold Douche: place patient in warm bath while administered.
Hyoscyamus.
Morphine: hypodermically.
Musk: in the delirium of low fever, and in ataxic pneumonia of drunkards with severe nervous symptoms.
Opium: with tartar emetic.
Quinine.
Stramonium.
Valerian: in the delirium of adynamic fevers.
~Delirium Tremens.~--_See also, Alcoholism._
Acetanilid.
Acid, Succinic.