Asiatic Cholera: A treatise on its origin, pathology, treatment, and cure

audiobook

Asiatic Cholera: A treatise on its origin, pathology, treatment, and cure

by Elijah Whitney, A. B. Whitney

EN·~3 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total

[p.1a] ASIATIC CHOLERA

0:37

[p.3a] DEDICATION. TO PROFESSORS POST, VAN BUREN, METCALF, AND BEDFORD.

0:51

[p.5a] PREFACE.

1:54

ASIATIC CHOLERA. - CHAPTER I. - Section I.—Origin and Development.

39:45

CHAPTER II. - Section I.—Pathology.

20:17

CHAPTER III. - Section I.—Unsuccessful Modes of Treatment—Venous Transfusion Explained.

1:59:18

CHAPTER IV. - Section I.—General Principle of Rational Practice—Dictated by the Pathology of the Disease—Confirmed by Observation and Experience.

35:30

FORMULÆ FOR SOME OF THE PREPARATIONS USED IN THE ABOVE RECIPES.

2:06

FOOTNOTES:

0:41

Transcriber's Notes:

4:09

Description

This nineteenth‑century medical treatise opens with a careful survey of cholera’s long, shadowy history, tracing its outbreaks from ancient Egypt to the devastating epidemics of Marseille and the plague‑ridden Middle Ages. The authors, both trained physicians, set out to untangle the disease’s mysterious origin by examining half a century of European and Indian reports, highlighting the stark mortality figures that made cholera “the most acute of acute diseases.” Their dedication to rigorous observation is evident as they sift through competing theories, from prevailing “remedial agents” to emerging ideas about pathology.

The work then moves into a systematic analysis of cholera’s physiological effects, presenting concise statistics and illustrations drawn from leading medical schools of the era. By contrasting the various schools of thought and emphasizing a pathology‑driven approach, the authors aim to craft a practical, evidence‑based guide for physicians seeking more reliable treatment strategies. Listeners will gain insight into how mid‑nineteenth‑century doctors wrestled with a pandemic that still shapes public‑health thinking today.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (216K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Iris Schröder-Gehring and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2016-12-14

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

Subjects

About the authors

Elijah Whitney

Elijah Whitney

Best known for the cotton gin, this early American inventor helped reshape both Southern agriculture and the way manufactured goods were made in the United States. His story sits at the crossroads of invention, industry, and the complicated legacy of slavery in America.

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A. B. Whitney

A. B. Whitney

Known today for a rare 19th-century medical work on cholera, this little-documented writer appears as co-author of a detailed treatise on one of the era’s most feared diseases. The surviving record is thin, which gives the book an added sense of historical curiosity.

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