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Cote : 43148x01.
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Exemplaire numérisé : BIU Santé (Paris)
Nombre de pages : 248
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 [page blanche]  
 I  [Page de titre]
 II  
 III  Preface
 IV  
 V  
 VI  
 VII  Dedication to their excellencies the directors of affaires in the East Indies
 VIII  
 IX  
 X  
 XI  Contents
 XII  
 XIII  
 XIV  
 XV  
 XVI  
 1  Chapter I : Of a particular kind of Palsy, called, The Barbiers
 2  
 3  
 4  
 5  
 6  
 7  Chapter II : Of the Spasm
 8  
 9  
 10  
 11  
 12  
 13  
 14  Chapter III : Of fluxes of the belly ; and first of the true dysentery
 15  
 16  
 17  
 18  
 19  Chapter IV : Of the hepatic flux
 20  
 21  
 22  Chapter V : Of the tenesmus
 23  
 24  
 25  
 26  Chapter VI : Of the cholera morbus
 27  
 28  
 29  
 30  Chapter VII : Of the diseases of the Liver : and first of obstruction, and inflammation
 31  
 32  
 33  
 34  
 35  Chap. VIII : Of an imposthume in the Liver, and the cure of it
 36  
 37  Chapter IX : Of the dropsy, a disease very frequent in the Indies
 38  
 39  
 40  
 41  
 42  
 43  Chapter X : Of the Jaundice in the Indies
 44  
 45  
 46  
 47  
 48  Chapter XI : Of an atrophy
 49  
 50  
 51  
 52  Chap. XII : Of some of the disorders of the lungs, which are common in this country, and first of the Haemoptoe, or spitting of blood ; and the consumption, or ulcer of the lungs
 53  
 54  
 55  
 56  
 57  
 58  Chap. XIII : Of the Empyema, and fluctuation of purulent matter in the cavity of the thorax
 59  
 60  
 61  Chap. XIV : Of fevers in the Indies
 62  
 63  
 64  
 65  Chap. XV : Of certain fevers, which the inhabitants call tymorenses, peculiar to the Indies
 66  
 67  
 68  
 69  
 70  
 71  Chap. XVI : Of blindness, and a weakness of sight, to which those are liable who sail to Amboyna, and the Molucca Islands, and in the circumjacent friths
 72  
 73  
 74  Chap. XVII : Of the herpes, or a species of the Indian impetigo, which the inhabitants call a cowrap
 75  
 76  
 77  
 78  
 79  Chapter XVIII : Of red pimples, or wheals, vulgarly called in Holland het Rootvont, and troublesome flea-bites
 80  
 81  
 82  Chap. XIX : Of Tophi, Gummata, and ulcerations, endemic in the Island of Amboyna, and especially the moluccas ; which the Dutch call d'Amboynse pochen
 83  
 84  
 85  Some select observations taken from the dissection of dead bodies, and tending to throw light on the diseases above treated of. Observation I : of a person who died of the spasm
 86  
 87  Observation II : Of a person who laboured under an empyema and consumption
 88  Observation III : Of one who died of the dysentery / Observation IV : Of a man whose lungs were full of purulent matter
 89  Observation V : Of a person cured of an empyema
 90  Observation VI : Of a remarkable fracture of the skull
 91  
 92  Observation VII : Of a chronical and complicated disorder
 93  Observation VIII : Of a man in whom the vena cava was filled with a fat and medullary substance in place of blood
 94  
 95  Observation IX : Of an imposthum in the liver / Observation X : Of a wound of the head, where the skull was falsely imagined to be cleft
 96  
 97  Observation XI : Of a suffocating catarrh in his excellency John Peter Coën, Esq., governour general in the Indies
 98  
 99  Observation XII : Of a person who died of a wound in the breast
 100  
 101  Some select observations on epidemic diseases in the Indies. Observation I : Of an epidemic dysentery
 102  Observation II : Of the same epidemic dysentery
 103  Observation III : Of an ardent fever, dysentery, malignant ulcers, &c.
 104  Observation IV : An inquiry, whether epidemic and pestilential diseases rage in the east indies
 105  
 106  
 107  Dialogues on the preservation of health, and on the diet most suitable in the Indies. Dialogue I : Of the qualities of the air, the seasons of the year, the times of the day, and the winds most common in the Indies
 108  
 109  
 110  
 111  
 112  
 113  
 114  
 115  
 116  
 117  Dialogue II : Of meat and drink : particulary flesh, and fish
 118  
 119  
 120  
 121  
 122  
 123  
 124  
 125  
 126  
 127  
 128  Dialogue III : Of Rice and bread in the Indies. Of drink, wine, and arrac. Of drink made of water, sugar and tamarinds. Of natural liquors drawn from trees
 129  
 130  
 131  
 132  
 133  
 134  
 135  
 136  
 137  Dialogue IV : Of natural drinks taken from trees, called in India Toruvat and Saguër, and of the liquor contained in the Indian nut
 138  
 139  Dialogue V : Of aromatics, and their use - where some things, imperfectly treated of by Garcias ab orta and other writers, are explained
 140  
 141  
 142  
 143  
 144  
 145  
 146  Dialogue VI : Of fruits
 147  
 148  
 149  
 150  
 151  
 152  
 153  
 154  
 155  Dialogue VII : Of pot-herbs, pulse, and some esculent roots in India
 156  
 157  
 158  
 159  Dialogue VIII : Of exercice, sleep and watching, blood-lettinh, purging, and the passions of the mind
 160  
 161  
 162  
 163  
 164  
 165  Animadversions on garcias ab orta
 166  
 167  To my most dearly beloved brother William Bontus, burgo-master of Leyden
 168  
 169  
 170  
 171  Animadversions on garcias ab orta. On the first book of Garcias ab Orta. On chapter III : Of altiht, or asa foetida, called hin by the Javans and Malaians
 172  
 173  On chapter IV : Of opium
 174  
 175  
 176  On chapter V : Of gum benzoin
 177  
 178  
 179  On chapter VIII : Of lack
 180  On chapter XIII : Of tutty
 181  
 182  On chapter XIV : Of Ivory, and the Rhinoceros
 183  
 184  
 185  
 186  On chapter XVI : Of agallochum, or aloes-wood, called by the Indians Calambac
 187  
 188  On chapter XVII : Of saunders
 189  
 190  On chapter XVIII : Of betele pynang & sirii poa
 191  
 192  
 193  On chapter XX : Of Mace
 194  
 195  On chapter XXII : Of pepper
 196  
 197  On chapter XXIV : Of cardamoms
 198  
 199  On chapter XXVI : Of the cocoa nut
 200  On chapter XXVII : Of myrobalans
 201  On chapter XXVIII : Of tamarinds
 202  On chapter XXIX : Of the pudding-pipe tree
 203  
 204  On chapter XXXII : Of calamus aromaticus, or the sweet flag
 205  On chapter XXXIII : Of nard
 206  
 207  On chapter XXXV : Of costus
 208  
 209  On chapter XXXIX : Of indian saffron, or turmeric
 210  
 211  On chapter XL : Of Galangal
 212  On chapter XLIV : Of snake-wood
 213  
 214  On chapter XLV : Of the bezoar stone
 215  
 216  
 217  
 218  
 219  On chapter XLVI : Of the hog-stone
 220  
 221  
 222  
 223  Animadversions on the second book of Garcias ab Orta. On chapter I : Of the tree called Pariz
 224  
 225  On chapter III : Of Negundi and Lagondi, or Eastern privet
 226  
 227  
 228  On chapter IV : Of the Jaaca fruit
 229  On chapter V : Of Jangomas
 230  On chapter XV : Of the carambola
 231