Diseases and Medical Terms in Old Documents
Use this table to help interpret older medical records and other documents citing unfamiliar medical terms.
| Term
| Definition
|
| Abscess
| An Abcess forms when pus accumulates in a localized area of the body.
An abcess is caused by infection from bacteria, viruses, parasites, and
fungi. The infection becomes swollen, tender and inflamed and there may be
associated fever and chills. An abcess can be the result of an injury, and
it can be internal or external. Some abcesses are removed through surgery.
|
| Acute Mania
| Insanity.
|
| Addison's Disease
| A disease characterized by severe weakness, low blood pressure,
gastrointestinal problems and a brownish pigmentation of the skin
resulting from the decreased secretion of cortisol from the adrenal gland.
|
| Ague
| Malarial or intermittent fever characterized by stages of chills,
fever, and sweating at regularly recurring times and followed by an
interval or intermission of varying duration. Also called fever and ague,
chill fever, the shakes, and swamp fever.
|
| Ague-cake
| Enlargement of the spleen, resulting from the effects of malaria.
|
| American Plague
| American Plague, also called Yellow Fever, is a viral disease
transmitted to man by a specific type of mosquito, Aedes aegypti. This
mosquito type is commonly found in the tropical forests of South America
and Africa. Both the Aedes mosquito and the yellow fever virus must be
present together to spread the disease. |
| Anasarca
| Generalized massive dropsy, also known as adema. It is the
accumulation of fluid in the body; it may affect all parts of the body
although it commonly occurs in the feet and ankles. The bloating and
swelling causes muscle aches and pains. Edema may be caused by allergies
or disorders of the kidney, bladder, heart, or liver.
|
| Anemia
| Anemia occurs when the blood's ability to carry oxygen is reduced. A
low red blood cell count will manifest as weakness, dizziness,paleness,
depression, instability, soreness of mouth, and amennorhea. The mineral
iron is critical because iron makes hemoglobin, which is the
oxygen-carrying component of blood. Without sufficient iron intake, the
function of rbc's will be impaired. Anemia can be difficult to recognize
but the first symptoms might include loss of appetite, headaches,
constipation, irritability, and difficulty with concentration.
|
| Aphonia
| Aphonia, also called laryngitis, exists when a person has no voice or
has lost their voice due to an inflammation of the larynx.
|
| Apoplexy
| Apoplexy results in a sudden loss of consciousness followed by
paralysis caused by hemorrhage into the brain, formation of an embolus or
thrombus, that occludes an artery, or rupture of an extracerebral artery
causing subarachnoid hemorrhage. Symptoms: Onset is acute.
Unconsciousness. Labored breathing due to paralysis of portion of the soft
palate; expiration puffs out the cheeks and mouth. Pupils sometimes
unequal, the larger one being on the side of the hemorrhage. Paralysis
usually involves one side of the body, with eyeballs turned away from the
affected side, skin covered with clay sweat, surface temperature of the
skin is often subnormal; speech disturbances. Onset more gradual if caused
by a thrombosis.
|
| Aphthae
| Thrush is a disease characterized by whitish spots and ulcers on the
membranes of the mouth, tongue, and fauces caused by a parasitic fungus.
Also called aphthae, sore mouth, aphthous stomatitis.
|
| Aphthous stomatitis
| These are painful mouth ulcerations that appear on the tongue, inside
the cheeks, and on the lips and gums. They have white centers with a red
border, and their size can be as large as a quarter. They usually appear
and leave quickly (4 to 20 days). Triggers include: stress, food
allergies, poor dental hygiene, and fatigue.
|
| Ascites
| Ascites is another term for dropsy, also known as adema. It is the
accumulation of fluid in the body; it may affect all parts of the body
although it commonly occurs in the feet and ankles. The bloating and
swelling causes muscle aches and pains. Edema may be caused by allergies
or disorders of the kidney, bladder, heart, or liver.
|
| Asthenia
| Abnormal bodily weakness or feebleness; decay of strength. This was a
term descriptive of a patient's condition and of no help in making a
diagnosis. Also called asthenia.
|
| Bad Blood
| An old term for syphilis, which is an infectious venereal disease.
Untreated, it can ultimately lead to the degeneration of bones, heart,
nerve tissue, etc. In earlier centuries syphilis commonly reached the
third stage, which is rare today, and caused brain damage, hearing loss,
heart disease, and/or blindness occur.
|
| Bilious fever
| Another term used in place of typhus, which is an acute, infectious
disease transmitted by lice and fleas. Symptoms include headache,
arthralgia and myalgia, chills, high fever, falling blood pressure,
stupor, delirium, rash that begins on chest and spreads to rest of trunk
and extremities The early rash is faint and rose colored and fades with
pressure. Later the lesions become dull red and do not fade. People with
severe typhus may also develop petechiae. Also called typhus fever,
malignant fever, jail fever, hospital fever, putrid fever, ship fever,
brain fever, bilious fever, spotted fever, and camp fever. It is also a
term loosely applied to other intestinal and malarial fevers.
|
| Biliousness
| Biliousness is a condition in which the bile (which is very bitter) is
brought up to the mouth from the stomach.
|
| Black Death
| Another term used to indicate Bubonic plague, a disease that has had a
major impact on the history of the world. Caused by the bacterium,
Yersinia pestis, and transmitted by fleas often found on rats, bubonic
plague has killed over 50 million people over the centuries. Burrowing
rodent populations across the world keep the disease present in the world
today. Outbreaks, though often small, still occur in many places. The use
of antibiotics and increased scientific knowledge first gained in the
1890s have reduced the destruction of plague outbreaks. In Medieval times,
with the unknowing help of humans, bubonic plague exploded into a
pandemic. Known as the ³Black Death², it decimated Europe in 1350, killing
1/3 of the population. It disrupted government, trade, and commerce. It
reshaped people¹s perspectives on life and Christianity, and found
expression in many works of art. Bubonic plague¹s influence and effects
have shaped events of the past and part of our world today.
|
| Blood Poisoning
| Blood poisoning, also called Septicemia is when toxins or
disease-causing bacteria begin growing in the blood.
|
| Boil
| A boil may also be called a furuncle. It appears as a tender,
pus-filled area of skin that appears suddenly. Symptoms of boil formation
include: itching, mild pain, and localized swelling. The nearest lymph
glands to the boil also becomes swollen. Causes include: bacterial
infection, stress, illness, decreased immunity, toxicity, allergy, and
thyroid imbalance. A carbuncle is a cluster of boils which have spread
through infection.
|
| Brain Fever
| Meningitis is an infection of the three membranes, the meninges, that
lie between the brain and the skull. The disease is contagious. It can be
caused by poor nutrition and any number of viruses such as poliomyelitis
and measles, fungi including yeast, or bacteria like meningococcus,
pneumococcus, streptococcus, and tuberculosis. It may result from severe
infection of the nose and throat or spread through the bloodstream. It is
more common in children than adults. Early symptoms are: sore throat, red
or purple skin rash, and signs of a previous, recent respiratory disorder.
Other classic symptoms include stiff neck, headache, high fever, chills,
nausea, vomiting, delirium, and sensitivity to light. Change in
temperament and sleepiness signal changes in the cerebral fluid and
frequently precede coma and death. An acute, infectious disease
transmitted by lice and fleas. The epidemic or classic form is louse
borne; the endemic or murine is flea borne.
|
| Bronchial asthma
| Asthma is caused by the spasms in the smooth muscles surrounding the
bronchi and bronchioles (small airways in the lungs), causing the
passageways to partially close. The spasms are accompanied with increased
mucus which clogs the bronchioles/bronchi and worsens the attack. It is
triggered by an allergic response and the immune system produces
histamine; thus, any type of allergen can precipitate an asthma attack. It
results in difficulty breathing (especially exhalation), coughing,
wheezing, and a tight chest. This above condition is specifically known as
bronchial asthma. Cardiac asthma is the result of a heart malfunction.
|
| Bubonic Plague
| Bubonic plague has had a major impact on the history of the world.
Caused by the bacterium, Yersinia pestis, and transmitted by fleas often
found on rats, bubonic plague has killed over 50 million people over the
centuries. Burrowing rodent populations across the world keep the disease
present in the world today. Outbreaks, though often small, still occur in
many places. The use of antibiotics and increased scientific knowledge
first gained in the 1890s have reduced the destruction of plague
outbreaks. In Medieval times, with the unknowing help of humans, bubonic
plague exploded into a pandemic. Known as the ³Black Death², it decimated
Europe in 1350, killing 1/3 of the population. It disrupted government,
trade, and commerce. It reshaped people¹s perspectives on life and
Christianity, and found expression in many works of art. Bubonic plague¹s
influence and effects have shaped events of the past and part of our world
today.
|
| Camp fever
| An acute, infectious disease transmitted by lice and fleas. The
epidemic or classic form is louse borne; the endemic or murine is flea
borne. Also called typhus fever, malignant fever (in the 1850s), jail
fever, hospital fever, ship fever, putrid fever, brain fever, bilious
fever, spotted fever, petechial fever, camp fever.
|
| Cancer
| A malignant and invasive growth or tumor. In the nineteenth century,
cancerous tumors tended to ulcerate, grew constantly, and progressed to a
fatal end and that there was scarcely a tissue they would not invade. Also
called a malignant growth, carcinoma.
|
| Cancrum otis
| A severe, destructive, eroding ulcer of the cheek and lip. In the last
century it was seen in delicate, ill-fed, ill-tended children between the
ages of two and five. The disease was the result of poor hygiene. It was
often fatal. The disease could, in a few days, lead to gangrene of the
lips, cheeks, tonsils, palate, tongue, and even half the face; teeth would
fall from their sockets. Synonyms: canker, water canker, noma, gangrenous
stomatitis, gangrenous ulceration of the mouth.
|
| Canine Madness
| Hydorphobia.
|
| Canker
| An ulcerous sore of the mouth and lips, not considered fatal today.
|
| Carditis
| Inflammation of the heart wall.
|
| Catalepsy
| Similar to a catatonic state, catalepsy occurs when a subject freezes
in almost any abnormal posture in which he or she is placed (waxy
flexibility). In earlier centuries observers thought they were seized or
in a trance.
|
| Catarrh
| Inflammation of a mucous membranes in the air passages of the head and
throat Bronchial catarrh was bronchitis; suffocative catarrh was croup;
urethral catarrh was gleet; vaginal catarrh was leukorrhea; epidemic
catarrh was the same as influenza. Also called cold, coryza.
|
| Chlorosis
| iron deficiency anemia
|
| Cholera
| An acute, infectious disease characterized by profuse diarrhea,
vomiting, and cramps. Cholera is spread by feces-contaminated water and
food.
|
| Cholera infantum
| A common, noncontagious diarrhea of young children, occurring in
summer or autumn. It was common among the poor and in hand-fed babies.
Death frequently occurred in three to five days. Also called: summer
complaint, weaning brash, water gripes, choleric fever of children,
cholera morbus.
|
| Chorea
| Any of several diseases of the nervous system, characterized by jerky
movements that appear to be well coordinated but are performed
involuntarily, chiefly of the face and extremities. Also called: Saint
Vitus' Dance.
|
| Chlorosis
| A form a anemia in which there is a serious iron deficency. The iron
in blood helps carry oxygen to all the tissues in the body. Without this
iron, the body can’t use the oxygen you breathe. Iron is an important part
of hemoglobin, a compound in red blood cells that carries oxygen from the
lungs to the rest of the body and returns carbon dioxide, a waste product
from the rest of the body, to the lungs where it is breathed out. When
someone is anemic, they don’t have enough red blood cells. The most common
cause of anemia is not having enough iron to form a normal amount of
hemoglobin.
|
| Cholera
| Aacute gastro-intestinal infection caused by the bacterium Vibrio
cholerae. It has a short incubation period of one to five days and causes
watery diarrhoea leading to severe dehydration and death if treatment is
not provided rapidly. Vomiting occurs in most cases. However, less than 10
percent of the infected suffer moderate or severe dehydration and most
never develop the full symptoms. Cholera is spread through contaminated
water and food.
|
| Chorea
| A nervous disorcer. Also called St. Vitus' Dance
|
| Colic
| Paroxysmal pain in the abdomen or bowels. Infantile colic is benign
paroxysmal abdominal pain during the first three months of life. Colic
rarely caused death. Renal colic can occur from disease in the kidney,
gallstone colic from a stone in the bile duct.
|
| Congestion
| An excessive or abnormal accumulation of blood or other fluid in a
body part or blood vessel. In congestive fever the internal organs become
gorged with blood.
|
| Congestive Fever
| Another term for malaria, which is an acute and sometimes chronic
infectious disease due to the presence of protozoan parasites within red
blood cells. These parasites are discharged through salivary ducts when
the mosquito bites a person. The causative organism is transmitted through
bites of infected female mosquitoes of the genus anopheles. Also may be
transmitted by blood transfusion. The incubation period averages 12 days
to 30 days. Symptoms: Various derangements of the digestive and nervous
systems; characterized by periodicity, chills, fever, and sweats in the
order mentioned, having pathological manifestations of progressive anemia,
splenic enlargement, and deposition in various organs of a melanin,
resulting from biological activity of the parasite.
|
| Consumption
| An old term for pulmonary tuberculosis, also called marasmus in the
mid-nineteenth century, Tuberculosis is an infectious disease that is
usually caused by the bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Infection may
result from inhalation of minute droplets of infected sputum which are
given off by coughing, talking, or sneezing. Tuberculosis most often
affects the lungs and the plurae, however, bones and kidneys may also be
affected and sometimes the intestines, spleen and liver. In most cases the
infection involves the top of the lungs, where, if the infected person is
not immune, the bacteria grow freely with in the body and spread from the
lungs to other parts of the body. Eventually the patient develops immunity
and the bacteria stop spreading. They become surrounded by scar tissue and
do not cause further damage. At a later stage, the protective layer of
scar tissue may break down. It is well established that poor nitrition is
one of the primary causes of TB in conjuntion with unsanitary living
conditions, loss of sleep, overwork and a sedentary lifestyle which all
contribute to a lowered immune system as well. SYMPTOMS: Initially
resemble influenza, which may include a cough. Mild symptoms include
fatigue and appitite and weight loss. More severe symptoms include fever,
increased perspiration or severe night sweats, chronic fatigue, continued
weight loss, chest pain, shortness of breath and infected urine. In
advanced cases, coughing up blood is initially seen.
|
| Convulsions
| Severe contortion of the body caused by violent, involuntary muscular
contractions of the extremities, trunk, and head.
|
| Corruption
| An old term for an infection. Infection occurs when disease-causing
microorganisms (bacteria, viruses, or fungi) establis a colony in the
body. They begin to reproduce and damage the other cells of the body
either directly or indirectly through the toxins released from the
microorganisms. Their presence usually elicits an immune response from the
body. Sometimes, these microorganisms spread throughout the body causing a
systemic infection; other times, the infection remains localized.
|
| Coryza
| Coryza, an old term for the common cold, is an inflammation of a
mucous membranes in the air passages of the head and throat Bronchial
catarrh was bronchitis; suffocative catarrh was croup; urethral catarrh
was gleet; vaginal catarrh was leukorrhea; epidemic catarrh was the same
as influenza.
|
| Costiveness
| Another word for constipation, a condition resulting from slow moving
wastes through the colon. Causes include: lack of fiber; lack of fluids;
side effect of iron supplements, pain killers, and antidepressants; and
pregnancy.
|
| Cramp Colic
| An old term for appendicitis, which is an inflammation of the
appendix, a small intestinal pouch that extends from the cecum, the first
part of the large intestine. The appendix has no known function, but it
can become diseased. Infection appears for unknown reasons, usually with
bacteria from the intestinal tract. The appendix may become obstructed
from contents moving through intestinal tract, or by a constricting band
of tissue. When infected, it becomes swollen, inflamed and filled with
pus. Death can result from possible complication, including a rupturing of
the appendix, abscess formation and peritonitis. This is more common in
older persons. A common cause of death in earlier centuries.
|
| Croup
| Croup is an inflammation and swelling of the larynx and surrounding
tissues. Usually due to a viral infection. There is a typical "barking"
cough and breathing may be labored. Usually affects younger children,
commonly under 6 years of age.
|
| Debility
| Abnormal bodily weakness or feebleness; decay of strength. This was a
term descriptive of a patient's condition and of no help in making a
diagnosis. Also called asthenia.
|
| Diphtheria
| An acute infectious disease acquired by contact with an infected
person or a carrier of the disease. It was usually confined to the upper
respiratory tract (throat) and characterized by the formation of a tough
membrane (false membrane) attached firmly to the underlying tissue that
would bleed if forcibly removed. In the nineteenth century the disease was
occasionally confused with scarlet fever and croup.
|
| Diverticulitis
| This condition is characterized by small, pouch-like formations of the
large intestine formed when the mucous membranes of the colon become
inflamed. These pouches, or diverticula, often form with constipation and
they cause symptoms when the waste matter becomes trapped in the pouches,
which then become infected and inflamed. Poor diet and stress are major
contrbuters to diverticulitis. Symptoms include: cramping, tenderness on
the left side of the abdomen which is relieved with a bowel movement or
with passing gas, constipation, diarrhea, and nausea.
|
| Dropsy
| Dropsy, also known as adema, it is the accumulation of fluid in the
body; it may affect all parts of the body although it commonly occurs in
the feet and ankles. The bloating and swelling causes muscle aches and
pains. Edema may be caused by allergies or disorders of the kidney,
bladder, heart, or liver.
|
| Dysentery
| Dysentery describes a group of infections characterized by
inflammation of the small and large intestine with diarrhea often
containing blood. The two main types are amoebic dysentery of the tropics
and bacillary dysentery which occurs throughout the world.
|
| Dysepsia
| Acid indigestion.
|
| Eclampsia
| The occurrence of seizures that are not attributed to another cause
during pregnancy (usually in the 3rd trimester).
|
| Effluvia
| Exhalations. In the mid-nineteenth century, they were called "vapours"
and distinguished into the contagious effluvia, such as rubeolar
(measles); marsh effluvia, such as miasmata.
|
| Emphysema
| A chronic, irreversible disease of the lungs.
|
| Enteric fever
| Typhoid fever An infectious, often-fatal disease, usually occurring in
the summer months--characterized by intestinal inflammation and
ulceration. The name came from the disease's similarity to typhus. Also
called typhoid fever.
|
| Epilepsy
| Epilepsy is characterized by seizures, of which there are several
types. Seizures are caused by electrical disturbances of nerve cells in
one area of the brain. 75% of seizures begin in childhood. The cause of
epilepsy is often unknown. Some causes may include: infection, meningitis,
rickets, rabies, tetanus, malnutrition, hypoglycemia, sports injuries,
head injuries, fevers, and allergies. A disorder of the nervous system,
characterized either by mild, episodic loss of attention or sleepiness
(petittnal) or by severe convulsions with loss of consciousness. Also
called a grand mal seizure, falling sickness, fits.
|
| Erysipelas
| Erysipelas is an infection of the skin and subcutaneous tissue caused
by streptococcus. This condition causes systemic (whole body) symptoms
including fever, chills, nausea, and vomiting.
|
| Extravasted blood
| A ruptured blood vessel.
|
| Falling Sickness
| An old term used for epilepsy. Epilepsy is characterized by seizures,
of which there are several types. Seizures are caused by electrical
disturbances of nerve cells in one area of the brain. 75% of seizures
begin in childhood. The cause of epilepsy is often unknown. Some causes
may include: infection, meningitis, rickets, rabies, tetanus,
malnutrition, hypoglycemia, sports injuries, head injuries, fevers, and
allergies. A disorder of the nervous system, characterized either by mild,
episodic loss of attention or sleepiness (petittnal) or by severe
convulsions with loss of consciousness. Also called a grand mal seizure,
falling sickness, fits.
|
| Fatty Liver
| Another term for cirrhosis of the liver. Although cirrhosis is
normally associated with alcohol abuse, the term cirrhosis refers to the
replacement of liver cells by non-functioning, fibrous tissues and
shrinking of the liver, all of which occur when liver cells cease
functioning. Malnutrition, prolonged obstruction of the flow of bile,
congestive heart failure and syphilis may also lead to cirrhosis.
|
| Flux
| A term given to a number of disorders marked by inflammation of the
intestines (especially of the colon). There are two specific varieties:
(1) amebic dysentery (2) bacillary dysentery. Also called: flux, bloody
flux, contagious pyrexia (fever), frequent griping stools.
|
| French Pox
| Various forms of venereal disease.
|
| Furuncle
| An abscess of skin or painful inflammation of the skin or a hair
follicle usually caused by a staphylococcal infection. Also called a boil.
|
| Gangrene
| Gangrene is the death of tissue leading to blackness of the skin over
the affected area. There are 2 types of gangrene: dry and wet. Dry
gangrene results from low blood flow to a tissue; there is usually no
bacterial infection and it does not spread to other tissues. Possible
causes include: arteriosclerosis, diabetes mellitus, thrombosis, embolism,
poor circulation, and frostbite. Wet gangrene develops when a wound or dry
gangrene become infected by bacteria. Careful hygiene is the best
prevention for wet gangrene. Once diagnosed as wet gangrene, amputation of
the area and antibiotics may be required.
|
| Glandular Fever
| Infected glands may also be mononucleosis, known as glandular fever.
This is an acute viral infection which results in swollen lymph glands in
the neck, armpits, and groin accompanied with a severe sore throat due to
tonsillitis. Recovery with lots of rest occurs after 4-6 weeks.
|
| Gleet
| An old term for the common cold. Colds are caused by a virus that has
hundreds of different forms; the virus is always changing its shape, size
and form. A cold takes place in the upper respiratory tract. Symptoms
include: head congestion, difficulty breathing, coughing, headaches,
fever, sneezing, watery eyes, aches and pains. Stress and poor diet weaken
the immune system and contribute to the cold. Also called cold, coryza.
|
| Gout
| Gout ia hereditary metabolic disease that is a form of acute arthritis
and is marked by inflammation of the joints. Joints affected may be at any
location but gout usually begins in the knee or foot. Excessive uric acid
(hyperuricemia) in the blood and deposits of urates of sodium in and
around the joints. Several different metabolic abnormalities this
condition. Approximately 90% of gout patients are male. The peak age for
onset of symptoms in men is between 40 and 50; women rarely have gout
before menopause. Gout is closely related to the diet, but may be brought
on by stress. Obesity and an improper diet increase the tendency for gout.
Also called the "disease of kings" and "rheumatism of the rich" because of
the rich diets people consume. Symptoms: Most cases are without symptoms.
When an acute attack occurs it usually begins at night with moderate pain
that increases in intensity to the point where no body position provides
relief.
|
| Gravel
| A disease characterized by small stones which are formed in the
kidneys, passed along the ureters to the bladder, and expelled with the
urine. Also called a kidney stone.
|
| Green Sickness
| Gree sickness, an old term used to describe anemia, occurs when the
blood's ability to carry oxygen is reduced. A low red blood cell count
will manifest as weakness, dizziness,paleness, depression, instability,
soreness of mouth, and amennorhea. The mineral iron is critical because
iron makes hemoglobin, which is the oxygen-carrying component of blood.
Without sufficient iron intake, the function of rbc's will be impaired.
Anemia can be difficult to recognize but the first symptoms might include
loss of appetite, headaches, constipation, irritability, and difficulty
with concentration.
|
| Grippe
| Grippe, an old term for influenza or flu, is a highly contagious
respiratory viral infection. Spread easily by coughing, sneezing, and poor
hygiene. Symptoms: Early stages, similar to the common cold, are headache,
weakness, and aching of back, arms, and legs. Dry throat and cough, tired
quickly, loss of appetite, and sometimes nausea and vomiting. High
fatality rates from influenza ended during the 20th century.
|
| Hectic Fever
| A daily recurring fever with profound sweating, chills, and flushed
appearance-- often associated with pulmonary tuberculosis or septic
poisoning.
|
| Hives
| A skin eruption of smooth, slightly elevated areas on the skin which
is redder or paler than the surrounding skin. Often attended by severe
itching. Also called cynanche trachealis. In the mid-nineteenth century,
hives was a commonly given cause of death of children three years and
under. Because true hives does not kill, croup was probably the actual
cause of death in those children.
|
| Hospital fever
| Another term used in place of typhus, which is an acute, infectious
disease transmitted by lice and fleas. Symptoms include headache,
arthralgia and myalgia, chills, high fever, falling blood pressure,
stupor, delirium, rash that begins on chest and spreads to rest of trunk
and extremities The early rash is faint and rose colored and fades with
pressure. Later the lesions become dull red and do not fade. People with
severe typhus may also develop petechiae. Also called typhus fever,
malignant fever, jail fever, hospital fever, putrid fever, ship fever,
brain fever, bilious fever, spotted fever, and camp fever.
|
| Hydrocephalus
| A contraction for hydropsy. The presence of abnormally large amounts
of fluid. Congestive heart failure.
|
| Hydrothorax
| A contraction for hydropsy. The presence of abnormally large amounts
of fluid. Congestive heart failure.
|
| Icterus
| Icterus, also called jaundice, is the build-up of bilirubin in the
blood which causes a "yellowing" of the skin, urine, and whites of the
eyes. Jaundice is an indicator of blood or liver disorders (such as
cirrhosis, pernicious anemia, and hepatitis) or it may be a sign that
there is an obstruction (such as a tumor, gallstone or inflammation)
blocking the bile flow from the liver.
|
| Inanition
| Exhaustion from lack of nourishment; starvation.
|
| Infection
| In the early part of the last century, infections were thought to be
the propagation of disease by effluvia (see above) from patients crowded
together. "Miasms" were believed to be substances which could not be seen
in any form--emanations not apparent to the senses. Such miasms were
understood to act by infection.
|
| Inflammation
| Redness, swelling, pain, tenderness, heat, and disturbed function of
an area of the body. In the last century, cause of death often was listed
as inflammation of a body organ--such as, brain or lung--but this was
purely a descriptive term and is not helpful in identifying the actual
underlying disease.
|
| Jail fever
| Another term used in place of typhus, which is an acute, infectious
disease transmitted by lice and fleas. Symptoms include headache,
arthralgia and myalgia, chills, high fever, falling blood pressure,
stupor, delirium, rash that begins on chest and spreads to rest of trunk
and extremities The early rash is faint and rose colored and fades with
pressure. Later the lesions become dull red and do not fade. People with
severe typhus may also develop petechiae. Also called typhus fever,
malignant fever, jail fever, hospital fever, putrid fever, ship fever,
brain fever, bilious fever, spotted fever, and camp fever.
|
| Jaundice
| Jaundice, also called icterus, is the build-up of bilirubin in the
blood which causes a "yellowing" of the skin, urine, and whites of the
eyes. Jaundice is an indicator of blood or liver disorders (such as
cirrhosis, pernicious anemia, and hepatitis) or it may be a sign that
there is an obstruction (such as a tumor, gallstone or inflammation)
blocking the bile flow from the liver.
|
| Kidney Stone
| A disease characterized by small stones which are formed in the
kidneys, passed along the ureters to the bladder, and expelled with the
urine. Also called gravel.
|
| Kings Evil
| Tubercular infection of the lymph glands in the throat. Also called
scrofula. The name originated in the time of Edward the Confessor, the
king of England, when people believed that the disease could be cured by
the king's touch.
|
| La Grippe
| La Grippe, also known as influenza. A flu is a highly contagious viral
infection of the respiratory tract. It spreads easily through coughing and
sneezing. The virus continually changes; therefore, vaccinations are only
partially successful. The earlier signs of the flu are those similar for a
cold: headache, weakness, achiness of muscles and bones, alternating fever
with chills, and dry throat and cough. There may be fatigue, nausea, and
vomiting. The flu makes the person more susceptible to other more serious
conditions such as pneumonia. Influenza.
|
| Leprosy
| Also known as Hansen's disease; it is a chronic bacterial infection
that damages the nerves (especially in the limbs and facial area) and can
cause severe skin damage. If left untreated, very serious complications
occur including blindness and disfigurement. Leprosy is spread through
droplets of nasal mucus only in the first stages of the disease. Leprosy
is not highly contagious as most people believe.
|
| Lesions
| This is a broad term which refers to any abnormality of structure or
function in any body part. Examples include: wounds, infections, and
tumors.
|
| Lockjaw
| Tetanus, a disease in which the jaws become firmly locked together.
Also called trismus, tetanus.
|
| Lues
| An old term for syphilis, which is an infectious venereal disease.
Untreated, it can ultimately lead to the degeneration of bones, heart,
nerve tissue, etc. In earlier centuries syphilis commonly reached the
third stage, which is rare today, and caused brain damage, hearing loss,
heart disease, and/or blindness occur.
|
| Lues Venera
| Veneral disease.
|
| Lumbago
| Back pain. Painful inflammatory rheumatism of the muscles and tendons
of the lumbar region, which is the part of the back and sides between the
lowest ribs and the pelvis.
|
| Lung Fever
| Another term for pneumonia, which is an inflamation in the lungs
caused by different bacteria, viruses, and fungi. The tiny air sacs in the
lung area become inflamed and fill with mucus and pus. It is unlikely to
be contagious. Although symptoms can vary in intensity, they usually
include fever, chills, cough, muscle aches, fatigue, sore throat, enlarged
lymph glands in the neck, bluish nails, pains in the chest, and rapid,
difficult respiration. Typical contributing factors to pneumonia are the
common cold, influenza, seizure or stroke, aspiration under anesthesia,
alcoholism, smoking, kidney failure, sickle cell disease, malnutrition,
foreign bodies in the respiratory passages, bacteria, viruses, chemical
irritants, and even allergies.
|
| Lung Sickness
| An old term for pulmonary tuberculosis, also called marasmus in the
mid-nineteenth century, Tuberculosis is an infectious disease that is
usually caused by the bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Infection may
result from inhalation of minute droplets of infected sputum which are
given off by coughing, talking, or sneezing. Tuberculosis most often
affects the lungs and the plurae, however, bones and kidneys may also be
affected and sometimes the intestines, spleen and liver. In most cases the
infection involves the top of the lungs, where, if the infected person is
not immune, the bacteria grow freely with in the body and spread from the
lungs to other parts of the body. Eventually the patient develops immunity
and the bacteria stop spreading. They become surrounded by scar tissue and
do not cause further damage. At a later stage, the protective layer of
scar tissue may break down. It is well established that poor nitrition is
one of the primary causes of TB in conjuntion with unsanitary living
conditions, loss of sleep, overwork and a sedentary lifestyle which all
contribute to a lowered immune system as well. SYMPTOMS: Initially
resemble influenza, which may include a cough. Mild symptoms include
fatigue and appitite and weight loss. More severe symptoms include fever,
increased perspiration or severe night sweats, chronic fatigue, continued
weight loss, chest pain, shortness of breath and infected urine. In
advanced cases, coughing up blood is initially seen.
|
| Malaria
| Malaria is an acute and sometimes chronic infectious disease due to
the presence of protozoan parasites within red blood cells. These
parasites are discharged through salivary ducts when the mosquito bites a
person. The causative organism is transmitted through bites of infected
female mosquitoes of the genus anopheles. Also may be transmitted by blood
transfusion. The incubation period averages 12 days to 30 days. Symptoms:
Various derangements of the digestive and nervous systems; characterized
by periodicity, chills, fever, and sweats in the order mentioned, having
pathological manifestations of progressive anemia, splenic enlargement,
and deposition in various organs of a melanin, resulting from biological
activity of the parasite.
|
| Malignant fever
| Another term used in place of typhus, which is an acute, infectious
disease transmitted by lice and fleas. Symptoms include headache,
arthralgia and myalgia, chills, high fever, falling blood pressure,
stupor, delirium, rash that begins on chest and spreads to rest of trunk
and extremities The early rash is faint and rose colored and fades with
pressure. Later the lesions become dull red and do not fade. People with
severe typhus may also develop petechiae. Also called typhus fever,
malignant fever, jail fever, hospital fever, putrid fever, ship fever,
brain fever, bilious fever, spotted fever, and camp fever.
|
| Mania
| Insanity.
|
| Marasmus
| Malnutrition, emaciation, usually occurring in infants and young
children, from insufficient nutrition.
|
| Membranous Croup
| Membranous croup, also called hoarseness, is a rough, croaking voice
which usually results from interference with the vocal cords. Usually, the
hoarseness clears up in a few days if the voice is rested. Some causes
include: overuse of voice, anxiety, hypothyroidism, smoking, alcohol,
cancer of the larynx, mucus dripping on the larynx (as with nasal polyps,
hay fever, sinusitis, and deviated nasal septum)
|
| Meningitis
| Meningitis is an infection of the three membranes, the meninges, that
lie between the brain and the skull. The disease is contagious. It can be
caused by poor nutrition and any number of viruses such as poliomyelitis
and measles, fungi including yeast, or bacteria like meningococcus,
pneumococcus, streptococcus, and tuberculosis. It may result from severe
infection of the nose and throat or spread through the bloodstream. It is
more common in children than adults. Early symptoms are: sore throat, red
or purple skin rash, and signs of a previous, recent respiratory disorder.
Other classic symptoms include stiff neck, headache, high fever, chills,
nausea, vomiting, delirium, and sensitivity to light. Change in
temperament and sleepiness signal changes in the cerebral fluid and
frequently precede coma and death. Also called brain fever.
|
| Milk Sick
| poisoning resulting from the drinking of milk produced by a cow who
had eaten a plant known as white snake root.
|
| Mormal
| Mormal is an old term for gangrene. Gangrene is the death of tissue
leading to blackness of the skin over the affected area. There are 2 types
of gangrene: dry and wet. Dry gangrene results from low blood flow to a
tissue; there is usually no bacterial infection and it does not spread to
other tissues. Possible causes include: arteriosclerosis, diabetes
mellitus, thrombosis, embolism, poor circulation, and frostbite. Wet
gangrene develops when a wound or dry gangrene become infected by
bacteria. Careful hygiene is the best prevention for wet gangrene. Once
diagnosed as wet gangrene, amputation of the area and antibiotics may be
required.
|
| Neurasthenia
| Neurasthenia is a condition marked by fatigue, worry, inadequacy, and
lack of zest and often by headache, undue sensitiveness to light and
noise, and by disturbances of digestion and circulation.
|
| Neuralgia
| Neuralgia is due to irritation of a nerve from a variety of causes.
Exposure to dampness and cold with resultant infection, dental decay, lack
of proper diet, eye strain, and infections around the nose are some of the
causes. Pain is usually felt in the part of the body supplied by the
irritated nerve. There may or may not be accompanying muscle weakness,
paralysis, or areas of decreased sensation on the skin. One side of the
face may be affected or there may be pain in the temples and the neck.
|
| Paristhmitis
| Paristhmitis, also called Quinsy, is a suppurative inflammation of the
tonsils.
|
| Petechial fever
| Another term used in place of typhus, which is an acute, infectious
disease transmitted by lice and fleas. Symptoms include headache,
arthralgia and myalgia, chills, high fever, falling blood pressure,
stupor, delirium, rash that begins on chest and spreads to rest of trunk
and extremities The early rash is faint and rose colored and fades with
pressure. Later the lesions become dull red and do not fade. People with
severe typhus may also develop petechiae. Also called typhus fever,
malignant fever, jail fever, hospital fever, putrid fever, ship fever,
brain fever, bilious fever, spotted fever, and camp fever.
|
| Phthisis
| An old term for pulmonary tuberculosis, also called marasmus in the
mid-nineteenth century, Tuberculosis is an infectious disease that is
usually caused by the bacteria Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Infection may
result from inhalation of minute droplets of infected sputum which are
given off by coughing, talking, or sneezing. Tuberculosis most often
affects the lungs and the plurae, however, bones and kidneys may also be
affected and sometimes the intestines, spleen and liver. In most cases the
infection involves the top of the lungs, where, if the infected person is
not immune, the bacteria grow freely with in the body and spread from the
lungs to other parts of the body. Eventually the patient develops immunity
and the bacteria stop spreading. They become surrounded by scar tissue and
do not cause further damage. At a later stage, the protective layer of
scar tissue may break down. It is well established that poor nitrition is
one of the primary causes of TB in conjuntion with unsanitary living
conditions, loss of sleep, overwork and a sedentary lifestyle which all
contribute to a lowered immune system as well. SYMPTOMS: Initially
resemble influenza, which may include a cough. Mild symptoms include
fatigue and appitite and weight loss. More severe symptoms include fever,
increased perspiration or severe night sweats, chronic fatigue, continued
weight loss, chest pain, shortness of breath and infected urine. In
advanced cases, coughing up blood is initially seen.
|
| Plague
| Bubonic plague has had a major impact on the history of the world.
Caused by the bacterium, Yersinia pestis, and transmitted by fleas often
found on rats, bubonic plague has killed over 50 million people over the
centuries. Burrowing rodent populations across the world keep the disease
present in the world today. Outbreaks, though often small, still occur in
many places. The use of antibiotics and increased scientific knowledge
first gained in the 1890s have reduced the destruction of plague
outbreaks. In Medieval times, with the unknowing help of humans, bubonic
plague exploded into a pandemic. Known as the ³Black Death², it decimated
Europe in 1350, killing 1/3 of the population. It disrupted government,
trade, and commerce. It reshaped people¹s perspectives on life and
Christianity, and found expression in many works of art. Bubonic plague¹s
influence and effects have shaped events of the past and part of our world
today.
|
| Pleurisy
| Inflammation of the pleura, the lining of the chest cavity. Symptoms
are chills, fever, dry cough, and pain in the affected side (a stitch).
|
| Pneumonia
| Pneumonia is an inflamation in the lungs caused by different bacteria,
viruses, and fungi. The tiny air sacs in the lung area become inflamed and
fill with mucus and pus. It is unlikely to be contagious. Although
symptoms can vary in intensity, they usually include fever, chills, cough,
muscle aches, fatigue, sore throat, enlarged lymph glands in the neck,
bluish nails, pains in the chest, and rapid, difficult respiration.
Typical contributing factors to pneumonia are the common cold, influenza,
seizure or stroke, aspiration under anesthesia, alcoholism, smoking,
kidney failure, sickle cell disease, malnutrition, foreign bodies in the
respiratory passages, bacteria, viruses, chemical irritants, and even
allergies.
|
| Podagra
| Another term for gout, which is the deposition of uric acid crystals
in the joint(s) of the body. The crystals cause swelling, redness, pain,
and sometimes fever. The pain may be so severe that the person can not
tolerate clothing touching the affected area. Uric acid is a by-product of
certain foods, especially foods containing purines. It is best to avoid
purine-rich foods such as organ meats, mushrooms, legumes, and sardines.
90% of gout patients are male.
|
| Potts Disease
| Degeneration of the vertebrae.
|
| Putrid Fever
| An old term for diptheria, which is an acute bacterial disease that
usually affects the tonsils, throat, nose or skin. Diphtheria is
transmitted to others through close contact with discharge from an
infected person's nose, throat, skin, eyes and lesions. There are two
types of diphtheria. One type involves the nose and throat, and the other
involves the skin. Symptoms include sore throat, low-grade fever and
enlarged lymph nodes located in the neck. Skin lesions may be painful,
swollen and reddened. In earlier centuries, when diphtheria went
untreated, serious complications such as paralysis, heart failure and
blood disorders resulted.
|
| Putrid Sore Throat
| Ulceration of an acute form, attacking the tonsils.
|
| Pyrexia
| Dysentery describes a group of infections characterized by
inflammation of the small and large intestine with diarrhea often
containing blood. The two main types are amoebic dysentery of the tropics
and bacillary dysentery which occurs throughout the world.
|
| Quinsy
| A suppurative inflammation of the tonsils.
|
| Remitting Fever
| An old term used to indicate the presence of malaria. Malaria is an
acute and sometimes chronic infectious disease due to the presence of
protozoan parasites within red blood cells. These parasites are discharged
through salivary ducts when the mosquito bites a person. The causative
organism is transmitted through bites of infected female mosquitoes of the
genus anopheles. Also may be transmitted by blood transfusion. The
incubation period averages 12 days to 30 days. Symptoms: Various
derangements of the digestive and nervous systems; characterized by
periodicity, chills, fever, and sweats in the order mentioned, having
pathological manifestations of progressive anemia, splenic enlargement,
and deposition in various organs of a melanin, resulting from biological
activity of the parasite.
|
| Sanguinous Crust
| A scab.
|
| Scarlatina
| A relative of scarlet fever, scarletina is a rash caused by infection
somewhere in the body, usually the throat but often other places. Scarlet
fever is the full blown syndrome of untreated Strep infection with a much
worse rash.
|
| Rheumatism
| Rheumatism refers to any painful state of the supporting structures of
the body - its bones, ligaments, joints, tendons, or muscles.
|
| Scrofula
| Primary tuberculosis of the lymphatic glands, especially those in the
neck. A disease of children and young adults. Also called king's evil.
|
| Septicemia
| Blood poisoning.
|
| Shingles
| Shingles, caused by the same virus that causes chicken pox, affects
the nerve endings in the skin. It usually occurs on the skin of the
abdomen under the ribs leading toward the naval, but can appear anywhere
on the body. An attack of shingles is often preceded by three of four days
of intense pain in the affected area. Then numerous and excruciatingly
painful and itchy blisters develop, normally lasting between seven and
fourteen days. These blisters eventually form crusty scabs and drop off.
After an attack of shingles, the pain may continue even after the blisters
have disappeared, especially in the elderly. The pain can sometimes last
for months or years. This post-herpetic syndrome can be even more painful
than the original infection.
|
| Ship Fever
| Another term used in place of typhus, which is an acute, infectious
disease transmitted by lice and fleas. Symptoms include headache,
arthralgia and myalgia, chills, high fever, falling blood pressure,
stupor, delirium, rash that begins on chest and spreads to rest of trunk
and extremities The early rash is faint and rose colored and fades with
pressure. Later the lesions become dull red and do not fade. People with
severe typhus may also develop petechiae. Also called typhus fever,
malignant fever, jail fever, hospital fever, putrid fever, brain fever,
bilious fever, spotted fever, petechial fever, camp fever.
|
| Softening of The Brain
| Cerebral hemorrhage or stroke.
|
| Spotted Fever
| Typhus, an acute, infectious disease transmitted by lice and fleas.
Also called typhus fever, malignant fever, jail fever, hospital fever,
ship fever, putrid fever, brain fever, bilious fever, spotted fever,
petechial fever, camp fever.
|
| Strangery
| Rupture, herniate.
|
| Summer Complaint
| A common, noncontagious diarrhea of young children, occurring in
summer or autumn. It was common among the poor and in hand-fed babies.
Death frequently occurred in three to five days. Also called: infantum
cholerum, weaning brash, water gripes, choleric fever of children, cholera
morbus.
|
| Suppuration
| The production of pus.
|
| Tetanus
| An acute, often fatal disease, caused by a bacillus and characterized
by rigidity and spasmodic contractions of the voluntary muscles. Also
called lock jaw.
|
| Thrush
| A disease characterized by whitish spots and ulcers on the membranes
of the mouth, tongue, and fauces caused by a parasitic fungus. Also called
aphthae, sore mouth, aphthous stomatitis.
|
| Trismus nascentium or neonatorum
| A form of tetanus seen only in infants, almost invariably in the first
five days of life.
|
| Typhoid Fever
| An infectious, often-fatal disease, usually occurring in the summer
months--characterized by intestinal inflammation and ulceration. The name
came from the disease's similarity to typhus. Also called enteric fever.
|
| Typhus
| Typhus is an acute, infectious disease transmitted by lice and fleas.
Symptoms include headache, arthralgia and myalgia, chills, high fever,
falling blood pressure, stupor, delirium, rash that begins on chest and
spreads to rest of trunk and extremities The early rash is faint and rose
colored and fades with pressure. Later the lesions become dull red and do
not fade. People with severe typhus may also develop petechiae. Also
called typhus fever, malignant fever, jail fever, hospital fever, ship
fever, putrid fever, brain fever, bilious fever, spotted fever, petechial
fever, camp fever.
|
| Variola
| Another term for smallpox, which is an acute, highly infectious, often
lethal viral disease characterized by chills, fever, headache and eventual
formation of widespread pus-filled blisters. The smallpox virus has been
eradicated from the world's population and currently exists in only two
high-containment laboratories.
|
| Venesection
| The ancient practice of bleeding, which required a surgical incision
in the patient to release what physician's believed was contaminated
blood.
|
| Winter Fever
| An old term for pneumonia, which is an inflamation in the lungs caused
by different bacteria, viruses, and fungi. The tiny air sacs in the lung
area become inflamed and fill with mucus and pus. It is unlikely to be
contagious. Although symptoms can vary in intensity, they usually include
fever, chills, cough, muscle aches, fatigue, sore throat, enlarged lymph
glands in the neck, bluish nails, pains in the chest, and rapid, difficult
respiration. Typical contributing factors to pneumonia are the common
cold, influenza, seizure or stroke, aspiration under anesthesia,
alcoholism, smoking, kidney failure, sickle cell disease, malnutrition,
foreign bodies in the respiratory passages, bacteria, viruses, chemical
irritants, and even allergies.
|
| Yellow Fever
| Yellow fever is a viral disease transmitted to man by a specific type
of mosquito, Aedes aegypti. This mosquito type is commonly found in the
tropical forests of South America and Africa. Both the Aedes mosquito and
the yellow fever virus must be present together to spread the disease.
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