A
Abasia - Inability to walk or stand, caused by hysteria.
Ablepsy - Blindness, also Ablepsia, Abopsia.
Abscess - A localized collection of pus buried in tissues, organs, or
confined spaces of the body, often accompanied by swelling and inflammation and
frequently caused by bacteria. The brain, lung, or kidney (for instance) could
be involved. See boil.
Accouchment - childbirth, the period after childbirth.
Acute - (adj.) disease of sudden onset, severe, not chronic.
Addison's disease - A disease characterized by severe weakness, low blood
pressure, and a bronzed coloration of the skin, due to decreased secretion of
cortisol from the adrenal gland. Dr. Thomas Addison (1793-1860), born near
Aegrotat - Is sick from.
Aegrotantem - Sickness, illness.
Ague - Malarial Fever; Malarial or intermittent fever characterized by
paroxysms (stages of chills, fever, and sweating at regularly recurring times)
and followed by an interval or intermission whose length determines the
epithets: quotidian, tertian, quartan, and quintan ague (defined in the text).
Popularly, the disease was known as "fever and ague," "chill
fever," "the shakes," and by names expressive of the locality in
which it was prevalent--such as, "swamp fever" (in
Ague-cake - A form of enlargement of the spleen, resulting from the
action of malaria on the system.
American plague - Yellow fever.
Anasarca - Generalized massive edema. see dropsy.
Anchylosis/ankylosis - Abnormal stiffening and immobility of a joint by
fusion of the bones.
Angina - Pain in chest brought on by exertion; intense constricting pain
especially of the throat, can lead to suffocation; quinsy.
Aphonia - Laryngitis.
Aphtha/aphthae - see thrush.
Aphthous stomatitis - see canker.
Apoplexy - Paralysis due to stroke.
Ascites - see dropsy.
Asphycsia/Asphicsia - Cyanotic and lack of oxygen.
Asthenia - see debility.
Atrophy - Wasting away or diminishing in size.
Bad Blood - Syphilis.
Bilious fever - A term loosely applied to certain enteric (intestinal)
and malarial fevers; Typhoid, malaria, hepatitis or elevated temperature and
bile emesis /fever due to a liver disorder, See typhus.
Biliousness - Jaundice associated with liver disease; A complex of
symptoms comprising nausea, abdominal discomfort, headache, and constipation;
formerly attributed to excessive secretion of bile from the liver.
Black plague/death - Bubonic plague.
Black fever - Acute infection with high temperature and dark red skin
lesions and high mortality rate.
Black pox - Black Small pox.
Black vomit - Vomiting old (black) blood due to ulcers or yellow fever.
Blackwater fever - Dark urine associated with high temperature.
Bladder in throat - Diphtheria.
Blood poisoning - Bacterial infection; septicemia.
Bloody flux - Bloody stools; dysentry.
Bloody sweat - Sweating sickness.
Boil - An abscess of skin or painful, circumscribed inflammation of the
skin or a hair follicle, having a dead, pus-forming inner core, usually caused
by a staphylococcal infection. Synonym: furuncle.
Bone shave - Sciatica.
Brain fever - see meningitis, typhus.
Breakbone - Dengue fever.
Bright's disease - Chronic inflammatory disease of kidneys; kiddney
disease; glomerulonephritis.
Bronchial asthma - A paroxysmal, often allergic disorder of breathing,
characterized by spasm of the bronchial tubes of the lungs, wheezing, and
difficulty in breathing air outward, often accompanied by coughing and a feeling
of tightness in the chest.
Bronze John - Yellow fever.
Brucellosis - bacterial disease, especially of cattle, causing undulant
fever in humans.
Bule - Boil, tumor or swelling.
Cachexy - Malnutrition.
Cacogastric - Upset stomach.
Cacospysy - Irregular pulse.
Caduceus - Subject to falling sickness or epilepsy.
Camp fever - Typhus; aka Camp diarrhea, typhoid fever.
Cancer - A malignant and invasive growth or tumor (especially tissue that
covers a surface or lines a cavity), tending to recur after excision and to
spread to other sites. In the nineteenth century, physicians noted that
cancerous tumors tended to ulcerate, grew constantly, and progressed to a fatal
end and that there was scarcely a tissue they would not invade. Synonyms:
malignant growth, carcinoma.
Cancrum otis - A severe, destructive, eroding ulcer of the cheek and lip,
rapidly proceeding to sloughing. 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 acting upon a debilitated system. It commonly
followed one of the eruptive fevers and was often fatal. The destructive 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, and a
horribly fetid saliva flowed from the parts. Synonyms: canker, water canker,
noma, gangrenous stomatitis, gangrenous ulceration of the mouth.
Canine madness - Rabies, hydrophobia.
Canker - An ulcerous sore of the mouth and lips, not considered fatal
today; herpes simplex Synonym: aphthous stomatitis. See cancrum otis.
Catalepsy - Condition which causes Seizures/trances or unconsciousness.
Catarrh - Inflammation of a mucous membrane, especially of the air
passages of the head and throat, with a free discharge. It is characterized by
cough, thirst, lassitude, fever, watery eyes, and increased secretions of mucus
from the air passages. Bronchial catarrh was bronchitis; suffocative catarrh was
croup; urethral catarrh was gleet; vaginal catarrh was leukorrhea; epidemic
catarrh was the same as influenza. Synonyms: cold, coryza. Nose and throat
discharge from cold or allergy; influenza.
Cerebritis - Inflammation of cerebrum or lead poisoning.
Chilblain - Swelling of extremities caused by exposure to cold and then
heat; extremities turn black and itch unbearably.
Childbed - Childbirth.
Child bed fever - Infection following birth of a child; puerperal fever.
Childbirth - A cause given for many female deaths of the century. Almost
all babies were born in homes and usually were delivered by a family member or a
midwife; thus infection and lack of medical skill were often the actual causes
of death.
Chin cough - Whooping cough.
Chlorosis - Iron deficiency anemia; condition of pale or greenish skin,
weakness, & dyspepsia.
Cholecystitis - Inflammation of the gall bladder.
Cholelithiasis - Stones of the gall bladder.
Cholera - An acute, infectious disease, endemic in
Cholera infantum - A common, noncontagious diarrhea of young children,
occurring in summer or autumn. In the nineteenth century it was considered
indigenous to the
Cholera morbus - Characterized by nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramps,
elevated temperature, etc. Could be appendicitis
Chorea - Any of several diseases of the nervous system, characterized by
jerky movements that appear to be well co-ordinated but are performed
involuntarily, chiefly of the face and extremities; convulsions, contortions and
dancing. Synonym: Saint Vitus' dance.
Chronic - Persisting over a long period of time as opposed to acute or
sudden. This word was often the only one entered under "cause of
death" in the mortality schedules. The actual disease meant by the term is
open to speculation.
Cold plague - Ague which is characterized by chills.
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; but in the last century a study reported that in cases of
death, intussusception (the prolapse of one part of the intestine into the lumen
of an immediately adjoining part) occasionally occurred. Renal colic can occur
from disease in the kidney, gallstone colic from a stone in the bile duct.
Confinement - the conclusion of pregnancy; labor and childbirth.
Congestive chills - Malaria.
Consumption - A wasting away of the body; formerly applied especially to
pulmonary tuberculosis. The disorder is now known to be an infectious disease
caused by the bacterial species Mycobacterium tuberculosis. Synonyms: marasmus
(in the mid 19th century), phthisis.
Congestion - An excessive or abnormal accumulation of blood or other
fluid in a body part, blood vessel or an organ, like the lungs Congestive
chills. Malaria with diarrhea.
Congestive fever - Malaria Corruption Infection.
Convulsions - Severe contortion of the body caused by violent,
involuntary muscular contractions of the extremities, trunk, and head. See
epilepsy.
Coryza - A cold. see catarrh.
Costiveness - Constipation.
Cramp colic - Appendicitis.
Crop sickness - Overextended stomach.
Croup - Any obstructive condition of the larynx (voice box) or trachea
(windpipe), characterized by a hoarse, barking cough and difficult breathing
occurring chiefly in infants and children. The obstruction could be caused by
allergy, a foreign body, infection, or new growth (tumor). In the early 19th
century it was called cynanche trachealis. The crouping noise was similar to the
sound emitted by a chicken affected with the pip, which in some parts of
Cyanosis - Dark skin color; blueness of skin caused by lack of oxygen in
blood.
Cynanche - Diseases of throat.
Cystitis - Inflammation of the bladder.
Day fever - Fever lasting one day; sweating sickness.
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. Lack of movement or staying in bed. Synonym: asthenia.
Decrepitude - Feebleness due to old age.
Delirium tremens - aka DTs; hallucination due to alcoholism.
Dengue - Infectious fever endemic to
Dentition - Cutting of teeth, see teething.
Deplumation - Tumor of the eyelids which causes hair loss.
Diary fever - A fever that lasts one day.
Diptheria - An acute infectious disease caused by toxigenic strains of
the bacillus Corynebacterium diphtheriae, 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.
Distemper - Usually animal disease with malaise, discharge from nose and
throat, anorexia.
Dock fever - Yellow fever.
Dropsy - A contraction for hydropsy. Edema, the presence of abnormally
large amounts of fluid in intercellular tissue spaces or body cavities.
Abdominal dropsy is ascites; brain dropsy is hydrocephalus; and chest dropsy is
hydrothorax. Cardiac dropsy is a symptom of disease of the heart and arises from
obstruction to the current of blood through the heart, lungs, or liver. Anasarca
is general fluid accumulation throughout the body.Edema (swelling), often caused
by kidney or heart disease.
Dropsy of the Brain - Encephalitis.
Dry Bellyache - Lead poisoning.
Dyscrasy - An abnormal body condition.
Dysentery - A term given to a number of disorders marked by inflammation
of the intestines (especially of the colon) and attended by pain in the abdomen,
by tenesmus (straining to defecate without the ability to do so), and by
frequent stools containing blood and mucus. The causative agent may be chemical
irritants, bacteria, protozoa, or parasitic worms. There are two specific
varieties: (1) amebic dysentery caused by the protozoan Entamoeba histolytica;
(2) bacillary dysentery caused by bacteria of the genus Shigella. Dysentery was
one of the most severe scourges of armies in the nineteenth century. The several
forms of dysentery and diarrhea accounted for more than one-fourth of all the
cases of disease reported during the first two years of the Civil War. Synonyms:
flux, bloody flux, contagious pyrexia (fever), frequent griping stools.
Dysorexy - Reduced appetite.
Dyspepsia - Indigestion and heartburn. Heart attack symptoms; bad
digestion.
Dysury - Difficulty in urination.
Eclampsy - A form of toxemia (toxins, or poisons, in the blood)
accompanying pregnancy, characterized by albuminuria (protein in the urine), by
hypertension (high blood pressure), and by convulsions. In the last century, the
term was used for any form of convulsion.
Ecstasy - A form of catalepsy characterixed by loss of reason.
Edema - Nephrosis; swelling of tissues. see Dropsy.
Edema of lungs - Congestive heart failure, a form of dropsy.
Eel thing - Erysipelas.
Effluvia - Exhalations or emanations, applied especially to those of
noxious character. In the mid-nineteenth century, they were called "vapours"
and distinguished into the contagious effluvia, such as rubeolar (measles);
marsh effluvia, such as miasmata; and those arising from animals or vegetables,
such as odors.
Elephantiasis - Gross enlargement of the body, especially the limbs, due
to lymphatic obstruction by a nematode parasite transmitted by mosquitoes; a
form of leprosy.
Emphysema, pulmonary - A chronic, irreversible disease of the lungs,
characterized by abnormal enlargement of air spaces in the lungs and accompanied
by destruction of the tissue lining the walls of the air sacs. By 1900 the
condition was recognized as a chronic disease of the lungs associated with
marked dyspnea (shortness of breath), hacking cough, defective aeration
(oxygenation) of the blood, cyanosis (blue color of facial skin), and a full and
rounded or "barrel-shaped" chest. This disease is now most commonly
associated with tobacco smoking.
Encephalitis - Swelling of brain; aka sleeping sickness.
Enteric fever - see Typhoid fever.
Enterocolitis - Inflammation of the intestines.
Enteritis - Inflations of the bowels.
Epilepsy - 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 (grand mal). Synonyms: falling sickness,
fits.
Epitaxis - Nose bleed.
Erysipelas - An acute, febrile, infectious disease, caused by a specific
group of streptococcus bacterium and characterized by a diffusely spreading,
deep-red inflammation of the skin or mucous membranes causing a rash with a
well-defined margin; Contagious skin disease, due to infection of the blood with
vesicular bulbous lesions. Synonyms: Rose, Saint Anthony's Fire.
Extravasted blood - Rupture of a blood vessel.
Falling sickness - see Epilepsy.
Fatty Liver - Cirrhosis of liver.
Fits - Sudden attack or seizure of muscle activity.
Flux - An excessive flow or discharge of fluid like hemorrhage or
diarrhea. see dysentry.
Flux of humour - Circulation.
French pox - Syphilis.
Furuncle - see boil.
Gangrene - Death and decay of tissue in a part of the body, usually a
limb, due to injury, disease, or failure of blood supply. Synonym:
mortification.
Gathering - A collection of pus.
Glandular fever - Mononucleosis (mono).
Gleet - see catarrh.
Goitre - Enlarged thyroid gland which affects body's metabolism.
Gout - Chronic metabolic disorder affecting the joints, associated with
hypertension, uric acid in the blood and kidney disease, often associated with a
rich and fatty diet (and red wine).
Gravel - A disease characterized by multiple small calculi (stones or
concretions of mineral salts) which are formed in the kidneys, passed along the
ureters to the bladder, and expelled with the urine. Synonym: kidney stone.
Grave's disease - Thryotoxicosis.
Great pox - Syphilis.
Green fever/sickness - Anemia.
Grippe/grip - Influenza like symptoms; the flu; influenza.
Grocer's itch - Skin disease caused by mites in sugar or flour.
Heart sickness - Condition caused by loss of salt from body.
Heat stroke - Body temperature elevates because of surrounding
environment temperature and body does not perspire to reduce temperature. Coma
and death result if not reversed.
Hectical complaint - A daily recurring fever with profound sweating,
chills, and flushed Hectic Fever appearance, often associated with pulmonary
tuberculosis or septic poisoning.
Hematemesis - Vomiting blood.
Hematuria - Bloody urine.
Hemiplegy - Paralysis of one side of body.
Hip gout - Osteomylitis.
Hives - A skin eruption of weals (smooth, slightly elevated areas on the
skin) which is redder or paler than the surrounding skin. Often attended by
severe itching, it usually changes its size or shape or disappears within a few
hours. It is the dermal evidence of allergy. See the discussion under croup;
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.
Horrors - Delirium tremens.
Hospital Fever - see typhus.
Hydrocephalus - Enlarged head, water on the brain; dropsy of the brain.
see dropsy.
Hydropericardium - Heart dropsy.
Hydrophobia - Rabies; fear of water.
Hydrothroax - Dropsy in the chest. see dropsy.
Hypertrophic - Enlargement of organ, like the heart.
Hypertropy of heart - Enlarged heart.
Hysteria - Wild uncontrollable emotion, excitement, functional
dusturbance of the nervous system.
Icterus - see jaundice.
Impetigo - Contagious skin disease charac terized by pustules.
Inanition - Exhaustion from lack of nourishment; starvation. A condition
characterized by marked weakness, extreme weight loss, and a decrease in
metabolism resulting from severe and prolonged (usually weeks to months)
insufficiency of food.
Infantile paralysis - Polio.
Infection - The affection or contamination of a person, organ, or wound
with invading, multiplying, disease-producing germs (such as bacteria,
rickettsiae, viruses, molds, yeasts, and protozoa). 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, especially as a reaction of tissue to injurious
agents. This mechanism serves as a localized and protective response to injury.
The word ending -itis denotes inflammation on the part indicated by the word
stem to which it is attached, as in: appendicitis, pleuritis, etc.
Microscopically, it involves a complex series of events, including enlargement
of the sizes of blood vessels; discharge of fluids, including plasma proteins;
and migration of leukocytes (white blood cells) into the inflammatory focus. 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.
Intestinal colic - Abdominal pain due to bad or improper diet.
Intussusception - The slipping of one part within another, as the
prolapse of one part of the intestine into the lumen of an immediately adjoining
part. This leads to obstruction and often must be relieved by surgery. Synonym:
introsusception.
Jail fever - see typhus.
Jaundice - Yellow discoloration of the skin, whites of the eyes, and
mucous membranes, due to an increase of bile pigments in the blood - often
symptomatic of certain diseases, such as hepatitis, obstruction of the bile
duct, or cancer of the liver; Condition caused by blockage of intestines (common
in newborn babies) Synonym: icterus.
Kidney Stone - see gravel.
King's evil - A popular name for scrofula. The name originated in the
time of Edward the Confessor, with the belief that the disease could be cured by
the touch of the king of
Kruchhusten - Whooping cough.
Lagrippe - Influenza.
Lockjaw - Tetanus, an infectious disease affecting the muscles of the
neck and jaw in which the jaw beomes firmlt locked. Untreated, it is fatal in 8
days. Synonyms: trismus, tetanus.
Lues disease - Syphilis.
Lues venera - Venereal disease; sexually transmitted disease (STD).
Lumbago - Back pain.
Lung fever - Pneumonia.
Lung sickness - Tuberculosis.
Lying in - Time of delivery of infant.Malignant Fever - see
typhus.
Malignant sore throat - see Diphtheria.
Mania - Insanity.
Marasmus - Malnutrition occurring in infants and young children, caused
by an insufficient intake of calories or protein and characterized by thinness,
dry skin, poor muscle development, and irritability. In the mid-nineteenth
century, specific causes were associated with specific ages: In infants under
twelve months old, the causes were believed to be unsuitable food, chronic
vomiting, chronic diarrhea, and inherited syphilis. Between one and three years,
marasmus was associated with rickets or cancer. After the age of three years,
caseous (cheeselike) enlargement of the mesenteric glands (located in the
peritoneal fold attaching the small intestine to the body wall) became a given
cause of wasting. (See tabes mesenterica.) After the sixth year, chronic
pulmonary tuberculosis appeared to be the major cause. Marasmus is now
considered to be related to kwashiorkor, a severe protein deficiency.
Membranous Croup - Diphtheria.
Meningitis - Inflammation of the meninges (the three membranes covering
the brain and spinal cord), especially of the pia mater and arachnoid, caused by
a bacterial or viral infection and characterized high fever, severe headache,
and stiff neck or back muscles. Synonym: brain fever.
Metritis - Inflammation of uterus or purulent vaginal discharge.
Miasma - Poisonous vapors thought to infect the air.
Milk fever - Disease from drinking contaminated milk; fever which effects
lactating women (mastitis?).
Milk leg - Post partum thrombophlebitis.
Milk sickness - Disease from milk of cattle which had eaten poisonous
weeds.
Morbus - Latin word for disease. In the last century, when applied to a
particular disease, morbus was associated with some qualifying adjective or
noun, indicating the nature or seat of such disease. Examples: morbus cordis,
heart disease; morbus caducus, epilepsy or failing sickness.
Mormal - Gangrene.
Morphew Scurvy - Blisters on the body.
Mortification - Gangrene of necrotic tissue.
Myelitis - Inflammation of the spine.
Myocarditis - Inflammation of heart muscles.
Necrosis - Mortification of bones or tissue.
Nephrosis - Kidney degeneration.
Nepritis - Inflammation of kidneys.
Nervous prostration - Extreme exhaustion from inability to control
physical and mental activities.
Neuralgia - Sharp and paroxysmal pain along the course of a sensory
nerve. There are many causes: anemia, diabetes, gout, malaria, syphilis. Many
varieties of neuralgia are distinguished according to the part affected, such as
face, arm, leg.
Nostalgia - Homesickness.
Palsy - Paralysis or uncontrolled movement of controlled muscles; loss of
muscle control.
Paristhmitis - see quinsy.
Paroxysm - Convulsion.
Pemphigus - Skin disease of watery blisters.
Pericarditis - Inflammation of heart.
Peripneumonia - Inflammation of lungs.
Peritonotis - Inflammation of abdominal area.
Petechial Fever - Fever characterized by spotting of the skin. see
typhus.
Phthiriasis - Lice infestation.
Phthisis - Chronic wasting away due to ,or a name for, tuberculosis or
consumption. see consumption.
Plague - An acute febrile highly infectious disease with a high fatality
rate.
Pleurisy - Inflammation of the pleura, the membranous sac lining the
chest cavity, with or without fluid collected in the pleural cavity. Symptoms
are chills, fever, dry cough, and pain in the affected side (a stitch).
Pneumonia - Inflammation of the lungs with congestion or consolidation,
caused by viruses, bacteria, or physical and chemical agents.
Podagra - Gout.
Poliomyelitis - Polio.
Potter's asthma - Fibroid pthisis.
Pott's disease - Tuberculosis of spine.
Puerperal exhaustion - Death due to child birth.
Puerperal fever - Elevated temperature after giving birth to an infant;
septic poisoning associated with child birth.
Puking fever - Milk sickness.
Pus - A yellow-white, more or less viscid substance found in abscesses
and sores, consisting of a liquid plasma in which white blood cells are formed
and suspended by the process of inflammation.
Putrid fever - Diphtheria; typhus. see typhus.
Putrid sore throat - Ulceration of an acute form, attacking the tonsils
and rapidly running into sloughing of the fauces (the cavity at the back of the
mouth, leading to the pharynx).
Pyrexia - see dysentry.
Quinsy - (streptococcal) Tonsillitis; A fever, or a febrile condition. An
acute inflammation of the tonsils, often leading to an abscess; peritonsillar
abscess. Synonyms: suppurative tonsillitis, cynanche tonsillaris, paristhmitis,
sore throat.
Remitting fever - Malaria.
Rheumatism - Any disorder associated with pain in joints.
Rickets - Disease of skeletal system caused by vitamin D deficiency.
Rose cold - Hay fever or nasal symptoms of an allergy.
Rotanny fever - (Child's disease) ???
Rubeola - German measles.Sanguineous crust - Scab.
Scarlatina - Scarlet fever. A contagious febrile disease, caused by
infection with the bacteria group. A beta-hemolytic streptococci (which
elaborate a toxin with an affinity for red blood cells) and characterized by a
scarlet eruption, tonsillitis, and pharyngitis.
Scarlet fever - A disease characterized by red rash. see Scarlatina.
Scarlet rash - Roseola.
Sciatica - Rheumatism in the hips.
Scirrhus - Cancerous tumors.
Scotomy - Dizziness, nausea and dimness of sight.
Scrivener's palsy - Writer's cramp.
Screws - Rheumatism.
Scrofula - Primary tuberculosis of the lymphatic glands, especially those
in the neck. A disease of children and young adults, it represents a direct
extension of tuberculosis into the skin from underlying lymph nodes. It evolves
into cold abscesses, multiple skin ulcers, and draining sinus tracts. Synonym:
king's evil.
Scrumpox - Skin disease, impetigo.
Scurvy - Lack of vitamin C. Symptoms of weakness, spongy gums and
hemorrhages under skin.
Septic - Infected, a condition of local or generalized invasion of the
body by disease-causing microorganisms (germs) or their toxins.
Septicemia - Blood poisoning.
Shakes - Delirium tremens.
Shaking - Chills, ague.
Shingles - Viral disease characterized by skin blisters (closely related
to chickenpox - cannot get shingles unless previously affected by chickenpox.
often brought on by stress. most commonly the blisteres develope on the back -
extremely itching),
Ship fever - see Typhus.
Siriasis - Inflammation of the brain due to sun exposure.
Sloes - Milk sickness.
Small pox - Contagious disease characterized by fever and blisters.
Softening of brain - Result of stroke or hemorrhage in the brain, with an
end result of the tissue softening in that area; apoplexy.
Sore throat distemper - Diphtheria or quinsy.
Spanish influenza - An epidemic influenza.
Spasms - Sudden involuntary contraction of muscle or group of muscles,
like a convulsion.
Spina bifida - Deformity of spine.
Spotted fever - Either typhus or meningitis; cerebrospinal meningitis
fever. see Typhus.
Sprue - Tropical disease characterized by intestinal disorders and sore
throat.
St. Anthony's fire - Also erysipelas, but named so because of affected
skin areas are bright red in appearance.
St. Vitus' dance - Ceaseless occurrence of rapid complex jerking
movements performed involuntarily. see chorea.
Stomatitis - Inflammation of the mouth.
Stranger's fever - Yellow fever.
Strangery - Rupture.
Sudor anglicus - Sweating sickness.
Suffocation - The stoppage of respiration. In the nineteenth century,
suffocation was reported as being accidental or homicidal. The accidents could
be by the impaction of pieces of food or other obstacles in the pharynx or by
the entry of foreign bodies into the larynx (as a seed, coin, or food).
Suffocation of newborn children by smothering under bedclothes may have happened
from carelessness as well as from intent. However, the deaths also could have
been due to SIDS (sudden infant death syndrome), wherein the sudden and
unexpected death of an apparently healthy infant, while asleep, typically occurs
between the ages of three weeks and five months and is not explained by careful
postmortem studies. Synonyms of SIDS: crib death and cot death. It was felt that
victims of homicidal suffocation were chiefly infants or feeble and infirm
persons.
Summer complaint - Diarrhea, usually in infants caused by spoiled milk.
see Cholera infantum.
Sunstroke - Uncontrolled elevation of body temperature due to environment
heat. Lack of sodium in the body is a predisposing cause.
Suppuration - The production of pus.
Swamp sickness - Could be malaria, typhoid or encephalitis.
Sweating sickness - Infectious and fatal disease common to
Tabes mesenterica - Tuberculosis of the mesenteric glands in children,
resulting in digestive derangement and wasting of the body.
Teething - The entire process which results in the eruption of the teeth.
Nineteenth-century medical reports stated that infants were more prone to
disease at the time of teething. Symptoms were restlessness, fretfulness,
convulsions, diarrhea, and painful and swollen gums. The latter could be
relieved by lancing over the protruding tooth. Often teething was reported as a
cause of death in infants. Perhaps they became susceptible to infections,
especially if lancing was performed without antisepsis. Another explanation of
teething as a cause of death is that infants were often weaned at the time of
teething; perhaps they then died from drinking contaminated milk, leading to an
infection, or from malnutrition if watered-down milk was given.
Tetanus - An infectious, often-fatal disease caused by a specific
bacterium, Clostridium tetani, that enters the body through wounds;
characterized by respiratory paralysis, high fever, and tonic spasms and
rigidity of the voluntary muscles, especially those of the neck and lower jaw.
Synonyms: trismus, lockjaw.
Thrombosis - Blood clot inside blood vessel.
Thrush - A disease characterized by whitish spots and ulcers on the
membranes of the mouth, tongue, and fauces caused by a parasitic fungus, Candida
albicans. Thrush usually affects sick, weak infants and elderly individuals in
poor health. Now it is a common complication from excessive use of
broad-spectrum antibiotics or cortisone treatment. Synonyms: aphthae, sore
mouth, aphthous stomatitis.
Thyrotoxicosis - A disease affecting the thyroid gland.
Tick fever - Rocky mountain spotted fever.
Toxemia (of pregnancy) - see Eclampsia.
Trench mouth - Painful ulcers found along gum line, caused by poor
nutrition and poor hygiene.
Trismus nascentium/neonatorum - A form of tetanus seen only in infants,
almost invariably in the first five days of life, probably due to infection of
the umbilical stump.
Tussis convulsiva - Whooping cough.
Typhoid fever - An infectious, often-fatal, febrile disease, usually
occurring in the summer months, characterized by intestinal inflammation and
ulceration caused by the bacterium Salmonella typhi, which is usually introduced
by food or drink. Symptoms include prolonged hectic fever, malaise, transient
characteristic skin rash (rose spots), abdominal pain, enlarged spleen, slowness
of heart rate, delirium, and low white-blood cell count. The name came from the
disease's similarity to typhus (see below). Synonym: enteric fever.
Typhus - An acute, infectious disease caused by several micro-organism
species of Rickettsia (transmitted by lice and fleas) and characterized by acute
prostration, high fever, depression, delirium, headache, and a peculiar eruption
of reddish spots on the body. The epidemic or classic form is louse borne; the
endemic or murine is flea borne. Synonyms: 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.
Undulant Fever - Intermittant fever caused by brucellosis. also called
abortus fever.
Variola - Smallpox.
Venesection - Bleeding.
Viper's dance - St. Vitus' Dance.
Virus - An ultramicroscopic, metabolically inert infectious agent that
replicates only within the cells of living hosts, mainly bacteria, plants, and
animals. In the early 1800s virus meant poison, venom, or contagion.
Water on brain - Enlarged head.
White swelling - Tuberculosis of the bone.
Winter fever - Pneumonia.
Womb fever - Infection of the uterus.
Worm fit - Convulsions associated with teething, worms, elevated
temperature or diarrhea.
Yellow fever - An acute, often-fatal, infectious febrile disease of warm
climates, caused by a virus transmitted by mosquitoes, especially Aledes aegypti,
and characterized by liver damage and jaundice, fever, and protein in the urine.
In 1900 Walter Reed and others in
Yellowjacket - Yellow fever.