When dysenteric symptoms are troublesome, give an injection into the rectum night and morning.
The Sanicle is popularly employed in Germany and France as a remedy for profuse bleeding from the lungs, bowels, womb, and urinary organs; also for the staying ofdysenteric diarrhoea.
Obstinate diarrhoea may be cured by giving doses of a tablespoonful of this extract taken with a wineglassful of warm water, and repeated at intervals of two hours whilst needed, even for the more severe cases of dysenteric diarrhoea.
A corresponding fatality of smallpox was observed shortly before among children at the Foundling who were recovering from or had lately passed through the dysentery or "dysenteric fever[1055].
In that summer, as well as in the following, Sydenham lays stress upon the amount of choleraic and dysenteric sickness, without saying that it was specially fatal to children.
A fever which he calls febris comatosa had been raging far and wide since the beginning of July, with which in the autumn dysenteric and diarrhoeal disorders were mingled (it was an exceedingly dry season).
The "epidemic constitution" of 1743 was so markedly dysenteric after the influenza in the spring that Huxham regarded the dysentery as a sequela of the influenza.
The passage had been long and stormy, and attended with much sickness, dysenteric and diarrhoeal; one man died and was thrown overboard two or three days before the ship reached Liverpool.
Another complaint which frequently occurred during the last dysenteric season was dry gripes.
The proper dysenteric symptoms usually lasted from ten to fourteen days, and were followed by diarrhoea, it might be, for many weeks.
Next day he fell ill of rage and vexation of spirit, contracted a dysenteric ailment, and died a week later at Newark (Oct.
March 1422), the king contracted a dysenteric ailment which he could never shake off.
Huxham tells us, that, in some Seasons, he has seen round Worms in the Stools of most of the Dysenteric Patients.
The passage of a dysenteric stool by a man who is really ill was often followed by the entry into his anus of flies before an attendant had time to intervene.
Once the dysenteric organisms were introduced, it was practically impossible to stop the spread of disease.
It results from dysenteric perforation of the bowel, from rupture of a splenic abscess, or from rupture of the spleen itself.
Pus is discharged per anum in cases ofdysenteric or other ulceration of the bowel; also when an abscess occurring in any part of the abdomen (most frequently hepatic) opens into the intestine.
If thedysenteric disease has had a chance to localize itself, and to assume a higher degree of intensity, it becomes necessary to excite the organic reaction all the more frequently.
Not unfrequently I have met with patients upon whom Apis acts too powerfully, causing pains in the bowels, interminable diarrhœa, of a dysenteric character, extreme prostration and a sense of fainting.
Corrosive sublimate in its action upon the large intestine produces a dysenteric condition; similar in their effects are colocynth, jalap, elaterium, and cantharides.
The fall of the sloughs leaves the dysenteric ulcer.
A case by the latter[105] casts a strong light on this question: A patient had extensive dysenteric ulceration of the intestine and an abscess of the liver, without any symptoms indicating their existence.
This disease, although having a dysenteric form, is not ordinary dysentery.
There are many examples of hepatic abscess connected with dysenteric ulcerations of the intestine in which no embolus can be found.
The causes are identical with those of catarrh of the large intestine, if we except the follicular disease produced by dysenteric infection.
The loss of appetite, the frequent vomiting, and often the dysenteric troubles, contribute materially to the exhaustion and the wasting of the tissues.
According to Rindfleisch, the scars of dysenteric ulcers are very prone to contract, so that "the liability of a subsequent stricture is directly proportionate to the extent of the previous ulceration.
But it is more probable that the dysenteric matters of the negroes had themselves in turn bred an infection of yellow fever for the whites.
To a man reduced in strength and chronically affected with dysenteric symptoms ever likely to be aggravated by exposure, the effect may be well conceived!
The excruciating pains of his dysenteric malady caused him the greatest exhaustion as they marched, and they were glad enough to reach another village in 2-1/4 hours, having travelled S.
About this time many of the Irish prisoners lately arrived were afflicted with dysenteric complaints, of which several died.
Dysenteric complaints were also very common, which were attributed to the water, most of the runs and springs having been nearly dried up.
Richards as to there being no case in which slow antimonial poisoning was accompanied with dysenteric evacuations.
He had not acted as an accoucheur since 1854, but was of opinion that sickness accompanied by dysenteric diarrhœa, in the early stage of pregnancy, might have been the cause of all the appearances exhibited in this case.
The weather proved very unfavourable to an excursion in a country where the residence for each night was to be provided by the travellers themselves; and some of the party returned with dysenteric complaints.
On the 7th the surgeon's mate of the Supply died of a dysenteric complaint.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "dysenteric" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.