A Treatise On Fever

Cover A Treatise On Fever
A Treatise On Fever
Smith, Southwood, 1788-1861
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The intimate and inseparable connexion which physiology teaches us subsists between the respiratory and the circulating systems, might lead us to anticipate the fact which patliology demonstrates. We know that the res- piratory system is constructed for the circulating ; that the form,- the extent, the complication of the respiratory apparatus depend entirely upon tlie quantity of blood that is to be regenerated, and 26 302 THIU>&T OF FEV^It.
the degree of perfection with which that regeneratio
...n is to be accomplished. It is therefore impossible that any considerable derangement in the function of one of these systems should continue long, without being accompanied with a proportionate derangement in the other. The function of respiration cannot be materially deranged, without producing a morbid condition of the blood, that vital fluid which it is the specific object of the process to purify and regenerate. The function of secre- tion depends upon the quality of the blood conveyed to the secreting organ, upon the action of the capillary vessels of that organ, and upon the supply of nei'vous influence received by those vessels ; it follows, that in a disordered state of the ner- vous, the circulating and the respiratory organs must be attend- ed with a derangement in the process of secretion ; while the excreting being necessarily connected with the secreting pro- cesses, ^ vitiation of the one cannot fail to occasbn a corres- ponding deterioration of the other.

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