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References
* Langius, referring to the vertex, observes:—“Ubi mulieres glaciei frigus et pondus se sentire fatentur.” Quoted by Stuckens, “De dol. cap.,” Brux., 1787. Bellini, “De Urinis et Pulsibus,” Leipsig, 1698, and many other of the older authors refer to the same passage.Google Scholar
† Wepfer writes of one of his cases—“There is, moreover, a constriction or tightening of the head as if it were bound round about by a cord or bandage.” “De Affect. Capitis.” Scaphusii, 1727.Google Scholar
* Willis describes the case of a woman suffering from headache who was also “vexed with a weight of her whole head, a numbness of her senses, and a dulness of mind.” (Eng. Trans. of his works.)Google Scholar
* One of Wepfer's cases felt “as if a weight of lead were suspended from the back of the head” (op. cit., p. 103).Google Scholar
* The following passage from Stahl is interesting in this connection:—“Es drücke ihnen in den Stirn nicht anders, als ob ein Stein darinnen läge; Können kaum die Augen dafür aufthun, und ins Licht seben.”—Stahl, G. E., Med. Dog. Syst., etc., Sec. II., Halae, 1707, p. 683.Google Scholar
∥ The following passage from Galen—Kuhn's edit., Latin translation—is worthy of quotation in this connexion: “Alii caput contnndi distendique sentiunt.”—Vol. viii., p. 204.Google Scholar
*“A Manual of Diseases of the Nervous System,”1888, Vol. ii., p. 802.Google Scholar
*“On the Causes and Signs of Acute and Chronic Diseases,” translated by Reynolds, T. F., Lond., 1837, p. 59.Google Scholar
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