On the Functional Diseases of the Urinary and Reproductive Organs by Donald Campbell Black (9781150466953)
Donald Campbell Black Release Date: 20 December 2009 Format: Paperback Pages: 202 Publisher: General Books ISBN: 9781150466953 ISBN-10: 1150466952
General Books publication date: 2009 Original publication date: 1875 Original Publisher: Churchill Subjects: Genitourinary organs Medical / Surgery / General Medical / Urology Notes: This is a black and white OCR reprint of the original. It has no illustrations and there may be typos or missing text. When you buy the General Books edition of this book you get free trial access to Million-Books.com where you can select from more than a million books for free. Excerpt: CHAPTER III. ON THE PATHOLOGY AND TREATMENT OF NOCTURNAL ENURESIS AND SPERMATIC INCONTINENCE. Synonyms. -- ('Evovpto)); Incontinentia urinae (Latin); Incontinence d'urine (French); Incontinentia urinae (Ger.); Enuresi (Ital..) -- Spermatorrhoea (Srep/io, piw). -- Spermorrhagia (prr/vvfu, Author); Spermatorrhee (French); Samenfluss (Oer.); Spermatorrea (Ital.). Contents: -- Organic Functions -- Hysteria, Metroraania, and their Allied Diseases -- Pathology of Enuresis, and of Spermorrhagia -- Secretion of Semen -- Functions of the Vesiculae Seminales -- Limits of Pro- creative Capacity -- Secretion of Cowper's Glands -- Is Semen Discharged with the Urine in Health ? -- Is Semen Rcahsorbed into the System? -- Tahes Dorsalis -- Eelations of Cerebellum and Sexual Functions -- Puherty -- Circumstances which influence the Development of the Eeproductive Faculty -- Excessive Seminal Emission a Pathological State -- Seminal Incontinence in its relation to Mental States -- Reflex Spinal Paralysis and Epilepsy; their connection with Genito-Urinary Irritation -- Correlation of Symptoms as arising from Sexual Excesses and Masturbation -- Varieties and Causes of Spermorrhagia -- The Analogies and Relations of Nocturnal Enuresis and Seminal Incontinence -- Diagnosis and Prognosis of Spermorrhagia -- Treatmen t. Normal function essentially consists in a due equilibrium of nervous influence. It is regulated from two poles, so to speak, the psychical and the somatic; and when undue elevation or depression ...