An Account of the Foxglove and some of its Medical Uses...
PHOTOS
Additional photos can be provided to clarify the condition of a book before it is posted—contact the shop if this is something you require
PUBLISHER
Broomsleigh Press (Fudge and Co Ltd) London
BINDING
Half green leather and cloth
BOOK CONDITION
Fine condition, ex Birmingham Assay Office, small stamp in frontispiece (see photos)
DUST JACKET
No
EDITION
Facsimile of the 1785 edition. Number 224 of a limited edition of 250
DESCRIPTION
Folding frontispiece after the original by James Sowerby
SYNOPSIS
Beginning his research after hearing of an old country woman who used the herb to cure dropsy, Withering used foxglove to treat congestive heart failure with some success. Its introduction into the Edinburgh pharmacopoeia in 1783 and its subsequent widespread acceptance eventually led to its overuse and Withering's classic Account of the Foxglove was actually written as a protest against such abuse. The book includes 163 cases involving the use of digitalis and is regarded as one of the classics in pharmacology (Heirs of Hippocrates 1039)