Medical Terminology, Then and Now
************************************************************************
These documents may be used by anyone for their personal research. These electronic pages
may NOT be reproduced in any format for profit. Any other use, including copying files to
other sites, requires permission from the contributor PRIOR to uploading to the other sites.
************************************************************************
compiled by Penny Papenfus email: thirdpeapod28@peoplepc.com
sources: includes Tabors Medical Dictionary, Edition 12, 1973; personal knowledge as RN for over 30years.
Medical terms can be confusing at times. As medical knowledge increases, new terms are used that better explain a certain disease than previous terminology did. My parents used a lot of the old terminology when I was growing up, and being an “old school” nurse as my students liked to describe me [ha!], I wanted to put together a small list to help everyone better understand what the cause of death that is listed on our ancestors death certificate might mean in today’s terms. Email me if you would like a disease added to the list.
Then Now
Apoplexy stroke
Bad blood syphilis
Blood poisoning septicemia
which is a life threatening bacterial infection which spreads through the body
via the blood
Brain fever Meningitis
Bright’s
Disease a vague term for acute and
chronic disease of the kidneys. It is usually associated with dropsy. Nephritis.
Catarrh inflammation
of mucous membranes and usually accompanies Emphysema, Bronchitis, Pneumonia,
or dilation of right
Heart ventricle.
Child bed fever Sepsis
occurring during or after childbirth.
Remember, women were on bedrest for 2weeks after having a baby even up
Until the mid 1950’s.
And in the early years, sterile environments at home just weren’t
thought of.
Consumption Pulmonary
Tuberculosis
Dilation of the heart I think
this term more likely conveys what we think of today as Congestive Heart
Failure. See Dropsy below.
Dropsy Morbid [life
threatening] condition that causes accumulation of fluid and edema in tissues
and body cavities. Due to Heart
Disease, Kidney disease, or Cirrhosis. The treatment back then was to tap and drain
the fluid from these pocket. My
Dad
knew lots of people who had Dropsy. He
always said that they could drain you twice but the third time always killed
you. As a Nurse, I know that it wasn’t the procedure that
killed them, it was the severity of their condition by the time the
3rd
Tap was done. Many people just want to
say this was just Congestive Heart Failure, but it really was different.
Erysipelas Acute
febrile [fever] disease with localized inflammation and swelling of skin and
subcutaneous [layer under the skin]
Tissue leading to systemic [whole body] symptoms like
Septicemia and kidney disease if untreated.
Fatty liver Cirrhosis
Inanition Malnutrition
due to lack of sufficient foods essential to the body
La Grippe Influenza [remember
the flu epidemic that killed thousands of people in 1918. My dad was 4. He and his parents had it. They
were very sick but survived. He lived in Union C TN. Neighbors brought them food and left it
On the porch. He felt the best and it was his job to crawl
to the door and bring it in.]
Jail Fever Typhus
Fever, often developing in places where living conditions are
unfavorable, like ships, army camps and jailhouses
Lock jaw tetanus
Marasmus Emaciation
or wasting away due to acute diseases present. Common in infants up to 18 months
of age.
Phrenitis Acute
Delirium frenzy.
Encephalitis
Plague once used to
describe any widespread contagious disease associated with a high death rate.
There are several forms of
Plague
today: Bubonic, Black [epidemic in
Pott’s
Disease Tuberculosis of the
spine, especially found in children and adult through age 40
Purpural Fever/ Blood Fever I’ve seen it spelled
several ways. It means Septicemia or Fever with skin hemorrhages
Quinsy Peritonsilar
abscess due to bacterial inflammation of the tonsil area that can rupture
spontaneously
Scrofula Tuberculosis
adenitis involving the cervical lymph nodes of neck spread from a pulmonary TB
lesion.
Softening of Brain I’m
pretty sure this was the term used for Senile Dementia, or possibly even for Alzheimer’s Disease.