About delaying bowel movements

Evacuation is stopped either by diverting the matter without any other emptying, or by deviating with deviation, or by emptying itself, or by using cooling, enveloping, astringent or cauterizing drugs, or by bandaging.

As for stopping bowel movements by diverting matter without erupting it outward, for this, for example, cups are placed on the nipple in order to prevent bleeding from the uterus. The best is distraction with calming the pain in the organ from which matter is being distracted

A means of distracting matter with emptying is, for example, bloodletting from basil, used for this purpose, or, for example, stopping vomiting by laxation, or stopping laxation by vomiting, or stopping both, causing the patient to sweat. Stopping emptying by emptying is achieved, for example, by cleansing the stomach and intestines through iyaraja from sticky laxative juices that make the intestines slippery, and trying to cleanse the mouth of the stomach through vomiting, so that the vomit matter in the stomach dries up.

Stopping bowel movements with cooling medications is achieved due to the solidification of flowing juices, compression and narrowing of the mouths of the ducts. Astringents are used to bind matter and compress the ducts; coating medications are used to create blockages at the mouth of the ducts. If these medicines are hot and drying, then they are more effective.

As for cauterizing agents, they are used to form a jarab, which lies on the surface of the duct, clogging it and, as it were, soldering it. There is a harm in this that should be kept in mind: the fact is that the jarab is sometimes torn off and the duct becomes wider. Some cauterizing agents have astringent properties, such as vitriol, while other drugs do not have astringent properties, such as quicklime; tightening agents are used when they want to form an unstable jarab, and other medicines are used when they want the jarab to quickly fall off. Cauterizing and contracting agents are used when they want a persistent jarab to form.

As for stopping eruptions by bandaging, sometimes bandaging closes the duct and causes it to shrink; this happens when bandaging the arm above the elbow, when the one that lets the blood miss the basil and hits the artery, and sometimes the bandage plugs the opening of the wound and blocks the path of the ejected substance. This happens when hare hair is placed in a wound. We say: when bleeding occurs due to the opening of the mouths of blood vessels, it is treated with astringents to narrow the mouths, but when it occurs from a burn, then it is treated with astringents and enveloping agents, for example, printed clay. When bleeding occurs from tissue destruction, then medications that strengthen the meat are used in a mixture with agents that stop tissue destruction.