| The language of disease, like any other, must be
learned. Through many thousands of
years medicine has been trying to understand disease by its own
methods, taking little note
of the language in which disease expresses itself. The distressed
vital force uses the oldest
and most universal language in the world, the sign language. Next
in importance for
expression, is the symptom language. All the signs of disease expressed
externally we find
by observation of the so-called objective symptoms. Disease expresses
itself also
subjectively, the so-called subjective ,symptoms, which must be
obtained from the patient. This is often very difficult. All too
often the homeopath expects to be guided chiefly by the
subjective, almost entirely neglecting the objective signs. All
great prescribers are
intuitively dose observers of the sign language of disease. These
two dialects, as it were, of
disease, are the ones on whom we depend for our symptom picture
of morbid action. As
patients present themselves it is the first duty of the physician
to observe them closely,
noting the facial expression, manner, mode of action, habits, and
all external manifestations.
This often gives the key to the whole case without asking a single
question. One comes in
with a slouchy gait, he is unkempt, his remedy is, apt to be Sulphur.
Another is all primped
up, a dude, his hair combed just so, he, likely, is an Arsenicum
patient. The mild, gentle
patient, well mannered, often weeping on telling his troubles is
frequently the Pulsatilla
type. Note the patient's actions, manner of speech, slow, rapid,
evasive, measured terms,
nervous, or what not. All these we must lean to observe and note
down as beginners. Later,
as experience is acquired, it becomes automatic and it is no longer
necessary to record every
little observation. The lively, nervous patient, especially if a
women, if often Phosphorus.
The variable patient, showing all kinds of contradictions suggests
Ignatia; the loquacious,
Lachesis. The loquacity of senile degeneration does, however, not
usually need this remedy,
and so on through the whole chapter.
If the physician can get at the patient's mode of thinking, his
involuntary ideas, he can
build up a picture of his mental process. This is often difficult.
The psychoanalyst takes
hours and weeks to do it, the physician rarely has so much time
at his disposal. To uncover
these subconscious mental trends ask if the patient dreams much
and the nature of his
dreams, of business, excitement, fire, emotional or erotic things,
etc.; what he thinks about
in his quiet moments, when his mind is unoccupied, drifting thoughts
as they are sometimes
called. Some drift momentarily, from one thing to another, with
no definite ideas. Are the
thought processes slow or rapid? The strength of mind is a great
factor. These symptom
pictures can usually be put into two categories, states of exaltation
or excitement, and states
of depression. All disease pictures one or the other and it is quite
important to make up your
mind to which class the patient belongs. All remedies are primarily
either depressive or
exaltative in nature. One rarely thinks of Aconite in a depressive
state except, perhaps, in
acute collapse, or of Phosphoric acid in a state of excitement.
The division of all remedies
into these two broad classes is of immeasurable help in prescribing.
It now behoves us to examine the rest of the patient's body. Often
I have done all the
above only to discover on close examination of the body something
to upset my whole
conclusion, an immense wart, a tendency to discoloration, etc.,
etc. Such observations often
put an entirely new interpretation on the symptom picture obtained
up to this point.
Again, the conclusion may be radically changed by finding that
he had an operation
years before, since which he has never been well. This may mean
that the symptoms are
reflex and may give us still another point of view. Recently a young
man came to me, as
nearly hysterical as a man can be, with exalted, hysterical ideas.
The symptom picture came
after an operation. The irritation from the operation excited an
unstable nervous system and
brought to the surface an hysterical condition latent in the system
before the operation. ln
other words the operation was the exciting cause of the presented
condition. An exciting
cause uncovers the underlying strata, often lying dormant for years,
and is an important part
of the symptom picture. A fall downstairs, an automobile accident,
great grief may bring to
the surface this basic strata. One can not unravel such a complicated
case without taking
into consideration all exciting causes and what they ultimately
reveal.
The different forms and types of disease are almost numberless.
Disease variations may
be due to time, season, sidereal influences, meteorological conditions,
occupation, location,
etc. To match different types of disease to the remedies is the
duty of the homeopath and the
true homeopathist only is capable and able to meet such a situation.
We have haemorrhagic
types of disease, haemorrhagic measles, haemorrhagic smallpox, haemorrhagic
diphtheria;
we have fulminating forms of disease where the patient dies in two
or three days or sooner;
we have septic types of disease; we have depressive types, and the
types of cerebral
irritation, in which the patient shows cerebral irritation in any
disease he may happen to
have. In some patients most acute diseases will take on a particular
type; for example
mumps will show cerebral irritation and the rest of the picture
will conform to the regular
type. Let me repeat, it behoves us to observe closely and fit the
remedy to the type.
Remember that the patient expresses disease, as a unit and not by
scattered symptoms here
and there. These scattered symptoms serve us best in final differentiation
between remedies.
In some epidemics we have the. septic type appearing almost at once.
This adds to the
gravity of the prognosis. I have noted on many occasions that when
a certain type of
epidemic or disease is prevalent many acute conditions arising in
the same locality will bear
the same type mark. For instance, a women aborted during a septic
type epidemic. She
became septic, for no apparent reason other than the above. Rhus
tox. was the remedy for
the epidemic and Rhus was her remedy. This is often called the genus
epidemicus and holds
good for varying periods, but is subject to sudden changes. which
is its weak point.
PROGRESS OF CURE
As you may well presuppose the progress of cure moves in waves
which act and read.
After the exhibition of the indicated remedy and the reaction attendant
thereon takes place,
the reaction subsides and the patient begins slowly to improve.
The extent of this
improvement depends entirely upon the stored vitality of the patient
and is, therefore, of
uncertain length. The patient who has much stored vital force and
very little obstructive
pathology will move steady toward cure. We have all grades and all
amounts of vitality. The
person with a small amount of vitality and considerable pathological
obstruction will
progress for a while and then come to a standstill. Now is the critical
time in judging. Shall
we wait another wave of reaction before giving a remedy. Many who
have waited have been
our most successful prescribers. I have seen reaction not start
for six weeks after giving the
remedy, but this is uncommon and a still longer time is extremely
rare. Most reaction starts
in four to six days; these shorter periods are particularly present
in acute diseases. In very
acute diseases, such as membranous croup, spasmodic croup, spasm
of the larynx; etc., the
reaction should occur in a few minutes and we can not afford to
wait. In very acute work the
reaction should be almost instantaneous.
Always be suspicious of a sudden cessation of symptoms without
a reaction. If the
patient gets better almost instantly with no sign of a reaction,
it amuses the suspicion that
the action of the remedy is only palliative. Cases in which reaction
occurs within a
reasonable length of time and not too suddenly are well shown in
the neuralgias. The pain of
neuralgia will fade in one, two, three or four hours. As we have
said before what is going to
happen depends on the inherent vitality of the patient. Evidences
of betterment are first seen
in the expression of the eyes and face; an appearance of less sickness
and more well being,
and the patient, without any particular change of symptoms will
have some sense of
betterment, of well being. "I have just as much pain, but I
feel better." Waiting often
clarifies the whole picture and disposes of non-essentials. If the
patient is nervous and
fidgety it usually means that the doctor has been in too much of
a hurry and is not a good
prescriber. I have prescribed for over five hundred cases of typhoid
and practically every
case seen at the beginning has needed only one remedy, one dose.
This, of course, is not true
when cases are first seen later in the course of disease, but a
dear picture usually
predominates at the beginning. Baptisia has been said to be a specific
for typhoid, but the
statement is not true. It will abort the case at the beginning if
indicated, but is not a specific
by any means. Hahnemann's instruction about Bryonia and Rhus in
typhoid still holds good.
Often Arsenicum is useful at the beginning. Don't let anyone make
you believe that
Arsenicum is never indicated in the beginning of this disease. One
remedy, one dose, is also
true in pneumonia. Give the indicated remedy at the start and you
can well afford to wait for
the crisis. Watch but don't be frightened. The pneumonia’s
that die are usually those that
have been given digitalis (crude dosage), antipyretics, coal tar
products, etc. In typhoid
Arnica and Baptisia are indicated once in a while, Arsenicum fairly
often, Rhus and Bryonia
frequently. These five remedies probably cover over 80 per cent
of the cases. Patients
should be immobilised to stop their thrashing about. In this way
the inflammation of the
Peyer's patches is made milder by inaction and the ulceration of
the second and third stages
and intestinal haemorrhage are avoided. It is a very important point.
On the twenty-first day
or earlier when the temperature drops, due to the remedy or to the
natural course of the
disease, don't give a remedy when the temperature drops to subnormal,
say 96 1/2 degrees.
If you do you will cause a relapse. In my earlier years I mistook
this for collapse and gave
Carbo vegetabilis. In every case there was a relapse and its consequences
of another run of
fever. It taught me a lesson and now I give no remedy at this point
to interrupt the action of
the first remedy or to start up a fresh inflammation. Such cases,
left alone, come back to
normal in a few days. The well indicated remedy will usually finish
up your typhoid cases
in ten to fourteen days, about the time you would ordinarily think
you had a real typhoid to
deal with.
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