| The aim of medicine is to make for comfort and increase
the span of life. Hahnemann
contributed notably to this end when he brought into the light nature's
own way of healing,
from within. In doing so he evolved a new and unique method of dealing
with symptoms
and at the same time showed that success with the abnormal depends
upon fully realising
what is normal. Just as the lights and shadows of the mind colour
every form and kind of
action, so they foreshadow those oncoming storm crises which we
call sickness, by changes
of mood and disposition. It is nature's first signal call for
help, and often varies but little
from sickness to sickness in the individual, thereby affording a
sure point of departure for
the study of particular illnesses whose salient features are to
be found in a minute
examination of their latest developments. All symptoms are reactions,
be they general or
particular. The mental ones are the most illuminating as
well as interacting fully with all the
others, hence they deserve the highest rank. General sense reactions
to heat, cold, light,
noise, touch, posture, motion, etc., are all distinctly related
to the comfort of the patient,
hence also of great value. Subjective sensations are ideographic
expressions, useful for
interpretation by the examiner and may have any value whatsoever.
Their true worth is best
ascertained by their purity and definiteness, as fully
expressed by the patient who invariably
gives them a mental slant not otherwise obtainable. This has value
in so far as it leads away
from the machine methods of the schools. Every symptom picture shows
three phases,
constitutional, general conformation and the peculiarities. The
basic factors with the rules of
procedure are the constants, while the symptoms are the variables.
All three must be well
met before the similimum can be seen. The gist of the case
may be featured in any one part
thereof. Often it is the common factor of the assembled peculiarities,
again it may come
down through the anamnesis, hereditary predilection, etc.
CLINICAL CASES
Late in February a child of two years developed severe chills
at 11 a.m. on every
alternate day. His face became very blue, soon intense heat
followed, then a slight moisture.
One dose of Natrium muriaticum MM was given at the close
of the cycle. There never was
another chill and he has flourished as never before.
The profuse leucorrhoea a of a young woman suddenly ceased; a
left sided salpingitis
with local swelling, high fever, restlessness and severe prostration
quickly followed. Each
paroxysm of pain gradually rose to a certain pitch then suddenly
ceased. A dose of
Pulsatilla MM restored the discharge over night and a steady
and complete recovery
followed.
A woman in the seventies with chronic nephritis was operated for
a right sided
strangulated hernia. In two weeks she developed subacute pneumonia
with gastritis. The
stomach pains always went to the side upon which she happened
to turn. Two doses of
Pulsatilla MM quickly stopped all distress and she expectorated
much muco-pus, tasting of
ether. In a week the gastric pain recurred but another dose of the
same remedy completed the
cure.
A devotee of Bacchus and Venus with endarteritis of the aorta and
broken compensation
was suddenly seized with an agonising twisting pain in
the left calf along with complete
anaesthesia below that point. A swelling in the popliteal space
appeared and he rolled about
in great pain, tried hot baths and all sorts of applications without
relief. A few doses of Nux
vomica soon put him to sleep and in two days he was back to
his former state.
These case histories emphasize the necessity of discovering the
essential peculiarities
which crop out from time to time in every sickness. In cases of
long standing they are
usually deeply rooted and should be used with care, lest we stir
up an aggravation that
cannot be easily handled. If structural changes have not gone too
far and there is an
abundance of vitality, we may venture with some confidence into
the storm crisis which is
almost sure to follow the administration of one of these diggers
among remedies. Such cases
bring us face to face with the old question of palliation and the
use of sedatives; where it
goes without saying that the genuine relief obtained will be in
strict proportion to our
knowledge of materia medica, for the ultimate effects of pain killers
are never happy.
A woman well in the seventies had a dangerous abscess of the gallbladder
followed in
four months by apoplexy and left sided paralysis; then came recurring
cerebral congestions
with violent head pains which caused her to scream out, pull
her hair and roll the eyeballs
from side to side. There was some paralysis of deglutition
and a heavy dry coat on the
tongue. Several doses of Cuprum metallicum MM given at
long intervals made her very
comfortable, cleared the tongue, removed the throat paralysis and
restored the appetite, but
did not affect the vascular degeneration.
Suppression and metastasis turn disease movement toward more vital
organs
engendering many evils. The laity cannot visualise the damage done
by the use of salves,
plasters, liniments and the host of soothing drugs so well calculated
to relieve distress while
they throw the vital forces into disorder, make disease more intractable
and lower the
patient's vitality. Let it not be thought that specialists, apprentice
surgeons and dope shooters
are the only ones guilty of disordering nature's processes; for
chasing symptoms about
without grasping their actual import and connection is a most insidious
and subtle form of
suppression, entailing endless confusion, often making cure an impossibility.
This is the
particular weakness of some deluded homeopaths. The curative remedy
removes the latest
symptoms first, then reaches further and further back until reaction
to it has eliminated
everything to which it is in the least similar in action. As the
morbid symptoms grow less
and less a calm finally follows whereupon very old symptoms reappear
transiently or the
picture alters its character radically, demanding a new analysis.
This is a critical time for
both patient and prescriber; a mistake here may ruin everything.
Aside from their acute dangers serums are palliatives as well
as causing defective
elimination; they lower reactive power and force the vital powers
into more sluggish
channels where response is much slower. This is fully shown by the
presence of retention
changes in the Ms and the increased susceptibility to disease which
follows. Injecting
heterogeneous matter into the blood stream violates the laws of
nature and is full of danger;
being certainly a step down procedure.
Life expresses itself through harmonious interaction and expenditure
of vital energy. If
its regular movement be disturbed health is soon impaired and disease
appears. Prompt
restoration demands the contacting of a similar acting force such
as is best carried by
potentised substances which are, after all, but new vehicles for
particular detached forces. The dissipation of their power by sunlight
is highly suggestive proof of this. Potentization
seemingly does not change inherent vibratory activity as much as
might be supposed. Did it
in fact do so, the manifest power of the nosodes would soon lose
all resemblance to that of
its parent substance and become a nullity, which we know is not
the case, by any means.
That mere dilution or attenuation hardly alters the specific effect
or vibration rate at all, is
proven by the fact that vaccination not infrequently reproduces
true smallpox, while
potencies of Variolinum develop spurious variolous symptoms of high
potential value. No
procedure that violates the protective bathers which nature has
thrown about the blood can
possibly be anything but a bad palliative at best, and should not
be called curative, however
expedient it maybe. Actual cures are only made by again harmonising
discordant vibration
by means of the application of similarly acting forces. We thus
come to think of the human
body as a generator and storehouse of convertible energy capable
of being shifted into
needed channels when properly and sympathetically handled, which
means that the forces
used must primarily act in consonance with those to which they are
applied, if we wish to
restore normal action again.
Should the case be taken correctly, the similar remedy found,
an accurate diagnosis
made and whatever else is needful be done, it will all avail but
little, if we do not know how
to control reaction. The test of our ability is to know how long
to await its appearance, to
recognise it when it comes, to correctly evaluate its course and
finally realise when it really
ceases. These are the essentials.
Peculiarities of drug action are carried forward, amplified and
intensified by
potentization while their crudities are gradually eliminated; hence
physiological action has
value in so far as it is definite only. The burnings of Arsenicum
and the cramps of
Colocynthes already appear in poisonings and extend as
a characteristic action through the
highest potencies. Of itself this would not absolutely separate
them from their companions,
but as the ascent through the potencies is made notable modifiers
and concomitants appear
which clearly distinguish them from their associates. In this respect
drugs act just like
diseases. They cannot do otherwise, for no applied force can call
forth what is not already
potentially present in the human economy.
Every disease picture appeals to as well as leaves something to
the imagination. Were it
otherwise we could not cure. Disordered life forces soon exteriorise
themselves as manifest
disease pictures which we at once try to fill out by searching out
all of its ramifications in
order to form an unified concept thereof, which will be harmonious
and be a speaking
likeness, as it were, of some medicinal counterpart. The correction
of a disordered symptom complex is important and often difficult.
For
this preliminary work Nux vomica has very generally been
used, largely because of the
American drugging habit; but sometimes other remedies are clearly
called for and must be
given.
A case in point: A lifelong hard drinker of 63 recently came to
me with mitral
incompetence and broken compensation. He did badly under several
remedies including an
allopathic prescription of large doses of digitalis with hypodermics
of morphia two or three
times a day. There was mounting ascites, dropsy of the legs, Cheyne-Stokes
breathing and
increasing insomnia, not always due to the dyspnoea. We all know
the picture, which
usually ends in repeated tappings and final exitus. The peculiar
sleeplessness kept me
looking for a remedy to match the combined contingency and which
would perhaps hold ,the
heart a while longer. Sleeplessness in heart affections was finally
found under Crataegus.
The prescription was thirty drops of mother tincture in half a
glass of water; one teaspoonful
every three hours. The effect was unbelievable. In two days the
patient's blue cyanosed face
became red; the very dry, red tongue again became moist; he began
to lie down a little and
the immensely hypertrophied and dilated heart grew progressively
less; in short, a
marvellous improvement set in, until one day a left sided supra-orbital
neuralgia appeared.
Now I knew the symptoms had been set in order. A single dose of
Spigelia MM has seemed
to establish valvular competency and only slightly irregular heart
action remains. For
obvious reasons, this case does not point to a complete solution
of the treatment of even one
type of cardiac disease, but it does show what the right application
of the carefully selected
homeopathic remedy may do in a very dangerous situation. In an acute
endocarditis
following suppressed tonsillitis, with almost the same diagnostic
picture, but accompanied
by excessive restlessness of the arms and air hunger, Tarantula
cured radically. It seems to
me that valvular heart affections are more amenable to correct prescribing
than has been
generally supposed, but the utmost care to place the diagnostic
and individualistic symptoms
in their proper perspective, must be exercised, if success is to
crown our efforts.
The problems which daily confront us are in no wise less vital
if we take into account
the ultimation of disease, for every acute affection properly treated
tends to bring to the
surface those deeper lying dyscrasias which we carry about but too
faithfully for our own
well being. If we wish to eradicate these, much depends upon when
and how we begin
operations. Homoeopathy has proven its high value in the growing
years beyond all cavil.
Dietetics and sanitation are the only measures which have come even
within hailing distance
of it here. When thinking over these things one is likely to become
impatient at the narrow
mindedness which has so long passed for real scientific attainment.
Science is not the thing
or mode which we learn, but the relativity with which we understand
facts. This
interdependence is not new in homeopathy, even, if almost bizarre
in the senior branch of
the profession.
One more thought. Our regular brethren may possibly take up and
even extend the
usefulness of the homeopathic method in a number of ways, but the
purposeful manipulation
of inherent vital powers is a step far beyond their grasp. For us
it is almost natural.
PARKERSBURG, W VA.
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