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§ 241
Epidemics of intermittent fever, in situations where none are endemic,
are of the nature of chronic diseases, composed of single acute
paroxysms; each single epidemic is of a peculiar, uniform character
common to all the individuals attacked, and when this character
is found in the totality of the symptoms common to all, it guides
us to the discovery of the homoeopathic (specific) remedy suitable
for all the cases, which is almost universally serviceable in those
patients who enjoyed tolerable health before the occurrence of the
epidemic, that is to say, who were not chronic sufferers from developed
psora.
§ 242
If, however, in such an epidemic intermittent fever the first paroxysms
have been left uncured, or if the patients have been weakened by
improper allopathic treatment; then the inherent psora that exists,
alas! in so many persons, although in a latent state, becomes developed,
takes on the type of the intermittent fever, and to all appearance
continues to play the part of the epidemic intermittent fever, so
that the medicine, which would have been useful in the first paroxysms
(rarely an antipsoric), is now no longer suitable and cannot be
of any service. We have now to do with a psoric intermittent fever
only, and this will generally be subdued by minute and rarely repeated
doses of sulphur or hepar sulphuris in a high potency.
§ 243
In those often very pernicious intermittent fevers which attack
a single person, not residing in a marshy district, we must also
at first, as in the case of acute diseases generally, which they
resemble in respect to their psoric origin, employ for some days,
to render what service it may, a homoeopathic remedy selected for
the special case from the other class of proved (not antipsoric)
medicines; but if, notwithstanding this procedure, the recovery
is deferred, we know that we have psora on the point of its development,
and that in this case antipsoric medicines alone can effect a radical
cure.
§ 244 Fifth Edition
The intermittent fevers endemic in marshy districts and tracts
of country frequently exposed to inundations, give a great deal
of work to physicians of the old school, and yet a healthy man may
in his youth become habituated even to marshy districts and remain
in good health, provided he preserves a faultless regimen and his
system is not lowered by want, fatigue or pernicious passions. The
intermittent fevers endemic there would at the most only attack
him on his first arrival; but one or two very small doses of a highly
potentized solution of cinchona bark would, conjointly with the
well-regulated mode of living just alluded to, speedily free him
from the disease. But persons who, while taking sufficient corporeal
exercise and pursuing a healthy system of intellectual occupations
and bodily regimen, cannot be cured of marsh intermittent fever
by one or a few of such small doses of cinchona - in such persons
psora, striving to develop itself, always lies at the root of their
malady, and their intermittent fever cannot be cured in the marshy
district without antipsoric treatment.1 It sometimes
happens that when these patients exchange, without delay, the marshy
district for one that is dry and mountainous, recovery apparently
ensues (the fever leaves them) if they be not yet deeply sunk in
disease, that is to say, if the psora was not completely developed
in them and can consequently return to its latent state; but they
will never regain perfect health without antipsoric treatment.
1 Large, oft-repeated doses of cinchona bark, as also
concentrated cinchona remedies, such as the sulphate of quinine,
have certainly the power of freeing such patients from the periodical
fits of the marsh ague; but those thus deceived into the belief
that they are cured remain diseased in another way.
§ 244 Sixth Edition
The intermittent fevers endemic in marshy districts and tracts
of country frequently exposed to inundations, give a great deal
of work to physicians of the old school, and yet a healthy man may
in his youth become habituated even to marshy districts and remain
in good health, provided he preserves a faultless regimen and his
system is not lowered by want, fatigue or pernicious passions. The
intermittent fevers endemic there would at the most only attack
him on his first arrival; but one or two very small doses of a highly
potentized solution of cinchona bark would, conjointly with the
well-regulated mode of living just alluded to, speedily free him
from the disease. But persons who, while taking sufficient corporeal
exercise and pursuing a healthy system of intellectual occupations
and bodily regimen, cannot be cured of marsh intermittent fever
by one or a few of such small doses of cinchona - in such persons
psora, striving to develop itself, always lies at the root of their
malady, and their intermittent fever cannot be cured in the marshy
district without antipsoric treatment.1 It sometimes
happens that when these patients exchange, without delay, the marshy
district for one that is dry and mountainous, recovery apparently
ensues (the fever leaves them) if they be not yet deeply sunk in
disease, that is to say, if the psora was not completely developed
in them and can consequently return to its latent state; but they
will never regain perfect health without antipsoric treatment.
1 Large, oft-repeated doses of cinchona bark, as also
concentrated cinchona remedies, such as the sulphate of quinine,
have certainly the power of freeing such patients from the periodical
fits of the marsh ague; but those thus deceived into the belief
that they are cured remain diseased in another way, frequently with
an incurable Quinin intoxication (see §276 note.)
§ 245 Fifth Edition
Having thus seen what attention should, in the homoeopathic treatment,
be paid to the chief varieties of diseases and to the peculiar circumstances
connected with them, we now pass on to what we have to say respecting
the remedies and the mode of employing them, together with the diet
and regimen to be observed during their use.
§ 245 Sixth Edition
Having thus seen what attention should, in the homoeopathic treatment,
be paid to the chief varieties of diseases and to the peculiar circumstances
connected with them, we now pass on to what we have to say respecting
the remedies and the mode of employing them, together with the diet
and regimen to be observed during their use.
Every perceptibly progressive and strikingly increasing amelioration
in a transient (acute) or persistent (chronic) disease, is a condition
which, as long as it lasts, completely precludes every repetition
of the administration of any medicine whatsoever, because all the
good the medicine taken continues to effect is new hastening towards
its completion. Every new dose of any medicine whatsoever, even
of the one last administered, that has hitherto shown itself to
be salutary, would in this case disturb the work of amelioration.
§ 246 Fifth Edition
On the other hand, the slowly progressive amelioration consequent
on a very minute dose, whose selection has been accurately homoeopathic,
when it has met with no hindrance to the duration of its action,
sometimes accomplishes all the good the remedy in question is capable
from its nature of performing in a given case, in periods of forty,
fifty or a hundred days. This is, however, but rarely the case;
and besides, it must be a matter of great importance to the physician
as well as to the patient that were it possible, this period should
be diminished to one-half, one-quarter, and even still less, so
that a much more rapid cure might be obtained. And this may be very
happily affected, as recent and oft-repeated observations have shown,
under three conditions: firstly, if the medicine selected with the
utmost care was perfectly homoeopathic; secondly, if it was given
in the minutest dose, so as to produce the least possible excitation
of the vital force, and yet sufficient to effect the necessary change
in it; and thirdly, if this minutest yet powerful dose of the best
selected medicine be repeated at suitable intervals,1
which experience shall have pronounced to be the best adapted for
accelerating the cure to the utmost extent, yet without the vital
force, which it is sought to influence to the production of a similar
medicinal disease, being able to feel itself excited and roused
to adverse reactions.
1 In the former editions of the Organon I have advised
that a single dose of a well-selected homoeopathic medicine should
always be allowed first fully to expend its action before a new
medicine is given or the same one repeated - a doctrine which was
the result of the positive experience that neither by a larger dose
of the remedy, which may have been well chosen (as has been again
recently proposed, but which would be very like a retrograde movement),
nor, what amounts to the same thing, by several doses of it given
in quick succession, can the greatest possible good be effected
in the treatment of diseases, more especially of chronic ones; and
the reason of this is, that by such a procedure the vital force
dose not quietly adapt itself to the transition from the natural
disease to the similar medicinal disease, but is usually so violently
excited and disturbed by a larger dose, or by smaller doses of even
a homoeopathically chosen remedy given rapidly one after the other,
that in most cases its reaction will be anything but salutary and
will do more harm than good. As long as no more efficacious mode
of proceeding than that then taught by me was discovered, the safe
philanthropic maxim of sin non juvat, modo ne noceat, rendered it
imperative for the homoeopathic practitioner, for whom the weal
of his fellow-creatures was the highest object, to allow, as a general
rule in diseases, but a single dose at a time, and that the very
smallest, of the carefully selected remedy to act upon the patient
and, moreover, to exhaust its action. The very smallest, I repeat,
for it holds good and will continue to hold good as a homoeopathic
therapeutic maxim not to be refuted by any experience in the world,
that the best doses of the properly selected remedy is always the
very smallest on in one of the high potencies (X), as well for chronic
as for acute as for acute diseases - a truth that is the inestimable
property of pure homoeopathy and which as long as allopathy and
the new mongrel sect, whose treatment is a mixture of allopathic
and homoeopathic processes is not much better continues to gnaw
like a cancer at the life of sick human beings, and to ruin them
by large and ever larger doses of drugs, will keep pure homoeopathy
separated from these spurious arts as by an impassable gulf.
On the other hand, however, practice shows us that though a single
one of these small doses may suffice to accomplish almost all that
it was possible for this medicine to do under the circumstances,
in some, and especially in slight cases of disease, particularly
in those of young children and very delicate and excitable adults,
yet that in many, indeed in most cases, not only of very chronic
diseases that have already made great progress and have frequently
been aggravated by a previous employment of inappropriate medicines,
but also of serious acute diseases, one such smallest dose of medicine
in our highly potentized dynamization is evidently insufficient
to effect all the curative action that might be expected from that
medicine, for it may unquestionably be requisite to administer several
of them, in order that the vital force may be pathogenetically altered
by them to such a degree and its salutary reaction stimulated to
such a height, as to enable it to completely extinguish, by its
reaction, the whole of that portion of the original disease that
it lay in the power of the well-selected homoeopathic remedy to
eradicate; the best chosen medicine in such a small dose, given
but once, might certainly be of some service, but would not be nearly
sufficient.
But the careful homoeopathic physician would not venture soon to
repeat the same dose of the same remedy again, as from such a practice
he has frequently experienced no advantage, but most frequently,
on close observation, decided disadvantage. He generally witnessed
aggravation, from even the smallest dose of the most suitable remedy,
which he has given one day, when he repeated the next day and the
next.
Now, in cases where he was convinced of the correctness of his
choice of the homoeopathic medicine, in order to obtain more benefit
for the patient than he was able to get hitherto from prescribing
a single small dose, the idea often naturally struck him to increase
the dose, since, for the reason given above, one single dose only
should be given; an, for instance, in place of giving a single very
minute globule moistened with the medicine in the highest dynamization,
to administer six, seven or eight of them at once, and even a half
or a whole drop. But the result was almost always less favourable
than it should have been; it was often actually unfavourable, often
even very bad - an injury that, in a patient so treated, is difficult
to repair.
The difficulty in this case is not solved by giving, instead, lower
dynamizations of the remedy in a large dose.
Thus, increasing the strength of the single doses of the homoeopathic
medicine with the view of effecting the degree of pathogenic excitation
of the vital force necessary to produce satisfactory salutary reaction,
fails altogether, as experience teaches, to accomplish the desired
object. This vital force is thereby too violent and too suddenly
assailed and excited to allow it time to exercise a gradual equable,
salutary reaction, to adapt itself to the modification effected
in it; hence it strives to repel, as if it were an enemy, the medicine
attacking it in excessive force, by means of vomiting, diarrhoea,
fever, perspiration, and so forth, and thus in a great measure it
diverts and renders nugatory the aim of the incautious physician
- little or no good towards curing the disease will be thereby accomplished;
on the contrary, the patient will be thereby perceptibly weakened
and, for a long time, the administration of even the smallest dose
of the same remedy must not be thought of if we would not wish it
to injure the patient.
But it happens, moreover, that a number of the smallest doses given
for the same object in quick succession accumulate in the organism
into a kind of excessively large dose, with (a few cases excepted)
similar bad results; in this case the vital force, not being able
to recover itself betwixt every dose, though it be but small, becomes
oppressed and overwhelmed, and thus being incapable of reacting
in a salutary manner, it is necessitated passively to allow involuntary
the continuance of the over-strong medicinal disease that has thus
been forced upon it, just in the same manner as we may every day
observe from the allopathic abuse of large cumulative doses of one
and the same medicine, to the lasting injury of the patient.
Now, therefore, in order, whilst avoiding the erroneous method
I have here pointed out, to attain the desired object more certainly
than hitherto, and to administer the medicine selected in such a
manner that it must exercise all its efficacy without injury to
the patient, that it may effect all the good it is capable of performing
in a given case of disease, I have lately adopted a particular method.
I perceived that, in order to discover this true middle path, we
must be guided as well by the nature of the different medicinal
substances, as also by the corporeal constitution of the patient
and the magnitude of the disease, so that - to give an example from
the use of sulphur in chronic (psoric) diseases - the smallest dose
of it (tinct, sulph. X˚) can seldom be repeated with advantage,
seen in the most robust patients and in fully developed psora, oftener
than every seven days, a period of time which must be proportionally
lengthened when we have to treat weaker and more excitable patients
of this kind; in such cases we would do well to give such a dose
only every nine, twelve, or fourteen days, and continue to repeat
the medicine until it ceases to be of service. We thus find (to
abide by the instance of sulphur) that in sporic diseases seldom
fewer than four, often however, six, eight and even ten doses (tinct.
sulph. X˚) are required to be successively administered at
these intervals for the complete annihilation of the whole portion
of the chronic disease that is eradicated by sulphur - provided
always there had been no previous allopathic abuse of sulphur in
the case. Thus even a (primary) scabious eruption of recent origin,
though it may have spread all over the body, may be perfectly cured,
in persons who are not too weakly, by a dose of tinct sulph. X˚
given every seven days, in the course of from ten to twelve weeks
(accordingly with ten or twelve such globules), so that it will
seldom be necessary to aid the cure with a few doses of carb. veg.
X˚ (also given at the rate of one dose per week) without the
slightest external treatment besides frequent changes of linen and
good regimen.
When for other serious chronic diseases also we may consider it
requisite, as far as we can calculate, to give eight, nine or ten
doses of tinct. sulph. (at X˚) it is yet more expedient in
such cases, instead of giving them in uninterrupted succession,
to interpose after every, or every second or third dose, a dose
of another medicine, which in this case is next in point of homoeopathic
suitableness to sulphur (usually hep. sulph.) and to allow this
likewise to act for eight, nine, twelve or fourteen days before
again commencing a course of three doses of sulphur.
But it not infrequently happens that the vital force refuses to
permit several doses of sulphur, even though they may be essential
for the cure of the chronic malady and are given at the intervals
mentioned above, to act quietly on itself; this refusal it reveals
by some, though moderate, sulphur symptoms, which it allows to appear
in the patient during the treatment. In such cases it is sometimes
advisable to administer a small dose of nux vom. X˚, allowing
it to act for eight or ten days, in order to dispose the system
again to allow succeeding doses of the sulphur to act quietly and
effectually upon it. In those cases for which it is adapted, puls.
X˚ is preferable.
But the vital force shows the greatest resistance to the salutary
action upon itself of the strongly indicated sulphur, and even exhibits
manifest aggravation of the chronic disease, though the sulphur
be given in the very smallest dose, though only a globule of the
size of a mustard seed moistened with tinct. sulph X˚ be smelt,
if the sulphur have formerly (it may be years since) been improperly
given allopathically in large doses. This is one lamentable circumstance
that renders the best medical treatment of chronic disease almost
impossible among the many that the ordinary bungling treatment of
chronic diseases by the old school would leave us nothing to do
but to deplore, were there not some mode of getting over the difficulty.
In such cases we have only to let the patient smell a single time
strongly at a globule the size of a mustard seed moistened with
mercur metall. X, and allow this olfaction to act for about nine
days, in order to make the vital force again disposed to permit
the sulphur (at least the olfaction of tinct. sulph. X˚) to
exercise a beneficial influence on itself - a discovery for which
we are indepted to Dr. Griesselich, of Carlsruhe.
§ 246 Sixth Edition
Every perceptibly progressive and strikingly increasing amelioration
during treatment is a condition which, as long as it lasts, completely
precludes every repetition of the administration of any medicine
whatsoever, because all the good the medicine taken continues to
effect is now hastening towards its completion. This is not infrequently
the cause in acute diseases, but in more chronic diseases, on the
other hand, a single dose of an appropriately selected homoeopathic
remedy will at times complete even with but slowly progressive improvement
and give the help which such a remedy in such a case can accomplish
naturally within 40, 50, 60, 100 days. This is, however, but rarely
the case; and besides, it must be a matter of great importance to
the physician as well as to the patient that were it possible, this
period should be diminished to one-half, one-quarter, and even still
less, so that a much more rapid cure might be obtained. And this
may be very happily affected, as recent and oft-repeated observations
have taught me under the following conditions: firstly, if the medicine
selected with the utmost care was perfectly homoeopathic; secondly,
if it is highly potentized, dissolved in water and given in proper
small dose that experience has taught as the most suitable in definite
intervals for the quickest accomplishment of the cure but with the
precaution, that the degree of every dose deviate somewhat from
the preceding and following in order that the vital principle which
is to be altered to a similar medicinal disease be not aroused to
untoward reactions and revolt as is always the case1
with unmodified and especially rapidly repeated doses.
1 What I said in the fifth edition of the organon, in
a long note to this paragraph in order to prevent these undesirable
reactions of the vital energy, was all the experience I then had
justified. But during the last four or five years, however, all
these difficulties are wholly solved by my new altered but perfected
method. The same carefully selected medicine may now be given daily
and for months, if necessary in this way, namely, after the lower
degree of potency has been used for one or two weeks in the treatment
of chronic disease, advance is made in the same way to higher degrees,
(beginning according to the new dynamization method, taught herewith
with the use of the lowest degrees).
§ 247 Fifth Edition
Under these conditions, the smallest doses of the best selected
homoeopathic medicine may be repeated with the best, often with
incredible results, at intervals of fourteen, twelve, ten, eight,
seven days, and, where rapidity is requisite, in chronic diseases
resembling cases of acute disease, at still shorter intervals, but
in acute diseases at very much shorter periods - every twenty -
four, twelve, eight, four hours, in the very acutest every hour,
up to as often as every five minutes, - in ever case in proportion
to the more or less rapid course of the diseases and of the action
of the medicine employed, as is more distinctly explained in the
last note.
§ 247 Sixth Edition
It is impractical to repeat the same unchanged dose of a remedy
once, not to mention its frequent repetition (and at short intervals
in order not to delay the cure). The vital principle does not accept
such unchanged doses without resistance, that is, without other
symptoms of the medicine to manifest themselves than those similar
to the disease to be cured, because the former dose has already
accomplished the expected change in the vital principle and a second
dynamically wholly similar, unchanged dose of the same medicine
no longer finds, therefore, the same conditions of the vital force.
The patient may indeed be made sick in another way by receiving
other such unchanged doses, even sicker than he was, for now only
those symptoms of the given remedy remain active which were not
homoeopathic to the original disease, hence no step towards cure
can follow, only a true aggravation of the condition of the patient.
But if the succeeding dose is changed slightly every time, namely
potentized somewhat higher (§§ 269-270) then the vital principle
may be altered without difficulty by the same medicine (the sensation
of natural disease diminishing) and thus the cure brought nearer.1
1 We ought not even with the best chosen homoeopathic
medicine, for instance one pellet of the same potency that was beneficial
at first, to let the patient have a second or third dose, taken
dry. In the same way, if the medicine was dissolved in water and
the first dose proved beneficial, a second or third and even smaller
dose from the bottle standing undisturbed, even in intervals of
a few days, would prove no longer beneficial, even though the original
preparation had been potentized with ten succussions or as I suggested
later with but two succussions in order to obviate this disadvantage
and this according to above reasons. But through modification of
every dose in its dynamiztion degree, as I herewith teach, there
exists no offence, even if the doses be repeated more frequently,
even if the medicine be ever so highly potentized with ever so many
succussions. It almost seems as if the best selected homoeopathic
remedy could best extract the morbid disorder from the vital force
and in chronic disease to extinguish the same only if applied in
several different forms.
§ 248 Fifth Edition
The dose of the same medicine may be repeated several times according
to circumstances, but only so long as until either recovery ensues,
or the same remedy ceases to do good and the rest of the disease,
presenting a different group of symptoms, demands a different homoeopathic
remedy.
§ 248 Sixth Edition
For this purpose, we potentize anew the medicinal solution1
(with perhaps 8, 10, 12 succussions) from which we give the patient
one or (increasingly) several teaspoonful doses, in long lasting
diseases daily or every second day, in acute diseases every two
to six hours and in very urgent cases every hour or oftener. Thus
in chronic diseases, every correctly chosen homoeopathic medicine,
even those whose action is of long duration, may be repeated daily
for months with ever increasing success. If the solution is used
up (in seven to fifteen days) it is necessary to add to the next
solution of the same medicine if still indicated one or (though
rarely) several pellets of a higher potency with which we continue
so long as the patient experiences continued improvement without
encountering one or another complaint that he never had before in
his life. For if this happens, if the balance of the disease appears
in a group of altered symptoms then another, one more homoeopathically
related medicine must be chosen in place of the last and administered
in the same repeated doses, mindful, however, of modifying the solution
of every dose with thorough vigorous succussions, thus changing
its degree of potency and increasing it somewhat. On the other hand,
should there appear during almost daily repetition of the well indicated
homoeopathic remedy, towards the end of the treatment of a chronic
disease, so-called (§ 161) homoeopathic aggravations by which the
balance of the morbid symptoms seem to again increase somewhat (the
medicinal disease, similar to the original, now alone persistently
manifests itself). The doses in that case must then be reduced still
further and repeated in longer intervals and possibly stopped several
days, in order to see if the convalescence need no further medicinal
aid. The apparent symptoms (Schein - Symptome) caused by the excess
of the homoeopathic medicine will soon disappear and leave undisturbed
health in its wake. If only a small vial say a dram of dilute alcohol
is used in the treatment, in which is contained and dissolved through
succussion one globule of the medicine which is to be used by olfaction
every two, three or four days, this also must be thoroughly succussed
eight to ten times before each olfaction.
1 Made in 40, 30, 20, 15 or 8 tablespoons of water with
the addition of some alcohol or a piece of charcoal in order to
preserve it. If charcoal is used, it is suspended by means of a
thread in the vial and is taken out when the vial is succussed.
The solution of the medicinal globule (and it is rarely necessary
to use more than one globule) of a thoroughly potentized medicine
in a large quantity of water can be obviated by making a solution
in only 7-8 tablespoons of water and after thorough succussion of
the vial take from it one tablespoon and put it in a glass of water
(containing about 7 to 8 spoonfuls), this stirred thoroughly and
then given a dose to the patient. If he is unusually excited and
sensitive, a teaspoon of this solution may be put in a second glass
of water, thoroughly stirred and teaspoonful doses or more be given.
There are patients of so great sensitiveness that a third or fourth
glass, similarly prepared, may be necessary. Each such prepared
glass must be made fresh daily. the globule of the high potency
is best crushed in a few grains of sugar of milk which the patient
can put in the vial and be dissolved in the requisite quantity of
water.
§ 249
Every medicine prescribed for a case of disease which, in the course
of its action, produces new and troublesome symptoms not appertaining
to the disease to be cured, is not capable of effecting real improvement,1
and cannot be considered as homoeopathically selected; it must,
therefore, either, if the aggravation be considerable, be first
partially neutralized as soon as possible by an antidote before
giving the next remedy chosen more accurately according to similarity
of action; or if the troublesome symptoms be not very violent, the
next remedy must be given immediately, in order to take the place
of the improperly selected one.2
1 As all experience shows that the dose of
the specially suited homoeopathic medicine can scarcely be prepared
too small to effect perceptible amelioration in the disease for
which it is appropriate (§§ 275-278), we should act injudiciously
and hurtfully were we when no improvement, or some, though it be
even slight, aggravation ensues, to repeat or even increase the
dose of the same medicine, as is done in the old system, under the
delusion that it was not efficacious on account of its small quantity
(its too small dose). Every aggravation by the production of new
symptoms - when nothing untoward has occurred in the mental or physical
regimen - invariably proves unsuitableness on the part of the medicine
formerly given in the case of disease before us, but never indicates
that the dose has been too weak.
2 The well informed and conscientiously careful
physician will never be in a position to require an antidote in
his practice if he will begin, as he should, to give the selected
medicine in the smallest possible dose. Like minute doses of a better
chosen remedy will re-establish order throughout.
§ 250
When, to the observant practitioner who accurately investigates
the state of the disease, it is evident, in urgent cases after the
lapse of only six, eight or twelve hours, that he has made a bad
selection in the medicine last given, in that the patient’s state
is growing perceptibly, however slightly, worse from hour to hour,
by the occurrence of new symptoms and sufferings, it is not only
allowable for him, but it is his duty to remedy his mistake, by
the selection and administration of a homoeopathic medicine not
merely tolerably suitable, but the most appropriate possible for
the existing state of the disease (§ 167).
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