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The
first solution cannot be made in pure alcohol, because sugar
of milk will not dissolve in alcohol. The first solution is
therefore made in a mixture of half water and half alcohol.
To
one grain of the medicinal powder triturated to the millionfold
potency I, fifty drops of distilled water are dropped in and
by turning the vial a few times round on its axis it is easily
dissolved, when fifty drops of good alcohol * are added, and the vial, which ought only to
be filled to two-thirds of its capacity by the mixture, ought
to be stoppered and shaken twice (i.e. with two down-strokes
of the arm). It is marked with the name of the medicine and
1/100 I. One drop of this is added to ninety-nine or one hundred
drops of pure alcohol, the stoppered vial is then shaken with
two strokes of the arm and marked with the name of the medicine
and designated 1/1000 I. One drop of this is added to ninety-nine
or one hundred drops of pure alcohol, the corked vial is then
shaken with two strokes of the arm and marked with the name
of the medicine and II. The preparation of the higher potencies
is then continued with two strokes of the arm**
every time to the 1/100 II, 1/10000 II, III, etc., but to
attain a simple uniformity in practice only the vials with
the full numbers II, III, IV, V, etc., are used in practice,
but the intermediate numbers are preserved in boxes or cases
with their labels. Thus they will be protected from the effect
of daylight.
-----
(*
For the fifty drops of water as well as for the fifty drops
of alcohol a vial containing just that quantity may be used,
so that we need not then count the drops, especially as drops
of water are not easily counted when it flows from a vial,
the mouth of which is not roughened by rubbing with sand.)
(It
will be well to mark on the label that it has been shaken
twice, together with the date.)
(**
After many experiments and searching comparisons with
the patients I have for several years preferred from conviction
to give to the medicinal fluids which are to be elevated to
higher potencies and at the same time to be rendered milder,
only two shakes (with two strokes of the arm) instead of the
ten shakes given by others, because the potentizing in the
latter case by the repeated shaking passes far beyond the
attenuation at every step (though this is one hundred fold);
while yet the end striven for is to develop the medicinal
powers only in the degree that the attenuation may reach the
end aimed for: to moderate in some degree the strength of
the medicine while its power of penetration is increased.
The double shake also increases the quantity of the medicinal
forces developed, like the tenfold shake, but not in as high
a degree as the latter, so that its strength may, nevertheless,
be kept down by the one hundred fold attenuation effected,
and we thus obtain every time a weaker though somewhat more
highly potentized and more penetrating medicine.)
(Instead
of the fractional numbers 1/1000000 (I/I), 1/1000000000000
(I/II), etc., these degrees of dynamization are frequently
so expressed that only the exponent showing how often one
hundred has been multiplied into itself is expressed, thus,
instead of 1, 100
(3);
instead of I/II, 100 (6);
instead of I, 100 (9);
instead of 1/100 III 100 (10);
instead of 1/10000 IX, 100 (29)
and instead of decillion I/X, 100
(3),
thus only the exponents as to the third, sixth, ninth, tenth,
twenty-ninth and thirtieth potency, etc.)
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As
the shaking is only to take place through moderate strokes
of the arm, the hand of which holds the vial, it is best to
choose the vials just so large that they will be two-thirds
filled with 100 drops of the attenuated medicine.
Vials
that have contained a remedy must never be used for the reception
of any other medicine, though they be rinsed ever so often,
but new vials must be taken every time.
----------------------
The
pellets which are to be moistened with the medicine should
also be selected of the same size, hardly as large as poppy-seeds,
made by the confectioner, partly so that the dose may be made
small enough, and partly that homoeopathic physicians in the
preparation of medicines, as also in the giving of doses,
may act alike, and thus be able to compare the result of their
practice with that of other Homoeopaths in the most certain
manner.
The
moistening of pellets is best done with a quantity, so that
a drachm or several drachms of pellets are put into a little
dish of stoneware, porcelain or glass; this dish should be
more deep than wide, in the form of a large thimble; several
drops of the spirituous medicinal fluid should be dropped
into it (rather a few drops too many), so that they may penetrate
to the bottom and will have moistened all the pellets within
a minute. Then the dish is turned over and emptied on a piece
of clean double blotting paper, so that the superfluous fluid
may be absorbed by it, and when this is done, the pellets
are spread on the paper so as to dry quickly. When dry, the
pellets are filled in a vial, marked as to its contents, and
well stoppered.
All
pellets moistened with the spirituous liquid have when dry
a dull appearance; the crude, unmoistened pellets look whiter
and more shining.
To
prepare the pellets to give to patients, one or a couple of
such little pellets are put into the open end of a paper capsule
containing two or three grains of powdered sugar of milk;
this is then stroked with a spatula or the nail of the thumb
with some degree of pressure until it is felt, that the pellet
or pellets are crushed and broken, then the pellets will easily
dissolve if put into water.
Wherever
I mention pellets in giving medicine, I always mean the finest,
of the size of poppy-seeds, of which about 200 (more or less)
weigh a grain.
-----<
Page - 152 >-----
The
antipsoric medicines treated of in what follows contain no
so-called idiopathic medicines, since their pure effects,
even those of the potentized miasma of itch (Psorin) have
not been proved enough, by far, that a safe homoeopathic use
might be made of it. I say homoeopathic use, for it does not
remain idem (the same); even if the prepared itch substance
should be given to the same patient from whom it was taken,
it would not remain idem (the same), as it could only be useful
to him in a potentized state, since crude itch substance which
he has already in his body as an idem is without effect on
him. But the dynamization or potentizing changes it and modifies
it; just as gold leaf after potentizing is no more crude gold
leaf inert in the human body, but in every stage of dynamization
it is more and more modified and changed.
Thus
potentized and modified also, the itch substance (Psorin)
when taken is no more an idem (same) with the crude original
itch substance, but only a simillimum (thing most similar).
For between IDEM and SIMILLIMUM There is no intermediate for
any one that can think; or in other words between idem and
simile only simillimum can be intermediate. Isopathic and
aequale are equivocal expressions, which if they should signify
anything reliable can only signify simillimum, because they
are not idem.
-----<
Page - 155 >-----
SECOND
PART.
--------
ANTIPSORIC
MEDICINES.

Dr
Samuel HAHNEMANN (1755-1843)
PREFACE
CONCERNING
THE TECHNICAL PART OF HOMOEOPATHY1
Since
I last* addressed the public
concerning our healing art, I have had among other things
also the opportunity to gain experience as to the best possible
mode of administering the doses of the medicines to the patients,
and I herewith communicate what I have found best in this
respect.
A
small pellet of one of the highest dynamizations of a medicine
laid dry upon the tongue, or the moderate smelling of an opened
vial wherein one or more such pellets are contained, proves
itself the smallest and weakest dose with the shortest period
of duration in its effects. Still there are numerous patients
of so excitable a nature, that they are sufficiently affected
by such a dose in slight acute ailments, to be cured by it
if the remedy is homoeopathically selected. Nevertheless the
incredible variety among patients as to their irritability,
their age, their spiritual and bodily development, their vital
power and especially as to the nature of their disease, necessitates
a great variety in their treatment, and also in the administration
to them of the doses of medicines. For their diseases may
be of various kinds: either a natural and simple one but lately
arisen, or it may be a natural and simple one but an old case,
or it may be a complicated one (a combination of several miasmata),
or again what is the most frequent and worst case, it may
have been spoiled by a perverse medical treatment, and loaded
down with medicinal diseases.
I
can here limit myself only to this latter case, as the other
cases cannot be arranged in tabular form for the weak and
negligent, but must be left to the accuracy, the industry
and the intelligence of able men, who are masters of their
art.
Experience
has shown me, as it has no doubt also shown to most of my
followers, that it is most useful in diseases of any magnitude
(not excepting even the most acute, and still more so in the
half- acute, in the tedious and most tedious) to give to the
patient the powerful homoeopathic pellet or pellets only in
solution, and this solution in divided doses. In this way
we give the medicine, dissolved in seven to twenty tablespoonfuls
of water without any addition, in acute and very acute diseases
every six, four or two hours; where the danger is urgent,
even every hour or every half-hour, a tablespoonful at a time;
with weak persons or children, only a small part of a tablespoonful
(one or two teaspoonfuls or coffeespoonfuls) may be given
as a dose.
-----
(1
This preface was prefixed to Vol. III, of the Chronic Diseases,
published in the year 1837.-Tr.)
(*In
the beginning of the year 1834 I wrote the first two parts
of this work and although they together contain only thirty-six
sheets, my former publisher, Mr. Arnold, in Dresden, took
two years to publish these thirty-six sheets. By whom was
he thus delayed? My acquaintances can guess that.)
-----<
Page - 156 >-----
In
chronic diseases I have found it best to give a dose (e.g.,
a spoonful) of a solution of the suitable medicine at least
every two days, more usually every day.
But
since water (even distilled water) commences after a few days
to be spoil, whereby the power of the small quantity of medicine
contained is destroyed, the addition of a little alcohol is
necessary, or where this is not practicable, or if the patient
cannot bear it, I add a few small pieces of hard charcoal
to the watery solution. This answers the purpose, except that
in the latter case the fluid in a few days receives a blackish
tint. This is caused by shaking the liquid, as is necessary
every time before giving a dose of medicine, as may be seen
below.
Before
proceeding, it is important to observe, that our vital principle
cannot well bear that the same unchanged dose of medicine
be given even twice in succession, much less more frequently
to a patient. For by this the good effect of the former dose
of medicine is either neutralized in part, or new symptoms
proper to the medicine, symptoms which have not before been
present in the disease, appear, impeding the cure. Thus even
a well selected homoeopathic medicine produces ill effects
and attains its purpose imperfectly or not at all. Thence
come the many contradictions of homoeopathic physicians with
respect to the repetition of doses.
But
in taking one and the same medicine repeatedly (which is indispensable
to secure the cure of a serious, chronic disease), if the
dose is in every case varied and modified only a little in
its degree of dynamization, then the vital force of the patient
will calmly, and as it were willingly receive the same medicine
even at brief intervals very many times in succession with
the best results, every time increasing the well-being of
the patient.
This
slight change in the degree of dynamization is even effected,
if the bottle which contains the solution of one or more pellets
is merely well shaken five or six times, every time before
taking it.
-----<
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Now
when the physician has in this way used up the solution of
the medicine that had been prepared, if the medicine continues
useful, he will take one or two pellets of the same medicine
in a lower potency (e.g. if before he had used the thirtieth
dilution, he will now take one or two pellets of the twenty-fourth),
and will make a solution in about as many spoonfuls of water,
shaking up the bottle, and adding a little alcohol or a few
pieces of charcoal. This last solution may then be taken in
the same manner, or at longer intervals, perhaps also less
of the solution at a time; but every time the solution must
be shaken up five or six times. This will be continued so
long as the remedy still produces improvement and until new
ailments (such as have never yet occurred with other patients
in this disease), appear; for in such a case a new remedy
will have to be used. On any day when the remedy has produced
too strong an action, the dose should be omitted for a day.
If the symptoms of the disease alone appear, but are considerably
aggravated even during the more moderate use of the medicine,
then the time has come to break off in the use of the medicine
for one or two weeks, and to await a considerable improvement.*
When
the medicine has been consumed and it is found necessary to
continue the same remedy, if the physician should desire to
prepare a new portion of medicine from the same degree of
potency, it will be necessary to give to the new solution
as many shakes, as the number of shakes given to the last
portion amount to when summed up together, and then a few
more, before the patient is given the first dose; but after
that, with the subsequent doses, the solution is to be shaken
up only five or six times.
-----
(*In
treating acute cases of disease the homoeopathic physician
will proceed in a similar manner. He will dissolve one (two)
pellet of the highly potentized, well selected medicine in
seven, ten or fifteen tablespoonfuls of water (without addition)
by shaking the bottle. He will then, according as the disease
is more or less acute, and more or less dangerous, give the
patient every half hour, or every hour, every two, three,
four, six hours (after again well shaking the bottle) a whole
or a half tablespoonful of the solution, or, in the case of
a child, even less. If the physician sees no new symptoms
develop, he will continue at these intervals, until the symptoms
present at first begin to be aggravated; then he will give
it at longer intervals and less at a time.
As
is well known, in cholera the suitable medicine has often
to be given at far shorter intervals.
Children
are always given these solutions from their usual drinking
vessels; a teaspoon for drinking is to them unusual and suspicious,
and they will refuse the tasteless liquid at once on that
account. A little sugar may be added for their sake.
-----<
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In
this manner the homoeopathic physician will derive all the
benefit from a well selected remedy, which can be obtained
in any special case of chronic disease by doses given through
the mouth.
But
if the diseased organism is affected by the physician through
this same appropriate remedy at the same time in sensitive
spots other than the nerves of the mouth and the alimentary
canal, i.e. if this same remedy that has been found useful
is at the same time in its watery solution rubbed in (even
in small quantities) into one or more parts of the body which
are most free from the morbid ailments (e.g. on an arm, or
on the thigh or leg, which have neither cutaneous eruptions,
nor pains, nor cramps) -then the curative effects are much
in creased. The limbs which are thus rubbed with the solution
may also be varied, first one, then another. Thus the physician
will receive a greater action from the medicine homoeopathically
suitable to the chronic patient, and can cure him more quickly,
than by merely internally administering the remedy.
This
mode of procedure has been frequently proved by myself and
found extraordinarily curative; yea, attended by the most
startling good effects; the medicine taken internally being
at the same time rubbed on the skin externally. This procedure
will also explain the wonderful cures, of rare occurrence
indeed, where chronic crippled patients with sound skin recovered
quickly and permanently by a few baths in a mineral water,
the medicinal constituents of which were to a great degree
homoeopathic to their chronic disease.*
The
limb, therefore, on which the solution is to be rubbed in,
must be free from cutaneous ailments. In order to introduce
also here change and variation, when several of the limbs
are free from cutaneous ailments, one limb after the other
should be used, in alternation, on different days, (best on
days when the medicine is not taken internally). A small quantity
of the solution should be rubbed in with the hand, until the
limb is dry. Also for this purpose, the bottle should be shaken
five or six times.
Convenient
as the mode of administering the medicine above described
may be, and much as it surely advances the cure of chronic
diseases, nevertheless, the greater quantity of alcohol or
whisky or the several lumps of charcoal which have to be added
in warmer weather to preserve the watery solution were still
objectionable to me with many patients.
-----
(*
On the other hand such baths have also inflicted a proportionally
greater injury with patients who suffered from ulcers and
cutaneous eruptions; for these were driven by them from the
skin, as may be done by other external means, when after a
short period of health, the vital force of the patient transferred
the internal uncured disease to another part of the body,
and one much more important to life and health. Thus e.g.
may be produced the, obscuration of the crystalline lens,
the paralysis of the optic nerve, the destruction of the sense
of hearing; pains also of innumerable kinds in consequence
torture the patient, his mental organs suffer, his mind becomes
obscured, spasmodic asthma threatens to suffocate him, or
an apoplectic stroke carries him off, or some other dangerous
or unbearable disease takes the place of the former ailment.
Therefore the homoeopathic remedy given internally must never
be rubbed in on parts which suffer from external ailments.
-----<
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I
have, therefore, lately found the following mode of administration
preferable with careful patients. From a mixture of about
five tablespoonfuls of pure water and five tablespoonfuls
of French brandy - which is kept on hand in a bottle, 200,
300 or 400 drops (according as the solution is to be weaker
or stronger) are dropped into a little vial, which may be
half-filled with it, and in which the medicinal powder or
the pellet or pellets of the medicine have been placed. This
vial is stoppered and shaken until the medicine is dissolved.
From this solution one, two, three or several drops, according
to the irritability and the vital force of the patient, are
dropped into a cup, containing a spoonful of water; this is
then well stirred and given to the patient, and where more
especial care is necessary, only the half of it may be given;
half a spoonful of this mixture may also well be used for
the above mentioned external rubbing.
On
days, when only the latter is administered, as also when it
is taken internally, the little vial containing the drops
must every time be briskly shaken five or six times; so also
the drop or drops of medicine with the tablespoonful of water
must be well stirred in the cup.
It
would be still better if instead of the cup a vial should
be used, into which a tablespoonful of water is put, which
can then be shaken five or six times and their wholly or half
emptied for a dose.
Frequently
it is useful in treating chronic diseases to take the medicine,
or to rub it in in the evening, shortly before going to sleep,
because we have then less disturbance to fear from without,
than when it is done earlier.
When
I was still giving the medicines in undivided portions, each
with some water at a time, I often found that the potentizing
in the attenuating glasses effected by ten shakes was too
strong (i.e., the medicinal action too strongly developed)
and I, therefore, advised only two succussions. But during
the last years, since I have been giving every dose of medicine
in an incorruptible solution, divided over fifteen, twenty
or thirty days and even more, no potentizing in an attenuating
vial is found too strong, and I again use ten strokes with
each. So I herewith take back what I wrote on this subject
three years ago in the first volume of this book on page 149.
In
cases where a great irritability of the patient is combined
with extreme debility, and the medicine can only be administered
by allowing the patient to smell a few small pellets contained
in a vial, when the medicine is to be used for several days,
I allow the patient to smell daily of a different vial, containing
the same medicine, indeed, but every time of a lower potency,
once or twice with each nostril according as I wish him to
be affected more or less.
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