High-resolution, full color images available online
Search, browse, read, and print yearbook pages
View college, high school, and military yearbooks
Browse our digital annual library spanning centuries
Support the schools in our program by subscribing
Privacy, as we do not track users or sell information
Page 179 text:
“
us in arriving at useful therapeutic procedures: and not at all upon its phil- osophical attractiveness. Such value is fully attested in the common practices of medicine today, 'for instance, the administration, under proper conditions, of iodine in exophthalmic goitre: the same drug in certain forms of syphilis: phosphorus in human rickets: mercury and other heavy metals in lues Cparen- thetically, it may be said that bismuth has been employed more than one hundred years in this disease by those familiar with simile thinkinql: the snake venoms in the purpuras associated with thrombocytopenia: latrodectus mac- tans in angina pectoris: quinine in malaria: sulphur in arthritis: the same remedy in furunculosis: and so forth. THE INDICATION S F OR PRESCRIPTIONS ACCORDING TO THE SIMILE lt is a common misconception that subjective symptoms are used entirely for the selection of remedial agents according to the simile rule. That con- ception has undoubtedly arisen from the necessity of stressing subjective phenomena, in the early days of homeopathic practice. At that time there was an almost total absence of any knowledge of the basic sciences of the medical art. In the medicine of today, however, we may find our remedy by atten- tion to etiologic factors, anatomicopathologic Cstructurall variations, physiolog- ico-pathologic Cfunctionall alterations, prognostic indications, and so forth. Etiologic considerations bring us homeopathically to the use of vaccines, to the application of allergens, to the employment of more or less specific anti- gens, and so forth. Indeed, one might at least theoretically suggest that Ien- ner's small pox vaccine could have come about entirely by simple thinking In actuality, Ienner observed that dairy maids rarely developed small pox. By simile thinking, we may observe the great similarity existing between intox- ications of cow pox virus in human beings lvaccinial, and the manifestations of the disease, small pox, against which it protects. The etiologic applica- tions of the simile will perhaps remain its most accurate and effective usages, but they do not detract from the value of prescriptions made on other indi- cations. Anatomico-pathologic Cstructurall changes in disease are often helpful guides in applying the simile. For example, some centuries ago, it was learned empirically that mercury was useful in treating the dreaded scourge, syphilis. More recently, experiments have actually shown that mercury produces all the structural changes of syphilis. Moreover, the chronic inttx- ications from it show a predilection for all structures of the body in somewhat the same frequency as is to be observed from the ravages of the spirocheta pallida. W Again, the structural changes taking place in the kidney in uranium nitrate poisoning prove conclusively that the drug can never be useful in glycosuria due to pancreatic disease: but only in that of kidney dysfunction. Pathologico-physiologic manifestations may also offer indications for simile thinking. The influence of iodine upon the thyroid gland are well known and, without some degree of disturbance in that organ, rarely will iodine be useful in disturbances of sugar metabolism. lt is quite true that many thera- peutic procedures which coulcl have been reached by simile thinking have actually been determined in other ways: as, for example, by antipathic, allo- pathic, or heteropathic reasoning. Let us approach the therapeutic problem of One hundred eighty
”
Page 178 text:
“
TI-IOMAS H. MCGAVACK, M. D. Associate Professor of Medicine In recognizing the various factors concerned in the production of phasic effects, homeopathy focuses upon the clinical field in medicine, and attempts so to utilize drugs and other medicinal agents that organismal activities can be depressed or furthered as the indications may suggest. Perhaps the matter becomes clearer when we say that adrenalin in usaul dosage at first con- stricts, and, shortly thereafter, dilates the bronchioles of the lung. Therefore, we use it in asthma to relieve bronchial spasm. However, if we give repeated doses in short succession, its action is manifested predominantly in the first, rather than in the second phase, and so we not only do not relieve our attack, but actually make the status of the patient worse. By way of further illustration, it is recalled that insulin in reasonable amounts increases the utilization of sugar by the tissues, but if the dosage is pushed too far, decreased metabolism supervenes. As Rentz has said, There is scarcely any biologic stimulus of any sort that has not at some time, under some conditions, produced phasic effects, which is another way of saying that under certain definite conditions almost any known biologic stimulus can be applied according to the simile rule. LIMITATIONS OF HOMEOPATI-IY Of course, the above statement does not infer that homeopathy is applic- able in every case of disease, nor in any particular case of a disease under all circumstances, or in all of its manifestations. lt does imply the possibility of utilizing any and every phase of the action of a biologic stimulus in some medical condition, according to a very definite rule-the simile. This general- ization springs logically from any deep or detailed discussion of phase action. This does not mean that it is universally applicable, that is, does not imply that homeopathy rests upon, or presupposes, an infallible basic law. It merely implies that the homeopathic rule is useful in medicine in finding a curative agent in some cases of disease. THE SIMILE AS A FINDING PRINCIPLE Perhaps a simple illustration will make clear the finding value of this rule. The characteristic features of acute amoebic dysentery are at first, loose, watery bowel movements, later containing, in addition to fecal matter, con- siderable blood and mucous. If the condition continues, nausea and vomiting of a persistent type supervene, the patient becomes dehydrated, heart and kidney damage may occur, and, very late, neuritic manifestations may ap- pear. Such a sequence of events has been produced by ipecac and also by arsenic-assuming of course, that each is administered by the proper route with due attention to size of dose, interval of administration, and total amount of drug used. In other words, arsenic and ipecac, under proper conditions, may reproduce the picture of amoebic dysentery. By simile thinking, there- fore, they should be useful in the disease. We can find them by comparing their effects with those of the disease: when similarity exists, the conditions of the simile rule are fulfilled. It is interesting to note that these two drugs form the basis of the more successful prescriptions for amoebic dysentery today. While the modus of their action remains obscure, their effects lead us to a correct therapeutic ap- plication, via simile thinking. Many further examples of drug action can be invoked, from which we can generalize that the simile is in its essence, a finding principle. The value of the rule rests entirely upon its ability to aid One hundred seventy nine
”
Page 180 text:
“
a given case of bacillary dysentery. By the rule of the simile, we must find an agent capable of producing ulcerative lesions of the intestines associated with copious, watery, bloody diarrhoea and a generalized toxemia. Such a remedy is to be found in mercurius subcorrosivus. Experience has taught us that one to three tablets of the 3x tablet triturate leach representing lflOOOth of a grain? should be given at two hourly intervals. lf we approach the prob- lem antipathically, then we search for an agent capable of destroying the organism. ln other Words, we look for an antiseptic. Among others to be considered is mercurius subcorrosivus, and the dosage to be used is the largest one compatible with the integrity of the tissues of the host. Actually such a dose approximates lflOOOth to lf5UOth of a grain every two hours. ln other words, I am trying to convey the important thought that the same therapeutic procedure may be invoked by more than one method of medical thinking, and that therefore homeopathy does not represent in any sense, an exclusive school of thought, but is a method complementary to all others in the field of therapy. It does not directly play a part in the rapidly expanding field of substitutive therapy, of which we have notable examples in the use of insulin for diabetes, thyroid for myxedema, anti-toxin for diphtheria, and so forth. One should here also stress the importance of palliation therapy and the top- ical usefulness of parasiticidal therapy. IN CONCLUSION Finally, it would seem clear that homeopathy belongs primarily in the field of stimulo-therapy, and can be best summarized in the words of Professor Manwaring of Stanford University School of Medicine- One could para- phrase the familiar 'similiar similibus curentur' of Hahnemann by the postulate that in proper dosage, every symptom-producing drug acts as a heterophile symptom specific vaccine, increasing personal resistance to each and every pathologic factor of the same syptom-specific group. This statement affords us an excellent immunologic conception of the simile. A more fruitful concep- tion, however, is probably contained in the words of Professor Boyd, of the New York Medical College: If there are purposeful reactions in the body, it would seem rational to imitate them. This is the simile in its fundamental form. The simile principle is the principle by whose applications the defen- sive reactions are to be stimulated. Wherever in nature we find purposeful defensive reactions in the body, we should attempt to simulate them. Without reasoning of this sort Bier would never have discovered the value of reactive hyperemia in inflammatory states-a truly homeopathic procedure. Homeo- pathy represents an effort on the part of the physician to imitate and to stim- ulate nature's reaction against disease. Its limitations have been suggested, its field of application implied. There is an old Arabian proverb which reads, A hatchet is a good thing, but not to eat soup With. So let it be said of homeopathy in the medicine of todOtY. It is a good thing, but by no means universally applicable for all morbific states, but wherever stimuli of any sort--electrical, thermal, mechan- ical, or drug-are to be applied with a view to increasing nature's own re- sponse to morbific influences, then and there will simile thinking be useful. ' By the term Hparasiticidal therapy the author means the use of an agent for its direct action upon the living morbific influence without any effect, or at least, without any deleterious effect upon the host. There are no extant instances of such therapy in the human body-with the possible exception of the arsphenamlnes in syphilis. One hundred eighty one
Are you trying to find old school friends, old classmates, fellow servicemen or shipmates? Do you want to see past girlfriends or boyfriends? Relive homecoming, prom, graduation, and other moments on campus captured in yearbook pictures. Revisit your fraternity or sorority and see familiar places. See members of old school clubs and relive old times. Start your search today!
Looking for old family members and relatives? Do you want to find pictures of parents or grandparents when they were in school? Want to find out what hairstyle was popular in the 1920s? E-Yearbook.com has a wealth of genealogy information spanning over a century for many schools with full text search. Use our online Genealogy Resource to uncover history quickly!
Are you planning a reunion and need assistance? E-Yearbook.com can help you with scanning and providing access to yearbook images for promotional materials and activities. We can provide you with an electronic version of your yearbook that can assist you with reunion planning. E-Yearbook.com will also publish the yearbook images online for people to share and enjoy.