LECTURES IN MATERIA MEDICA


Homoeopathically this is a useful remedy in vomiting, especially if it is reflex and of cerebral origin, such as in vomiting of pregnancy and sea sickness. Apomorphia is a very powerful poison and you should remember that even the old school dose of it to produce vomiting is from 1/10 to 1/25 of a grain. The 6x trituration is as low as it should be given.


THE PAPAVERACEAE FAMILY cont.

Continued from the June issue.

OPIUM.

This is the Papaver Somniferum and the part used in our materia medica is the concrete milky exudation obtained in Asia Minor by incising the unripe capsules of the white poppy. Opium occurs in irregular lumps or cakes of dark-brown color, sharp, narcotic odor and bitter taste, and yields 9 percent of morphine. Opium contains 28 or 30 alkaloids, the principal ones are morphine, codeine, apomorphine, narceine, thebaine, narcotine and meconine and an acid called meconic acid.

ALLOPATHIC PREPARATIONS AND USES.

It is a drug greatly abused by the allopaths. Take away opium and its preparations, cinchona, iron and mercury and there is very little left in their materia medica. With these well known drugs any examination could be passed in old school materia medica. [ Not true at the present time. ED].

There are many preparations of opium is use in the allopathic school and it is important that every student should know something about them, especially of their doses. It the old school we have:.

1. Opium, crude, the dose of which is 1 grain.

2. Laudanum, which is the tincture of opium, not like our homoeopathic tincture of opium, since it contains other substances, for example phosphate of lime, so it should never be substituted for ours. Its dose is 25 drops.

3. Paregoric which is the camphorated tincture of opium and contains benzoic acid, anis, honey, etc. It really is an elixir of opium. Its dose is up to 2 ounce.

4. Morphine, dose 1/5 of a grain.

5. Morphine sulphate, dose 1/4 of a grain.

6. Vinegar of opium, dose 62 minims.

7. Wine of opium, dose 8 minims.

8. Magendies solution. A favorite way of administering opium or morphine is by hypodermic injections and for this purpose this solution may be used. It is a solution the strength of which equal 16 grains to the ounce, five drops of which equals 1/6 grain of morphine sulphate. It is also called liquor morphinae sulphatis.

9. Codeine, dose 2 to 1 grain.

10. Dovers powders. These are made up of opium, 10 parts, ipecac

10 parts and saccharum lactis 80 parts, and the dose is from 5 to 15 grains.

USES.

The allopathic school uses opium therapeutically:.

1. To relieve pain from any cause except from inflammation of the brain.

2. To produce sleep.

3. To allay irritation.

4. To check excessive secretion as in diarrhoea,diabetes, ptyalism.

5. In inflammation of serous membranes, peritonitis, etc.

Each of the alkaloids of opium has its distinctive action, but the effect of opium is the result of the combination of the forces of these several ingredients. Opium is the form in which its constituents are given us in nature. As a single substance it has been proved on the healthy and tested on the sick. The separate constituents cannot replace opium nor opium replace them.

Hahnemann says of Opium, that its effects are more difficult to appreciate than those of most other medicines, and so subsequent observers have found. Its action is as complex as its composition and it has not been easy to unravel it.

Let us briefly consider its principal alkaloids:.

MORPHINE.

This is generally used in the form of the sulphate. The old school gives it universally for the relief of pain in hypodermic injections, in fact they claim no curative action from it; for instance they give it in colic, saying that it is curative secondarily, by giving the parts rest, quieting the peristaltic actions of the intestines and allowing nature to do the work of cure, a tribute to nature not often paid by that school.

Homoeopathically Morphine will do the same, when indicated, or rather it will effect a cure. Among the secondary symptoms of Morphine are extreme susceptibility to pain. The pains are so violent as to threaten convulsions or cause twitchings or jerkings of the limbs. Here Morphine will cure administered homoeopathically in potency. Morphine will produce tympanitis, so do not mistake its effects for peritonitis, as may be done from the extreme sensitiveness and susceptibility to pain and tympanites.

We may use morphine as a palliative in cases of severe pain, intense pain such as the passage of a biliary or renal calculus, but even here let it use be postponed until you have tried such remedies as China and Berberis. Do not give it in every pain which seems severe. Remember that many patients seem oversensitive to pain and the remedy may be Chamomilla instead of morphine. The less of it you use the better for your patients.

CODEINE.

This is similar to morphine but less intense in its action. Homoeopathically it is useful in the dry, teasing and incessant cough of consumptive and it is also useful in twitching of the muscles, especially those of the eyelids.

APOMORPHIA.

Homoeopathically this is a useful remedy in vomiting, especially if it is reflex and of cerebral origin, such as in vomiting of pregnancy and sea sickness. Apomorphia is a very powerful poison and you should remember that even the old school dose of it to produce vomiting is from 1/10 to 1/25 of a grain. The 6x trituration is as low as it should be given.

We have little use for the other preparations of opium. Our endeavors will rather be directed to undo the mischief caused by their indiscriminate use by the allopaths and of these you will have plenty. Nearly all the cough and soothing syrups contain opium in some form and the death rate in children is terribly increased thereby. Mrs. Winslows Soothing Syrup is said to be responsible for the death of 150,000 children annually. Soothing syrups for children are pernicious in more ways than one, they stunt the growth of children, make them irritable and interfere with their brain development.

Nux vomica is our remedy to antidote the effects of these anodyne preparation, unless they have been given for some time and their secondary effects have been produced, the patient is wakeful and the pains are unbearable, then give Chamomilla. Now, although it is a deplorable fact that the allopaths greatly abuse opium and its preparations, it is still more to be deplored that there are members of the homoeopathic school who also abuse it. It is to be deplored, not only because it is non-homoeopathic, but because it shows crass ignorance on the part of such physicians of the means of assuaging pains, for opium is not homoeopathic to all kinds of pain, there being many that it will aggravate.

GENERAL ACTION.

Taken in a moderate dose, opium seems to act as a stimulant. This effect is especially felt in depressing and chilly conditions of the body, as in hunger, in physical and mental wretchedness, which often make the poor resort to it. Orientals use it as western nations do alcohol, to spur flagging courage and excite desire. How well it exerts the imaginative powers you can see by reading De Quincys Confessions of an Opium Eater. But while the fancies and desires are aroused, the higher faculties of the mind are already dulled. In the normal state of being we keep down the animal within us, but in intoxication, with alcohol or opium, our powers of control are relaxed and the lower nature asserts itself loudly, before it too yields to the narcotic influence of continued dosage.

It is possibly the sympathetic nervous system which is especially affected by opium. It is depressed. What are the symptoms that result from such depression? There is an apparent antagonism and contradiction between the nerves of the sympathetic and those of the cerebro-spinal system. If we stimulate a sympathetic ganglion the nerves animated by it cause the arteries they supply to contract with consequent coldness, paleness and diminished secretory activity. But if a depressing agent makes its influence first felt in the sympathetic system, the earliest phenomena will be those of apparent stimulation, an increased flow of blood to the sympathetic from the very beginning of its action. The apparent stimulation present during the earlier effects is due to the removal of the restraint exercised on the circulation by the vascular nerves.

In medium doses, one grain, opium arrests all the secretions except the milk and sweat, the latter being increased, the pupils are slightly contracted, the cerebral faculties are stimulated, and sleep follows, full of dreams. In full doses, 3 to 5 grains, we have the same symptoms but in greater intensity, digestion is arrested, and there is nausea, vomiting, profuse diaphoresis, intense pruritus, worse at the nose; spasmodic retention of urine; profound sopor; irregular and slow respiration, with after effects of nauseas; constipation; headache; anorexia; pruritus and foetid secretions.

A toxic dose produces cold, clammy sweat, very slow pulse, stertorous respiration, cyanosed face, contracted pupils, coma and death by paralysis of respiratory center.

The habitual use of opium deranges the system woefully, produces premature decrepitude, impotence, gastric irritability and hallucinations. All opium eaters are chronic liars.

The feeling of strength, therefore, which opium at first produces soon is followed by its main effects, namely, sopor. This is produced by a direct increase of the amount of blood in the brain, this soporific state ranges from a sleepy, drowsy state to complete insensibility. At first the patient can be easily aroused, but as the congestion increases it amounts to compression of the brain and we have the opposite condition to stimulation- a deep sleep, from which the patient cannot be aroused, with snoring breathing and rattling from the vibration of the soft palate which announces impending paralysis of the brain. This relaxed uvula is the first of the paralyzing effects of opium.

W.A. Dewey
Dewey, Willis A. (Willis Alonzo), 1858-1938.
Professor of Materia Medica in the University of Michigan Homeopathic Medical College. Member of American Institute of Homeopathy. In addition to his editoral work he authored or collaborated on: Boericke and Dewey's Twelve Tissue Remedies, Essentials of Homeopathic Materia Medica, Essentials of Homeopathic Therapeutics and Practical Homeopathic Therapeutics.