THE BOWEL NOSODES


THE BOWEL NOSODES. The role of the intestinal bacteria. B.Coli can be isolated from the intestine of all warm blooded animals and have been found on grasses outside the body. Where there seemed to be no possibility of faecal contamination. Most workers consider the B.Coli to be a harmless saprophyte and to be non-pathogenic in the healthy bowel.


Read to the Rhodanienne Homoeopathic Society at the Meeting of the International Homoeopathic League Council, Lyons, August, 1949.

INTRODUCTION.

The name of one of your illustrious countrymen, Louis Pasteur, will forever be remembered as the founder of the science of bacteriology. It was he who first isolated and identified a specific germ and related it to a definite clinical entity (disease). Following upon his discoveries medical science concentrated on the laboratory technique for the isolation and identification of a specific germ for each known disease, and the Koch postulates were accepted as the standard for declaring any germ capable of pathogenesis-of having power to cause disease.

The motto of the medical profession is still Tolle Causam, find the cause, and to-day there are many who consider that germs are the only cause of disease and are working to discover the specific germ or virus for well known clinical entities.

It must now be accepted as scientific fact that specific germs, in many cases of disease, can be isolated and identified, but is it a true conclusion that the specific germ is always the cause of the disease? The subject is too great to be dealt with in all its aspects in this short session, but a little time must be given to considering the general question, namely the role of the Bacterium in Nature, because ones opinion on this must determine the value one places on the use of bacterial products – vaccines or nosodes-in the treatment of disease.

As the subject of this paper deals with the intestinal flora, I propose to limit my remarks to consideration of the role played by the B.Coli and coliform organisms found in the intestinal tract.

The role of the intestinal bacteria. B.Coli can be isolated from the intestine of all warm blooded animals and have been found on grasses outside the body. Where there seemed to be no possibility of faecal contamination. Most workers consider the B.Coli to be a harmless saprophyte and to be non-pathogenic in the healthy bowel. Its function is to break up into the more simple substances the complex molecules of the organic combinations which form the bodies of plants and animals, or of the complex substances which result from the digestive processes in the intestinal canal and are excreted.

It is important to note this function in the further study of the intestinal flora and its relationship to disease. In nature, where there is balance, there is no disease and the germ, in this case the B.coli in the intestinal tract, performs a useful function. Where the intestinal mucosa is healthy the B.Coli is non-pathogenic. Any change in the host which affects the intestinal mucosa will upset the balance and will be followed by a change in the habit and the bio-chemistry of the B.Coli, which may then be said to become pathogenic, but it should be noted that the primary change, the disease, originated in the host, which compelled the bacillus to modify its habit in order to survive. I would ask you to keep this sequence of events in mind as a great deal of what I have to say about the intestinal nosodes is based upon this conception which I have confirmed by clinical and laboratory observations over the last twenty years.

In 1936 I presented a paper to the British Homoeopathic Society, which was published in their journal of April, 1936, under the title of “The Potentised Drug and its Action on the Bowel Flora” and it dealt with the clinical and bacteriological observations on 12,000 cases. A brief summary of the findings is as follows:

(A) Non-lactose fermenting bacilli were isolated in 25 percent of the stool specimens examined.

(B) The appearance of non-lactose fermenting bacilli often followed and seemed to bear relationship to the previously administered homoeopathic remedy-the choice.

Of the remedy being made according to “the law of similars” and prepared by “potentization”.

In the laboratory one observed an unexpected phenomenon, that from a patient who had previously yielded only B.Coli, there suddenly, appeared a large percentage of non-lactose fermenting bacilli of a type which one associated with the pathogenic group of typhoid and paratyphoid. If one accepts the view, generally held, that the B.Coli of the intestinal tract is a harmless saprophyte and is non- pathogenic it must be concluded that, so far as the intestinal tract was concerned, there was no evidence of disease in these patients during the first series of examinations.

Now the patients stool yielded a large percentage of presumably pathogenic organism, and according to the accepted Pasteur and Koch theory, the patient was suffering form disease. Clinical investigations, however, revealed that the patient did not feel ill, but had experienced a sense of well being which he had attributed to the last medicine he had received.

Since the non-lactose fermenting bacilli had appeared after a definite latent period of 10 to 14 days, following the administration of the remedy had changed the bowel flora, and had caused the disease. The pathogenic germ in this case was the result of vital action set up in the patient by the potentized remedy. The germ was not the cause of the disease.

Is the “specific germ” the actual cause of disease, or is it the result of the action of the vital force (Dynamis) which characterizes all living cells, in their resistance to disease? That is a question which I must ask you to consider and answer for yourselves in the light of the observations I have placed before you to-day. Meantime, it will be sufficient for the purpose of continuing the subject of this paper, if we agree that each germ is associated with its own peculiar symptom picture (disease) and that certain conclusions may be made from these clinical and laboratory observations and translated into the practice of medicine.

(A) The specific organism is related to the disease.

(B) The specific organism is related to the homoeopathic remedy.

(C) The homoeopathic remedy is related to the disease.

From my observations, I have been able to compile a list of bowel organisms with their related homoeopathic remedies and to associate a clinical picture, i.e. to offer a “proving,” for each type of bowel organism. In this case the word “proving” is not used in the strict Hahnemannian sense-experiment on the healthy human-but on clinical observation of the sick person.

CLINICAL PROVINGS OF BOWEL ORGANISMS.

It is not possible to give a detailed account of each type in one session, so I propose to give you a brief summary for each, indicating a keynote, the main action. From this, and your knowledge of the associated homoeopathic remedies, you should be able to formulate a more complete picture of the symptom complex of these bowel organisms, and later I shall indicate how this knowledge can be put into practice.

MORGAN (Bach).

B.MORGAN is the type of non-lactose organism most frequently found in the stool and it has the greatest number of associated remedies compared to other types on the list.

The keynote for the Morgan group is contained in the word “Congestion” and if this is used in the study of the various parts of the body affected it will afford a good symptom picture of the pathogenesis of the B.Morgan.

Head. Congestive headaches, with flushed face; worse from hot atmosphere; thundery weather; excitement; travelling in bus or train. Vertigo from high blood pressure.

Mentals. Introspective, anxious and apprehensive about state of health; irritability; avoids company but often shows mental anxiety if left alone. Mental depression, often with suicidal tendency.

Digestive system. Congestion of gastric mucosa and liver; heartburn pyrosis, dirty tongue, bitter taste in mouth in the morning with accumulation of mucus causing gagging as soon as rises from bed. Congestion of liver; “bilious attacks” with severe headache which is finally relieved by vomiting large quantities of bile stained mucus. (A history of “bilious attacks,” especially occurring at the menopause in women should lead one to consider the use of the nosode. Morgan (Bach).) Cholecystitis, gallstone; constipation, haemorrhoids, pruritus ani.

Respiratory system. Congestion of nasal and bronchial membranes, especially in children, broncho- and lobar pneumonia. (A history of repeated attacks of “congestion of the lungs” or broncho-pneumonia, in children, is indicative for the use of the nosode Morgan (Bach) or one of the sub-types Morgan-pure (Paterson) or Morgan-Gaertner (Paterson).).

It is worth noticing in view of the frequent use of the Sulpha drugs in the treatment of pneumonia, that Sulphur is outstanding among the remedies associated with Bacillus Morgan of the intestinal tract.

Genito-urinary System. The congestive headache associated with the menstrual onset has already been mentioned, and this is often accompanied by ovarian pain (congestive dysmenorrhoea) or by the congestive flushings of the menopausal period.

Circulation. Congestion and sluggish action is seen by the tendency to haemorrhoids and varicose veins and the condition known as “Erythro-cyanosis puellorum” a blueness of the lower extremities, often in female adolescents and marked by chilblains of feet and toes.

John Paterson
John Paterson 1890 – 1954 was an orthodox physician who converted to homeopathy. John Paterson was a Microbiologist, who was married to Elizabeth Paterson, also a Microbiologist. They both worked at the Glasgow Homeopathic Hospital and at the Royal London Homeopathic Hospital.
John Paterson was President of International Homeopathic Medical League in 1939.
John Paterson wrote The Bowel Nosodes, and he was responsible for introducing them into British homeopathy n the 1920s.