THE MILKS AS HOMOEOPATHIC AGENTS


Inherited tendencies are the gifts of the parents and are woven into the protoplasm, but the diet factor enters into the development of the individual from the very first feeding. During infancy and childhood structural diet problems take precedence over the maintenance and replacement foods required in later years, and during the early months milk is the important item of diet.


Inherited tendencies are the gifts of the parents and are woven into the protoplasm, but the diet factor enters into the development of the individual from the very first feeding. During infancy and childhood structural diet problems take precedence over the maintenance and replacement foods required in later years, and during the early months milk is the important item of diet.

When the mother s milk cannot provide for the childs needs we must substitute the nearest similar, and cows milk in some from is the frequent alternative and often meets the need. It is usually later in life that cows milk becomes of questionable value in the diet. Burnout observes that “children who drink much like after their teeth are grown become very liable to colds.” Some patients are so sensitive (or allergic, if you prefer that term) to dairy products that they cannot tolerate them in any form. All this leads us to a study of milk as a homoeopathic agent, with a brief preliminary glance at commercial milk production.

Dairy milk represents abnormal stimulation of lactation through heredity and selective breeding, an evolutionary development so rapid that it probably approaches a pathological state. Lactation is a vital part of the female sexual cycle; this factor continues to be a strong influence, in potentized milk, on the female system. Milk itself is a mucous secretion, and observation of the effects of milk either in natural form or in potency reflect the stimulation of secretions from all mucous surfaces. Milk-borne epidemics usually manifest symptoms centering in the mouth, throat or alimentary tract: unpasteurized milk has a strongly diuretic action. We observe that these tendencies continue strongly through the action of potentized milk.

Another question to be considered is the free use of cows milk in the standard diets for tuberculous patients. Here we have a pathological condition having to do with exudations, copious mucous discharges and deposits in the tissues. We have observed that milk tends to increase the production of mucus. It has marked influence on the mouth, throat and upper respiratory tract, both in the natural and in the potentized states. Question: Do we help or hinder the pulmonary tuberculous patient by prescribing a milk diet?

In our study of the potentized milks we have analyzed and compared eight remedies: Lac vaccinum, Lac vaccinum butyraceum, Lac vaccinum defloratum, Lactic acid, Lactis vaccini flos, Saccharum lactis, Lac caninum, Lac felinum. There was no record available of the effect of goat milk, nor of the other types of milk run up by Swan in his experiments, such as the equorum, humanum, etc. The symptoms considered were both the proven and the pathogenetic, because of the scanty information on some forms.

Without any question, Lac caninum, has taken the lead in the development of symptoms, both in the number of symptoms produced and in their depth and violence of action. This may be partly due to the fact that Lac caninum has been more carefully and thoroughly proven than any other member of the group and its clinical application is of ancient origin. Cream (Lactis vaccini flos) produced the least number of symptoms, and no symptoms at all of the mind, head, eyes or ears have been recorded.

Whole milk (Lac vaccinum) produces less symptoms than either skimmed milk (Lac vaccinum defloratum) or butter-milk (Lac vaccinum butyraceum). This might seem to indicate some natural balance between cream and the body of the milk, and that cream is able to modify or possibly antidote the symptoms produced by skimmed milk.

All eight remedies produced symptoms, of the mouth, throat, urinary tract, female organs, upper respiratory tract, and in the lower limbs.

We have seen that cream alone was exempt from mental symptoms. The mental picture of the rest of the group might be condensed into a composite picture as follows:

Marked depression, despondency, nervousness: fearful, apprehensive. Weakness if will; weakness of memory; mental confusion; laziness; hysteria; vacillation; confusions so marked they last for a long time after the proving (Lac vac.); fears and delusions to the point if important insanity.

Lac. can. fears: disease , consumption, heart trouble; that she will be unable to perform her duties; of falling downstairs; to close her eyes because if snakes; cannot bear to be left alone. Lac fel. fears: falling down stairs. Sac. lac. has great feat of death especially during paroxysms of heart pains at night; is taken suddenly with fear, and trembling of whole body as from fright.

Lac con. imagines; that snakes are all around or on her, especially in the daytime; that they are in her bed; that she is a loathsome, horrible mass of diseases, that she is dirty; that she sees spiders; that if she cannot get out of her body in some way she will become crazy; that everything she says is a lie; that she sears someone elses nose; that she is very short in stature morning and evening; that she is of no importance and is looked down on by all. Lac fel. imagines: that the corners of furniture or any pointed object near her is about to run into her eyes, even when she knows they are not too close. Lac vac. defl.: that all her friends will die and that she must go to convent. Sac. lac.: that it is only by a great effort she can keep herself together; that there is a large hole in her back just above the sacrum; that someone is behind her; that her mother wants to kill her.

Probably the most important symptoms in this group as being most characteristic of the milks, are the fears and delusions, and the marked listlessness which merges into definite laziness. Memory symptoms, depression and fear, while important symptoms, occur in many deep acting remedies; but few remedies have such marked laziness as Lactic acid and Sac. lac. All these remedies are cross, ugly, hateful, Lac can rages. cures and swears; Lactic acid and Sac. lac. also are outstandingly sarcastic and fault- finding-they cannot be pleased nor speak kindly to anyone.

There is marked vertigo with this group, but in Lac. can. and Lac. fel. we find a curious symptom: fear of falling downstairs without vertigo, although vertigo may occur apart from this symptom.

Lac. can., as we have said, is rich in mental symptoms, but these should be so well known to every homoeopathic physician we need not repeat them here. One symptom worth mentioning here, however, is that where the patient cannot tell the truth-or when she believes fully that everything she says is a lie-together with the alternating type of symptoms in other parts of the body, we may well study Lac can.

All these remedies tend to the alternation of sides, especially in pains. The head pains are very acute, sharp, fiery, bursting heavy, usually confined to one rather small space or to one side, or in painful stripes; then these may leave the area first disturbed and appear in the corresponding area of the other side. Usually the left side suffers more severely, and there is the concomitance of rigidity of the fords of the neck.

Buttermilk produces no sharp pains, but painful dullness, heaviness and throbbing, with the heat which usually accompanies the headaches, Lac can.s headaches are often associated with throat affections, the one location improving as the other becomes worse; terrible splitting pains in forehead on going into cold air; over eyes when sewing. Lac, vac., defl. has the alternation of the headache with tonsillitis, also, but here the headache usually occurs more frequently in anaemic women; and there is a definite relationship between the menstrual period, the throat symptoms and the headaches that should make us consider this remedy more frequently for menstrual headaches in patients who suffer from throat troubles. The headaches of Lac fel. are agonizing, with heat and pain spreading from the vertex down over the left face as a viel; or reversing the symptoms, may begin with coldness about the nose or ear, passing upward to the vertex.

Cream alone has no eye symptoms. The other members of the group have a wide variety of excessively painful eye symptoms and may well be indicated in many serious and stubborn eye conditions; or they may have the concomitance of severe and peculiar and pains. Lac fel. has a peculiar and valuable symptom in that its eye troubles come on in the fall. CLARKE tells us that more than any other remedy Lac. can. > the deafness of hereditary syphilis. Lac. vac., Sac. lac. and Lac vac. but. all have the dullness of hearing, or at least the sensation as if the hearing would be dull.

Cows milk and cream, alone of this group, have no catarrhal manifestations in the nose. The other members of the group have mucous discharges, hard plugs. stopped coryza, and painfully sensitive pressure about the bridge of the nose and in the facial bones about the nose, indicating probable sinus involvement. Lac. fel. has a curious symptom in its exaggerated sense of smell for clams, of which she is usually very fond and which now is exceedingly disagreeable to her.

H.A. Roberts
Dr. H.A.Roberts (1868-1950) attended New York Homoeopathic Medical College and set up practrice in Brattleboro of Vermont (U.S.). He eventually moved to Connecticut where he practiced almost 50 years. Elected president of the Connecticut Homoeopathic Medical Society and subsequently President of The International Hahnemannian Association. His writings include Sensation As If and The Principles and Art of Cure by Homoeopathy.