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Pharmacy and Homoeopathic Philosophy

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Title: Pharmacy and Homoeopathic Philosophy


1
Pharmacy and Homoeopathic Philosophy
  • Objectives
  •  
  • To review the literature related to Pharmacy
    from Hahnemannian writings
  •  
  • To evolve a teaching methodology to correlate
    with Organon of Medicine

2
  • Cardinal Principles of Homoeopathy
  •  
  • Law of Similars
  • Theory of Vital Force
  • Law of Simplex (Single, Simple Medicine)
  • Law of Minimum Dose
  • Doctrine of Drug Dynamization
  • Doctrine of Drug Proving
  • Theory of Chronic Diseases

3
  • Pharmacy involves the process of
  • Drug Dynamization
  • Drug Proving
  • Medicine Administration

4
DRUG DYNAMIZATION HISTORY
5
  • Hahnemann's early writings frequently advise the
    use of small doses of medicines, but say nothing
    about potencies or potentization.
  • Hahnemann's writings imply that his aim was the
    reduction of the toxic effects from overdosing
    with medicines.
  • This intention directed Hahnemann's work for
    several years.

6
  • Two closely related discoveries brought
    Hahnemann closer to the principle of dynamization
  • One was the improved therapeutic effect of
    reducing the dosage of previously used medicines.
  • The other finding was that substances such as
    salt or lycopodium, not previously identified as
    medicines became therapeutically active on
  • undergoing this process.

7
  • So Hahnemann, setting out simply to reduce the
    quantity of his doses, discovered potentization,
    an entirely new principle in posology.
  • This is the principle, which gives life and power
    to the system of medicine that Hahnemann
    Developed and is the third great step in the
    evolution of the law of cure.

8
EVOLUTION OF THE CONCEPT OF POTENTIZATION
  • Hahnemann's approach to potency was modified in
    each phase of his medical career.
  • A point worth emphasising is that he was an
    experimenter and innovator, motivated more by
    practice than by theory.
  • These phases can be discussed in detail along
    with the published works that Hahnemann was
    involved with at each stage.

9
1784 1796 PRE HOMOEOPATHIC MEDICAL CAREER
  • Before discovering the law of similars,
    Hahnemann's treatment of his patients differed
    very slightly from that of other physicians.
  • His prescriptions corresponded in composition,
    weight and quantities with those of his
    contemporaries.

10
  • 1790 - Hahnemann translated Cullen's Materia
    Medica - historic discovery relating to Cinchona
    bark.
  • Hahnemann wrote 'Surely toxicity is nothing but
    the violent manifestation of an extremely
    powerful agent applied in too high a dose and in
    the wrong place.'

11
  • 1796 - Hufeland's journal -
  • Essay on a New Principle For ascertaining the
    Curative Powers
  • of Drugs.
  • In this essay he makes reference to
  • the use of small doses, but does not clarify
    what he meant by "small".

12
  • The aggravation or the increase of disease
    symptoms following the administration of the
    homoeopathic remedy, induced him gradually to
    decrease the dose.
  • But this diminution was not so swift and it was
    only by experiments and bedside experiences that
    the necessity was felt by him.

13
1797 1800 FIRST HINTS OF DILUTION
  • 1798 Some Kinds of Continued and Remittent
    Fevers. Here, he notes using Ignatia in doses of
    2 to 3 grains Opium in 1/5-1/2 grain doses
    Camphor 30-40 grains/day Ledum 6-7 grains.
  • Although these are still crude doses, and
    rather large by later homoeopathic standards,
    they represent dramatic reductions from the
    allopathic doses of his contemporaries.

14
  • The first hints of dilutions are found in his
    Apothecaries Lexicon (1798), where
  • he recommends Sabina in very small
  • doses Stramonium at 1/100th or
  • 1/1000th part of a grain. Hahnemann's
  • experiments during this time led him to
  • the use of even smaller doses, with those
  • remedies he used commonly.
  • Serial dilution in the preparation of
  • remedies appears to have been
  • introduced in 1799.

15
1801 1813 DISPERSING THE SUBSTANCE WELL
THROUGHOUT DILUTION MEDIUM
  • 1801 Cure and Prevention of Scarlet Fever.
  • He offered exact details of the preparation
  • and administration of Belladonna.
  • He offers descriptions of mixing such as
  • shaking the whole well and intimately mixed
  • ... by shaking it for a minute that suggest an
  • interest in dispersing the substance well
  • throughout the dilution medium. He
  • describes these preparations in terms as
  • dilutions, attenuations or reduced doses.

16
  • Hahnemann wrote an article On the Power of Small
    Doses of Medicine in General, and of Belladonna
    in Particular, in Hufeland's Journal in 1801. He
    still understood the infinitesimal preparations
    to be dilutions or small doses.
  • Up to 1813, nothing definite was written by
    Hahnemann. There appeared general remarks about
    dilution and reduction of size of doses.

17
1813 - 1819 SEED OF DYNAMIZATION THEORY
  • 1813 Spirit of the Homoeopathic Doctrine of
    Medicine - Drugs, besides their physico-chemical
    properties, possess another property by which
    they alter the qualitative state of the organism.
    More the materiality of a drug is reduced, by
    processes of dilution or trituration, greater
    the specific therapeutic quality lying dormant in
    the drug seemed to be unveiled.
  • This is the seed of dynamization theory.

18
  • So it is dilution plus friction that liberates
    the pharmacodynamic properties of the drug.
  • His observations had demonstrated that
  • certain substances, ineffective in their
  • natural form, as common salt, charcoal,
  • lycopodium, silica, lime, etc. become
  • available as an efficacious medicine only
  • after prolonged trituration with milk sugar.

19
  • These discoveries are the reason why Hahnemann
    from that time onwards no longer designated the
    different degrees of his dosages as dilutions,
    but as
  • 'power developments' or 'potencies'.

20
1820 1828 DYNAMIZATIONS IMPORTANCE OF
FRICTION
  • 1821 - Sixth volume of Materia Medica Pura,
    Hahnemann referred constantly to treating with
    "the smallest part of a drop".
  • Hahnemann was then adopting the use of globules,
    whereby a fraction of a drop could be
    administered easily.

21
  • He now understood the idea of friction as
    bringing about the remarkable change in the
    activity of the drug.
  • This is represented in his article
  • How can Small Doses of such very Attenuated
    Medicine as Homoeopathy employs still possess
    great power
  • in 1827.

22
  • Hahnemann used the terms 'dilution', 'diminish',
    'dynamization' / 'dynamic' / 'dynamized', and
    'potentization' / 'potency' to describe these
    various concepts.
  • The term too-strong dose referred to
    prescriptions making a too-strong impression on
    the life force either by to being too large (in a
    material sense) or of too great a potency.

23
1829 1837 STANDARD POTENCY 30C
OLFACTION
  • Hahnemann felt in 1829, the urgent necessity of
    a limit in potentising and declared the ultimate
    degree of dilution to be the 30th centesimal
    potency.
  • In 1832, Hahnemann began experimenting with
    olfaction of remedies.
  • 5th edition of the Organon
  • Hahnemann described the concept of potentization
    in 269.

24
  • Hahnemann also began experimenting with giving
    the dose in solution, rather than as a dry pellet
    on the tongue.
  • In 1835 Hahnemann described split doses of a
    medicinal solution produced by dissolving a
    medicated centesimal pellet in a volume of water.
    This reduced dose allowed for more frequent
    repetition.

25
1838 FINAL INSTRUCTIONS
  • LM potency scale, which Hahnemann
  • referred to as "medicaments au globule"
  • as distinct from the centesimal
  • medicaments a la goutte, was developed
  • in 1838, 5 years before his death, with the
  • intention of preparing remedies even better
  • adapted for use in split dose in medicinal
  • solution - 6th edition of the Organon (270).
  • Intimately related to these new
  • preparations, were new approaches
  • to the repetition of dose.

26
EVOLUTION OF CONCEPT OF TRITURATION AND
SUCCUSSION
  • In 1814, in an essay entitled, A method of
    treating the currently epidemic typhus, he says
    shaken vigorously for 3 minutes.
  • Volume 2 of Materia Medica Pura (1816) - Well
    shaken or accurately shaken.
  • He almost always used fluids, shaking them,
    sometimes unsystematically, for minutes.
  • 4th volume of Materia Medica Pura, 1818 - Aurum
    - first metal to be triturated.

27
  • Vol 6 of Materia Medica Pura (1821)
  • bring down ten times, using full strength
  • of the arm.
  • 5th edition of Organon give only two
  • succussions.
  • 2nd edition of volume 3 of Chronic Diseases
  • (1837) he changed his method again, going
  • back to 10 succussion strokes.
  • 2nd volume of Chronic Diseases metals
  • triturated for a total of 3 hours, exactly 1
  • hour per stage, were soluble in water.

28
  • One can therefore conclude
  • that Hahnemann changed his
  • views on potency mainly in the
  • light of clinical experience
  • rather than empty
  • speculations and theories.

29
Observations on the three current methods of
treatment ( 1809)
Treatment of the Name Interchangeable remedies,
Compound Prescriptions Treatment of the Symptom
General indications general remedies, Routine
remedies Treatment of the Cause ( internal
essence of disease) Material Cause , Immaterial
Dynamic Cause
30
Examination of the sources of the common(
ordinary) materia medica ( 1817 )
  • Guess work and fiction general therapeutic
    virtues of drugs Dioscorides resolving,
    dissiptating, diuretic,diaphoretic, emmenagogue,
    antispasmodic, cathartic
  • Their sensible properties, from which their
    action may be inferred Signature Hypericum
    perforatum red juice injuries wounds
  • Chemistry - Animal and plant
  • Clinical and Special therapeutic indications for
    employment

31
Pharmacy and Organon of Medicine
32
20 Spirit like power to alter mans state of
health which lies hidden in the nature of
medicines Experience of the phenomena it
displays when acting on state of health
33
31 Alteration in the state of health occurs
due to Susceptibility To the attack of the
morbific cause that may be present
34
63 and 64 PRIMARY ACTION AND SECONDARY
ACTION
35
Drug Proving Concept From 105 to 145
105 Acquiring a knowledge of the instruments
intended for the cure of the natural diseases
36
106 Pathogenetic effects of the several
medicines must be known on healthy individual.
107 108 Proving on healthy individuals
F.N. 91 - Albrecht von Haller
37
109 Homoeopathic employment of medicines cure
human maladies F.N.92 and F.N.93 Fragmenta De
viribus medicamentorum positivis sive in sano
corpore humano observatis 1805, Reine
Arzneimittellehre 1833, M.M.Pura 1827 and Die
chronischen Krankheiten 1828,1830 , Dresden bei
Arnold 1835,1839
38
110 Poisonous substances and their curative
powers 
111 Based on Eternal Laws
39
112 Primary and Secondary Action Concept
Allopathy and Homoeopathy   113 Exception
Narcotic Drugs   114 Observe only Primary
Actions except in Narcotic medicines
40
115 Alternating actions of medicines -
Opposing symptoms in Primary Action   116
Appearance of Symptoms Frequent ( Many )
Rarely ( Few) and Very few
41
117 Idiosyncrasies.   118 Peculiar
Action by every medicine  
42
  • 119
  • Morphology of every substance varies
  • The action of every medicine differs from that
    of every other.
  • F.N. 98 No surrogates

43
120 Value based knowledge of Action of
Medicines - Experiments on healthy body  
121 Power of medicine to be tested on Human
Body  
44
122 Care in selecting the medicines Pure,
Genuine and energy assured   123 Mode of
Preparation of medicines. Indigenous plants,
Exotic vegetable substances, Salts and Gums  
124 Employment of medicines
45
125 Diet to be followed F.N. 100 and
101   126 Qualities of a Prover Mind Factor
 
46
127 Method of testing Male and Female
both   128 Not only crude medicines but
dilutions of 30 also are used for proving  
129 Start with small dose and then increasing  
47
130 Response after administration of dose
Strong / Moderate   131 Repetition till the
full action of the medicine is known and
inferring Secondary / Alternating Action   132
Repetition not considering the sequential
order of symptoms / phenomena
48
133 Modalities and Characteristic
expressions of medicine   134 Expectation of
all symptoms not in one prover but various
provers and at various times.   135 Numerous
observations on both sexes and various
constitutions Observation of same symptom to be
confirmed
49
136 Similar medicine produces an artificial
state and also cures him of his original
malady   137 Recording the symptoms of
Primary Action of Moderate doses. Large doses
bring about Primary Action very fast and
overlapping. No observation   138 Previous
symptoms resurging / which also Primary Action
50
139 Physician noting down the symptoms of
prover. Precise details to be elicited.
140 Mode of proceeding when we make trial of
them on other persons. If prover unable to
write, voluntary narration of the same must be
recorded as mentioned in CASE TAKING   141
The experiments of the healthy physician with
medicines upon himself are the best. F.N 103
Advantages
51
142 The investigation of the pure
effects of medicines in diseases is
difficult.   143 True Materia Medica
Collection of all disease elements and symptoms,
real, pure, reliable modes of action   144
Pure language of nature Materia Medica
carefully and honestly interrogated   145
Superiority of Materia Medica and Homoeopathy
52
196 205 External Application and their
disadvantage. F.N. 163 to 282 states that
Figwarts need external application of their
specific medicine as well as their Internal use
at the same time
53
246, 247, 248 Successive dilutions for
higher attenuations
54
267 Preparation of the most powerful and
most durable forms of medicines from fresh
plants.   268 Preparation of Dry vegetable
substances. Note- Preparation of powders so
that they shall keep. 
55
269, 270, 271, 272 The mode of
preparing crude medicinal substances peculiar
to Homoeopathy, so as to develop their
curative powers to the utmost. 50 millessimal
potency F.N.150
56
284, 285 Routes of administration of
medicine
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