| Hahnemann knew that treating chronic disease was
quite different to treating acute disease. In chronic disease patients
would often return in a worse state than previously. Hahnemann’s
purpose for writing Chronic Diseases was based on
a missing principle that did not exist when treating acute disease.
He was able for instance, to treat nearly two hundred patients with
typhus successfully, as well as treating numerous cases of scarlet
fever and typhoid. Despite this Hahnemann failed to achieve the
same success by applying the same laws of similia simillibus to
chronic cases.
-
Why, then, cannot this vital force, efficiently
affected through Homoeopathic medicine, produce any true and lasting
recovery in these chronic maladies even with the aid of the Homoeopathic
remedies which best cover their present symptoms (1)
- CHRONIC DISEASES
In the above statement Hahnemann questions why the simillimum fails
to work in chronic disease when he has seen it work so well in acute.
Chronic Diseases was Hahnemann’s twelve year study
into this missing principle. His conclusion was chronic disease
has a miasmatic base that acute disease does not have. The following
excerpt demonstrates this point.
-
…by the employment of medicines more suitable
for this miasm, he is enabled to render more essential service
and almost invariably to effect a perfect cure (2)
-
Samuel Hahnemann
HAHNEMAN’S CONCLUSION
-
REMEDIES SELECTED ON SYMPTOM TOTALITY ALONE ARE
NOT ENOUGH TO INFLUENCE THE UNDERLYING MIASM
It became obvious when treating chronic disease that the remedy
selected must contain within its influence, more than the simillimum.
It must also contain a resonance to the miasm that dominates the
patient. In this way chronic remedies must be selected in accordance
to both symptom totality and miasm. While some remedies contained
the symptom totality, they did not resonate to the miasm, hence
why Homœopathic literature is filled with the statement of “a well
indicated remedy that fails to relieve”.
Hahnemann’s miasm theory was not approved of by all of his contemporaries.
How could a miasm be determined? What were the signs? For instance
consider the following quote by Boenninghausen
- ‘…we have not so far any certain signs
by which we can distinguish certainly the domain of one miasma
from that of the other.’(3)
-
C.M.F von Boenninghausen
Many Homœopathic authors have made reference of how miasms influence
facial features. Consider the following statements by these well
respected authors.
-
"In the tubercular patient…the face and
head is often seen to be the shape of a pyramid" (4)
-
J.H.Allen
-
“How
generally we see the landmarks of one of these chronic miasms
stamped upon the organism. We see it in every feature and every
physiological process; in the shape and contour of the body; upon
the visual expression, the face, nose, lips, ears, mouth, upon
the hair, its growth, lustre and general beauty or lack of it…’(5)
-
J.H.Allen
-
“The appearance of people suffering
from the syphilitic stigma often tells the story at a glance,
for we observe that the head is large and bulging, the hair is
moist, gluey, greasy…” (6)
-
H Roberts
-
"These children presented
a remarkably similar appearance, having blue sclerotics, a cafe
au lait complexion and numerous moles" (7) -
D Foubister
Outside of Homoeopathy conventional medicine was aware that the
children of parents’, who suffered with diseases such as syphilis,
often displayed particular facial features. Consider the following
list of facial features attributed to syphilis
-
Cupped teeth
-
High arched palate
-
Depressed bridge of the nose or saddle
-
Domed forehead
-
Wide-set eyes (8)
-
Heredosyphilis - Stokes 1926
To demonstrate the effectiveness of using facial features with
Homœopathy a case is presented in three parts over a three year
period. This patient presented in 2003 with chronic headaches,
2004 with digestive disturbances and 2006 with anxiety. The same
remedy brought about relief after each visit.
Homœopathic Facial Analysis (HFA) has been an ongoing and extensive
research project of eight years duration. Its effectiveness in
the treatment of chronic disease is unquestionable and as dramatic
as the results Hahnemann expected.
The case study presented includes a step by step description of
HFA in practice, combined with practical case taking in accordance
with Hahnemannian principles.
Case by Louise Barton
Female 44
Presented in February 2003 with chronic headaches. She wakes with
them and they last all day. She usually rises at 6am and they really
set in by 9am. They are worse on her right side and are felt through
the temple to the eye and right cheek area – they are also felt
in her teeth. For the last fortnight they have been constant.
Previously (when she was a manager) she would grind her teeth.
She is a health consultant and work is not stressful and she is
looking forward to resuming some tertiary studies in the next month
to further advance her work. She is very tired and says it is an
effort to get up – she feels that she has to crawl out of bed and
drag herself around. She gets to bed by 9.30pm but is still awake
at 11pm – often checking her emails which she says she can’t leave
but must check. At night she snores and when doing exercise can
be breathless – she is aware of her heart and wonders if there is
an underlying problem. Walking up hills and stairs leaves her exhausted.
Two years ago she had a nervous breakdown at work and she couldn’t
go back again but resigned instead. She had been planning a clinic
set-up but felt that her manager was against her – in fact everyone
was against her and that she was challenged on everything. It was
like fighting a losing battle on her own and all efforts were like
hitting her head against a brick wall. There was no point to her
efforts and she felt an enormous lack of support. She is no good
in groups and feels easily challenged, she can’t put her case forward
especially to doctors and managers as she isn’t forceful enough.
In 1991 when she was a manager she would wake up crying and couldn’t
go to work. She felt a newcomer and that work was all about breaking
down barriers – it was hard to be both a mate and a manager.
Two years ago after a holiday she didn’t want to go back to work.
Everything was building up and she was crying a lot. It was much
worse if she was spoken to and she felt she couldn’t cope and didn’t
know where she was going. She didn’t want to share this with anyone
and didn’t want to cry. Even now thoughts of this time will make
her cry. If others cry or are in emotional pain she will cry easily.
As a teenager she was volatile and angry and easily worked up –
she also argued a lot.
After she left her work she had fear that working for an agency
would mean less responsibility but this got better and she got more
responsibility as time went on. She fears that others are on a
pedestal and there is a gap of inequality between her and them.
When she is nervous her neck will freeze and her mouth becomes tense.
She particularly dislikes professional dinners and meeting unknown
people especially doctors. Her lips will twitch, her neck will
freeze and she feels jerky. Sometimes this is felt in the jaw.
She dislikes speaking publicly and authority figures in general.
In her health work she often feels undermined and enjoyed working
with a group of women overseas. In Australia she feels there is
no collaboration and teamwork is poor. She likes working as part
of a team as each person has different abilities and each can help
the others with new problems. She has no problem in asking for
help. Conventional medicine she finds frustrating as it segments
people into parts, she sees herself as an idealist. When problems
arise she doesn’t ignore them but will harbour and fester on them
if she can’t do anything about the problem. In particular she gets
very angry when she sees specialists influencing patients to have
operations. In her work she also sees mismanagement of medical
problems and feels as if it is like hitting her head against a brick
wall. She knows that others will lose confidence if they don’t
know other therapies. Now she has the opportunity to use alternative
treatments before conventional treatment is applied.
She is going to study psychology so she can become independent
but feels panicked at the amount of work to be achieved. After
she commences she knows she will feel better and will push through
the work. When she is nervous she can’t study and puts things off
– she likes to keep control. In her current work she feels protected
and can treat her clients as she wishes as there is support and
sharing. The team environment is great – very supportive.
Physicals
Scalp – oily, hair – oily
Headache – throbbing (similar to crying sensation – fullness)
Wakes feeling puffy – 8-9am onset
Headaches are worse if not going to work or sleeping in – she
is better up at 6am
Concentration poor
Right cheek – tightness between cheek, temple and eye with a
pulling/pinching sensation, burning sensation
Nose – mucous drip with a hoarse voice and a lump in the throat
- < if not drinking enough, < coffee
Nose – blocked almost always - << wine (snoring)
History of hay fever, eyes streaming, < flowers, itchy palate
History of cold sores – lips
Mouth dry - < with stress
Gums – sensitive
Breath – bad in the mornings – almost faecal – others notice
Voice – hoarse most of the time
Exhausted < heat, one time pain in chest
Reflux/heartburn, < coffee, < bread
Flatus < baked beans – much worse lately, < overeating
Appetite – can’t eat early
Loves Thai foods, coriander and salads, meat and vegetables
Not big on sweets, likes savory (nuts, cheese, smoked salmon)
– likes delicacies
Loves spicy although chili = diarrhea and stomach pain
Apples = sore teeth, << wine and champagne (loves)
Loves coffee but 3 cups = nausea and shakes
Feels thirsty but doesn’t drink much (6 glasses per day) – urine
can be dark
History of diarrhea+++ when traveling –also hemorrhoids
Menses – history of irregular, unable to have children, never
wanted to be a career person, menses – pain 10-7 days before –
burning explosion inside followed by painful bowel motion - <
right side. Heavy period up to 7 days.
Moody - < week before menses – not depressed just flat
Back – occasional sciatica < right side
Knee – occasional sudden weakness < right side
Skin – acne before menses
Abdomen – moles
History of sarcoidosis in twenties, also chronic fatigue and
join pains with swollen legs
Family history – artery disease and stroke
As a teenager she would tell off her mother and was naughty and
got into trouble. Mostly she was happy but moved many times and
found this stressful. In her twenties she suffered a major heartbreak
when she lost her love. He was manipulative and cheated on her
– she ended up not trusting him and she took years to get over him.
Environment – she hates winter and loves summer but is worse for
heat. She also loathes wind and rain
Sleep – wants to sleep in the afternoon and is better at night
in her energy. History of dreams of people over her bed – this
happened last night – as if a shadow was over her.
Previous treatment – another Homœopath gave her Silica and Ignatia
two years ago.
HFA
HFA is a complete system incorporating case taking according to
both Hahnemann and Kent. It comprises accurate repertorisation and
remedy selection based on the miasm.
The miasm of the patient is determined by examination of their
facial features and the allocation of each feature into psora, sycosis
and syphilis. The principle of the simillimum states that two similar
diseases cannot exist in the same body at the same time, the stronger
will dominate or if of equal strength will join together to form
a complex disease (miasm).
HFA Principles
-
Facial features select the miasm
-
The remedy selected belongs to the same miasmatic
group as the patient
-
Repertorisation based on 2-3 Mentals and 4-5 Generals
Choosing Rubrics
The second fundamental in Homœopathic prescribing is the totality
of symptoms. The rubrics selected for repertorisation must be based
on facts. The repertory is not the place for interpretation because
it is a program – what comes out is only as good as the information
that goes in. Every rubric selected must be obvious and there must
be no doubt and no interpretation. When using HFA large rubrics
are preferred so as to ensure the remedy is “caught in the net”
MIND; WEEPING, tearful mood; tendency (356) ***
The most dominant emotional state
MIND; DREAMS; business, of (67) **
She talks of business continually but this rubric only contains
10 remedies – this is too small and our remedy may not be included.
Dreams of business is chosen as it has the energy of business and
contains 67 remedies
MIND; DELUSIONS, imaginations; specters, ghosts, spirits, sees
(80) *
It is always useful to choose an individual rubric where possible
- GENERALITIES; SIDE; right (225)
- GENERALITIES; ASCENDING; agg. (123)
- GENERALITIES; FOOD and drinks; coffee; agg. (72)
- GENERALITIES; FOOD and drinks; alcohol, alcoholic drinks; agg.
(116)
- GENERALITIES; PAIN; burning; internally (195)
The case had a number of general symptoms – these five rubrics
were considered to be worthy of inclusion.
Circumstances
Circumstance legitimizes mental rubrics by providing an objective
base. This means that interpretation is left to a minimum and all
we need to do is find the best rubric to describe the recurring
circumstances happening in the lives of our patients. For example
in this women’s story work features prominently. Most of her stress
and discussion is around work. Therefore Business as
a rubric must feature in her case. The rubric doesn’t have to be
literal. With this case the patient is talking of business, not
dreaming of it. Energy recognizes the topic no matter what presentation
so the largest rubric covering that topic will be acceptable. Alternatively
all the Business rubrics can be grouped together as
one rubric.
Generals
Generals play an important role in any repertorisation because
they complete totality. They are the body’s expression of stress
and when combined with the mental causes provide us with a complete
picture.
From this repertorisation the following remedies appear.
In order – Nux, Puls, Ars, Sulph, Bell, Bry, Calc, Rhus T, Lyc,
Merc, Sep
All of these remedies are polychrests but not all of them belong
to the same miasm as the patient. The patient’s facial features
will narrow down this list of remedies even further.
Facial Features
As Allen, Roberts and Foubister have described, specific facial
features are formed by specific miasms. The HFA project has analysed
and grouped over seventy different facial features. Each of these
facial features has its corresponding miasm. By analyzing facial
features we can tell the dominant miasm of the patient.
Remedy Selection
As stated in Chronic Diseases, Hahnemann believed
the purpose of understanding the miasm is the ability for the practitioner
to include it in the remedy selection, thereby having a remedy that
caters for the simillimum as well as the underlying miasm. This
is the conclusion to Hahnemann’s Chronic Diseases.
The miasm of the remedy must be the same as the miasm of the patient.
Patient’s Facial Features
An analysis of this patient’s facial features into their miasmatic
classification is as follows
-
Lips thin – Psora
-
Two lines between the eyes – Psora
-
Down turned eyes - Psora
-
Hairline – Sycosis
-
Bridge of nose – Sycosis
-
Hairline - Syphilis
-
Chin - Syphilis
-
Asymmetry – Syphilis
-
History of teeth – Syphilis
-
Eyes – size – Psora
-
Smile – compact – Psora
-
Facial lines – Psora
-
Nose – Psora
-
Forehead - Psora
When charted these features look as follows
|
Psora |
Sycosis |
Syphilis |
|
Lips
Lines 1
Eyes 1
Eyes 2
Smile
Lines 2
Nose
Forehead
8 features |
Hairline
Bridge of nose
2 features |
Hairline
Chin
Asymmetry
Teeth
4 features |
Hahnemann states in the Organon that two dissimilar
diseases cannot live in the same body at the same time, the stronger
will repel the weaker. However if the two dissimilar diseases are
of equal strength they will combine to form a complex disease.
Each miasm is a dissimilar disease. Psora is hypofunction and
reactivity. Sycosis is hyperfunction and inflammation while Syphilis
is dysfunction and submission. Viewed in this light, the Psoric
miasm is dominant in this patient because her facial features show
that the stronger dissimilar disease of Psora will overpower the
weaker dissimilar diseases of Sycosis and Syphilis.
Choosing the Remedy
In this patient’s repertorisation there are four Psoric remedies.
These are Bryonia, Sulphur, Pulsatilla and Lycopodium. The beauty
of HFA lies in remedy selection. Taking Hahnemann’s directive,
the remedy selected must belong to the same miasm as the patient.
The patient’s facial features tell us the miasm, research tells
us what remedy belongs to what miasm, and the two are brought together.
This means in this particular case, despite the fact that there
are eleven remedies covering every rubric in her repertorisation,
only the four psoric remedies need to be considered. As her tendency
to weep was so strong Pulsatilla was chosen
Remedy Choice
Pulsatilla 1M – single dose
Within a few days of the remedy the headaches were gone, her digestion
settled, her sleep and energy improved as did her blocked nose.
She was happy with the result and wasn’t seen again until June
2004. This time her digestion was the major issue. She had been
sick two months ago after eating curry and red wine which resulted
in vomiting all night followed by a week of feeling sick. Ever
since there is a knot in her stomach and some burning. She has
wind+++ which is < coffee. There is anxiety too as exams are
coming up and some headaches have returned. At night she is holding
her breath. Her right shoulder is painful and she is dreaming guilt
dreams related to her libido. A few weeks earlier she was having
scary dreams, being chased, running, arriving late but they have
stopped. Her home life is content, her husband is not an achiever,
and she focuses on the money and on her garden. Sometimes she gets
very angry and will yell at him but afterwards can’t concentrate
especially if she needs to study. There are family issues with
her husband and her parents and moving. She is weepy and reactive
again and her skin is poor. She talks of her work how she believes
her ideas are right, that she can put them forward strongly which
results in good discussion. She can subdue her tendencies and is
less offended if others don’t take her options. No longer nursing
(described as dominating, not seeing the person as a whole and others
as spiteful) she is a private health consultant and enjoys helping
others.
Pulsatilla 1M – single dose
She rings to cancel her follow up appointment as she is feeling
all back to normal and all the physical symptoms have gone including
the anxiety.
1 August 2006
Her anxiety has returned and it feels like an internal vibration
especially in the arms and upper body. She is back at university
and these feelings are worse before a presentation – she feels as
if she has drunk heaps of coffee. She is waking with headaches
that don’t clear until midday and is weeping easily again and constantly
thinking of sad things. Worries include her studies, the debt from
studying and her job satisfaction. To be independent is her greatest
aim. Her family doesn’t understand as she has enough money and
loves her work but she worries about the future. She tells of her
husband and how he may get cancer due to exposure to toxins years
earlier – she weeps as she tells his story. She feels that she
should give up study but worries about being the sole provider in
the future – she wants security. Sleep is poor and her hip and
shoulder ache. The head is heavy and tight across the temples and
forehead and it feels full and woolly. If she moves around she
feels better – the headache can last till mid morning. Many of
her old symptoms have returned – breathless on ascending, pain in
her shoulder, pain in her hip, flatulence and anxiety.
Remedy – Pulsatilla 1M single dose – as she has a history of not
keeping her follow up appointments as she gets better so quickly,
I insist she see me in a few weeks to check on the progress of the
remedy.
21 August 2006
She feels a lot better emotionally – this took about five days
and she has been fine since. She feels clearer and can plan things
properly without expecting they will fall apart. All the headaches
have gone and she is continuing with her study and both she and
her husband are happy about it. His situation is still unclear
but she feels more balanced about it. Her sleep is much improved
and her snoring less. Both hip and shoulder pain are 50% improved
and her knee is fine. Her period came and was shorter and less
painful.
Miasms
Using Hahnemann’s miasms as the primary foundation for HFA has
been invaluable and success rates with patients have soared. It
is important to understand that it is Hahnemann’s miasms not a modern
interpretation that is being used. As discussed in the Organon
(6th edition) there are three primary miasms that will
combine when of equal strength. Using this as the basis the following
diagrams represent the HFA method.
HAHNEMANN’S PRIMARY
MIASMS

COMMONLY KNOWN COMPLEX
MIASMS

FULL RANGE
OF PRIMARY AND COMPLEX MIASMS

SUMMARY
By following Hahnemann’s instructions on how to combine symptom
totality and miasmatic selection, modern Homeopathy is capable of
accomplishing all that Hahnemann dreamed possible regarding chronic
disease. The benefits for the contemporary practitioner include
- Quicker results
- Accurate results
- Deep acting responses
- Self confidence that comes from objective analysis
Too often in Homœopathic constitutional prescribing, practitioners
have faced the dilemma of trying to discern one remedy from another.
Attempts at overcoming this hurdle have focused primarily on continuing
education regarding the nature of our remedies. However, with HFA,
trying to spot the increasingly subtle difference between remedies
is no longer necessary as we have nature as our guide. The concept
of holism means the microcosm reflects the macrocosm. Hahnemann
always stated that Homœopaths should be observers of God at work
through nature. This is how he discovered the simillimum and the
infinitesimal dose. In the same way, HFA follows natures lead and
observes facial features as a guide to the underlying dominant miasm.
HFA takes the guess work out of miasmatic selection and gives the
practitioner an objective base from which they can feel confident.
BOOKS ON HFA – available from www.vcch.org
APPEARANCE AND CIRCUMSTANCE – Grant Bentley 2003
Extending on Hahnemann's original idea of three primary miasms,
Appearance and Circumstance details the development of the
complex miasms - Tubercular, Syco-Psora, Syco-Syphilis and Cancer,
as well as the three primary miasms.
Understanding that miasms are genetically inherited influences,
the author discusses how each miasm will dominate physical structure,
pathology and mental outlook. Recognizing the lifetime influence
of a miasm helps to explain the events and circumstances that surround
us.
Every individual is dominated by one of these miasms and facial
features have been identified and matched to each group to be used
as clinical aids. Themes together with facial features enable a
practitioner to recognize the dominant miasm of the patient
HOMŒOPATHIC FACIAL ANALYSIS – Grant Bentley 2006
Hundreds of photos and sketches with detailed visual parameters
to aid in the miasmatic analysis of faces. This book is the complete
guide to facial analysis and combined with Appearance and Circumstance
will allow homoeopaths from students to practitioners to make an
accurate miasmatic diagnosis before a remedy is chosen.
REFERENCES
1. Hahnemann Samuel, Chronic Disease:Their Peculiar Nature and
Their Homœopathic Cure, B Jain Publishers, New Delhi, India
2. Hahnemann Samuel, Chronic Disease:Their Peculiar Nature and
Their Homœopathic Cure, B Jain Publishers, New Delhi, India
3. Boenninghausen CMV, The Lesser Writings, B Jain Publisher,
New Delhi, India, 1994
4. Allen, JH, The Chronic Miasms Vol. 1 – Psora and Pseudo-Psora,
Author 1910, reprint B Jain Publishers, New Delhi, India
5. Allen, JH, The Chronic Miasms Vol. 1 – Psora and Pseudo-Psora,
Author 1910, reprint B Jain Publishers, New Delhi, India
6. Roberts H, The Principles and Art of Cure
by Homœopathy, Health Science Press, Whitstable, Kent, 1942
7. Foubister, Donald, The Carcinosin
Drug Picture, MacRepertory Reference Works
8. Stokes, John H, Modern Clinical Syphilology:
Diagnosis, Treatment, Case Studies, WB Saunders, Philadelphia
1926
---------------------------------------------
Grant Bentley – ND Dip Hom Grad Dip Psych Th Prof Memb AHA AROH reg ATMS
ANPA
Victorian College of Classical
Homœopathy
3A/574 Whitehorse
Road
Mitcham, Victoria, Australia 3132
Website www.vcch.org
Phone 61 (3) 9873 0567
Email admin@vcch.org
Fax 61 (3) 9787 5145 |