The Development of Nosodes
The advent of Hahnemann's theory of the miasms caused great interest
in the chronic diseases and their anti-miasmatic remedies. One of
the direct consequences of the publication of The Chronic Diseases
was the development of the use of miasmic organisms as potentized
homoeopathic remedies. The earliest experiments with nosodes were
carried out by Constantine Hering while he was in Surinam, Guiana,
South America between 1827 and 1833. In the five years Hering spent
studying plant and animal species, he paid special attention to
the virulent snake and spider poisons as well as miasmic substances.
This was the time period when Hering captured the Bush Master snake
that supplied the first venom for the proving of Lachesis. In 1832
Hering said:
"During the experiments on the serpent poison, I have given
out the idea that the hydrophobic virus should be a powerful pathological
agent. I presented the same hypotheses regarding the virus of variola
[small pox]. I expect no less as regards the psoric virus, and I
invited my colleagues to make provings."
It seems that shortly after Hahnemann published his chronic disease
theory, Hering performed the first proving of Psorinum on himself.
Hering originated the method of using a miasmic agent as a basis
for a remedy and it was he who coined the term "nosode".
The Greek word Noso is a prefix which is added to give the idea
of a disease indicating its morbid root. This term is also connected
with the Latin word "noxa", the root of the term noxious
or damaged. This implies the use of potentially dangerous noxious
materials as a basis for a potentized remedy.
Hering is responsible for greatly expanding the materia medica
of homoeopathy and adding seven (7) new categories of potentized
remedies*. At the same time, he was one of the true defenders of
the four cardinal rules of Homoeopathy: similars cure similars,
the single remedy, the minimal dose and the potentized remedy. Hering's
7 uses of idem in Homoeopathy include:
1. The use of poisons taken from insects, snakes, and other venomous
creatures (Animal poisons).
2. The use of remedies made from miasmas (Nosodes).
3. The introduction of potentized miasmas and morbid secretions
taken directly from the patient's body (Auto-nosodes).
4. The use of homologous organs, tissues and secretions (Sarcodes).
5. The use of potentized miasmic products as nosodes for the prevention
of infectious diseases (Nosode prophylaxis).
6. The use of chemical and nutritional elements innate to the human
organism (Chemical and elemental relationships).
7. The use of potentized genus groups as curative and preventative
remedies for individuals, groups, and habitats. Hering suggests
potentized seed of weeds or dangerous plants to eradicate and destroy
those plants and potentized insects or animals to remove and prevent
infestations of dangerous species (Isodes).
*Lectures on the Theory & Practice of Homoeopathy, R.E. Dudgeon,
B. Jain Publishers (P) Ltd, Lecture VI, Isopathy, pages 141-175.
Hering continued to experiment with nosodes of acute and chronic
miasms and invited others to conduct provings. He recommended the
use of potentized watery excrements of cholera, the black vomit
of yellow fever, the desquamated skin of malignant scarlet fever,
to bind bags of milk sugar in contact with the skin of typhus patients,
the use of leucorrhoeal matter, etc., as well as psorine (Psorinum)
gleet-matter (Medorrhinum), pthisine (Tuberculinum) and syphiline
(Syphilinum). Many ancient isopathic remedies were introduced into
the Homoeopathic Materia Medica by dedicated homoeopaths of the
19th century. Constantine Hering, W. Gross, Wilhelm Lux, Father
Collet, Swan and Burnett immediately come to mind.
After Hering's introduction of the nosodes, Johann Joseph Wilhelm
Lux, a well known homoeopathic veterinarian, began to conduct experiments
with the isopathic use of disease materials in potencies. In December,
1831, Lux was asked if he knew any homoeopathic remedies for the
treatment of bovine plague and anthrax. Lux replied that he could
not suggest any remedies off hand but he offered the following suggestion.
He told the person to take a drop of blood of an animal infected
with anthrax, and a drop of the nasal mucous of a cow with the plague,
and prepare a 30c potency of the material. During the epidemic in
1832 many veterinarians relied on the complementary use of the nosodes
and standard remedies to treat the animals under their care.
On December 24, 1835, Jolly of Constantinople reported to Hahnemann
that Russian doctors had cured a number of cases of bubonic plague
with a 30c nosode prepared from the serous exudation of plague buboes.
Hahnemann was interested in the new nosode movement on the basis
of these clinical experiences but he was concerned because most
of these nosodes were not being proved. So in this way the revolutionary
ideas contained within the 1828 edition of The Chronic Diseases
changed the way people thought about contagious disease and stimulated
the integration of nosodes into the homoeopathic pharmacopoeia.
Aqualia Aqualibus Curentur
All of this was going quite well until Lux decided that the healing
law was not "similars cure similars" but "same cures
same". With this in mind he declared that "idem"
not "similars" was the key to the healing arts and coined
the term “Aqualia Aqualibus Curentur” in place of “Similia
Similibus Curentur”. This, of course, was exactly what Samuel
Hahnemann was afraid would happen so he became quite defensive of
Homoeopathy and critical of crude isopathy. Even before Lux’s
statements upset the climate of the research into the nosodes, Hahnemann
felt that Psorinum should be proven more completely before being
included in the materia medica section of The Chronic Diseases.
In Hahnemann's mind the idea of using unproved disease substances
on patients just because they suffered from the same contagion was
far too limited.
Hahnemann felt that the isopathy of Lux was in truth only part
of a greater homeopathic principle because all the remedies were
potentized to at least the 30c dynamization. If it was potentized
energy how could one call it the same thing as the original diseased
substance? Hahnemann thought that under these conditions:
"….it would not remain idem (the same) as it could
only be useful to him in a potentized state, since crude itch substance
which he had already in his body as an idem is without effect on
him. But the dynamization or potentizing changes it and modifies
it".
In the light of Hahnemann's logic the use of the miasmic material
without potentization was crude isopathy, and as Lux himself was
using homoeopathic potencies, his treatment was still within the
realm of Homoeopathy. Vide The Chronic Diseases, the chapter called
"The Medicines".
"Thus potentized and modified also, the itch substance (psorin)
when taken is no more an idem (the same) with the crude original
itch substance, but only a simillimum (thing most similar). For
between IDEM and SIMILLIMUM there is no intermediate for any one
that can think; or in other words between idem and simile only simillimum
can be intermediate. Isopathic and aquale are equivocal expressions,
which if they should signify anything reliable can only signify
simillimum because they are not idem."
The major difference between isopathy and Homoeopathy is that a
homoeopathic remedy is proven and based on symptoms brought out
in patients so it has a much wider application because its symptomatic
picture is much more expanded. The simple isopathic prescription
can only be used for the same condition it causes. If the miasmic
substance is not potentized, or transmuted in some way, it is often
an extremely dangerous method. The modern vaccines have more in
common with crude isopathy than Homoeopathy because they are unpotentized.
This limits their usage to the treatment and prevention of one single
disease condition. On the contrary, a homoeopathic nosode has been
proven so it can be used as part of the greater materia medica.
This allows it to be prescribed more accurately as well as to be
applied in many different situations.
The first generation of homeopaths who introduced the use of the
nosodes were Hahnemann, Hering, Lux, Gross, and Stapf. Hering gathered
a tremendous amount of first hand experience in proving and using
nosodes and applying idem remedies to acute and chronic diseases
in the field. Hering introduced all these new remedies yet he clearly
pointed out their limitations when used by idem. All these idem
preparations cannot be regarded as absolute specifics, but only
as chronic intercurrent remedies, which serve to stir up the diseases,
and render the reaction to the subsequently administered homoeopathic
remedy more permanent.
In 1836, Hering stated that:
HE NEVER SUCCEEDED IN CURING BUT ONLY AMELIORATING DISEASES WITH
THEIR OWN MORBID PRODUCTS.
This statement was made after 7 years of rigorous clinical trials.
He gave a perfect example of the proper use of idem in a case of
suppressed syphilis which would not respond to antisyphilitic remedies
like Mercury so he used Syphiline (his syphilinum) as an intercurrent.
This brought out the cutaneous eruption and chancre which was then
perfectly cured by Mercury followed by Lachesis. He had many similar
cases. Without constitutional treatment it is impossible to perform
the perfect cure.
The nosodes are only curative by themselves when they are administered
by the totality of the symptoms. Then they are the constitutional
simillimum.
IF DISEASE PRODUCING PRODUCTS ARE ADMINISTERED BY IDEM THEY ARE
ONLY USEFUL AS INTERCURRENT REMEDIES WHICH HELP TO REMOVE OBSTACLES
TO CURE AND MOVE THE CASE FORWARD. Their remedial actions must be
complemented by constitutional remedies if a complete cure is going
to take place. THIS IS THE PROPER USE OF IDEM REMEDIES WITHIN COMPLETE
CONSTITUTIONAL CASE MANAGEMENT.
The Homoeopathic Uses of the Nosodes
When a nosode is administered by the totality of the symptoms it
is a constitutional simillimum just like the mineral, plant and
animal remedies. The nosodes belong to a genus of primitive miasms
which are the first life forms on our planet and symbiotically related
to the development of the first plant algae. Viruses, bacteria and
fungi are ancient genus groups and some produce disease in human
beings. The minerals are the first remedies on the developmental
chain followed by the miasms, fungi, lichens, fern allies, ferns,
gymnosperms, dicotyledons and monocotyledons, and finally, the animal
remedies. The nosode genus group has a very special place in Classical
Homoeopathy.
Hahnemann wanted the nosodes to be well proven before they are
entered in the materia medica. He was quite concerned that Homoeopathy
might become mixed with isopathy which gives remedies solely by
causation. Swan, who is given credit for introducing contemporary
Medorrhinum and Syphilinum, was asked if it was correct to use unproven
nosodes. He replied that 100's of years of suffering these genus
diseases, and their complications, provided a "natural proving".
This rather controversial answer does have some merit. It is obvious,
however, that the most characteristic indications of the nosodes
are those that have come out in provings or on patients under treatment.
Nevertheless, there are specific ways that the miasms disease-tune
the vital force producing a characteristic group of symptoms. Hering
noticed that certain characteristic symptoms are associated with
the indications of miasmic intercurrents and nosodes. Just as the
homoeopath who works with families of remedies recognizes the symptoms
of the plant, mineral and animal remedies, Hering recognized the
characteristics of the nosode family picture. These characteristics
includes indications of the miasms concomitant to lack of vital
reaction to well chosen remedies; constant changing of symptoms
after administering remedies; fragmented pictures of several constitutional
remedies and one-sided miasmic pathology with few characteristic
symptoms.
Such individuals often have a sense of being tainted, guilty, dirty
or feel like life is a burden, they never feel comfortable or satisfied
in any environment, they have discolored complexions and a look
of suffering in the face when relaxed, and they are prone to self-destructive
impulses, cravings and habits. A differential analysis of the rest
of the mental and general symptoms will immediately uncover which
chronic miasm and therapeutic nosode is at the root of the picture.
Making a comparative study of the plant, mineral, animal and nosode
group symptoms is very helpful. The symptoms of the nosode group
are indications to study the case from the miasmic point of view.
From a study of the totality of the available symptoms one can uncover
which miasm is active or which nosode the vital force is calling
to one’s attention. At such a time an intercurrent may be
useful in removing obstructions to the cure or bringing out a clearer
picture. All miasmic intercurrents should be complemented by constitutional
remedies at the appropriate time to complete the cure.
One’s attention may be called to the use of a nosode when
the patient no longer progresses under the influence of a constitutional
remedy because well chosen remedies do not act, hold or only change
the symptoms. Another important indication for the nosodes is a
'never well since syndrome' when it can be traced to a chronic miasm
such as suppressed gonorrhea or a suppressed skin disorder, etc.
A miasmic block in the case can also produce one-sided states with
a lack of symptoms yet the general history or indication of the
miasms is in the background.
The nosode group characteristics are a signal to investigate the
chronic miasms and map their signs and symptoms as well as looking
closely for the symptoms of the major nosodes and anti-miasmic remedies.
Normally one will find objective signs and subjective symptoms that
will individualize the remedy if it is indicated. Over the years
the use of nosodes as chronic intercurrents has proved of assistance
to constitutional treatment if used correctly.
I would advise students of Homoeopathy to study the use of chronic
remedies deeply and integrate intercurrent remedies carefully into
practice when needed to assist the cure. The isopathic concept seems
so easy (using the same against the same) that many star-struck
beginners think they have found a short-cut way to do Homoeopathy.
They do not have enough experience in the more traditional approach
to Homoeopathy to understand those special moments when intercurrents
are complementary to constitutional treatment. Others are prone
to falling into old allopathic thinking combined with new homeopathic
remedies. This leads to the abuse of idem in potency and can cause
the disruption of the constitutional state. In the name of treating
layers, removing drugs and blockages, some practitioners give too
many remedies by idem while ignoring the totality of the symptoms
of the patient.
A Synopsis of Nine Ways to Administer the Nosodes
1. The first indication for the nosodes is when the mentals, physical
generals and particular symptoms are characteristic of the proving
of the remedy. This makes the nosode a CONSTITUTIONAL REMEDY. An
example of this would be the use of Syphilinum in a person who fears
the night because of the suffering it brings, fears going insane,
despairs of recovery, has delusions that they are dirty, tainted,
or impure causing them to compulsively wash their hands, etc. The
symptoms confirm both the miasmic diagnosis and the simillimum.
In such cases the derangement of the vital force occurs in such
a manner that it takes the symptoms of the nosode. In some cases
this state may or may not be directly linkable to the corresponding
miasma. Others are born with this tendency due to the inherited
miasms.
2. The second condition for using a nosode is when WELL CHOSEN
REMEDIES DO NOT ACT, HOLD, OR JUST CHANGE THE SYMPTOMS. This is
usually caused by the chronic miasms such as psora, sycosis, pseudopsora,
and syphilis. This is one of the reasons why it is important to
know what miasms are in the background of a constitutional syndrome.
Otherwise the prescriber may think they are choosing the wrong remedies
and further confuse the situation by picking more and more new ones.
An example of this usage of a nosode is Psorinum's keynotes: Lack
of reaction; when well-chosen remedies fail to act, especially in
those who are extremely sensitive to cold, suffer from profuse sweating,
filthy smell, dirty looking skin, and tend to be very pessimistic
about their recovery, etc. Another example of this rubric is Tuberculinum's
keynote: When symptoms are constantly changing and well-selected
remedies do not improve, especially in those who have light complexion,
narrow chest, lax fiber, low recuperative powers and constantly
catch cold. There may also be fear of cats, dogs, and animals in
general, a desire to travel, and a deep discontented state with
a tendency to curse, swear, and a desire to break things, etc.
3. The third way to use a nosode is when there is a LACK OF SYMPTOMS.
There are times when there are very few symptoms by which to prescribe.
These are often one-sided cases where a strong inherited or acquired
miasm has repressed the ability of the constitution to show symptoms.
Other than the signs related to the pathology of one or another
of the miasms, the symptoms in these cases are not very characteristic
of any chronic remedies. This may be a chronic state caused by a
miasmic dyscrasia. Vide the discussion of Tuberculinum in Kent's
Lectures: "It seems from looking over the record of many cures
that this remedy has been given many times for just that state on
a paucity of symptoms, and if the records can be believed, it has
many times balanced up to the constitution in that anemic state,
where the inheritance has been phthisis. It is not the best indication
for Tuberc., but where the symptoms agree in addition to that inheritance,
then you may have indication for the remedy.". There are two
things that may happen after the ingestion of a nosode for such
a condition. First of all, the symptoms may improve and bring the
constitution toward the state of health. Second, the symptoms of
the patient may become more plentiful as the suspended layers within
the constitution become more active. The new state allows the homoeopathic
practitioner to prescribe a chronic remedy based on the newly arising
syndrome and advance the case forward.
4. The fourth condition for using a nosode is when a person has
not recovered from a miasmic infection, and its suppression. This
state is called "THE NEVER WELL SINCE SYNDROME" (NWS).
An example of this condition is the use of Medorrhinum in a person
who has a history of sycosis from which they have never recovered.
Perhaps a new layer of disease has been added to their constitution
by a suppressed gonorrhea that changed both their physical health
and personality. They no longer manifest the symptoms of a constitutional
remedy because the acquired miasm has become the active layer and
suppressed their natural temperament. Once they may have been of
sharp intellect, clear memory, and of a calm nature, but all that
has changed for the worse. Now they have become very hurried as
if time passes too slowly, they can't follow the thread of a conversation
because they are losing their memory, and they've become fearful
of the dark, superstitious, and suffer from delusions that someone
or something is always behind them. This last symptom is very indicative
of the paranoid suspicious state of sycosis as it represents a subconscious
fear that something is going on "behind their back" and
is about to "get them".
The never-well-since syndrome can also be applied to acute miasms.
There are times when a person has never fully recovered from an
acute illness or miasm. The unresolved acute state still has an
effect on the vital force as it has formed a layer within the constitution.
If this imbalance is strong it will become the dominant layer and
repress the older weaker symptoms. This is often caused by acute
miasms like influenza, diphtheria, measles, mononucleosis, and whooping
cough from which the patient never really recovered. Of course,
a proper chronic remedy may remove the effects of an unresolved
acute miasm, but when it does not, a nosode of the offending miasm
will often cure. Nosodes for these acute miasms are available from
homoeopathic pharmacies under names like Influenzinum, Diphtherinum,
Morbillinum, Pertussin, etc.
5. The fifth way to use a nosode is WHEN PARTIAL PICTURES OF THE
CONSTITUTIONAL REMEDIES MANIFEST YET NO ONE REMEDY COMPLETELY FITS
THE CASE. Such cases seem to be fragmented and disorganized, but
in actuality, this pattern is characteristic of the miasms and nosode
group. An investigation of the miasms behind the fragmented picture
may reveal the symptoms of the nosode family. Differential analysis
will quickly show which miasm is involved and what nosode may remove
the state. Such an intercurrent often improves the state of health
and regularizes the natural symptoms pattern. After the nosode has
done all it can do the symptoms will point more clearly toward a
constitutional or anti-miasmic remedy. In this way a nosode can
bring order out of chaos and clarity out of confusion.
6. The sixth way for using a nosode is WHEN A MIASMIC LAYER OBSTRUCTS
THE PROGRESS OF A CONSTITUTIONAL REMEDY that was improving the patient.
This use of a nosode is called a miasmic intercurrent. Suppose one
has a patient whose symptoms point to an inherited pseudopsoric
miasm and the case works out to fit Pulsatilla perfectly. This is
all coherent because Pulsatilla is a strongly anti-tuberculin medicine
as well as the individual's constitutional remedy. After several
months of solid improvement the patient begins to relapse with the
same symptoms, and to one's great surprise, the Pulsatilla no longer
works. Although there is no change of symptoms calling for a new
remedy, the old remedy has become completely ineffective. If the
underlying symptomatology shows the tubercular miasm, the homoeopath
can try to unlock the blocked case with a tubercular nosode, such
as Tuberculinum. In the above example the tubercular nosode sets
the stage for the reintroduction of the Pulsatilla by re-sensitizing
the vital force.
Two things may happen after the introduction of the miasmic intercurrent.
The nosode may move the case forward by removing the active symptoms.
When this happens it is best to stay with the nosode as long as
the improvement lasts. If this improvement ceases the remaining
symptoms may be treated with the former chronic remedy. If the patient
does not show any improvement on the nosode after a sufficient amount
of time, the former chronic remedy should be re-introduced. Under
these conditions the previous remedy often acts just as dramatically
as it did the first time it was given. This effect has been witnessed
by many experienced homoeopaths over and over again. Although the
miasmic intercurrent may not radically improve the case by itself,
it can cause the patient to become re-sensitized to their original
constitutional remedy. There are times when this technique is extremely
useful.
7. The seventh way for using a nosode is when the remedy is RELATED
TO THE DISEASE GENUS. An example of this method is Clarke's use
of Pertussin (Coqueluchinum) against whooping cough. Clarke once
wrote, "I have found in this nosode a specific for a large
proportion of cases of this disease. It should be given every four
hours to begin with, and if it does not cut short the case in a
few days, or materially modify its severity, another remedy may
be chosen from the following."
Another area where the isode may be of use is in the case of complications
caused by vaccines. In this case a nosode of the offending vaccination
may be appropriate to remove the side-effects of an immunization.
Closely aligned with using idem is the use of remedies to desensitize
a person to specific allergies. Most individuals are allergenic
to more than one antigen at a time so the chronic remedy, with or
without a miasmic intercurrent, is usually much more effective.
Nevertheless, in some very stubborn allergies where this is not
the case, the isopathic method may prove a useful adjutant. The
use of organs and glandular preparations (organotherapy & hormonotherapy)
is also based on idem. This includes remedies like Thyroidinum,
the dried thyroid of the sheep, and Adrenalin, the internal secretion
of the suprarenal glands. This method has also proved useful in
some cases of thyroid disease.
8. The eighth way of using a nosode is for HOMOEOPATHIC PROPHYLAXIS
to prevent specific infectious diseases. An early example of this
was Boenninghausen's successful use of Variolinum to prevent smallpox.
Nosodes may also be used as a method to protect children from the
miasma they have inherited through their parents. James Kent stated
in his Lectures on Homoeopathic Materia Medica: "If Tuberculinum
Bovinum be given in 10m, 50m, Cm. potencies two doses of each potency
at long intervals, all children and young people who have inherited
tuberculosis may be immuned from their inheritance and their resiliency
will be restored.". This, of course, relates to children who
show symptoms of the TB miasm such as nervousness, temper tantrums,
emaciation, anemia, swollen glands, frequent colds, etc.
9. The ninth way of using a nosode is as a homoeopathic remedy
made from the patient's own disease substances. This is called the
AUTO-NOSODE. This method has sometimes helped patients when nothing
else seems to work. Hahnemann once had a patient suffering from
phthisis that was not responding to well chosen remedies. This led
him to prepare an auto-nosode made from the saliva of the patient.
Auto-nosodes have been made from sputum, blood, urine, pus, leucorrhoea,
exudates from skin eruptions, and microbes from cultures of the
patient, etc. This is often tried when nothing else works. Nevertheless,
with observation homoeopaths should be able to develop the characteristic
symptoms of the auto-nosodes.
One can see from many of these indications that a good knowledge
of the acute, half-acute and chronic miasms is very important in
understanding the use of nosodes. As they are disease products knowledge
of disease goes hand and hand with their usage. The study of the
acute, half-acute and chronic miasms, and their action on the system
of mass defense, is an important part of classical Homoeopathy.
Some modern homoeopaths no longer pay any serious attention to the
miasms and do not study the nine ways to use nosodes. Some are Neo-Kentian
prescribers but they do not seem to understand that Kent studied
the miasms and used nosodes in various ways depending on the circumstances.
It seems at this time, however, the miasms are making a necessary
come back as they are an integral part of homoeopathic pathology.
Dare to Know!
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David Little, H.O.E. 1996-2007, all rights reserved.
Homoeopathic Online Education - http://simillimum.com
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