Caked Breast—Mammary Inflammations.—Rapid and positive cure follows proper adjustments.
Cerebral Softening.—Prognosis bad.
Cerebrospinal Meningitis.—Serious always, but no fatalities reported in adjusted cases. Failure to modify fever and cervical retraction within two or three hours, and with one to ten adjustments, is alarming.
Chickenpox.—Like smallpox and the other exanthemata, chickenpox should be modified at once by adjustment and all cases should be light, eruption hastened, and fever quickly broken. Sometimes the rash may be strongly marked and the disease run its usual course in all particulars except fever and prostration, being a febrile with absence of all the consequences of fever.
Cholangitis.—Recovers quickly under adjustment.
Cholecystitis.—Prognosis excellent.
Chorea.—Prognosis excellent in acute and subacute cases, less favorable in chronic. No figures are available, but many chronic cases fail to respond at all.
Cirrhosis of Liver.—Doubtful. No statistics have been compiled, but it seems probable that most cases are unmodified by adjustment.
Congestion of Liver.—Prognosis good.
Conjunctivitis.—Readily curable, unless part of a more general infection.