As pancreatic juice acts both upon proteids and starch, an extract of the pancreas has a more general application than an extract of the stomach—pepsin. Roberts of Manchester has given full directions for the method of digesting food by pancreatic extract. Beef, milk, and the farinacea may be digested, the albuminoid substances being changed into peptones, the starchy matters into dextrin and sugar, capable of being absorbed readily with but little or no further alteration in the digestive tract.18 Pancreatic emulsion (Dobell) is another method of giving fat emulsified.

18 Fresh pancreatic extract is made by cutting into small pieces the pancreas of the pig (which is the best), the ox, or sheep. The pancreas of the calf yields an extract which acts only on albuminous substances, but not on starchy matters. The divided pieces of the pancreas, well freed from fat, are put in a well-corked, wide-mouthed bottle with four times their weight of dilute alcohol (one part of rectified spirit to three parts of water). The mixture should be agitated once daily: at the end of a week the mixture is filtered through paper until it is clear. A well-made liquid extract of pancreas is made and sold by Metcalfe of Boston, and a solid extract by Fairchild Bros. & Foster of New York. No doubt improvements will be made in the processes of manufacture of these extracts, and better results will in time be obtained from their use.

A less successful way of gaining the same object is by administering the pancreatic extract internally. The difficulty lies in conveying the extract (the ferment of which is destroyed by the acid gastric juice) through the stomach in safety. This chemical danger is thought to be obviated by giving the extract one to two hours after eating with a protecting guard of an alkali, the bicarbonate of sodium; but the mechanical difficulty of securing direct transit through the stomach to the intestine early enough and in quantity enough to digest the duodenal contents is as great as the chemical obstacle. It is very doubtful whether this method of use can be of any real service.

In those cases in which the form of indigestion is due to, or is associated with, a deficient hepatic secretion—a condition indicated by offensive and light-colored stools and other symptoms—it is advisable to stimulate the liver to increased secretion. It is probable that the same remedies which excite a flow of bile do at the same time stimulate the pancreas. The best of these are euonymin, sanguinarin, iridin, ipecacuanha, colocynth, jalap, podophyllin, sodium sulphate, and potassium sulphate. Sodium benzoate, ammonium benzoate, and the salicylate of sodium are also powerful hepatic stimulants. As one of the purposes of the bile is to create the alkaline medium necessary for pancreatic digestion, the administration of an alkaline19 solution in full doses, as in the form of mineral water, when gastric digestion is finished, may make amends for the lack of bile. A combination of an antiseptic and the alkali may to some extent supply the deficiency still better, as the bile is the antiseptic of the intestinal canal.

19 The waters of Ems, Vichy (Grande Ville or Hôpital Springs), Vals, or Bilin may be used for this purpose.

Atony of the intestinal wall leads to flatulence, colics, and constipation, and would be a cause of indigestion if none other existed. It is to be treated by the general rules already given, by electrical stimulation of the abdominal muscles with the faradic current, or by the effort to stimulate the intestinal wall more effectively with the galvanic current. Strychnia in small doses should be given for some time. In women of relaxed muscular fibre with enlarged abdomens an elastic belt may be worn with advantage.

After the special aids to the parts concerned in digestion, tonics are called for to combat the general want of tone and anæmia. The saccharated iron, the carbonate, potassio-tartrate, lactate, pyrophosphate, or the ferrum redactum may be given. The syrup of the iodide of iron is the best form for children. The bitter tonics are inadvisable except for loss of appetite in cases where the stomach is not disordered. Quinia is available in a large number of cases in which malarial influence plays a part. Strychnia is a good general tonic, and may be prescribed combined with mineral acids, particularly with the dilute hydrochloric acid.

The special symptoms which call for treatment are flatulence, abdominal pains, and constipation. All the remedies already described are directed toward their relief. But sometimes they appear in so exaggerated a form as to need immediate attention. The many remedies for colic and tympanitic distension which have the property of relieving spasm and absorbing gas find application in these conditions. Constipation is not to be treated by laxatives if it can be avoided. But the bitter waters, Friedrichshall, Pullna, Hunyadi Jânos, and Rakoczy, by exciting bile outflow, are sometimes of undoubted curative value.

The form of dyspepsia called strumous, as it occurs in children of anæmic appearance with dry skin covered with minute scales, and with bad breath and light ill-smelling stools, demands a very thorough and persevering treatment. The advantages of climate must be sought—seashore in summer with bathing, dry and moderately warm air in winter. Outdoor life in the sun, with active exercise, is to be had at the expense of education within-doors. Study is not good for children of this class except when health is made paramount to it. Cod-liver oil, either pure, in phosphatic emulsion, or in the pancreatic emulsion, is a necessity. Malt extract with the hypophosphites is beneficial. The food must be carefully selected, and the child educated to a varied diet, including fats. The skin should be anointed daily with cocoanut oil, olive, cottonseed oil, or cod-liver oil.