52 Woodward, op. cit., pp. 727, 728.
A preliminary purgative, as has already been stated, is necessary to expel undigested food and scybalæ, but for the purpose of increasing intestinal or biliary secretion and diminishing engorgement of the vessels this method is unsuccessful and unnecessary. When irritating substances have been removed (and this is done usually without the physician's aid by the spontaneous expulsive movements of the bowel) the effort to check the discharge and to give rest is one and the same. Opium is the one invaluable remedy which we cannot do without.53 As little of it should be given as is necessary to relieve the intensity of the symptoms. The aim should not be to stop the pain and check diarrhoea, but to take the edge off the sharp agony and to lengthen the interval between the stools. Thus gradually the spasms of peristalsis cease, and there is a diminution, and finally cessation, of the fluid accumulation in the bowel. The diarrhoea is relieved entirely in a period ranging from an hour after the giving of the first dose to one week, according to the severity of the attack. Opium is given in pill form, in the deodorized tincture, Dover's powder, or one of the salts of morphia may be preferred. Any of these may be combined with antacid and antifermentative mixtures, relieving the colic, gaseous distension, and diarrhoea. If opium is combined with, or followed by, evacuants, its effects are thwarted, and it might as well not be given at all.
53 The objections urged against opium, that it increases thirst and nervousness, causes a retention of fermenting products, produces opium intoxication, and that it is a routine practice to give it, and does not cure the inflammation, may be valid, but we cannot do without opium, nevertheless.
It is the custom to combine astringents with opium, but in acute cases of short duration it is a question whether astringents do not do more harm than good. When good does come from the combination, it is the opium which acts promptly and decidedly. The astringent lags behind, and in cases of some duration and severity supplements the work of the active partner. Bismuth is classed under this head, although it is not an astringent. Its action is mechanical; much that is taken is passed from the bowel as the black sulphide, which appears as a black granular powder in the fluid stool. This is no proof that it may not have been of service in its transit.54 After death, when large doses have been given, it has been found lining the whole intestinal canal.55 The subnitrate or subcarbonate can be given in powder on an empty stomach in doses of five to twenty grains alone or in combination with opium, or it can be dispensed with alkalies in water. The enormous doses (one hundred and fifty to nine hundred grains daily), as given by Monneret, are useless or hurtful. The value of bismuth is based on empirical grounds only, but it is irrational to load the bowel with an insoluble powder which if retained must cause irritation. As the discoloration of the stools is an objection to bismuth when it is desired to study their character for diagnosis, oxide of zinc may be substituted for it, as the latter is an absorbent of acids and gases.56 Gubler has insisted upon combining it with bicarbonate of sodium to prevent the formation of the irritating chloride of zinc in the stomach.57 One of the oldest and most popular remedies tor diarrhoea is lime in the form of the carbonate or lime-water. The officinal mistura cretæ is perhaps more generally used for children than any other remedy. Lime-water is added with advantage to milk when given to adults as well as children. Carrara-water, made by dissolving the bicarbonate of lime with an excess of carbonic acid, is less nauseous than liquor calcis, and may be mixed with an equal part of milk.58 Chalk and its preparations are less beneficial than bismuth as astringents, but may be used merely for their antacid effect.
54 Headland asserted that bismuth was insoluble, but it has been detected in the liver, in milk, in urine, and in the serum of dropsy by Orfila, Sewald, Bergeret, and Mayençon (Materia Med., Phillips, vol. ii. p. 81).
55 Levick, Am. Journ. Med. Sci., July, 1858, p. 101.
56 Bonamy, "Du Traitement des Diarrhées rébelles par l'Oxyde de Zinc," Bull. gén. de Thér., t. xcii., 1877, p. 251; also, J. Jacquier, De l'Emploi de l'Oxyde de Zinc dans la Diarrhée, Paris, Thèsis, 1878, No. 118.
57 Gubler, Principles of Therapeutics, Philada., 1881, p. 25.
58 Phillips, Materia Medica, vol. ii. p. 105.
The sugar of lead is a valuable astringent, because unirritating and sedative to the mucous membrane. With opium in pill form, in doses of one to three grains, it checks diarrhoea if the inflammation has not lasted long and is not extensive. If there are cases where the bile is passed in quantity, it is especially called for, as it is the only astringent which diminishes the flow of bile.