The mineral acids—dilute hydrochloric, nitric, and sulphuric acids—are given with some success. The first aids gastric digestion, and in small doses with pepsin can be directed after food irrespective of other treatment. The great repute which it has enjoyed in the diarrhoea of typhoid is no doubt due to the improved digestion and assimilation which follow its use. The acid principle is what is lacking in the gastric juice in fever and debility.59 In all cases of intestinal catarrh rapidity of gastric digestion should be sought for. Nitric acid is of doubtful utility. Without an opiate in combination there is little reason to hope for any result from its use; all the suggested formulæ contain opiates.60 Dilute sulphuric acid is thought to be more astringent than the others. If it has any efficacy, it is due to the local astringent or alterative effect by contact with the inflamed surface. Much testimony is to be found in its support in cases tending to become chronic and where astringents combined with opiates have failed after some days' trial. It should be administered in doses of five to twenty drops in the form of mixture with mucilage or some aromatic, as lavender and cardamom. An opiate should not be combined with it if it is desired to test it fairly. It would be called for when the stools are pale, abundant, watery, and alkaline.
59 Manassein, Virchow's Archiv, lv., 1872, p. 451.
60 The favor in which nitric acid is held is due to the advocacy of nitrous acid by Hope ("Observations on the Powerful Effects of a Mixture containing Nitrous Acid and Opium in curing Dysentery, Cholera, and Diarrhoea," Edin. Med. and Surg. Journ., vol. xxvi., 1826, p. 35). Nitrous acid, the same as the fuming nitric acid of the shops, is a reddish-yellow fluid highly charged with nitrogen trioxide. Hope said that ordinary nitric acid did not produce the same effects, and yet nitric acid is now given with the belief that it is of service.
Calomel is of ancient repute as a remedy in the early stages of diarrhoea. According to recent views, it acts as a sedative to the gastro-intestinal mucous membrane and checks fermentation. It should be given in small doses (one-twelfth to one-eighth of a grain to children, one-fourth to one-half of a grain to adults); it should not be continued for more than two or three days. In combination with Dover's powder it acts well, but it is doubtful which of the two remedies should receive the greater praise for the resulting improvement. A very small dose of the bichloride of mercury has been found beneficial by Ringer for clayey, pasty stools or straining stools containing slime and blood. His formula is—Hydrarg. bichloridi gr. j; Aquæ fluidounce x; a teaspoonful frequently during the day. The gray powder is not as much thought of now as formerly; it is not so good for the early stages of diarrhoea as calomel, but may be tried as an alterative when the stools are green and offensive.
In the vegetable materia medica there are many and ancient remedies. Tannin represents a large class, and there is nothing more than fancy in preferring to it kino, catechu, hæmatoxylon, or blackberry-root. Tannin is precipitated in the stomach as an inert tannate; gallic acid is to be preferred for this reason, and also for its pleasant taste and less irritating effect on the mucous membrane. It is well borne by children, even in large doses, when given with water and syrup. It is to be hoped that the unsightly and unsavory combinations of the astringent tinctures with chalk mixture will be soon given up. They are given chiefly to children, who are repelled by the sight, and still more by the taste, of such compounds. The syrup of krameria is the least objectionable, and catechu and krameria are made into troches which are sometimes available.
Ipecacuanha is said by Bartholow to be extremely serviceable in the diarrhoea of teething children with greenish stools containing mucus or blood. He prescribes it with bismuth and pepsin.
Recently some favor has been paid to coto-bark and its active principle, cotoin. The latter is advised to be given in the following formula:
| Rx. | Cotoinæ, | gr. j; |
| Aquæ distillat. | fluidounce iv; | |
| Alcohol, | gtt. x; | |
| Syrupi, | fluidounce j. |
A tablespoonful every hour. Five to eight drops of the fluid extract of coto are given. It is said to have a speedy and certain effect in acute diarrhoea.61
61 Coto-bark was imported into Europe from Bolivia in 1873, and was called quinquina coto. Wittstein of Munich and Julius Jobst of Stuttgart made the first analyses (Neues Repertorium für Pharmacie, xxiv. and xxv.). Von Gietl (idem, xxv.) first concluded from experiments that it was of use in diarrhoea. Cotoin and paracotoin were separated by Jobst. It has been found successful in the treatment of diarrhoea in Germany and of cholera in Japan (Baelz, Centralb. f. d. med. Wissen., 1878, xvi. p. 482). Cotoin sometimes disturbs the digestion to a marked degree. Paracotoin may be used hypodermically.