The intimate relations existing between the lungs and stomach, and the fact that asthmatics usually suffer at the same time with dyspepsia, make the question of diet an all-important one. Their meals should consist of good, nutritious food, rigidly excluding all heavy, indigestible substances, such as cheese, nuts, dried fruits, etc. The meals should be taken at regular hours, and, as asthma almost always comes on at night, it is important that the principal repast should be in the morning or early part of the afternoon, and that any food taken between that and the hour for retiring should be of the lightest possible description. The more empty the patient's stomach, the better will be the chances of his passing a good night. Alcoholic drinks, coffee, and other stimulants should only be allowed when prescribed as medicines, as they have a tendency to aggravate the hyperæmia of the air-passages, which is one of the prominent features of the disease. Constipation should of course be carefully guarded against.
Aside from the apparently well-established fact that asthmatics do well, and often remain so, in the damp, foggy air of crowded cities, we have no means of determining beforehand what locality will suit a case of asthma. Change of climate in such cases is a mere matter of experiment, but when such change is determined upon the patient should at first try a place which is in every respect the reverse of the one he has previously lived in. If his former residence was in a city, he should remove to the country; if the old place was dry, the new one should be damp; if he has lived in a flat, low country, let him try the mountains; and vice versâ. As already stated, removal from the pure air of the country to the foul, smoky air of a city densely populated often affords complete relief, but so soon as the patient returns to his old home the asthma reappears and is as bad as ever.
As regards its capriciousness as to locality, I quote the following interesting case from Salter's work on asthma: "G. C——, a confirmed asthmatic, a native of a city in Scotland in which he resided, having been a sufferer for many years, came to London in 1838 for the sake of receiving the best medical advice. He took apartments in the centre of the city of London, somewhere near St. Paul's. His intention was to wait for an attack, and as soon as one came on to present himself to his physician, that he might witness it and have a clear idea of the state he was in. He waited six weeks, much to his mortification, not only without experiencing one, but without any difficulty of breathing whatever. His health altogether improved; he slept well and gained flesh. Being tired of waiting, he went back to Scotland without having seen his physician at all, and, to his great disappointment, he had not been in his native city many days when he was attacked in the usual way, and continued to suffer just as before his visit to London. Subsequently, finding it necessary on matters of professional business frequently to visit London, he experienced the same result on all occasions as at his first visit—perfect immunity from his disease. To use his own expression, 'he felt in London like a renewed man.' On his first arrival in town he was in a miserable state: he could not move without feeling his shortness of breath distressingly; he got no rest at night, and was seldom able to lie down in his bed. But in London he could do anything—eat, drink, sleep. The consequence was he gained flesh and strength, and went back to Scotland looking quite a different man. This was the invariable result."
Having once found a place which agrees with him, the asthmatic should remain there, as change of climate when no good is effected often does harm.
Arsenic has long been a favorite remedy in asthma, and is undoubtedly of great value in a number of cases. It was used in the form of a vapor by Dioscorides, and, notwithstanding its poisonous properties, has always occupied a prominent place in the therapeutics of diseases of the air-passages. In Styria and other parts of Lower Austria arsenic is habitually eaten by many of the peasants to enable them to breathe more readily while climbing over their elevated mountains and to endure the fatigue incidental to their long pedestrian journeys. The same habit is said to prevail in China, where, however, it is not taken internally, but is smoked mixed with tobacco. Its physiological effects are thought to be due to the increased oxidation of the blood which it promotes, as is proven by the great increase of urea observed after its administration. The blood thus oxygenized stimulates the vital centre, and thus the nerves and muscles of respiration are incited to increased activity, as a result of which the respirations become freer and more easy. Those who believe in the herpetic diathesis derive an additional indication for its administration from the good effects which it manifests in cutaneous diseases. It is best administered in the form of liquor potassii arsenitis (Fowler's solution), giving at first only three drops in a wine-glassful of water after each meal, and increasing the dose one drop each day until the patient takes thirty drops in twenty-four hours. Should any toxic symptoms supervene—pain in the stomach or diarrhoea, puffiness of the lids or redness of the conjunctiva—the arsenic should be at once suspended, and not resumed until they shall have subsided. Thus given, it is quite safe. Trousseau recommends its use in the form of cigarettes, which are prepared as follows: "Twenty grains of the arsenite of potassium are dissolved in half an ounce of water, and a sheet of bibulous paper soaked in this solution until it is all taken up. The paper is then dried and divided into twenty equal pieces, which therefore contain one grain arsenite of potassium each. Each paper is then rolled in the form of a cigarette. In smoking them the patient should endeavor to inhale the smoke into the bronchi. He should take only four or five whiffs once a day."
Iodide of potassium often affords most satisfactory results in the treatment of asthma, but in many cases it fails entirely. It is a drug which must be given for a long period at a time, occasionally for weeks, before it manifests its effects, and want of perseverance may account for its failure in many cases. It forms one of the chief ingredients in Aubrée's antiasthmatic elixir, the formula for which is somewhat uncertain. According to Trousseau, it is as follows:
| Rx. | Rad. polygalæ, | gr. xl; |
| Coque c. aqua fervida, | ounce iv ad ounce ij; | |
| Filtrat, adde Potass. iodid. | drachm iv; | |
| Syrup, opii, | ounce iv; | |
| Spts. vin. gallic. | ounce ij; | |
| Tr. coccionellæ, q. s. ad coloraud. | ||
| Filtra. | ||
Of this Trousseau states three tablespoonfuls are taken "in the morning fasting, at noon, and in the evening, until the asthma disappears." Each dose contains no less than forty-five grains of the iodide of potassium and four-fifths grain of extract of opium. Aubrée himself always insisted that each dose should be followed by a "tablespoonful of chocolate pastille, which neutralizes the irritating action of the iodide of potassium."26
26 Trousseau, op. cit., p. 656.
A remedy resembling in its effects the one just mentioned is nitro-glycerine. It is administered in the form of a one per cent. alcoholic solution, in doses of half a drop, increased to three should the smaller dose prove inefficient. Its effects manifest themselves in from three or four minutes to a quarter of an hour, and disappear within an hour after its administration. The dose should be increased with great caution, as a single drop of the above solution has been known to produce alarming symptoms. The euphorbia pilulifera, much lauded by Australian physicians for its wonderful effects in bronchial asthma, promises to rank as an invaluable remedy in the treatment of that disease. It is best administered in the form of a decoction prepared by steeping one ounce of the fresh, or half that quantity of the dried plant, in two quarts of water, and simmering it down to one quart. The dose of this decoction is three or four wineglassfuls during the day, the last dose preferably in the evening, after supper.27