The most powerful and reliable preventive and solvent, thus far, is hydrargyrum. It is true that many voices have been raised against it, but from Bard, Bretonneau, and Billard to Rauchfuss, Ch. West, Lynn, Pepper, and others, the remedy has had its admirers. Large single doses of calomel have been given by some, amounting to 15–30 grains (gramme 1.0–2.0), but that treatment has not found many friends. In small and frequent doses it has been of good service to me both in fibrinous laryngitis and bronchitis, particularly in the latter; gr. ¼–½ may be given every half hour or every hour. Tartar emetic is liable to develop so many unfavorable effects that even doses—in combination with calomel—of 1/100 of a grain require great caution. The most reliable mercurial preparation, in my experience, and the least hurtful, is the corrosive chloride. In the stomach it combines with the chloride of sodium, is absorbed without being changed, and transmuted into an albuminate during its circulation in the blood. Babies of tender age bear one-half of a grain and more, daily, many days in succession. Salivation and stomatitis are exceedingly rare after its use. Gastro-intestinal disturbances are not at all frequent; diarrhoea, if observed at all, is very moderate, and can be avoided or removed by the administration of mucilaginous and farinaceous food or a mild dose of an opiate. But the administration of the bichloride requires care in regard to its solution. A fiftieth of a grain may be safely given to a baby a year old every hour, but it must be dissolved in one-half of a tablespoonful or a whole tablespoonful of water. The solution of a grain in a pint of water is about correct. In those very rare cases in which no preparation of mercury is borne internally the inunction of sufficient and frequent doses of the oleate of mercury may take the place of the internal administration or alternate or be combined with it. The blue ointment is not so effective as the oleate. The subcutaneous injection of the corrosive chloride may be added to the modes of administration if no time must be lost in introducing as much as possible of the drug into the system. Now and then, however, the subcutaneous tissue of the child does not tolerate it well in that form, though the solution may be not larger than 2 per cent.3 The cyanide of mercury, in doses of a hundredth of a grain every hour, has been warmly praised by A. Erichsen and C. G. Rothe.

3 The Medical Record, May 24, 1884.

The large mortality in croup and the inefficiency of remedial treatment have been the reasons why the recommendations of remedies have been very numerous. Alkalies were held in great favor during different periods of our literature, mainly the carbonate and bicarbonate of potassium (and sodium), in daily doses, to a child, of ½ drachm or 1 drachm or more; also the chlorate of potassium or sodium. As an adjuvant it may be useful; as an antidiphtheritic or antimembranous remedy it must not be regarded. What it can do is to heal or prevent a catarrhal stomatitis and pharyngitis. The best and most reliable is probably the iodide, in larger doses than are usually given. One or two drachms daily (grammes 4.0–8.0) are well tolerated when sufficiently diluted. Benzoate of sodium was recently recommended for its supposed antifermentative and antibacteric effect; its practical utility is but very limited; not even its antifebrile effect is anything but reliable. Lime-water has not fulfilled in my hands the promises made by others—neither its internal use nor spray nor inhalation. The most certain mode of introducing lime particles into the larynx is, after all, the inhalation of slaked lime, which allows a quantity sufficient to be somewhat effective to enter the respiratory organs. Its comparative inefficiency has been acknowledged by those who add 1 per cent. of the liquor of caustic potassium or sodium to the lime-water.

Quinia, in doses of 15 or 30 grains (grammes 1.0–2.0) daily, has been recommended by Monti for the same indications, mainly in the commencement of febrile cases. It has been claimed that cold applications, to be changed every hour or two according to the Priessnitz or hydropathic plan, had a great power in macerating and disintegrating mucous membrane. Many of the successful cases of these, as of all other specialists, are undoubtedly the result of the convenient substitution of a grave diagnosis for a milder one. The effect of such applications in laryngeal catarrh, like that of warm applications, is undoubted. Vesicatories applied to the neck over the larynx are never useful—frequently injurious by the sore surface becoming the seat of a pseudo-membrane.

Inhalations of warm vapor are decidedly beneficial, but atomized water is not of equal value. Thus, Richardson's atomizer is not so useful as Siegle's inhaler or other apparatuses working on the same plan.

Lactic acid, in solutions of 1:10 or 25 (Monti's solution of 1:200 is certainly too weak), has been applied by means of a sponge, inhaled, or thrown in from an atomizer for the same purpose. Good results have been reported, failures also; and still, recoveries are rushed into print much more readily than failures. The same may be said of the local applications of glycerin, boric acid, carbolic acid in solutions of 1 or 2 per cent., salicylic acid, iodoform, and hypermanganate of potassium; also of bromine (bromine and potas. bromid. aa) 1:water 500, or a stronger solution.

Tannin, dry or with glycerin, is rather more injurious than it can be useful. It is apt to coagulate the mucus contained in the pharynx and the upper part of the larynx, and to render the dyspnoea graver than before. Such an aggravation of symptoms must be carefully avoided, though it be but temporary. The same must be said of alum, which has been used solid, in finely-powdered condition, down to a 3 per cent. solution in water.

Spirits of turpentine are inhaled either from an inhaling apparatus or by saturating the air of the room. Water is kept boiling constantly on a stove, oven, or alcohol lamp (not on gas, which consumes a larger quantity of oxygen), and a tablespoonful of the spirits of turpentine is poured hourly or in shorter intervals upon the boiling surface.

Hydrochlorate of ammonia can be used in the same manner as described in the article on Catarrhal Laryngitis.

Hydrochlorate of pilocarpine was introduced into the treatment of diphtheria and pseudo-membranous croup some years ago, and recommended as no less than a specific. It increases, physiologically, the secretion of the skin, the mucous membranes, the lachrymal and muciparous glands, the kidneys. It also depresses the heart's action. In all cases in which the latter effect is to be feared the drug is contraindicated; thus in septic diphtheria, in pseudo-membranous croup with great asthenia, in general debility and anæmia. By increasing the secretion of the mucous membranes it is expected to macerate the pseudo-membrane and raise it from its bed. This can be accomplished wherever the membrane is deposited upon the mucous membrane—that is, whenever the number of muciparous follicles is large and the epithelium is cylindrical. This is not so on the vocal cords, and thus the floating effect of pilocarpine cannot be obtained exactly where it is most needed—that is, on the vocal cords, where the pseudo-membrane is more intimately imbedded into the tissue than, for instance, on the posterior wall of the fauces or the trachea and bronchi. Still, pilocarpine may be tried, in combination with other modes of treatment, as long as the heart's action is competent and the general condition satisfactory. It is dissolved in water; its dose, for a child a year old, 1/30 grain (2 milligrammes = 0.002) every hour. A subcutaneous injection every four or six hours of 1/60 grain (three drops of a 2 per cent. solution) will prove very effective for good and evil. I believe it has rendered me good service in some well-marked but mild cases of pseudo-membranous laryngitis, which it either aided in healing or prevented from getting worse.