A single movement is one in which only a single individual is engaged; speaking medically, single movements are those executed by the patient under the direction of the physician or attendant; they are, of course, active. Duplicated active movements require more than one for their performance. In these the element of resistance plays an important part. The operator with carefully-considered exertion performs a movement which the patient is enjoined to resist, or the latter undertakes a certain motion or series of motions which the former, with measured force, resists. Still, tact and experience are here of great value, in order that both direct effort and resistance should be carefully regulated and properly modified to suit all the requirements of the case. By changing the position of the patient or the manner of operating on her from time to time any muscles or groups of muscles may be brought into play. It is wonderful with what ease even some of the smallest muscles can be exercised by an expert manipulator.
The duplicated active movements are those which should be most frequently performed or attempted in connection with massage in hysterical patients. The very substance of this treatment is to call out that which is wanting in hysteria—will-power. It is a coaxing, insinuating treatment, and one which will enable the operator to gain control of the patient in spite of herself. As the patient exerts her power the operator should yield and allow the part to be moved.
Much of the value of massage and Swedish movements, in hysteria as in other disorders, is self-evident. Acceleration of circulation, increase of temperature, direct and reflex stimulation of nervous and muscular action, the promotion of absorption by pressure,—these and other results are readily understood. “The mode in which these gymnastic proceedings exert an influence,” says Erb,123 “consists, no doubt, in occasioning frequently-repeated voluntary excitations of the nerves and muscles, so that the act of conduction to the muscles is gradually rendered more facile, and ultimately the nutrition of the nerves and muscles is augmented.”
123 Ziemssen's Cyclopædia.
The objects to be attained by the use of electricity are nearly the same as from massage and duplicated active movements: in the first place, to improve the circulation and the condition of the muscles; and in the second place, to make the patient use the muscles. The faradic battery should be employed in these cases, and the patient should be in a relaxed condition, preferably in bed. A method of electrical treatment introduced some years ago by Beard and Rockwell is known as general faradization. This is sometimes used in the office of the physician. In this method the patient is placed in a chair with his feet on a large plate covered with chamois-skin; the operator then takes hold of the patient's hand and the other electrode is passed over the muscles of the neck, back, trunk, and extremities.
When the patient is in bed, as in the regular rest treatment, this method has to be modified, and then the best treatment is by direct muscular faradization. Two sponge electrodes are employed. The sponges are moistened, so that the current may pass through the skin and reach the muscles. Both electrodes are taken in one hand, the handle of one, pointing backward, being between the first and second fingers, while the handle of the other is between the third and fourth fingers. In this way the distance between the points of application can be readily altered. The current is then applied to the muscles everywhere, beginning with those of the feet. Muscles should be relaxed before passing the current through them. The whole body can be gone over in this way in the course of half an hour.
The hydropathic treatment of hysteria is one that has much in it to be commended. Jolly approves the systematic external application of cold water; Chambers advocates the daily morning use of shower-baths, holding that the bracing up of the mind to the shock of a cold shower-bath is a capital exercise for the weak will-power of the hysterical individual, and some admirable results have been reported by Charcot in inveterate neurasthenics and hysterics. Hydrotherapeutic treatment, continued perseveringly for a long time, says Rosenthal, “diminishes the extreme impressionability of hysterical patients, strengthens them, and increases their power of resistance to irritating influences, stimulates the organic functions, combats the anæmia, calms the abnormal irritability of the peripheral nervous system, and by diminishing the morbid increase of reflex power relieves the violence of the spasmodic symptoms. Even chronic forms which are combined with severe paroxysms of convulsions are susceptible of recovery under this plan of treatment.”
The hydrotherapeutic treatment may be contrasted with the treatment by seclusion, rest, massage, and electricity. Undoubtedly, one class of hysterical patients is greatly benefited by the latter method systematically carried out; these have already been described. In other cases, however, this method of treatment is useless; in some of them it has a tendency to prolong or aggravate the hysterical disorder, while in the same cases a well-managed hydrotherapeutic treatment will answer admirably. This is applicable in hysterical patients who eat and drink well, who, as a rule, preserve a good appearance, but whose mind and muscles are equally flabby and out of tone, and need to be stirred up both physically and mentally.
Dujardin-Beaumetz recommends prolonged warm baths of from one to two hours' duration, and believes that the therapeutic virtues of these baths are augmented by infusions of valerian.