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Bowel nosodes: A group of neglected remedies

de Ai-ling Makewell


INTRODUCTION:
Although the bowel nosode were brought into being during the early 1930s there was not much
attention being paid to this group of nosode after the initial experiments by E. Bach and J.
Paterson. Not only there was no further investigation of their properties in health and disease
since Paterson, they were not well utilized by the homoeopathic profession in our daily practice.
The latter issue is much to our own disadvantage as todays medical scientific inquiries have
shown that the bowel flora play an important role in the balance between health and diseased
conditions.


As we are well aware, diseases are fundamentally the result of a deep disturbance in the
individual rather than the fault of the micro-organisms. This assertion is also confirmed by
Patersons experiment on the bowel nosode. Considering this, our modern life style, dietary habit,
and both psychological and physical stresses, together with the practice of vaccination and the
over use of antibiotics have contributed to the weakening of the vitality of the host and
compromising the digestive, absorptive and immune functions of the body. These have led to the
alterations in the bacteria metabolism and the over growth of potentially pathogenic micro-
organisms in our intestinal system. As the gastrointestinal tract is considered to be one of the
largest immune organs of the body, any disturbance in the bowel flora can mean a difference
between health and disease in an individual. The consequence from this altered bowel flora
activity is one of the contributing factors to the development of many chronic and degenerative
diseases. The most common disease conditions include GIT (Gastrointestinal Tract) disorders
such as irritable bowel syndrome and inflammatory bowel disease as well as other conditions like
rheumatoid arthritis, chronic hepatitis, food allergies, etc. Therefore, a healthy balance of the
bacteria micro-flora is necessary to ensure a robust intestinal system.
For these reasons, I would like to bring our attention to the possibilities of bowel nosode in
homoeopathic practice and their role in healing chronic diseases.


Although my experience in the use and understanding of the efficacies of the bowel nosode is
limited, the purpose of this essay is to inspire more interest in this neglected group of remedies.
Moreover, those homoeopaths who are research oriented, may make further investigation of the
possibilities and properties of this group of remedies in terms of provings and their relationships
to disease and the related remedies.


The relationship between homoeopathic remedies and the bowel nosode made by Paterson in his
research work up till 1949 is in need of bringing up to date. This is particularly relevant when we
take into consideration the vast number of new remedies introduced since. This is especially
relevant when we take into consideration Scholtens contribution through his Element Theory and
the remedies obtained from the plant families by both Scholten and Sankaran. In order to do
credit to this group of remedies I will first give a brief history of their evolution. Second, how the
bowel nosode may be applied in practice and indications for their use and cautions to be
considered. Lastly, I will relate my own clinical experience in applying the bowel nosode.


A HISTORICAL CONTEXT:
Essentially, bowel nosode are prepared from cultures of non-lactose fermenting flora of the
intestinal tract. The various groups of the nosode are differentiated from each other based on
their ability to ferment certain sugars. The investigation and experiments on the bowel bacteria
and chronic diseases were first undertaken by Dr. Edward Bach (1886 1936) in 1926. He was a
bacteriologist at London University College Hospital.
Bachs investigation led him to conclude that certain intestinal germs belonging to the non-
lactose fermenting, gram-negative, and coli-typhoid group, had a close connection with chronic
diseases and their cure. These germs were present in the intestines of both healthy people and
people suspected of suffering from chronic diseases. However, the difference between the two is
that in the latter instance these germs were large in number and pathogenic, whereas their
presence was smaller in proportion in the healthy people.


In Bachs attempt to cure his patients from chronic diseases he isolated the bacilli and then gave
it back to the patient in the form of a vaccine (an autogenous vaccine) which was prepared from
the cultures of the killed organisms. Bach claimed to cure the disease with this form of vaccine.
95% of the individuals showed favourable response and 80% of the cases revealed excellent
results. Later he administered the potentized vaccine, prepared according to the homoeopathic
principle, and cured many of his patients. By 1930, Bach briefly summarized clinically derived
indications for most of the bowel nosode and moved away from their further investigation. It was
Dishington, in 1929, that did the first full preparation of a clinical proving on Dysentery Co.


In summary, the bowel nosode are classified into the following ten major categories that are in
use today (B stands for Bacillus; Co. for compound made up from number of specific germ in
each case):


1. B. Morgan Co. (Bach): two subtypes of Morgan Pure (Paterson) and Morgan Gaertner
(Paterson).
2. B. Proteus (Bach)
3. Mutable (Bach)
4. Bacillus No. 7 (Paterson)
5. Gaertner (Bach)
6. Dysentery Co. (Bach)
7. Sycotic Co. (Paterson)
8. Faecalis
9. Bacillus No. 10 (Paterson)
10. Cocal Co. (Paterson)


John Paterson (1890 1955), who worked on the nosode with Bach, continued the research for
the next two decades after Bach turned his attention to the flower remedies. Paterson and his
wife Elisabeth refined the indications for the use of bowel nosode in terms of the characteristics of
the bowel flora, especially their behavior in health, diseases and in drug provings. The results
produced by Paterson came after examining more than 20,000 stool specimens for over twenty
years, which led to the following conclusions:


1. Where there is balance there is no disease. The germ, in this case the B. Coli in the intestinal
tract performs a useful function. It is non- pathogenic.
2. The balance of bowel flora is disturbed in disease. This non-lactose fermenting non-pathogenic
bowel flora, B. Coli, undergoes definite change in disease conditions. Any change in the host
which affects the intestinal mucosa will upset the balance. Therefore, what follows is a change in
the B. Colis habit and biochemistry, which may then become pathogenic. The disease condition is
originated in the host that compels the Bacillus to modify itself in order to survive.
3. Similar changes are also observed in drug provings.


Previously in 1936, Paterson presented a paper to the British Homoeopathic Society. This paper
was published in the British Homoeopathic Journal (April, 1936) titled The Potentised Drug and
Its Action on the Bowel Flora. It dealt with the clinical and bacteriological observations on
12,000 cases. A brief summary of the findings is as follows:


1. Non-lactose fermenting bacilli were isolated in 25% of the stool specimens examined. These
are present in all the intestines of warm blooded animals.
2. The appearance of non-lactose fermenting bacilli often followed and seemed to bear
relationship of the previously administered homoeopathic remedy, the choice of the remedy being
made according to the law of simil and prepared by potentization.


Patersons conclusion states that B. Coli is a harmless saprophyte and to be non-pathogenic when
the intestinal mucosa is healthy. Its function is to break up the complex molecules of the organic
combinations into the more simple substances, i.e. absorptions. At the same time, Paterson
observed an unexpected phenomenon following the administering of the remedy. In the patient
who had previously only yielded B. Coli there suddenly appeared a large percentage of non-
lactose fermenting bacilli in the patients stool, a type which one associated with the pathogenic
group of typhoid and paratyphoid. It would seem that the homoeopathic potentized remedy had
changed the bowel flora and had caused the disease. Yet clinical investigations revealed that the
patient did not feel ill, but experienced a sense of wellbeing attributed to the last remedy he had
received. The pathogenic germ in this case was the result of a vital force set up in the patient by
the potentized remedy. As such, it begs the question Is the specific germ the cause of disease,
or is it the result of the action of the vital force (Dynamis) which characterizes all living cells in
their resistance to disease? The germ was not the cause of disease (Paterson, 1998:5-6).


Certain conclusions were made from Patersons clinical and laboratory observations:
1. The specific organism is related to the disease.
2. The specific organism is related to the homoeopathic remedy.
3. The homoeopathic remedy is related to the disease.


From his work, Paterson was able to compile a list of bowel nosode with their related
homoeopathic remedies (September 1949) and his wife Elisabeth Paterson later added her own
findings in 1959:
Bowel Nosode; Associated Remedies (J. Paterson)
September 1949; Indicated Remedies Used (E. Paterson)


November 1959
Morgan-pure (Paterson): Alumina; Baryta-c; Calc-c; Calc-sulph; Carbo-veg; Carbo-sulph;
Digitalis; Ferr-c; Graphites; Kali-c; Mag-c; Medorrhinum; Nat-c; Petroleum; Psorinum; Sepia;
SULPHUR; Tub-bov Calc-c; Calc-fl; Calc-sil; Calc-sulph; Causticum; Graphites; Hep-sulph; Kali-
bich; Kali-c; Kali-sulph; Lycopodium; Medorrhinum; Nat-sulph; Nux-v; Petroleum; Psorinum;
Pulsatilla; Rhus-t; Sepia; Silicea; S.S.C.; Thuja; Tub.

Morgan gaertner (Paterson): Chelidonium; Chenopodium; Hellebor-n; Hepar sulph; Lachesis;
LYCOPODIUM; Merc-sulph; sanguinaria; Taraxacum; Calc-c; Graphites; Kali-bich; Lycopodium;
Nat-m; Nux-v; Pulsatilla; Sepia; Silicea; Sulph.

Proteus (Bach): Acid-m; Ammon-m; Aurum-m; Apis; Baryta-m; Borax; Conium; Cuprum-met;
Calc-m; Ferr-m; Ignatia; Kali-m; Mag-m; NATRUM-M; Secale,Aurum-m; Baryta-m; Calc-m;
Cholesterin; Cuprum; Ferr-m; Kali-m; Mag-m; Nat-m; Secale cor; Sepia.

Gaertner (Bach): Calc-fl; Calc-hypo; Calc-phos; Cal-sil; Kali-phos; MERC-VIV; Nat-phos; Nat-sil-
fl; PHOSPHORUS; Phytollacca; Pulsatilla; SILICEA; Syphilinum; Zinc-phos; Bacilinum; Calc-phos;
Clac-sil; Ferr-phos; Kali-phos; Nat-phos; Phosphorus; Silicea; Tub.

Dysentery Co. (Bach): Anacardium; Arg-nit; ARSENIC ALB; Cadmium met; Kalmia; Veratrum-
alb; Veratrum-viv; Arg-nit; Ars-alb; China-ars; China-off; Pulsatilla; Tub.

Dysentery Co. (Dishington): Ammon-c; Arg-nit; Arnica; Ars; Cactus; Carbo-veg; Coffea;
Digitalis; Gels; Graph; Kali-c; Kalmia; Lachesis; Ledum; Lycopodium; Mag-m; Nat-c; Phos;
Platina; Sanguinaria; Sepia; Tub.

Sycotic Co.: Acid-nit; Anti-t; Bacillinum; Calc-met; Ferr-met; Nat-sulph; Rhus-t; Thuja;
Bacillinum; Clac-c; Kali-bich; Lycopodium; Nat-m; Pulsatilla; Sepia; Silicea; Sulph; Tub.

Bacillus No. 7: Ars-iod; Bromium; Calc-iod; Ferrum-iod; IODIUM; Kali-bich; Kali-brom; KALI-
CARB; Kali-iod; Kali-nit; Merc-iod; Nat-iod; Calc-c; Cal-fl; Causticum; Kali-c; Rhus-t.

Mutabile: Ferr-phos; Kali-sulph; PULSATILLA.
Source: Agrawal (1995:63)


Paterson also grouped the six most common non-lactose fermenting organisms in their
relationship to disease symptoms and bodily systems.


Bowel Nosode Group:-- Bodily Systems:-- Conditions:

Morgan Group: Portal System Sluggish-- Congestive
Sycotic Group: Mucous: -- Serous Proliferative Catarrhs
Gaertner Group: Intestinal -- Nutrition
Proteus Group: Vascular -- Nervous Strain, Spasm/Oedema
No. 7 Group: Skeletal Musculo -- Weakness, Aging
Dys. Co. Group: Autonomic -- Apprehensive Tension
Source: Agrawal (1995:17)



INDICATIONS FOR THE USE OF BOWEL NOSODES:
1. Bowel nosode are deep acting remedies and so case taking must cover the totality of
symptoms from the mental to the physical. The nosode should be given and selected in the same
manner as any other homoeopathic remedies in accordance with the homoeopathic principles.
2. The nosode should only be given when the patients symptoms correspond to it.
3. If the given homoeopathic remedy is working well and eliciting the desired result there is no
need for a nosode. However, if the case should lag in any way an appropriate bowel nosode may
give the necessary impetus for the patient to continue to progress.
4. In a new case where the patient has not had homoeopathic treatment before if there is a
definite symptom picture pointing to a remedy [constitutional prescribing], then the patient
should be given the indicated remedy and not the nosode. Second, in cases where it is difficult to
make the choice among many probable remedies, then a nosode may be given.
5. An old case where a patient may be under homoeopathic treatment, but is not responding to
it, an appropriately selected bowel nosode can be given.
6. Potency is selected in accordance with the general homoeopathic laws. Paterson often used the
nosode in high potency and the related remedy in low (e.g. Sycotic Co. 1M, one dose, and
Natrum Sulph 6C, twice a day).

Catgories: Thorie
Mots cls: vaccination,antibiotics,chronic diseases, weakening of the vitality, bacteria
metabolism, gastrointestinal, tract, GIT, bowel, bowel disease, bowel nosode, non-lactose
fermenting flora of the intestinal tract, Bacillus, B. Coli, J.Paterson, E.Bach, vital force, non-
lactose fermenting organisms
Remdes:

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