Biochemic System Of Medicine

        The structure and vitality of the organs depend upon the presence of the necessary quantities of the inorganic constituents. The word biochemistry is formed from bios (the Greek for life) and chemistry is the process by which the various fluids and tissues are formed‚ the nature and causes of the abnormal condition called disease‚ and the restoration of health by supplying to the body the deficient cell-salts. Biochemistry is science not experimentalism.

The food and drink taken into the stomach‚ and the air breathed into the lungs furnish all the materials of which the body is composed. By the juices of the stomach‚ pancreas‚ and liver‚ the food is digested and the useful particles are taken up by the villi of the small intestines. These are carried by the blood to the various parts of the body where they are needed and where they are absorbed. The blood thus supplies the materials necessary for forming every tissue and fluid in the body and for carrying forward every process.

An analysis of blood shows it to contain organic and inorganic matter. The organic constituents are sugar‚ fats and albuminous substances. The inorganic constituents are water and certain minerals‚ commonly called cell-salts. Of a living human being water constitutes over seven-tenths‚ the cell-salts about one-twentieth‚ and organic matter the remainder.

The cell-salts are the vital portion of the body‚ the workers‚ the builders; the water and organic substances are simply inert matter used by these salts in building the cells of the body. Should a deficiency occur in one or more of these workers‚ of whom there are twelve‚ some abnormal condition arises. These abnormal conditions are known by the general term‚ disease.

Two kinds of substances are needed in the process of tissue building‚ and both are found in the blood‚ namely‚ the organic and the inorganic constituents. Sugar‚ fat‚ and albuminous substances of the blood‚ the organic‚ serving as the physical basis of the tissues; while the water and salts‚ namely‚ potash‚ lime‚ silica‚ iron‚ magnesium‚ and sodium‚ form the inorganic substances‚ which determine the peculiar kind of cell to be built up.

Disease is the result of a loss of the power of union with organic matter by one or more of the inorganic cell-salts‚ which exhausted salt or salts are then carried out of the system. The cure consists in supplying the proper quantity of active inorganic cell-salts to replace that‚ which has been thrown out of the system‚ and‚ by uniting with the organ matter‚ thus allows the affected cells to function properly.

It is not the symptoms that must be cured‚ but the underlying cause for which the symptom is only the body’s warning thet there are deficiency to be supplied.

When the deficiency is great‚ more organic material must be disposed of‚ hence fevers or inflamation. The circulation is increased and the motion being changed to heat‚ by the law of conservation of energy‚ causes the sympton called ‘fever’.

The inorganic substances in the blood and tissues are sufficient to heal all diseases‚ which are curable.The question whether this or that disease is or not dependent on the existence of fungi‚ germs‚ or bacilli is of no importance in biochemic treatment because this treatment goes to the basic cause of trouble‚ and by supplying to the cells the cell-salts needed for a normal condition to exist there by destroys the breeding place for the fungi‚ germs‚ or bacilli.

Each one of the twelve inorganic substances (in chemistry called salts) of which the human body is built up has its own sphere of function and curative action‚ by reason of the part it occupies in the cells‚ and the part these have to perform in maintaining and restoring health.

A dose of any remedy used should be rather too small than too large; for too small‚ a repetition of the dose will bring about the desired effect, while too large a dose may miss its object altogether.

When two or more remedies are needed‚ they should be taken in altenation. In acute conditions give the remedy every half-hour to two hours‚ according to the severity of the case‚ and every three hours after amelioration. If the pains or symptoms are very severe‚ the quickest results are obtainable by giving the remedy in hot water‚ until relief is obtained. In chronic conditions give two or three doses daily in the morning‚ at noon and at night before retiring.

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Dr.Willhelm Heinrich Schuessler


Dr.Rudolf Ludwig Karl Virchow


Dr.Christian Friedrich Samuel Hahnemann

 

 

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