Appendicitis
Symptoms.--There
is discomfort in the right anterior abdominal region. There may
be a slight sensitiveness on pressure near the navel. The discomfort
may have been coming and going for some time, and one doctor has
suggested a possible involvement of the appendix; another may be
quite sure of appendicitis; all agree that an operation should be
performed. The operation is performed--of course it is; for you
cannot beat the game of operating.
Cause.--The
patient is not any better after the operation--of course not. Why
should he be? The operation did not remove the cause. Indeed, the
medical wiseacres never gave any thought to cause. In this they
thought to beat nature. But it cannot be done. Nature sent out her
edict at the beginning of time: Cause must be removed to cure effects.
There never has been an exception, and never will be, the daily
behavior of the entire medical profession to the contrary notwithstanding.
There
never has been, and never will be, a case of appendicitis that has
not been preceded by gastro-intestinal catarrh, with indigestion
and distention from gas. The catarrhal bowels are sensitive, and,
when distended with gas, there may be much or little pain. When
the pain is great, few escape operations. But no cures are made.
Those whom the undertaker does not get drift to the scrap-pile labeled
incurable. To cure disease by removing effects cannot be done. It
is a game which the best cannot beat.
When
an abscess forms, involving the appendix, the natural course, if
not meddled with--examined and re-examined or burst by the examiner's
fingers--will be a natural and normal opening into the intestine.
Where the pus fails to take this course--or, to state it differently,
where nature is not frustrated in her efforts at establishing drainage
at a point of least resistance by getting rid of the pus accumulation
through the bowel--it is because of malpractice by meddlesome examiners'
"bull in a china shop" methods.
Treatment.--To
illustrate this point: About a year ago a mother brought in her
arms to my office a boy about seven years old. She took him out
of one of the hospitals, where the surgeons had declared that he
must be operated upon at once. On examination, I found a walled-off
pus-sac in the region of the appendix. I did not dig in with my
fingers to satisfy myself just how large, or to satisfy a morbid
curiosity in seeing how much resistance there was, etc. I palpated
and examined very gently, and found a walled-off abscess as large
as a goose egg. With all the physics, attempts at moving the bowels,
and manipulative examinations, the boy was still within the possibilities
of the disease ending in a natural way. I told the mother to carry
her boy home. If there was a temperature amounting to 103 degrees,
she must put ice on the abdomen; with a temperature less than that,
she was to keep warmth to the abdomen and warmth to the feet. Nothing
but water was to be given daily, without force, to clear the bowels
below the cut-off. By this I mean that the swelling and distention
had collapsed the bowels in that region, so that there was nothing
passing down from above.
I
requested the mother to report every two or three days. I told her
to let the boy rest without disturbance to be kept absolutely quiet
in bed.
I
heard nothing more from the case for about two months. Then the
mother came and brought a lady to see me, whom she had encouraged
to come to get my advice. But, before going into any further conversation,
I insisted on her telling me about her boy. I reminded her that
she had not reported to me for further advice. Her answer was that
he rested quietly, that she had followed the instructions to the
letter, and that in about seven days after she was in the office
he had a copious evacuation from the bowels, which was largely pus,
mixed with blood and fecal matter. One or two movements had cleared
the bowels out. I had told her that when the bowels moved well she
might feed the child orange juice. She had kept him on the oranges
for two days, and then fed him lightly for a week. And that was
all there was to the case. I have seen many similar cases come to
just such an ending. It is possible to have all appendicular abscesses
end in that way by doing nothing scientifically. What is science?
Truth.
Meddlesome
and vicious examinations are the cause of about all ills resulting
from appendicular abscesses. Hundreds of cases come to my office
every year complaining of exactly the same pains that they had before
they were operated upon for the removal of their appendices. The
truth is that they did not have appendicitis, acute or chronic;
but they did have gastro-intestinal catarrh and the accompanying
indigestion.
What
is the trouble? Gastro-intestinal catarrh. What is chronic appendicitis?
Chronic gastrointestinal catarrh. The aggravating cause is excessive
starch-eating. Operations for the chronic, and most operations for
the acute, are malpractice. Of course, when vicious treatment and
nursing, with meddlesome examinations, have caused an abscess to
burst into the peritoneal cavity, it is a very serious affair. The
abdomen must be opened, cleared out, and properly drained; and patients
should be fasted during the time that the healing is taking place.
A lack of understanding of the symptoms-complex diagnosed appendicitis
is the cause of the frenzied haste and hysteria surrounding such
cases.
I
know from years of experience, "watchful waiting," and
let-alone treatment that it is not a serious disease, and that it
is one which does not occur very often without officious meddling.