The New-Hampshire Journal of Medicine, Vol. 1
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Excerpt from The New-Hampshire Journal of Medicine, Vol. 1: August, 1850, to August, 1851
In chlorosis how ought we to give iron? In what dose? For how long a time? All questions which therapeutists have scarcely touched upon, and which few practitioners have taken the trouble to examine thoroughly. We except, however, Sydenham, who has given the basis of a good treatment, but who has not sufficiently insisted upon some minutiae of great importance as a long use of this remedy has convinced us.
The insoluble preparations ought to be employed in general in the begin ning of the treatment. Iron filings hold the first -rank. They are given in powder, in a spoonful of broth or in sweetmeats, morning and evening, at the two principal meals, in the dose of from one to two grains each time. If this dose is easily borne, it is increased gradually until it reaches from fifteen to thirty grains for each meal. It is essential that the medicine should be taken at the beginning of a meal, for if it is given in the morning fasting, as many physicians do, the patients feel a weight at the stomach - a very great loathing - and lose their appetite.
When the iron filings are not borne in this way, we prescribe lozenges of chalybeate chocolate, according to the formula which we give below, * and we administer ten or a dozen of them in the course of the day. If the pa tient, on the contrary, bears the iron filings well, we may pass to the soluble preparations, such as the lactate, the citrate and, the chlorides of iron. Those which we prefer to all others, are those which we have invented, and which we designate by the name of tartaric, or hydrochloric gaseous chalybeate waters, made with fifteen grains of tartrate or perchloride of iron dissolved in a bottle of artificial Seltzer water. For certain women, we prescribe the tartarized tincture of iron, iron water, chalybeate wine, &c., &c., &c.,
This treatment, which ought not to be suspended even in the menstrual period, should be continued till the symptoms of chlorosis have entirely dis appeared. We stop then, to resume a month after, and persist in the same means for fifteen days or three weeks. Then we leave two months interval after that We give the chalybeates for fifteen days and we should do thus for a year, and even more for, if it is easy to cure chlorosis, it is difficult to cure it so as to have no fear of relapses, if we suspend suddenly the use of the preparations of iron.
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