and the Immune System by Dana Ullman, MPH
September 2004
Jonas Salk, with both eloquence and simplicity, once
stated that there are two primary approaches to treating ill people. He said
that there are therapeutic techniques that directly impact specific
symptoms, and there are methods that stimulate the body's own immune and
defense system.
Whereas conventional medical treatments today tend to focus on the former
goal of treating or controlling symptoms, various natural therapeutics
primarily attend to the latter goal of augmenting the person's own inherent
defenses. Although the direct treatment of symptoms often has immediate
effects, its benefits tend to be short-term. Because such therapeutic
interventions do not usually strengthen the person's own defenses, the
individual remains prone to recurrence of their problem.
In contrast, therapeutic methods that strengthen a person's immune and
defense system has longer term benefit and can prevent recurrence, but the
benefit is sometimes achieved more slowly.
These generalizations about therapeutic methods are, however, just that,
generalizations. There are plenty of exceptions, but these generalizations
create a useful framework from which to evaluate the benefits and
limitations of various therapeutic approaches.
Homeopathy and Immune Response
Homeopathy obviously fits into the class of therapeutic methods that augment
the body's own defenses. The basis of homeopathy, called the principle of
similars, suggests that a microdose of a substance will heal whatever
pattern of symptoms this substances causes in large dose. This principle is
also observed in the use of vaccinations and allergy treatments, though
homeopathic medicines are both considerably smaller and safer in dose and
more individualized to the person they are being used to treat.
Although homeopathic medicines are thought to stimulate the body's own
defenses, how they do so remains a mystery. One study published in the
European Journal of Pharmacology showed that a homeopathic medicine,
Silicea, stimulated macrophages (macrophages are a part of the body's
immune system which engulf bacteria and foreign substances). How or why
Silicea was able to have this action or why exceedingly small doses of
it are so active is unknown. In the same way that physicians and
pharmacologists do not understand how many drugs work, we do not understand
how homeopathic medicine actually work.
Homeopathic medicine do not simply stimulate the body's immune system to
treat ill people, for they can also calm it when this is necessary for the
healing of the individual. An example of this latter effect was observed in
a study of the homeopathic treatment of people with rheumatoid arthritis, a
condition which is considered an autoimmune illness. People with auto-immune
ailments suffer because their body's immune system is over-active and it
attacks the person's own cells, not just bacteria, viruses, or foreign
substances.
This study on 46 people with rheumatoid arthritis showed that those given an
individualized choice of homeopathic medicine got considerably more relief
than those given a placebo. A total of 82% of those people given a
homeopathic medicine experienced relief of pain, while only 21% of those
given a placebo got a similar degree of relief.
Homeopathy and Infectious Diseases
Toward the end of Louis Pasteur's life, he had come to realize that germs
may not be the cause of disease after all, but instead are probably
the results of disease. In other words, various bacteria and other
infective organisms may be present when there is some type of disease, but
infection tends to establish itself primarily when a person's own defenses
are compromised sufficiently to make him susceptible to the infection.
Louis Pasteur's realization at the end of his life has, however, gone
unnoticed by most conventional physicians and by the public at large. When a
person experiences an infection, most people think that it is best to take
an antibiotic for bacterial infection and an anti-viral drug for viral
infection. There are, however, problems with such drugs. Besides the various
side effects they cause and the various instances in which they are not
effective, even when they are effective, their usage tends to increase the
chances of infective agents to adapt to the drugs, thereby reducing the
chance that the drugs will be effective in the future.
As Jonas Salk noted, instead of trying to attack a specific problem, another
strategy to re-establish health is to attempt to stimulate a person's own
immune and defense system, which is ultimately the approach commonly used
with homeopathic medicines.
Most people today do not know that homeopathy actually gained its greatest
popularity in Europe and America during the mid- and late-1800s primarily
due to the significant successes it achieved in treating people suffering
from the often fatal infectious disease epidemics that raged during that
time. Cholera, typhoid, yellow fever, and scarlet fever were but some
of the infectious diseases that homeopathic medicines were exceptionally
effective in treating.
These natural medicines were not effective because they "attacked" the
infective agent but because they stimulated the body's own immune and
defense system to defend and heal itself.
Ideal Medicines?
There are no specific homeopathic medicines which are thought to be more
effective than others in augmenting a person's own immune and defense
system. Each homeopathic medicine is thought to be effective when it is
properly prescribed. The trick is to find the correct homeopathic medicine
that fits the person's unique pattern of symptoms.
For instance, Arsenicum album (white arsenic) is a very common
homeopathic medicine. There are numerous acute and chronic conditions for
which it is effective in treating, ranging from food poisoning and digestive
disorders, to fatigue and various anxiety states, and to asthma and
insomnia. Arsenicum album is not effective because it has antibiotic
properties or stimulating or sedative effects. It is effective according to
basic homeopathic principles because it has the capacity to heal those
specific patterns of symptoms it is known to cause if taken in large dose.
Arsenicum album will not be effective in treating a person whose
symptoms do not match the symptoms that arsenic is known to cause.
There are various books that help people to find the correct single
homeopathic medicine. This individualization of medicine is sometimes easy
and sometimes hard. If a person does not know how to find the correct remedy
or if this medicine is not readily available, it is often useful to use one
of the various homeopathic formulas available to the general public.
Although some authors, including myself, have accidently described
homeopathic medicines as immunostimulating drugs, it may be more accurate to
refer to them as immunomodulating drugs (drugs that stimulate a depressed
immune system and that tone down an overactive immune system).
Immunomodulating effects from drugs may be the ideal effect that drug
companies and physicians have longed for. Ironically, these drugs have been
with us for a long time. Indeed, it is time to further investigate
homeopathic medicines.
This article is one of 100+ articles on homeopathy
by Dana Ullman, MPH, PLUS a full online catalog of homeopathic books, tapes,
medicines, courses, and software. See the NHF Suggested
reading list:
http://www.thenhf.com/suggestedbooklist.html
DANA ULLMAN, MPH, is one of America's leading advocates for homeopathy,
(Homeopathic Educational Services -
www.homeopathic.com)
He has authored six books, including Homeopathy A-Z, The Consumer's Guide to
Homeopathy, Homeopathic Medicines for Children and Infants, Discovering
Homeopathy, and (the best-selling) Everybody's Guide to Homeopathic
Medicines (with Stephen Cummings, MD). Dana serves on advisory boards of
alternative medicine institutes at Harvard and Columbia schools of medicine.
He is the founder of Homeopathic Educational Services, America's leading
resource center for homeopathic books, tapes, medicines, software, and
correspondence courses. Homeopathic Educational Services has co-published
over 35 books on homeopathy with North Atlantic Books.