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BALNEOTHERAPEUTICS ( See also: internal and See also: external use of See also: mineral See also: waters is quite distinct from " hydrotherapy," or the therapeutic uses of pure See also: water
.
But the See also: term " balneotherapeutics " has gradually come to be applied to everything See also: relating to See also: spa treatment, including the drinking of waters and the use of hot See also: baths and natural vapour baths, as well as of the various kinds of mud and See also: sand used for hot applications
.
The See also: principal constituents found in mineral waters are sodium, magnesium, calcium and iron, in combination with the acids to See also: form chlorides, sulphates, sulphides and See also: carbonates
.
Other substances occasionally See also: present in sufficient quantity to exert a therapeutic influence are arsenic, lithium, potassium, manganese, bromine, iodine, &c
.
The chief gases in solution are See also: oxygen, nitrogen, carbonic acid and sulphuretted hydrogen
.
Argon and See also: helium occur in some of the " See also: simple thermal " and " thermal See also: sulphur waters." There are few doctors who would deny the See also: great value of See also: special bathing and drinking See also: cures in certain morbid conditions
.
In the employment of the various mineral waters, many of the spas adopt special means by which they increase or modify their influence, e.g. the so-called " aromatic " or " medicated " baths, in which substances are mixed to exert a special influence on the skin and peripheral nerves
.
Of these the " See also: pine-needle " See also: bath has the greatest repute; it is made by adding a decoction of the needles or See also: young shoots of firs and pines
.
See also: Fir See also: wood oil (a mixture of ethereal oils) or the tincture of an alcoholic extract acts equally well
.
The volatile ethereal constituents are sup-posed to penetrate the skin and to stimulate the cutaneous
circulation and peripheral nerves, being eliminated later by the ordinary channels
.
Similar effects follow the addition to the bath of aromatic herbs, such as camomile, See also: thyme, &c
.
For a full-sized bath 11 to 2 lb of herbs are tied in a muslin bag and infused in aSee also: gallon of boiling water; the juices are then ex-pressed and the infusion added to the bath
.
Astringent baths are prepared in a similar way from decoctions of See also: oak bark, See also: walnut leaves, &c
.
In many spas on the See also: European continent baths are prepared from peat or mud mixed with hot mineral water
.
Mineral peat consists of decomposing See also: vegetable See also: soil that has been so long in the neighbourhood of the medicinal spring that it has undergone See also: peculiar and variable chemical changes
.
This is mixed with the hot mineral water until the bath has the desired consistency, the effect on the patient being in almost See also: direct proportion to the See also: density
.
These baths vary greatly in composition
.
Mud baths are chiefly prepared from muddy deposits found in the neighbourhood of the springs, as at St Amand
.
They See also: act like a large See also: poultice applied to the See also: surface of the See also: body, and in addition to the influence of the temperature, they exert a considerable See also: mechanical effect
.
The See also: pulse is accelerated some 6 to 12 beats a minute, the respiration number rises, and the patient is thrown into a profuse perspiration
.
They have very great value in gouty and rheumatic conditions and in some of the special troubles of See also: women
.
There are certain conditions in which mineral water treatment is distinctly contra-indicated
.
Advanced cardiac disease and cardiac cases with failure of compensation must pre-eminently be treated at home, not at a spa
.
Advanced arterio-sclerosis, any form of serious organic visceral disease, advanced cirrhosis, pulmonary See also: tuberculosis with a tendency to haemoptysis, much See also: elevation of temperature or emaciation, are all entirely unsuited for this form of treatment
.
Serious organic See also: nervous diseases, great nervous depression and old cases of paralysis are all contra-indicated
.
Any trouble, however suited in itself for spa treatment, must be considered inapplicable if complicated with pregnancy
.
In advising balneo therapeutic treatment in any See also: case, all the conditions and habits of the patient—pecuniary, See also: physical and psychical—must be considered, as the spa must be fitted to the patient, not the patient to the spa
.
Besides the particular disease, the idiosyncrasy of the patient must be considered, the same morbid condition in different See also: people requiring very different treatment
.
Retarded convalescence is a condition often treated at the spas, although hygienic surroundings, both See also: mental and physical, are usually all that is necessary to ensure See also: complete recovery
.
After rheumatic fever, however, if the See also: joints remain painful and the See also: heart is dilated, the thermal gaseous saline water of See also: Nauheim, augmented by Schott's resistance movements, will often appear to See also: work wonders
.
Chronic See also: rheumatism, where there is much exudation round a joint or incipient stiffness of a joint, may be relieved by hot thermal treatment, especially when combined with various forms of See also: massage and exercises
.
Simple thermal waters, hot sulphur springs and hot muriated waters are all successful in different cases
.
Chronic See also: muscular rheumatism can also be benefited in a similar manner
.
Diseases of the nervous See also: system are on the whole treated by these means with small success
.
Mental diseases other than very mild cases of depression should be considered inapplicable
.
Neurasthenics are sometimes treated at chalybeate or thermal muriated saline spas; but such treatment is entirely secondary to the general management of the case . Neuralgic affections and the later stages ofSee also: neuritis, especially when dependent on See also: gout or rheumatism, are often relieved or cured
.
Abdominal venosity (abdominal plethora), a feature of obesity, glycosuria, &c., are extremely well fitted for this form of treatment
.
The alkaline sulphated waters, the bitter waters and the See also: common See also: salt waters can all be prescribed, and after a See also: short course can be supplemented with various forms of active and passive exercises
.
Diseases of the See also: respiratory See also: organs are far more suited for See also: climatic treatment than for treatment by baths
.
Anaemia can usually be better or equally well treated at home, or by seaside residence or a See also: sea voyage, though many physicians prescribe chloride ofsodium waters, followed by a course of iron waters at some suitably situated spa
.
In the anaemia dependent on malarial infection, the muriated or alkaline sulphated waters at spas of considerable elevation and combined with iron and arsenic are often very beneficial
.
See also: Gravel and See also: stone, if of the uric acid variety, can be treated with the alkaline waters, but the case must be under
See also: constant observation lest the urine become too alkaline and a deposition of See also: phosphates take place on the already formed uric acid stone
.
Gout is so variable both in cause and effect that much discrimination is required in its treatment
.
Where the patient is of " full habit," with portal stagnation, the sulphated alkaline or mild bitter waters are indicated, especially those of See also: Carlsbad and See also: Marienbad; but the use of these strong waters must be followed by a long rest under strict hygienic conditions
.
Where this is impossible, a milder course must be advised, as at Homburg, See also: Kissingen, See also: Harrogate, See also: Wiesbaden, See also: Baden-Baden, &c
.
For very delicate patients, and where See also: time is limited, the simple thermal waters are preferable
.
For radiant heat andSee also: light baths and electric baths of all kinds, see See also: ELECTROTHERAPEUTICS; and for compressed air baths, See also: AEROTHERAPEUTICS
.
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