CHAPTER X
Allow me to repeat: As soon as a case
is diagnosed the proper treatment is to stop all medicine and food, for they excite
movement, and this should be avoided. Give nothing but water. Keep ice over the inflamed
spot. Keep the patient quiet, end the feet warm. There is absolutely nothing to be
done until the bowels move, which will take place in from fourteen to twenty-eight
days. The patient will not starve to death, nor will there be any danger that the
abscess will open anywhere except into the bowels. After the bowels move, one glass
of hot milk is to be given three times a day, so there will be no danger of solid
food finding its way into the cavity of the abscess.
To be safe I insist on a fluid diet
for a week after the bowels move, and a light diet for two or three weeks more. Cases
taken through in this way, and then instructed in never allowing the bowels to become
loaded again, will not only make a good recovery, but there is no tendency for the
disease to return if the patient is prudent. I say that there need not be a death
from this disease if these suggestions are properly carried out. The cases that die
every year are killed by food and medicine.
Surgery has gained its reputation in
these cases because of the stupidity of the average physician and patient. Cases
taken through in this way are comparatively comfortable; they may pretend to suffer
from hunger, but it is principally imagination. If my plan were generally adopted
the dread of this disease would disappear; surgeons would get left on some fat fees,
and the undertaker would look glum after the fall crop.
There are a few laymen so willful and
incorrigible that they can't be depended upon to follow instructions. They will break
rules, be imprudent in eating, and in many ways disregard their own interests. Such
cases should be sent to the surgeons as early as possible, before they have time
to complicate their disease and make a complete recovery impossible; however, people
with such temperaments usually find an early grave and they might as well go by the
surgical route as any other.