Wednesday, April 28, 2010

Causticum lifted the Eyelids of Monica like an Eastern Bride

Love homeopathy --- Homeopathy never betrays you



Causticum lifted the Eyelids of Monica like an Eastern Bride




Date: Mon, 5 Apr 2010 17:34:57 -0700
From: monica_mesias@yahoo.com
Subject: Droopy eye lid
To: hdrsmahmood@hotmail.com



Dear Doctor Mahmood,




I found your name in an article about homeophatic medicines. Hope you could provide me some directions on how it is effective to take gelsemium for ptosis.

I had an eye surgery, pterygium removed, 2 months ago, the surgeon says that now I have a condition called droppy eye. Please let me know how can I take gelsemium and for how many days. Any reply is greatly appreciated.



Best Regards

Monica


****

From: Homoeo Dr. Sultan Mahmood
Subject: RE: Droopy eye lid
To: monica_mesias@yahoo.com
Received: Monday, April 5, 2010, 10:04 PM



Dear Monica,
You may try 5 drops of Causticum-1M in some water once a day for three days followed by Gelsemium-200 (5 drops in morning) and Kali Phos-30 (5 drops noon and evening) daily. Please report after 2 weeks.

Regards.

****

From: monica ------
Subject: RE: Droopy eye lid- May I take the pellets instead of liquid form, please let me know
To: "Homoeo Dr. Sultan Mahmood"
Received: Tuesday, April 6, 2010, 12:46 PM


Dear Doctor


none of the stores in Mississauga_Canada carry the liquid form, will be Ok if I buy the pellets on the same strengh you prescribed. If so, do you mind telling me how many pellets I need to take and for how long I need to take the 3 products.



Thanks in advance for your humanitary help but I am really desperate about my eye condition.


Regards

****
From:

Homoeo Dr. Sultan Mahmood (hdrsmahmood@hotmail.com)

Sent:Wednesday, April 07, 2010 4:50:16 AM

To:monica_mesias@yahoo.com


Dear Monica,
You may take 5-6 pellets (which will be equivalent to one dose) for 2 weeks and then report.

Regards.



****
From:monica ------ (monica_mesias@yahoo.com)

Sent:Friday, April 16, 2010 12:47:16 PM

To:


Homoeo Dr. Sultan Mahmood (hdrsmahmood@hotmail.com)

Dear Doctor Sultan,


I am sure it will not be a surprise to you to know I have improved 90%. Counting the 3 first days I took Causticum, and then I have continued with the other 2 products, I am on the 9th day of your miraculously treatment.



On April 21st will be 14 days, then I will write to you reporting my progress.



Once again thanks from the bottom of my heart to heal me; and thanks for checking on me.

God bless you

Monica

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Special Biochemic Combinations (Part-2)

Special Biochemic Combinations (Part-2)

Dr. Sayeed Ahmad D. I. Hom. (London



MENSES (SCANTY OR SUPPRESSED)

CP3x, KM3x, KP3x, KS3x, NM3x, S12x

MENSES (EXCESSIVE)

CF3x, FP12x, KM3x, KP3x, NM3x, NS3x

MENSES TOO SOON

CP3x, KM3x, MP3x, NP3x, S12x

MENSES TOO OFTEN

KM3x

MENSES LONG LASTING

CS3x, KM3x

MENSES DELAYED

CP3x, CS3x, KM3x, KP3x, KS3x, NM3x

MENSES IRREGULAR

KP3x, NP3x, S12x

MENSES PAINFUL

MP3x

MOTHER’S MILK TO INCREASE

CP3x alone or CF3x, CP3x, NM3x, S12x

MOTHER’S MILK TO DECREASE

NS3x alone or CF3x, NM3x, NS3x

NUMBNESS

KP3x, CP3x

NYMPHOMANIA

CP3x, KP3x, NM3x

OBESITY

CP30x, NM3x, S12x

ODEMA

FP12x, KM3x, KP3x, NM3x, NS3x, S12x

PAIN OF CANCER

FP200x, KP200x

PARALYSIS (LEFT SIDE)

KP3x, NP3x, MP3x

PARALYSIS (RIGHT SIDE)

KM3x, KP3x, NP3x, S12x

PENIS (SOFT AND FLACCID)

S12x

POLYPUS (NOSE)

CF3x, CP3x, NM3x, S12x

PRICKLY HEAT

CP3x, NM3x, NP3x

PROSTATE GLAND

MP3x alone or NS3x, S12x or CF30x, CP12x, KP3x, MP3x, NP3x, NS6x, S12x

PSORIASIS

CF3x, CP3x, KM3x, KP3x, KS3x, NM3x, NP3x, NS3x, S12x

SEXUAL DESIRE GONE OR LOST

KP3x, MP3x

SEXUAL DESIRE INCREASED

KP3x, MP3x, NM3x, NP3x

SLEEPING EXCESSIVE

NM3x

SLEEPLESSNESS

KP3x alone or FP12x, KM3x, KP3x, MP3x, NM3x, S12x

SMOKING HABIT (TO REMOVE)

CP3x alone or CP3x, NM3x

SNEEZING

CF3x, CP3x, CS3x, NM3x, NP3x, NS3x, S12x

SPERMATORRHŒA

CF3x, KM3x, NS3x

SEMEN DISCHARGED QUICKLY

NM3x, NP3x, S12x

STERILITY

NP3x, S12x

TALL (TO BECOME)

CP200x (Once a week)

S12x (Daily one dose)

TONIC (GENERAL)

CP3x, KP3x, NM3x

URÆMIA (SUPPRESSION OF URINE)

FP12x, KM3x, NP3x

URINE (WITH SUGAR)

NS3x

URINE (WITH URIC ACID)

KM3x, S12x

URINE (WITH PUS AND MUCOUS)

NS3x

URINE (WITH GRAVEL)

CP3x, MP3x, NS3x, S12x

UTERINE DISPLACEMENTS

CF3x, CP3x, KP3x, NP3x

UTERUS (BLEEDING)

CF3x

VERTIGO

FP12x, KM3x, KP3x, KS3x, MP3x, NP3x, NS3x

VOICE (LOST BY PARALYSIS)

KP3x

WEAKNESS OR EXHAUSTION

CP3x, KP3x, NM3x


WORRIES (EFFECT OF)

CP3x, KP3x



NOTE:


Any information given above is not intended to be taken as a replacement for medical advice. Therefore, it is very important that the patients should avoid self-treatment and rather consult the most abled and qualified classical homœopath and take the treatment under his proper guidance and advice.



Reference:

Simplest Remedies For All Diseases by Dr. B. S. Darbari.

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Special Biochemic Combinations (Part-1)

Special Biochemic Combinations (Part-1)
Dr. Sayeed Ahmad D. I. Hom. (London)



ACNE

CP3x alone or CP3x, FP12x, KM3x, KP3x, NM3x, NP3x, S12x or

CF3x, CS3x, KS3x, MP3x, NS3x

ANGER

KP3x, NM3x

ANGINA PECTORIS

CF3x, FP12x, KM3x, KP3x, MP3x, S12x

ANXIETY

KP3x, KS3x

ARTERIOSCLEROSIS

CF3x, NM3x, S12x

BRONCHITIS

FP12x, KM3x, KS3x, NS3x, S12x

CHILD SLOW TO LEARN TO WALK

CP3x, NM3x

CHILD SLOW TO LEARN TO SPEAK

CP3x, NM3x

COLITIS

KM3x, KS3x, MP3x

COLLAPSE

CP3x, KP3x, NM3x

COMA

CP3x, CS3x, KP3x, NM3x

CONSTIPATION

KM3x alone or CF3x, CP3x, FP12x, KM3x, KP3x, KS3x, MP3x, NM3x NP3x, NS3x, S12x

CORN

CF3x, KM3x, NM3x, S12x

COUGH

CF3x, CP3x, FP12x, KM3x, KP3x, KS3x, MP3x, NM3x, NP3x, NS3x, S12x

COUGH (EXCESSIVE EXPECTORATION OR RATTLING IN CHEST)

KM3x, KS3x, NM3x, S12x

CYST

CF3x, CP3x, CS3x, NM3x, S12x

DANDRUFF

KM3x, KS3x, NM3x

DEAFNESS

KM3x alone or CP3x, KP3x, MP3x, KM3x, KS3x, NM3x, NP3x, S12x

DIABETES

NS6x, MP6x or NP3x, NS3x or NP6x, NS6x

DROPSY

CF30x, KM12x, KP12x, KS3x, NM12x, NS12x

DYSMENORRHŒA

MP3x

EXHAUSTION

CP3x, KP3x, NM3x

FILARIA

KM3x, KS3x, NP3x, NS3x, S12x

GLANDS (STONY HARD)

CF3x

HAIR FALLING

CP3x, KM3x, KP3x, KS3x, NM3x, S12x

HAIR (GRAY PREMATURELY)

S12x

HEART FAILURE

CP3x, KP3x, NM3x

HERNIA

CF3x, CP3x, FP12x, KM3x, NM3x, S12x

HIGH BLOOD PRESSURE

CF3x, CP3x, FP12x, KM3x, KP3x, MP3x, KS3x, NS3x, NM3x, NP3x, S12x

IMPOTENCY

CP3x, CS3x, KM3x, KP3x, NM3x, NP3x, NS3x, S12x

INJURIES TO HEAD AND ITS EFFECTS

CP3x, FP12x, KM3x, KP3x, MP3x, NS3x

JAUNDICE

NS3x

LEUCODERMA

NM3x (Internally) thrice daily.

NM3x (Powder to be rubbed on the patch thrice daily).

LOW BLOOD PRESSURE

CP3x, KP3x, NM3x


NOTE:

Any information given above is not intended to be taken as a replacement for medical advice. Therefore, it is very important that the patients should avoid self-treatment and rather consult the most abled and qualified classical homœopath and take the treatment under his proper guidance and advice.


Reference:

Simplest Remedies For All Diseases by Dr. B. S. Darbari.

Monday, April 19, 2010

Homoeopathy and "Viagra"

Homoeopathy and "Viagra"
(Sildenafil Citrate).

Dr. Sayeed Ahmad D. I. Hom. (London)



Erectile dysfunction is a persistent or recurrent inability to attain, or maintain until completion of sexual activity, an adequate penile erection. This replaces the earlier term "Impotence". Erectile dysfunction can seriously mar the quality of life of the patients. A range of drugs like Alcohol and medications like Antihistamines, Antidepressants and Antihypertensions can cause erectile dysfunction.

The factors which contribute for organic erectile dysfunction include :



Chronic Illness :

Atherosclerosis, Diabetes, Cardiovascular Disease, Renal Failure, Hepatic Failure, Multiple Sclerosis, Spinal Pathology, Peyronie’s Disease, Depression, Anxiety, Hyperthyroidism, Hypothyroidism, Hypogonadism, Hyperprolactinaemia.



Surgery :

Radical Prostatectomy, Resection of the rectum, Major Pelvic Surgery.



Trauma :

Neurological, Spinal Cord Injury, Pelvic Injury.



Drugs :

Alcohol, Substance of abuse, Smoking.



Radiotherapy :

External beam, Irradiation of the pelvis.



Medications :

Antihypertensives, Thiazide Diuretics, Beta-Blockers, Antidepressants (Tricyclics), Harmones (Steroidal Antiandrogens), Tranquillzers (Phenothiazines), H2 Antagonists, Lipid Lowering Substances like "Statins".

Majority of sexual dysfunctions are primarily psychogenic in origin. Anxiety concerning sexual performance and fear of sexual failure are the most salient immediate causes of erectile difficulties. A history of sexual abuse, guilt about sexuality, and early homosexual experiences are among the more common factors that underline sexual dysfunction. Psychological causes include depression like major depressive episode or dysthymia, stress, anger, interpsychic problems, performance anxiety, low self-esteem. A man may have a good erection with masturbation, but not when sexually active with his regular partner.

In Allopathy "Sildenafil Citrate" is the new oral therapy for the treatment of erectile dysfunction. It usually acts within an hour of administration. The drug enables erections to occur in response to but not in the absence of sexual stimulation. The manufacturer recommends caution if Sidenafil is used in patients with bleeding disorders or peptic ulcers or eye disorders or with poor cardiac status. Blood pressure is reduced transiently by Sildenafil 100 mg. However, larger blood pressure reductions may be observed when Sildenafil is given with nitrates.

Sildenafil under the brand name "VIAGRA" is being sold in America and now even in Indian market Sildenafil is available under different brand names. It is very unfortunate that media has given very much importance to this drug by highlighting on the advantages by ignoring its serious side effects especially in those who are suffering from cardiovascular diseases. It is surprising to know that during April 1998 to February 2000, 522 people died from cardiovascular problems due to the side effects of Sildenafil. A majority of people who died were below 65 years of age with no cardiac risk factors (diabetes, hypertension, high cholesterol or smoking). Secondly, Nitrates alongwith Sildenafil can cause serious cardiovascular events with fatal outcome.

The Nitrate drugs are :

Isosorbide Dinitrate.
Isosorbide-5-Mononitrate.
Pentaerythritol Tetranitrate.
Glyceryl Trinitrate.
Amyl Nitrate or Nitrite (Inhaled Forms)

Those patients are using the above Nitrates drugs should not use Sildenafil since it may cause potential life threatening hypotension, dizziness, faintness or even a heart attack or stroke.

Therefore, Sildenafil ("Viagra" or its other versions) is not the right choice for all men. In addition to this drug, many people take the help of Vaccum Constriction Device, Penile Injection Therapy, Intraurethral Therapy, Surgery. All of these treatments have different complications and side effects.



Adverse Reactions of "Sildenafil" :

Headache, flushing, dyspepsia, nasal congestion, urinary tract infection, abnormal vision, diarrhoea, dizziness, rash, respiratory tract infection, back pain, flu syndrome, arthralgia, angina pectoris AV block, migraine, syncope, tachycardia, palpitation, hypotension, postural hypotension, myocardial ischaemia, cerebral thrombosis, cardiac arrest, heart failure, abnormal electrocardiogram, cardiomyopathy , ataxia, hypertonia, neuralgia, neuropathy, paresthesia, tremor, vertigo, depression, insomnia, somnolence, abnormal dreams, decreased reflexes, hyperaesthesia, seizure, anxiety, urticaria, herpes simples, pruritus, sweating, skin ulcer, contact dermatitis, exfoliative dermatitis, vomiting, glossitis, colitis, dysphagia, gastritis, gastroenteritis, esophagitis, stomatitis, dry mouth, abnormal liver function tests, rectal hemorrhage, gingivitis, thirst, edema, gout, unstable diabetes, hyperglycemia, peripheral edema, hyperuricemia, hypoglycemic reaction, hypernatremia, arthritis, arthrosis, myalgia, tendon rupture, tenosynovitis, bone pain, myasthenia, synovitis, mydriasis, conjunctivitis, photophobia, tinnitus, eye pain, deafness, ear pain, eye hemorrhage, cataract, dry eyes, diplopia, temporary vision loss/decreased vision, ocular redness or bloodshot appearance, ocular burning, ocular swelling/pressure, increased intra-ocular pressure, retinal vascular disease or bleeding, vitreous detachment/traction and paramacular edema, face edema, photosensitivity reaction. Shock,asthenia, pain, chills, accidental fall, abdominal pain, allergic reaction, chest pain, accidental injury.

In view of all the above negative factors, complications and adverse reactions, Homoeopapthy has the best and the safest possible treatment to cure the problem of erectile dysfunction quite effectively without any complications or side effects. In general terms "Erectile Dysfunction" means "Impotency". For more details on this subject, please read my book "Homoeopathic Management of Male Sexual Disorders", published by B. Jain Publishers (P) Ltd., New Delhi (India) as well as my Article "Impotency".



HOMOEOPATHIC TREATMENT :



Agnus Castus :

The penis is small and flaccid, so relaxed that voluptuous fancies excite no erection. The testicles are cold, swollen, hard and painful. Impotence with gleet. During micturition and at stool there is much secretion of prostatic fluid. Pollutions from irritable weakness with prostatorrhoea. Gonorrhoea with suppressed sexual desire. Diminution of sexual power.



Argentum Nitricum :

Erection fails when coition is attempted. Want of desire. Penis shrivelled. Coition painful, sensitive at orifice. Painful tension during erection. Testicle drawn high up. Psychological impotency. Apprehensive impotency before coition.



Caladium Seguinum :

Sexual organs relaxed and swelled. Glans flabby from masturbation. Painful erection without sexual desire, alternating with sexual desire with relaxed penis. Impotence with mental depression. Nocturnal emission without dream. Imperfect erection and premature ejaculation of semen. Excitement does not erect penis. Feeling of coldness in penis.



China Officinalis :

Impotency with excited, lascivious fancy. Swelling of the testes and spermatic cord. Quick discharge of semen during intercourse followed by profound neurasthenia.



Conium Maculatum :

Impotence, insufficient erections, and absence of erections. Want of energy in coition. Erections imperfect, and of too short duration. Easy emission of semen, even without firm erections. Dejection, after coition. Sometimes emission at mere presence of women.



Lycopodium Clavatum :

Impotence of long standing. Weakness or total absence of erections. Penis small, cold, relaxed. Emission too speedy or too tardy during coition. Falling asleep during coition. Lassitude, after coition or pollutions. Flow of prostatic fluid, without an erection. Abhorrence of coition.



Nux Vomica :

Excitement easy. Strong sexual desire with painful erection. Increased sexual desire with frequent erections and pollution in the morning. Pollution with flaccidity of penis fllowed by coldness and weakness in lower extremities. Involuntary seminal emission. Nightly emissions with lascivious dreams. Impotency due to masturbation and sexual excess. Flaccidity of penis during coition.



Phosphoricum Acidum :

A feeling of heaviness in glans especially when urinating. Absence of sexual desire. Neurasthenia after sexual intercourse. Weakness of sexual organs with onanism and little sexual desire. Frequent and very debilitating pollutions. Onanism. Discharge of semen while straining at stool.



Phosphorus :

Impotency after excessive excitement and onanism. Involuntary emission. Feeble and too speedy emission during coition. Very strong sexual desire, with constanct wish for coition.



Selenium :

Impotence ; with lascivious ideas. Pollutions, with flaccidity of penis. Discharge of semen, drop by drop, during sleep. Flow of prostatic fluid during evacuation and at other times. Thin and scentless semen. During coition, feeble erection, too prompt emission, and long-continued voluptuous thrill. Priapism, glans drawn up.



Staphisagria :

Always has sexual thought. Frequent pollutions, even during a siesta. Face sunken and melancholic due to bad effect of onanism and too frequent nocturnal emission. Organs relaxed with backache and weakness of the lower extremities. Seminal emissions followed by great chagrin and mortification Dyspnoea develops after coition. Secretion of prostatic fluid during evacuation.



Medorrhinum :

Impotency after suppression of gonorrhoea. Emission during sleep. Semen watery, causing no stiffness of the linen. Pain, burning along urethra when semen discharges.



Sabal Serrulata :

Discharge of prostatic fluid. Pain in back much aggravates after coitus. Drawing pains in spermatic cords ; shrunk testes. Penis shrunk and cold with urinary troubles. Hard erection, slight twisting chordee as if stretched from the root. Organs feel cold. Coitus painful at the time of emission. Sexual neurotics.



Turnera Aphrodisiaca (Damiana) :

An excellent remedy for impotency. Give 5-10 drops a dose thrice daily. Sexual debility from nervous prostration. Chronic prostatic discharge.



Sulphur :

Too quick discharge of semen during coition. Erection fails when coition is attempted. Incomplete rection during coition. Impotence with mental depression, relaxed penis, with sexual desire and excitement. Testes relaxed and hanging down. Watery semen.



Calcarea Carbonica :

Weakness of the genital functions, and absence of sexual desire. Erections of too short continuance, and emission of semen too slow and too feeble during coition.



Arnica Montana :

Impotency due to fall or blow. Impotence from excess or abuse.



Nuphar Luteum :

Excessive depression of the male generative system. Entire absence of erections and desire ; voluptuous ideas which fill imagination do not cause erections. Penis retracted, scrotum relaxed. Complete absence of erections ; inability to effect coitus.



Moschus Moschiferus :

Impotency associated with diabetes.



Kali Bromatum :

Impotency with melancholy, loss of memory ; nervous prostration ; epilepsy.



Yohimbinum :

It is a powerful stimulant of the genital function in males. Sexual neurasthenia, with impotence.



NOTE :

Any information given in this Article is not intended to be taken as a replacement for medical advice. Any person with a condition requiring medical attention should consult a well qualified classical homoeopath. If you wish to be treated homoeopathically, the Author of this Article can offer his good services. If so, you may kindly contact him by e-mail for details.



Reference :

CIMS, India – regarding Sildenafil.

Friday, April 9, 2010

Antibiotics & Homeopathic Antidotes

Antibiotics & Homeopathic Antidotes
Dr. Sayeed Ahmad D. I. Hom. (London)



I. - INTRODUCTION

Antibiotics (Greek anti,"against;"bios,"life") are chemical compounds used to kill or inhibit the growth of infectious organisms. Originally the term antibiotic referred only to organic compounds, produced by bacteria or molds, that are toxic to other microorganisms. The term is now used loosely to include synthetic and semisynthetic organic compounds. Antibiotic refers generally to antibacterials; however, because the term is loosely defined, it is preferable to specify compounds as being antimalarials, antivirals, or antiprotozoals. All antibiotics share the property of selective toxicity: They are more toxic to an invading organism than they are to an animal or human host. Penicillin is the most well-known antibiotic and has been used to fight many infectious diseases, including syphilis, gonorrhea, tetanus, and scarlet fever. Another antibiotic, streptomycin, has been used to combat tuberculosis.



II. - HISTORY

Although the mechanisms of antibiotic action were not scientifically understood until the late 20th century, the principle of using organic compounds to fight infection has been known since ancient times. Crude plant extracts were used medicinally for centuries, and there is anecdotal evidence for the use of cheese molds for topical treatment of infection. The first observation of what would now be called an antibiotic effect was made in the 19th century by French chemist Louis Pasteur, who discovered that certain saprophytic bacteria can kill anthrax bacilli. In the first decade of the 20th century, German physician and chemist Paul Ehrlich began experimenting with the synthesis of organic compounds that would selectively attack an infecting organism without harming the host organism. His experiments led to the development, in 1909, of salvarsan, a synthetic compound containing arsenic, which exhibited selective action against spirochetes, the bacteria that cause syphilis. Salvarsan remained the only effective treatment for syphilis until the purification of penicillin in the 1940s. In the 1920s British bacteriologist Sir Alexander Fleming, who later discovered penicillin, found a substance called lysozyme in many bodily secretions, such as tears and sweat, and in certain other plant and animal substances. Lysozyme has some antimicrobial activity, but it is not clinically useful.

Penicillin, the archetype of antibiotics, is a derivative of the mold Penicillium notatum. Penicillin was discovered accidentally in 1928 by Fleming, who showed its effectiveness in laboratory cultures against many disease-producing bacteria. This discovery marked the beginning of the development of antibacterial compounds produced by living organisms. Penicillin in its original form could not be given by mouth because it was destroyed in the digestive tract and the preparations had too many impurities for injection. No progress was made until the outbreak of World War II stimulated renewed research and the Australian pathologist Sir Howard Florey and German-British biochemist Ernst Chain purified enough of the drug to show that it would protect mice from infection. Florey and Chain then used the purified penicillin on a human patient who had staphylococcal and streptococcal septicemia with multiple abscesses and osteomyelitis. The patient, gravely ill and near death, was given intravenous injections of a partly purified preparation of penicillin every three hours. Because so little was available, the patient's urine was collected each day, the penicillin was extracted from the urine and used again. After five days the patient's condition improved vastly. However, with each passage through the body, some penicillin was lost. Eventually the supply ran out and the patient died.

The first antibiotic to be used successfully in the treatment of human disease was tyrothricin, isolated from certain soil bacteria by American bacteriologist Rene Dubos in 1939. This substance is too toxic for general use, but it is employed in the external treatment of certain infections. Other antibiotics produced by a group of soil bacteria called actinomycetes have proved more successful. One of these, streptomycin, discovered in 1944 by American biologist Selman Waksman and his associates, was, in its time, the major treatment for tuberculosis.

Since antibiotics came into general use in the 1950s, they have transformed the patterns of disease and death. Many diseases that once headed the mortality tables—such as tuberculosis, pneumonia, and septicemia—now hold lower positions. Surgical procedures, too, have been improved enormously, because lengthy and complex operations can now be carried out without a prohibitively high risk of infection. Chemotherapy has also been used in the treatment or prevention of protozoal and fungal diseases, especially malaria, a major killer in economically developing nations. Slow progress is being made in the chemotherapeutic treatment of viral diseases. New drugs have been developed and used to treat shingles and chicken pox. There is also a continuing effort to find a cure for acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS), caused by the human immunodeficiency virus (HIV).



III. - CLASSIFICATION

Antibiotics can be classified in several ways. The most common method classifies them according to their action against the infecting organism. Some antibiotics attack the cell wall; some disrupt the cell membrane; and the majority inhibit the synthesis of nucleic acids and proteins, the polymers that make up the bacterial cell. Another method classifies antibiotics according to which bacterial strains they affect: staphylococcus, streptococcus, or Escherichia coli, for example. Antibiotics are also classified on the basis of chemical structure, as penicillins, cephalosporins, aminoglycosides, tetracyclines, macrolides, or sulfonamides, among others.



A. Mechanisms of Action

Most antibiotics act by selectively interfering with the synthesis of one of the large-molecule constituents of the cell—the cell wall or proteins or nucleic acids. Some, however, act by disrupting the cell membrane (see Cell Death and Growth Suppression below). Some important and clinically useful drugs interfere with the synthesis of peptidoglycan, the most important component of the cell wall. These drugs include the Â-lactam antibiotics, which are classified according to chemical structure into penicillins, cephalosporins, and carbapenems. All these antibiotics contain a Â-lactam ring as a critical part of their chemical structure, and they inhibit synthesis of peptidoglycan, an essential part of the cell wall. They do not interfere with the synthesis of other intracellular components. The continuing buildup of materials inside the cell exerts ever greater pressure on the membrane, which is no longer properly supported by peptidoglycan. The membrane gives way, the cell contents leak out, and the bacterium dies. These antibiotics do not affect human cells because human cells do not have cell walls.

Many antibiotics operate by inhibiting the synthesis of various intracellular bacterial molecules, including DNA, RNA, ribosomes, and proteins. The synthetic sulfonamides are among the antibiotics that indirectly interfere with nucleic acid synthesis. Nucleic-acid synthesis can also be stopped by antibiotics that inhibit the enzymes that assemble these polymers—for example, DNA polymerase or RNA polymerase. Examples of such antibiotics are actinomycin, rifamicin, and rifampicin, the last two being particularly valuable in the treatment of tuberculosis. The quinolone antibiotics inhibit synthesis of an enzyme responsible for the coiling and uncoiling of the chromosome, a process necessary for DNA replication and for transcription to messenger RNA. Some antibacterials affect the assembly of messenger RNA, thus causing its genetic message to be garbled. When these faulty messages are translated, the protein products are nonfunctional. There are also other mechanisms: The tetracyclines compete with incoming transfer-RNA molecules; the aminoglycosides cause the genetic message to be misread and a defective protein to be produced; chloramphenicol prevents the linking of amino acids to the growing protein; and puromycin causes the protein chain to terminate prematurely, releasing an incomplete protein.



B. Range of Effectiveness

In some species of bacteria the cell wall consists primarily of a thick layer of peptidoglycan. Other species have a much thinner layer of peptidoglycan and an outer as well as an inner membrane. When bacteria are subjected to Gram's stain, these differences in structure affect the differential staining of the bacteria with a dye called gentian violet. The differences in staining coloration (gram-positive bacteria appear purple and gram-negative bacteria appear colorless or reddish, depending on the process used) are the basis of the classification of bacteria into gram-positive (those with thick peptidoglycan) and gram-negative (those with thin peptidoglycan and an outer membrane), because the staining properties correlate with many other bacterial properties. Antibacterials can be further subdivided into narrow-spectrum and broad-spectrum agents. The narrow-spectrum penicillins act against many gram-positive bacteria. Aminoglycosides, also narrow-spectrum, act against many gram-negative as well as some gram-positive bacteria. The tetracyclines and chloramphenicols are both broad-spectrum drugs because they are effective against both gram-positive and gram-negative bacteria.



C. Cell Death and Growth Suppression

Antibiotics may also be classed as bactericidal (killing bacteria) or bacteriostatic (stopping bacterial growth and multiplication). Bacteriostatic drugs are nonetheless effective because bacteria that are prevented from growing will die off after a time or be killed by the defense mechanisms of the host. The tetracyclines and the sulfonamides are among the bacteriostatic antiobiotics. Antibiotics that damage the cell membrane cause the cell's metabolites to leak out, thus killing the organism. Such compounds, including penicillins and cephalosporins, are therefore classed as bactericidal.



IV - TYPES OF ANTIBIOTICS

Following is a list of some of the more common antibiotics and examples of some of their clinical uses. This section does not include all antibiotics nor all of their clinical applications.



A. Penicillins

Penicillins are bactericidal, inhibiting formation of the cell wall. There are four types of penicillins: the narrow-spectrum penicillin-G types, ampicillin and its relatives, the penicillinase-resistants, and the extended spectrum penicillins that are active against pseudomonas. Penicillin-G types are effective against gram-positive strains of streptococci, staphylococci, and some gram-negative bacteria such as meningococcus. Penicillin-G is used to treat such diseases as syphilis, gonorrhea, meningitis, anthrax, and yaws. The related penicillin V has a similar range of action but is less effective. Ampicillin and amoxicillin have a range of effectiveness similar to that of penicillin-G, with a slightly broader spectrum, including some gram-negative bacteria. The penicillinase-resistants are penicillins that combat bacteria that have developed resistance to penicillin-G. The antipseudomonal penicillins are used against infections caused by gram-negative Pseudomonas bacteria, a particular problem in hospitals. They may be administered as a prophylactic in patients with compromised immune systems, who are at risk from gram-negative infections.

Side effects of the penicillins, while relatively rare, can include immediate and delayed allergic reactions—specifically, skin rashes, fever, and anaphylactic shock, which can be fatal.



B. Cephalosporin

Like the penicillins, cephalosporins have a Â-lactam ring structure that interferes with synthesis of the bacterial cell wall and so are bactericidal. Cephalosporins are more effective than penicillin against gram-negative bacilli and equally effective against gram-positive cocci. Cephalosporins may be used to treat strains of meningitis and as a prophylactic for orthopedic, abdominal, and pelvic surgery. Rare hypersensitive reactions from the cephalosporins include skin rash and, less frequently, anaphylactic shock.



C. Aminoglycosides

Streptomycin is the oldest of the aminoglycosides. The aminoglycosides inhibit bacterial protein synthesis in many gram-negative and some gram-positive organisms. They are sometimes used in combination with penicillin. The members of this group tend to be more toxic than other antibiotics. Rare adverse effects associated with prolonged use of aminoglycosides include damage to the vestibular region of the ear, hearing loss, and kidney damage.



D. Tetracyclines

Tetracyclines are bacteriostatic, inhibiting bacterial protein synthesis. They are broad-spectrum antibiotics effective against strains of streptococci, gram-negative bacilli, rickettsia (the bacteria that causes typhoid fever), and spirochetes (the bacteria that causes syphilis). They are also used to treat urinary-tract infections and bronchitis. Because of their wide range of effectiveness, tetracyclines can sometimes upset the balance of resident bacteria that are normally held in check by the body's immune system, leading to secondary infections in the gastrointestinal tract and vagina, for example. Tetracycline use is now limited because of the increase of resistant bacterial strains.



E. Macrolides

The macrolides are bacteriostatic, binding with bacterial ribosomes to inhibit protein synthesis. Erythromycin, one of the macrolides, is effective against gram-positive cocci and is often used as a substitute for penicillin against streptococcal and pneumococcal infections. Other uses for macrolides include diphtheria and bacteremia. Side effects may include nausea, vomiting, and diarrhea; infrequently, there may be temporary auditory impairment.



F. Sulfonamides

The sulfonamides are synthetic bacteriostatic, broad-spectrum antibiotics, effective against most gram-positive and many gram-negative bacteria. However, because many gram-negative bacteria have developed resistance to the sulfonamides, these antibiotics are now used only in very specific situations, including treatment of urinary-tract infection, against meningococcal strains, and as a prophylactic for rheumatic fever. Side effects may include disruption of the gastrointestinal tract and hypersensitivity.



V. - PRODUCTION

The production of a new antibiotic is lengthy and costly. First, the organism that makes the antibiotic must be identified and the antibiotic tested against a wide variety of bacterial species. Then the organism must be grown on a scale large enough to allow the purification and chemical analysis of the antibiotic and to demonstrate that it is unique. This is a complex procedure because there are several thousand compounds with antibiotic activity that have already been discovered, and these compounds are repeatedly rediscovered. After the antibiotic has been shown to be useful in the treatment of infections in animals, larger-scale preparation can be undertaken.

Commercial development requires a high yield and an economic method of purification. Extensive research may be needed to increase the yield by selecting improved strains of the organism or by changing the growth medium. The organism is then grown in large steel vats, in submerged cultures with forced aeration. The naturally fermented product may be modified chemically to produce a semisynthetic antibiotic. After purification, the effect of the antibiotic on the normal function of host tissues and organs (its pharmacology), as well as its possible toxic actions (toxicology), must be tested on a large number of animals of several species. In addition, the effective forms of administration must be determined. Antibiotics may be topical, applied to the surface of the skin, eye, or ear in the form of ointments or creams. They may be oral, or given by mouth, and either allowed to dissolve in the mouth or swallowed, in which case they are absorbed into the bloodstream through the intestines. Antibiotics may also be parenteral, or injected intramuscularly, intravenously, or subcutaneously; antibiotics are administered parenterally when fast absorption is required.

In the United States, once these steps have been completed, the manufacturer may file an Investigational New Drug Application with the Food and Drug Administration (FDA). If approved, the antibiotic can be tested on volunteers for toxicity, tolerance, absorption, and excretion. If subsequent tests on small numbers of patients are successful, the drug can be used on a larger group, usually in the hundreds. Finally a New Drug Application can be filed with the FDA, and, if this application is approved, the drug can be used generally in clinical medicine. These procedures, from the time the antibiotic is discovered in the laboratory until it undergoes clinical trial, usually extend over several years.



VI. - RISKS AND LIMITATIONS

The use of antibiotics is limited because bacteria have evolved defenses against certain antibiotics. One of the main mechanisms of defense is inactivation of the antibiotic. This is the usual defense against penicillins and chloramphenicol, among others. Another form of defense involves a mutation that changes the bacterial enzyme affected by the drug in such a way that the antibiotic can no longer inhibit it. This is the main mechanism of resistance to the compounds that inhibit protein synthesis, such as the tetracyclines.

All these forms of resistance are transmitted genetically by the bacterium to its progeny. Genes that carry resistance can also be transmitted from one bacterium to another by means of plasmids, chromosomal fragments that contain only a few genes, including the resistance gene. Some bacteria conjugate with others of the same species, forming temporary links during which the plasmids are passed from one to another. If two plasmids carrying resistance genes to different antibiotics are transferred to the same bacterium, their resistance genes can be assembled onto a single plasmid. The combined resistances can then be transmitted to another bacterium, where they may be combined with yet another type of resistance. In this way, plasmids are generated that carry resistance to several different classes of antibiotic. In addition, plasmids have evolved that can be transmitted from one species of bacteria to another, and these can transfer multiple antibiotic resistance between very dissimilar species of bacteria.

The problem of resistance has been exacerbated by the use of antibiotics as prophylactics, intended to prevent infection before it occurs. Indiscriminate and inappropriate use of antibiotics for the treatment of the common cold and other common viral infections, against which they have no effect, removes antibiotic-sensitive bacteria and allows the development of antibiotic-resistant bacteria. Similarly, the use of antibiotics in poultry and livestock feed has promoted the spread of drug resistance and has led to the widespread contamination of meat and poultry by drug-resistant bacteria such as Salmonella.

In the 1970s, tuberculosis seemed to have been nearly eradicated in the developed countries, although it was still prevalent in developing countries. Now its incidence is increasing, partly due to resistance of the tubercle bacillus to antibiotics. Some bacteria, particularly strains of staphylococci, are resistant to so many classes of antibiotics that the infections they cause are almost untreatable. When such a strain invades a surgical ward in a hospital, it is sometimes necessary to close the ward altogether for a time. Similarly, plasmodia, the causative organisms of malaria, have developed resistance to antibiotics, while, at the same time, the mosquitoes that carry plasmodia have become resistant to the insecticides that were once used to control them. Consequently, although malaria had been almost entirely eliminated, it is now again rampant in Africa, the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and parts of Latin America. Furthermore, the discovery of new antibiotics is now much less common than in the past.



ANTIBIOTICS AND HOMŒOPATHIC ANTIDOTES

Adverse Effects of Penicillin

Fever with cold feet. Bell., Cupr-ac.

Wheezing and Pseudoasthmatic attack. Aspidosperma (Quebracho)

When skin eruptions are simultaneouslypresent. Grind.

Anorexia (with Mycin group of drugs likeAureomycin). Abrot.

Peripheral Neuritis. Ant-t.

Brachiaglia Nocturna (with the pronounced symptoms of pins and needles). Sec., Act-s.

Pruritus. Apis and Grind. 10 drops mixed in a cup of milk andapplied locally.

Skin lesions from Penicillin. Agar., Sulph.

Chronic cough after Penicillin. Penicillin 3x or 30, Seneg. 30 or 200.

In cases when Srepto Peniciliin had been used. Streptococcin 30 or Staphelococcin 30 (as an intercurrent remedy.

Heart depressing effects of Penicillin. Ars-a.

Harmful effects of Penicillin. Ars-a., Thuj., Nux-v., Sil.

Specific to counteract the effects of Penicillin. Ars-a.

Diarrhœa from Antibiotics (especially Mycins). Nit-ac.

Allergic reactions to Antibiotics. Sulph., Penicillin, Streptomycin.

Headache due to Streptomycin. Bell.

#. Effects of Chloromycetin: cases of typhoid (where Chloromycetin was given). ----- Chloromycetin 30, 200 or 1M (according to patient’s Constitution). With Placebo for a week. In second week Typhoidinum 200 or 1M (with Placebo for a fortnight).

Intestinal effects of Aureomycin. Aureomycin leaves a very weak liver and severe troublewith the bowels. In this case, a pure constitutional treatment with careful observation of idiosyncrasies is most effective.

#. Effects of Allergy (in general). Ill effects of Penicillin. ----- Carb-v. (Dilutions used: 2x, 3x, 6x, 12x).



References:

1. Contributed by Dr. M. Maureen Dale and Dr. Joel Mandelstam (MS Encarta Encylopædia 2002).

2. Homœopathy and Adverse Reactions of Allopathic Drugs by Dr. Sayeed Ahmad.





Copyright © Dr. Sayeed Ahmad 2004