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This
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homeopathy! Scientific Evidence
for Homeopathic Medicine ©1995, Dana
Ullman, M.P.H. (Excepted from Consumer's
Guide to Homeopathy, Tarcher/Putnam)
Most
people with a little experience in
homeopathy have no doubt that these
medicines work, though inevitably they
will have some family members, friends,
neighbors, and physicians who will be
skeptical about it. One way to deal with
these people's skepticism is to become
familiar with research on the efficacy of
homeopathic medicines (see also Chapter 5
for a discussion on how to respond to
skeptics' remarks; sorry, not online at
present). There is actually considerably
more laboratory and clinical research on
homeopathic medicine than most people
realize. That said, it must also be
recognized that more research is
certainly needed, not simply to answer
the questions of skeptics but to help
homeopaths optimize their use of these
powerful natural medicines.
Some
skeptics insist that research on
homeopathy is mandatory since the
exceptionally small doses used do not
make sense and there is no known
mechanism for action for these drugs.
While it is true that homeopaths
presently do not know precisely how the
homeopathic microdoses work, there are
some compelling theories about their
mechanism of action (see the discussion
in Chapter 1, "The Wisdom and Wonder
of Small Doses"). More important,
there is compelling evidence that they do
work, as this chapter will show. And
although homeopaths may not understand
how their medicines work, keep in mind
that leading contemporary pharmacologists
readily acknowledge that there are many
commonly prescribed drugs today,
including aspirin and certain
antibiotics, whose mechanism of action
remains unknown, but this gap in
knowledge has yet to stop physicians from
prescribing them.
Many
conventional physicians express doubt
about the efficacy of homeopathy,
asserting that they will "believe it
when they see it." It may be more
appropriate for them to acknowledge that
they will "see it when they will
believe it." This is not meant as a
criticism of conventional physicians as
much as of conventional medical thinking.
The biomedical paradigm has narrowed the
view of, the thinking about, and the
practice of medicine to the treatment of
specific disease entities with supposedly
symptom-specific drugs and procedures. An
integral aspect of this approach to
medicine is the assumption that the
larger the dose of a drug, the stronger
will be its effects. While this seems to
make sense on the surface, knowledgeable
physicians and pharmacologists know that
it isn't true. There is a recognized
principle in pharmacology called the
"biphasic response of drugs."1
Rather than a drug simply having
increased effects as its dose becomes
larger, research has consisently shown
that exceedingly small doses of a
substance will have the opposite effects
of large doses.
The two
phases of a drug's action (thus the name
"biphasic") are dose-dependent.
For instance, it is widely recognized
that normal medical doses of atropine
block the parasympathetic nerves, causing
mucous membranes to dry up, while
exceedingly small doses of atropine cause
increased secretions to mucous membranes.
This
pharmacological principle was
concurrently discovered in the 1870s by
two separate researchers, Hugo Schulz, a
conventional scientist, and Rudolf Arndt,
a psychiatrist and homeopath. Initially
called the Arndt-Schulz law, this
principle is still widely recognized, as
witnessed by the fact that it is commonly
listed in medical dictionaries under the
definition of "law."
More
specifically, these reseachers discovered
that weak stimuli accelerate
physiological activity, medium stimuli
inhibit physiological activity, and
strong stimuli halt physiological
activity. For example, very weak
concentations of iodine, bromine,
mercuric chloride, and arsenious acid
will stimulate yeast growth, medium doses
of these substances will inhibit yeast
growth, and large doses will kill the
yeast.
In the
1920s, conventional scientists who tested
and verified this biphasic response
termed the phenomenon
"hormesis," and dozens of
studies were published in a wide variety
of fields to confirm this biological
principle.2
In the
past two decades there has again been a
resurgence of interest in this
pharmacological law, and now hundreds of
studies in numerous areas of scientific
investigation have verified it.3 Because
these studies have been performed by
conventional scientists who are typically
unfamiliar with homeopathic medicine,
they have not tested or even considered
testing the ultra-high dilutions commonly
used in homeopathy. However, their
research has consistently shown very
significant effects from such small
microdoses that even the researchers
express confusion and surprise.
Reference
to this research on the Arndt-Schulz law
and hormesis is important for validating
homeopathic research because it
demonstrates the evidence for the
important biphasic responses and
microdose effects that lie at the heart
of homeopathy. This research is readily
available to physicians and scientists
yet is often ignored or not understood.
The amount
of research on homeopathic medicines is
growing, and it is becoming increasingly
difficult to ignore these studies,
because they are now appearing in many of
the most respected medical and scientific
journals in the world. This chapter is
not meant to be exhaustive (that would
require a book or two of its own). It
will include many of the best studies,
most of which have been published in
conventional medical and scientific
journals. Some of the studies are
discussed because of the impressive
results they showed, and others are
included for their implications for
better understanding homeopathy and the
healing process. The review of research
is not simply to provide evidence of the
efficacy of homeopathic medicine but also
to enlighten readers on how to evaluate
homeopathic research, whether positive or
negative results are obtained.
To best
understand the remaining part of this
chapter, some definitions are helpful:
--Double-blind trials refer to
experiments in which neither the
experimenter nor the subjects know
whether a specific treatment was
prescribe or a placebo (a fake medicine
that looks and tastes like real
homeopathic medicines). --Randomized
trials are those in which subjects of an
experiment are randomly placed either in
treatment groups or in placebo groups.
The researchers attempt to place people
with similar characteristics in equal
numbers in treatment and placebo groups.
--Crossover studies refer to experiments
in which half of the subjects of a study
are given a placebo during one phase of a
study and then given the active treatment
during the second phase, while the other
half begin with the active treatment and
then receive the placebo during the
second phase. Crossover studies sometimes
do not test a placebo and instead compare
one type of treatment with another type
of treatment.
Modern
research is designed to evaluate the
results of a therapy as compared to a
placebo and/or another therapy. This type
of study is valuable because many
patients respond very well to placebos,
and this "treatment" is so safe
and inexpensive it is generally assumed
that "real treatments" should
have considerably better results than
placebo medicine. One should note that
placebo effects can be significant, and
clinically, these effects can be very
positive (some people think of them as a
type of self-healing).
Double-blinding
an experiment is important to research
because experimenters tend to treat
people who are getting the real treatment
differently or better than those given a
placebo, thus throwing off the results of
the experiment. Research is randomized so
that those people treated with the real
medicine and those treated with the
placebo are as similar as possible,
making a comparison between real
treatment and placebo treatment more
accurate. Crossover studies allow
researchers to compare the separate
effects of a placebo and a treatment on
all subjects in an experiment.
Statistics
obviously are an important part of
research. A treatment is thought to be
considered better than a placebo if the
results, according to statistical
analysis, have no more than a 5%
possibility of happening at random (the
notation of this statistical probability
is: P=.05). A study with a small number
of patients (for example, 30 or less)
must show a large difference between
treatment and nontreatment groups for it
to become statistically significant. A
study with a large number of patients
(for example, several hundred) needs to
have only a small but consistent
difference to obtain a similar
statistical significance. This
information is provided so that readers
will know that all the studies described
in this chapter are statistically
significant, except when otherwise noted.
Clinical
Research People are often confused by
research, not only because it can be
overly technical but because some studies
show that a therapy works and other
studies shows that it doesn't. To solve
this problem, a recent development in
research is used, called a
"meta-analysis," which is a
systematic review of a body of research
that evaluates the overall results of
experiments.
In 1991,
three professors of medicine from the
Netherlands, none of them homeopaths,
performed a meta-analysis of 25 years of
clinical studies using homeopathic
medicines and published their results in
the British Medical Journal.4 This
meta-analysis covered 107 controlled
trials, of which 81 showed that
homeopathic medicines were effective, 24
showed they were ineffective, and 2 were
inconclusive.
The
professors concluded, "The amount of
positive results came as a surprise to
us." Specifically, they found that:
--13 of 19
trials showed successful treatment of
respiratory infections,
--6 of 7 trials showed positive results
in treating other infections,
--5 of 7 trials showed improvement in
diseases of the digestive system,
--5 of 5 showed successful treatment of
hay fever,
--5 of 7 showed faster recovery after
abdominal surgery,
--4 of 6 promoted healing in treating
rheumatological disease,
--18 of 20 showed benefit in addressing
pain or trauma,
--8 of 10 showed positive results in
relieving mental or psychological
problems, and
--13 of 15 showed benefit from
miscellaneous diagnoses.
Despite
the high percentage of studies that
provided evidence of success with
homeopathic medicine, most of these
studies were flawed in some way or
another. Still, the researchers found 22
high-caliber studies, 15 of which showed
that homeopathic medicines were
effective. Of further interest, they
found that 11 of the best 15 studies
showed efficacy of these natural
medicines, suggesting that the better
designed and performed the studies were,
the higher the likelihood that the
medicines were found to be effective.
Although people unfamiliar with research
may be surprised to learn that most of
the studies on homeopathy were flawed in
one significant way or another,5 research
in conventional medicine during the past
25 years has had a similar percentage of
flawed studies.
With this
knowledge, the researchers of the
meta-analysis on homeopathy concluded,
"The evidence presented in this
review would probably be sufficient for
establishing homeopathy as a regular
treatment for certain indications."
There are
different types of homeopathic clinical
research, some of which provide
individualization of remedies; which is
the hallmark of the homeopathic
methodology; some of which give a
commonly prescribed remedy to all people
with a similar ailment, and some of which
give a combination of homeopathic
medicines to people with a similar
condition. While one can perform good
research using any of these methods,
there are certain issues that researchers
have to be aware of and sensitive to in
order to obtain the best objective
results.
For
instance, if a study does not
individualize a homeopathic medicine to
people suffering from a specific ailment
and the results of the study show that
there was no difference between those
given this remedy and those given a
placebo, the study does not disprove
homeopathy; it simply proves that this
one remedy is not effective in treating
every person suffering from that ailment,
each of whom may have a unique pattern of
symptoms that requires an individual
prescription.
In
describing specifics of the following
studies using homeopathic medicines,
differentiation has been made between
studies that allowed for
individualization of medicines and those
that did not.
Clinical
Research with Individualized Care Some
people incorrectly assume that research
using homeopathic medicines is impossibly
complicated because each medicine must be
individualized to the patient. The
following studies disprove this
simplistic belief.
A recent
clinical trial evaluating homeopathic
medicine was a unique study of the
treatment of asthma.6 Researchers at the
University of Glasgow used conventional
allergy testing to discover which
substances these asthma patients were
most allergic to. Once this was
determined, the subjects were randomized
into treatment and placebo groups. Those
patients chosen for treatment were given
the 30c potency of the substance to which
they were most allergic (the most common
substance was house dust mite). The
researchers called this unique method of
individualizing remedies
"homeopathic immunotherapy"
(homeopathic medicines are usually
prescribed based on the patient's
idiosyncratic symptoms, not on laboratory
analysis or diagnostic categories).
Subjects in this experiment were
evaluated by both homeopathic and
conventional physicians.
This study
showed that 82% of the patients given a
homeopathic medicine improved, while only
38% of patients given a placebo
experienced a similar degree of relief.
When asked if they felt the patient
received the homeopathic medicine or the
placebo, both the patients and the
doctors tended to guess correctly.
The
experiment was relatively small, with
only 24 patients. As noted, for
statistically significant results, small
experiments must show a large difference
between those treated with a medicine and
those given a placebo. Such was the case
in this study.
Along with
this recent asthma study, the authors
performed a meta-analysis, reviewing all
the data from three studies they
performed on allergic conditions, which
totaled 202 subjects. The researchers
found a similar pattern in the three
studies. Improvement began within the
first week and continued through to the
end of the trial four weeks later. The
results of this meta-analysis were so
substantial (P=0.0004) that the authors
concluded that either homeopathic
medicines work or controlled clinical
trials do not. Because modern science is
based on controlled clinical trials, it
is a more likely conclusion that
homeopathic medicines are effective.
Another
recent study, published in the American
journal Pediatrics, tested homeopathic
medicine for the treatment of a condition
recognized to be the most serious public
health problem today, childhood
diarrhea.7 Over 5 million children die
each year as the result of diarrhea,
mostly in nonindustrialized countries.
Conventional physicians prescribe oral
rehydration therapy (ORT, a salt solution
that helps children maintain fluid
balance), but this treatment does not
fight the infection that underlies the
diarrhea.
Conducted
in Nicaragua in association with the
University of Washington and the
University of Guadalajara, this
randomized double-blind,
placebo-controlled study of 81 children
showed that an individually chosen remedy
provided statistically significant
improvement of the children's diarrhea as
compared to those given a placebo.
Children given the homeopathic remedy
were cured of their infection 20% faster
than those given a placebo, and the
sicker children responded most
dramatically to the homeopathic
treatment. A total of 18 different
remedies were used in this trial,
individually chosen based on each child's
symptoms.
A study of
the homeopathic treatment of migraine
headache was conducted in Italy.8 Sixty
patients were randomized and entered into
a double-blind, placebo-controlled trial.
Patients regularly filled out a
questionnaire on the frequency,
intensity, and characteristics of their
head pain. They were prescribed a single
dose of a 30c remedy at four separate
times over two-week intervals. Eight
remedies were considered, and prescribers
were allowed to use any two with a
patient. While only 17% of patients given
a placebo experienced relief of their
migraine pain, an impressive 93% of
patients given an individualized
homeopathic medicine experienced good
results.
A
randomized double-blind,
placebo-controlled trial was performed on
175 Dutch children suffering from
recurrent upper respiratory tract
infections.9 Children in the treatment
group were prescribed a
"constitutional medicine" for
their overall health as well as acute
medicines to treat the acute respiratory
infections they developed. The study
found that the children given homeopathic
medicines had a 16% better daily symptom
score than children given a placebo.
This study
also found that the number of children
given a placebo who had to undergo
adenoidectomy was 24% higher than for the
children given homeopathic remedies. A
54.8% reduction in the use of antibiotics
in the children given homeopathic
medicines was reported, while the
children who received a placebo
experienced a 37.7% reduction in
antibiotic use. (This reduction in both
groups was determined to be the result of
the normal growth and development of the
child, dietary changes° the study
provided written nutritional advice to
the parents° and the change in
expectations as the result of being under
medical care.)
The
statistical possibility of these results
happening by chance was 6% (P=0.06).
Because statistical significance in
science is recognized when there is a 5%
or less chance of results happening at
random, the researchers concluded that
homeopathic medicine seem to add little
to the treatment of upper respiratory
tract infections. This more conservative
conclusion appeared to be influenced by
the fact that the authors sought and
received publication of their study in
the British Medical Journal. They should
have more accurately said that
homeopathic medicines provided benefit to
children with upper respiratory
infections, but there is a small chance
(6%) that these good results happened at
random.
Considering
the closeness of these results to 5%,
considering the other improvements in the
homeopathic group's health, and
considering the increasingly widespread
desire to avoid antibiotics, it makes
sense for physicians and parents to
consider seeking homeopathic care for
children's upper respiratory infections.
Another
study that involved individualized
homeopathic care was in the treatment of
rheumatoid arthritis.10 The study
involved 46 patients. Two homeopathic
physicians prescribed individually chosen
medicines to each patient, though only
half of them were given the real remedy,
while the other half were given a
placebo. The study found that 82% of
those given an individualized homeopathic
remedy experienced some relief of
symptoms, while 21% of those given a
placebo experienced a similar degree of
relief.
One other
very interesting trial that utilized
semi-individualization of care was in the
treatment of primary fibromyalgia (also
called fibrositis).11 Patients with
fibrositis were admitted into a trial in
which homeopathic physicians chose
between three possible remedies, Arnica,
Rhus tox, and Bryonia. Half of the
patients were given one of these
remedies, and the other half were given a
placebo. There was no discernible
difference between these groups. However,
as an integral part of the experiment's
design, a panel of homeopaths evaluated
the accuracy of each prescription. This
analysis found that those patients whom
the panel considered to have received the
correct remedy experienced a
statistically significant improvement in
symptoms as compared to those patients
given the "incorrect" remedy or
the placebo.
These same
researchers next conducted a more
sophisticated trial in the treatment of
primary fibromyalgia.12 This
double-blind, placebo-controlled,
crossover trial admitted only those
patients who fit the symptoms of Rhus
tox. The researchers found that this
constituted 42% of the patients
interviewed. One-half of these 30
patients were given Rhus tox 6c during
the first phase of the experiment, while
the other half were given a placebo.
During the second phase, those patients
initially given the medicine were given a
placebo, and those patients initially
given a placebo were now given the
homeopathic remedy. Researchers
determined at the beginning of the
experiment that improvement in pain and
sleeplessness were the outcome measures
most important in evaluating the results
of this trial, and the results showed
that 25% more of the patients experienced
pain relief when taking the homeopathic
remedy compared to when they were given a
placebo and almost twice as many had
improved sleep when taking the remedy.
This type
of crossover design is considered a
sophisticated type of research because it
compares each person when using a
treatment with the same person when using
a placebo. Most other research compares
two supposedly similar groups of people,
but researchers commonly acknowledge that
it is difficult and perhaps impossible to
get two exactly similar groups of people.
The limitation of the crossover design
for homeopathic treatment, however, is
that most homeopathic medicines provide
long-term benefits, so that once a person
stops taking a homeopathic remedy he or
she may still continue to improve, even
in the placebo stage of the trial.
Low-potency medicines, such as the 6c
used in the above described experiment,
generally have short-acting effects,
while higher potency medicines generally
have increasingly longer-term effects.
Clinical
Research with Nonindividualized Care In
addition to the studies on homeopathy in
which individualized remedies are
prescribed, there is also a body of
research testing single remedies to
people given in a non-individualized
manner. Such research is potentially
problematic because homeopaths
acknowledge that the remedies require
some degree of individualization to be
effective. The results of a
nonindividualized study, either positive
or negative, can be misunderstood by
people who do not know basic principles
of the homeopathic method.
One study
using nonindividualized homeopathic
treatment was sponsored by the British
government during World War II and was
conducted in 1941-42 on volunteers whose
skin was burned with mustard gas.13 The
study showed the efficacy of Mustard gas
30c as a preventive or Rhus tox 30c and
Kali bichromicum 30c as therapy. The
study was double-blind,
placebo-controlled, and was conducted at
two centers (London and Glasgow), both
showing similarly positive results. A
more recent analysis of the data further
substantiated the statistical
significance of this study.14
It should,
however, be mentioned that the
researchers also tested the efficacy of
Opium 30c, Cantharis 30c, and Variolinium
30c, none of which provided any
noticeable benefit. If this trial had
tested only these medicines, the
researchers might have concluded that
homeopathic medicines were ineffective in
treating mustard gas burns. Finding the
correct remedy is the key to making
homeopathy work.
Some
skeptics and journalists inaccurately
report that homeopathy is primarily used
to treat minor health problems.
Homeopaths today primarily treat various
chronic ailments for which conventional
medicine has not provided effective
treatment. One example of a chronic and
serious problem shown by a controlled
study to be effective treated by
homeopathy is diabetic retinitis15
(retinitis is a common complication of
diabetes in which there is an
inflammation of the retina causing
impairment of sight, perversion of
vision, swelling, discharge from the eye,
and sometimes hemorrhages into the
retina). This double-blind, randomized,
placebo-controlled study on 60 patients
used Arnica 5c. The results of this study
showed that 47% of patients given Arnica
5c experienced improvement in central
blood flow to the eye, while only 1% of
patients given the placebo experience
this improvement. Further, 52% of
patients given Arnica 5c experienced
improvement in blood flow to other parts
of the eye, while only 1.5% of those
given the placebo experienced a similar
degree of improvement.
The
best-selling flu remedy in France is
actually a homeopathic medicine. Anas
barbariae 200c, commonly marketed under
the trade name Oscillococcinum TM , is
also popular in the U.S. and is effective
primarily at the first signs of
influenza. A double-blind,
placebo-controlled study with 478
patients suffering from influenza was
conducted, making this the largest trial
yet performed testing a homeopathic
medicine.16 This trial showed that almost
twice as many people who took the
homeopathic remedy got over the flu after
48 hours as compared to those given a
placebo.
Although
this remedy was found to work for all age
groups, it was considerably more
effective for people under 30 than for
those over 30. However, it was not found
to be effective when subjects had severe
flu symptoms. In severe cases of the flu,
a more individualized homeopathic remedy
may be indicated.
In
addition to various studies on human
health, there have also been some animal
studies. British researchers have
conducted trials showing that homeopathic
medicines, specifically Caulophyllum 30c,
could lower the rate of stillbirths in
pigs.17 Pigs given a placebo had 103
births and 27 stillbirths (20.8%), while
those given Caulophyllum 30c had 104
births and 12 stillbirths (10.3%).
Not all
studies show efficacy of homeopathic
medicines, not because they don't work
but mostly because the studies were
poorly designed. One such study tested a
single homeopathic medicine in the
treatment of osteoarthritis.18 This study
consisted of 36 patients, of whom one
third were given Rhus tox 6c, one third
were given a conventional drug
(fenoprofen, a nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drug), and one third
were given a placebo. Those patients
given the conventional drug experienced
some relief of symptoms, but those given
the homeopathic remedy and the placebo
had a similar lack of response to
treatment. While some people would
erronously conclude that homeopathic
medicines are ineffective in the
treatment of osteoarthritis, it would be
more appropriate and accurate to conclude
that Rhus tox 6c is an ineffective remedy
when given without individualization to
people with osteoarthritis.
One of the
confounding variables from this trial was
that 2 of the 12 patients given the
homeopathic medicine were withdrawn from
the trial because they experienced an
aggravation of symptoms after taking the
medicine. Because homeopathic medicines
sometimes cause a temporary increase in
chronic symptoms before significant
improvement, it was disappointing that
the researchers did not follow their
status. Because this trial lasted only
two weeks, it did not allow time for the
homeopathic remedy to be adequately
evaluated. If, for instance, these 2
patients experienced the significant
relief that is common after an initial
aggravation of symptoms, the results of
the trial would have been different.
Further,
it is unfair to compare a fast-acting
conventional drug that has side effects
with a slower acting homeopathic medicine
that is considerably safer. Finally and
of great significance is the fact that
while Rhus tox is a common remedy for
rheumatoid arthritis, it is less common
for osteoarthritis.
Clinical
Research with Homeopathic Combination
Remedies Homeopathic combination remedies
are formulas in which several homeopathic
substances are mixed together into one
remedy. This untraditional approach to
using homeopathic medicine is
commercially popular in many countries.
While these remedies are not thought by
homeopaths to be as effective as
individually chosen medicines, they do
work and research has verified this. Yet,
homeopaths consistently find that single
homeopathic medicines have the potential
to truly cure a person's disease, while
combination medicines at best provide
safe but temporary relief of symptoms.
The same
researchers who conducted the study on
asthma earlier described also performed a
study on the treatment of hayfever.19
This double-blind, placebo-controlled
study prescribed a 30c potency of a
combination remedy made from 12 common
pollens. The results showed that those
subjects taking the homeopathic remedy
had six times fewer symptoms than those
given the placebo. Both groups of
subjects were allowed to use an
"escape" medicine (an
antihistamine) if their remedy didn't
work adequately. The study showed that
homeopathic subjects needed this medicine
half as often as did those given the
placebo.
Another
example of significant results from a
homeopathic combination remedy was in the
treatment of women during their ninth
month of pregnancy.20 Ninety women were
given the 5c potency of the following
remedies: Caulophyllum, Arnica,
Cimicifuga, Pulsatilla, and Gelsemium.
They were given doses of this combination
remedy twice daily during the ninth
month. This double-blind,
placebo-controlled study showed that
women given the homeopathic medicines
experienced a 40% (!) shorter labor than
those given a placebo. Also, the women
given the placebo had four times (!) as
many complications of labor as those
given the homeopathic medicines.
One of the
limitations of research on combination
remedies is that the results do not
reveal whether the effective treatment
came from one specific medicine or from
the unique combination of remedies. A
recent study of 22 healthy women in their
first pregnancies tested Caulophyllum,
one of the medicines used in the study
cited above, which was administered in
the 7c potency during the active phase of
labor (one dose per hour repeated for a
maximum of 4 hours). The time of labor
for those women given the homeopathic
medicine was 38% shorter than for women
given a placebo.21 This trial was not
double-blind; however, the researchers
recently completed a double-blind trial
and confirmed their earlier results.22
A popular
homeopathic external application marketed
as TraumeelTM has been studied for its
efficacy in the treatment of sprained
ankles.23 This combination of 14 remedies
in 2x to 6x potencies was given to
subjects with sprained ankles. After 10
days, 24 of the 33 patients who were
given the homeopathic medicine were
pain-free, while 13 of 36 patients given
a placebo experienced a similar degree of
relief. This same medicine was also used
in the treatment of traumatic
hemarthrosis (joint swelling) and was
shown to significantly reduce healing
time as compared to a placebo. Objective
measurements of joint swelling and
movement and evaluation of the synovial
fluid at injury were assessed.24
A study of
61 patients with varicose veins was
performed double-blind and
placebo-controlled.25 Three doses of a
popular German combination of eight
homeopathic medicines were given daily
for 24 days. Measures were venous filling
time, leg volume, and subjective
symptoms. The study found that venous
filling time improved in those given the
homeopathic medicines by 44%, while it
deteriorated in the placebo group by 18%.
Other measures also had significant
differences.
In
addition to the various clinical studies
on humans, there has also been some
research using homeopathic medicines to
improve the health of animals. German
researchers have shown that dairy cows
given Sepia 200c experienced
significantly fewer complications of
birth than those given a placebo.26
Low-potency (1x to 6x) combinations of
Lachesis, Pulsatilla, and Sabina, or
Lachesis, Echinacea, and Pyrogenium,
along with Caulophyllum given to pigs had
preventive and therapeutic effects on
infections (inflammation of the breasts
and the uterus) as well as on diarrhea in
the piglets.27
Not all
clinical studies on homeopathic
combination medicines find efficacy of
treatment, but there are often important
factors that explain the failure. A
Canadian study on the treatment of
plantar warts is one such example.28 This
randomized double-blind,
placebo-controlled trial with 162
patients prescribed three medicines to
each patient (Because the trial did not
mix the remedies together, it is not
completely accurate to call the use of
these remedies a combination. It is more
precise to consider it
"polypharmacy," the use of
several medicines). The remedies used
were Thuja 30c, Antimonium crud 7c and
Nitric acid 7c. Thuja was taken once a
week, and the other two remedies were
taken once a day. The trial lasted six
weeks. The results showed that there was
no noticeable difference between those
subjects given the homeopathic medicines
and those given a placebo.
Many
homeopaths may be initially surprised at
the result of this trial because they
consider these remedies commonly
effective in the treatment of warts. But
while the remedies may be effective for
treating warts, they are not necessarily
effective for all types of warts or in
all people. A recent study of homeopathic
treatment for various types of warts
found that 18 of 19 people with plantar
warts were cured in, on average, 2.2
months.29 The most common remedy was
Ruta, prescribed to 12 of the 19
patients. Thuja was prescribed for only 3
patients, and Antimonium crud was
prescribed for 2 patients.
This study
teaches us that individualization and the
use of well-chosen remedies are necessary
for most effective treatment.
One
additional note about research using
homeopathic combination medicines: The
homeopathic literature refers to the fact
that some remedies are antidoted by other
remedies. While the medicines in the
Canadian trial are not known to antidote
each other, homeopaths acknowledge that
our understanding of which remedies
antidote each other is somewhat primitive
(for a listing of which remedies antidote
each other, see the appendix in Kent's
Repertory or in the Indian edition of
Boericke's Pocket Manual of Materia
Medica with Repertory). Homeopathic
research must, therefore, be aware of
this possibility so that conclusions from
research are not overstated.
Laboratory
Research As valuable as clinical studies
are, laboratory research is able to show
biological activity of homeopathic
medicines that cannot be explained as a
placebo response, a common accusation of
skeptics. Laboratory research is also
capable of shedding some light on how the
homeopathic medicines may work.
Distinct
from clinical research which seeks to
measure improvement in the health of a
person or an animal, laboratory research
seeks to assess changes in biological
systems (cells, tissues, organs, viruses,
etc.). Typically, animal research can fit
under either clinical or laboratory
research, depending on the goal of the
study. If the study seeks to test the
efficacy of a treatment on the health of
an animal, it can be considered an animal
clinical study. If the study seeks to
test the effects of a treatment on
animals so that researchers can apply the
information for human health or to
understand biological phenomena, it can
be considered a laboratory study.
Admittedly,
while some of the animal studies
discussed here are humane, others are
not. Reference to these studies is not
meant to suggest that this author
condones all such research. Rather,
discussion of these studies is intended
to verify the benefits of homeopathic
medicines, both to animals and to humans,
and to encourage wider use of homeopathic
remedies.
Some of
this section is somewhat technical,
though an effort has been made to
describe the studies in a user-friendly
manner.
Earlier in
this chapter, reference was made to some
important double-blind clinical research
with homeopathic medicines conducted as
far back as 1941. There were also some
high-quality scientific laboratory
studies investigating homeopathic
microdoses as that time. One extensive
and meticulously controlled study was
performed in 1941-42 by a Scottish
homeopath/scientist, W.E. Boyd.30 This
work showed that microdoses of mercuric
chloride had statistically significant
effects of diastase activity (diastase is
an enzyme produced during the germination
of seeds). This research was so well
designed and performed that an associate
dean of an American medical school
commented, "The precision of
[Boyd's] technique exemplifies a
scientific study at its highest
level."31
There have
been over 100 studies evaluating the
prophylactic and therapeutic effects of
homeopathic doses of normally toxic
substances. A collaborative effort of
scientists from German research
institutions and from America's Walter
Reed Hospital performed a meta-analysis
of these studies.32 Like the
meta-analysis described earlier on
clinical trials using homeopathic
medicines, most of the studies were
flawed in some way. However, of the high
quality studies, positive results were
found 50% more often than negative
results. What was particularly intriguing
was that researchers who tested doses in
the submolecular range (potencies greater
than 24x) were found to have the best
designed studies and more frequently
found statisticially significant results
from these microdoses. Specifically,
several researchers gave, usually to
rats, crude doses of arsenic, bismuth,
cadmium, mercury chloride, or lead. The
research showed that animals who were
pretreated with homeopathic doses of
these substances and then given repeated
homeopathic doses after exposure to the
crude substance, excreted more of these
toxic substances through urine, feces,
and sweat than did those animals given a
placebo.
Several
studies noted that pretreatment and
treatment with potentized doses of
substances different from those to which
the animal was being exposed did not
provide any benefit.
As
horrible as this research may be for the
animals tested, animal researchers claim
that it can have considerable benefit for
treating animals and humans exposed to
toxic substances. Such studies cannot be
performed humanely on human subjects, and
because of the newness of the research,
no computer models to simulate the
effects of homeopathic medicines are
presently possible. While public health
measures must primarily focus on
preventing exposure to toxic substances,
medical treatment must be developed for
healing if and when exposure takes place.
The research suggests that homeopathic
medicine may play a significant role in
the treatment of toxicological exposure.
Homeopathic
research has also explored the benefits
of homeopathic medicines to protect
against radiation.33 Albino mice were
exposed to 100 to 200 rad of X-rays
(sublethal doses) and then evaluated
after 24, 48, and 72 hours. Ginseng 6x,
30x, and 200x and Ruta graveolens 30x and
200x were administered before and after
exposure. When compared with mice given a
placebo as treatment, mice given any of
the above homeopathic medicines
experienced significantly less
chromosomal or cellular damage.
Albino
guinea pigs were exposed to small doses
of X-ray that cause reddening of the
skin. Studies showed that Apis mellifica
7c or 9c had a protective effect and a
roughly 50% curative effect on
X-ray-induced redness of the skin.34 Apis
mellifica (honeybee) is a homeopathic
medicine for redness, swelling, and
itching, common symptoms of bee venom.
In one
very intriguing study, Thyroxine 30x
(thyroid hormone) was placed in the water
of tadpoles.35 When compared to tadpoles
who were given a placebo, the study
showed, morphogenesis of the tadpoles
into frogs was slowed for those who were
exposed to the homeopathic doses. Because
thyroid hormone in crude doses is known
to speed up morphogenesis, it makes sense
from a homeopathic perspective that
homeopathic doses would slow it down.
What makes
this study more interesting is that
additional investigations resulted in the
same effect when a glass bottle of the
homeopathic doses of thyroid hormone was
simply suspended in the water with the
lip of the bottle above the water line.
This research was replicated at several
laboratories, and results were
consistent.
The
implications of this study are somewhat
significant, not only for verifying
biological effects of homeopathic doses
but for showing that these medicines have
some type of radiational effect through
glass. Some types of unconventional
approaches to homeopathy have been
developed over the past decades in which
pupil reflex, pulse, muscle strength, and
skin conductance have been changed as the
result of simply holding on to a bottle
of an individually indicated homeopathic
medicine. While this approach may seem
strange to classically oriented
homeopaths, the above research provides
some basis for its application.
One other
interesting experiment dealing with water
is worthy of mention. This study used
nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), also
called magnetic resonance imaging (MRI),
to determine whether high potencies of
homeopathic medicines placed in water had
any measurable effects.36 Without getting
into the details of this highly technical
study, the researchers found that high
potencies of Silicea did, in fact, show a
distinct difference as compared with
placebo-treated water.
There have
been several studies investigating very
high dilutions of histamine (above 30x)
on isolated guinea pig hearts, showing
that this remedy increases blood flow
through the heart. What is particularly
interesting about these studies was that
this effect was completely neutralized if
the very high dilutions were exposed to
70 degrees Centigrade for 30 minutes or
exposed to magnetic fields of 50 Hz for
15 minutes.37
Needless
to say, it is unlikely that these
microdoses could have only a placebo
effect when known physical stresses to
the medicine can halt its activity.
A
professor of hematology at the School of
Pharmacy of Bordeaux has carried out
eight years of research on the effects of
acetylsalicylic acid (the active
ingredient in aspirin) on blood.38 It is
known that crude doses of aspirin cause
increased bleeding, while this research
showed that homeopathic doses of
acetylsalicylic acid shorten bleeding
time in healthy subjects.
Two Dutch
professors of molecular cell biology
recently completed a significant body of
experimentation which not only provided
evidence of the effects of homeopathic
microdoses on cell cultures but that also
suggested that these microdoses are only
effective when homeopathy's principle of
similars is followed.39 Specific
reference to the body of studies cannot
be provided in this chapter, both due to
the space necessary to describe this work
and due to its highly technical nature.
A now
famous study by respected French
physician and immunologist Jacques
Benveniste tested highly diluted doses of
an antibody on a type of white blood
cells called basophils (basophils
increase in number when exposed to
substances such as antibodies which cause
an allergic reaction). This work was
replicated at six different laboratories
at four different universities (the
University of Paris South, the University
of Toronto, Hebrew University, and the
University of Milano). Although the
prestigious journal Nature published this
study,40 it also published concurrently
an editorial stating that they did not
believe the results.41 The editor
insisted on going to the primary
researcher's laboratory at the University
of Paris South to observe the experiment
conducted in his presence along with two
known experts in scientific fraud (one of
whom was a magician).
The
details of what followed require more
detail and technical information than is
appropriate for this book. In summary,
the experiment did not show significant
results, leading the Nature editor to
pronounce in his journal that the
original study was a fraud.42 The
problem, however, was that the editor and
the fraud experts were not immunologists,
and thus, they did not seem aware that
many studies in immunology require
considerably more replication than could
be done in the couple of days that the
Nature team visited.
Another
problem was in the study itself, which
was very difficult to do. The researchers
later simplified it, provided even
greater scientific controls, and found
significant results. Nature, however,
chose not to publish these results, and
this study was published instead in the
Journal of the French Academy of
Sciences.43
Evidence
of the bias that "defenders of
science" have against homeopathy is
their refusal to publish or even comment
on the increasing body of research
accruing to homeopathic medicine.
Science is
supposed to be objective, though both
physicists and psychologists teach us
that objectivity is impossible. Science's
long-term antagonism to homeopathy is
slowly breaking down but not without
significant reaction, fear, anxiety, and
sometimes downright attack against
homeopaths.
Change is
difficult, and significant change is even
more difficult. Even though science grows
from new knowledge, it tends to be
resistant, often very resistant, to
perspectives and knowledge that do not
fit contemporary paradigms and scientific
theories. The information presented in
this chapter and in this book is not
meant to overthrow science but to enlarge
its perspective so that it more broadly
and accurately describes and accepts many
presently unexplainable phenomena of
nature.
In Summary
This review of research is not meant to
be complete. Readers are encouraged to
review the books listed in the Resources
section of this chapter for access to
many other clinical and laboratory
studies as well as to theoretical
foundations of homeopathic microdoses.
Despite
the now strong evidence that homeopathic
medicines promote biological activity and
clinical efficacy, there is still great
resistance to them. Recently, the Lancet
published the research on the homeopathic
treatment of asthma.44 In a press release
announcing this research, they emphasized
that although homeopathic medicines may
provide some benefit to people with
asthma, conventional medicines offer
greater benefit.
This was a
strange statement for two reasons. First,
the study didn't compare homeopathic and
conventional medicine; it only compared
homeopathic medicine with a placebo. Any
other conjecture was not founded on the
data presented. Secondly, the Lancet
refused to openly acknowledge that
homeopathic medicines may work after all.
One can't
help but wonder whether if a man flew and
science proved that he flew, the editors
of some medical journals would remark:
"But he doesn't fly as high or as
fast as a jet plane!"
Despite
the resistance to change in general and
to homeopathy specifically, it is getting
increasingly difficult for physicians and
scientists to doubt the benefits that
homeopathic medicines offer. Italian
hematologist Paolo Bellavite and Italian
homeopath Andrea Signorini's Homeopathy:
A Frontier in Medical Science is
presently the most comprehensive resource
of controlled studies on homeopathy. The
authors conclude, "The sum of the
clinical observations and experimental
findings is beginning to prove so
extensive and intrinsically consistent
that it is no longer possible to dodge
the issue by acting as if this body of
evidence simply did not exist."45
They go on
to say, "To reject everything en
bloc, as many are tempted to do, means
throwing out the observations along with
the interpretations, an operation which
may be the line of least resistance, but
which is not scientific because
unexplained observations have always been
the main hive of ideas for
research."
To ignore
the body of experimental data that
presently exists on homeopathic medicines
and to deny the body of clinical
experience of homeopaths and homeopathic
patients, one would have to be virtually
blind. One can only assume that this
blindness is a temporary affliction, one
that will soon be cured.
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29R.
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30W.E.
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Mercuric Chloride on Diastase,"
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32K.
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33A.R.
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S., "Alteration of Cytogenetic
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39Roeland
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40E.
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41J.
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44Reilly,
et al., 1994. See note 6. 45Paolo
Bellavite and Andrea Signorini,
Homeopathy: A Frontier in Medical
Science. Berkeley: North Atlantic, 1995.
Resources
--Paolo
Bellavite and Andrea Signorini book,
Homeopathy: A Frontier in Medical
Science. Berkeley: North Atlantic, 1995.
--Harris
L. Coulter, Homoeopathic Science and
Modern Medicine: The Physics of Healing
with Microdoses. Berkeley: North
Atlantic, 1980.
--P.C.
Endler and J. Schulte (editors), Ultra
High Dilution: Physiology and Physics.
Dordrecht: Kluwer Academic, 1994.
--M.
Doutremepuich (ed.), Ultra-Low Doses.
Washington, DC/London: Taylor and
Francis, 1991.
--Gerhard
Resch and Viktor Gutmann, Scientific
Foundations of Homoeopathy. Munich:
Bartel and Bartel, 1987.
--A.M.
Scofield, "Experimental Research in
Homoeopathy: A Critical Review,"
British Homoeopathic Journal, 73, 3-4,
July-October 1984, 161-80, 211-26.
--Dana
Ullman (ed.), Monograph on Homeopathic
Research, volumes I and II, 1981, 1986.
--Roeland
van Wijk and Fred A.C. Wiegant, Cultured
Mammalian Cells in Homeopathy Research:
The Similia Principle in Self-Recovery.
Utrecht: University of Utrecht, 1994.
--British
Homoeopathic Journal (2 Powis Place,
Great Ormond St., London, WC1N 3HT,
England)
The
Consumer's Guide to Homeopathy is
available from Homeopathic Educational
Services or through your local bookseller
(starting January, 1996).
DANA
ULLMAN, MPH, is one of America's leading
advocates for homeopathy. 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.
For more
information about homeopathic studies,
check out the following links:
Research
in Homeopathy
Clinical
Studies
Clinical
Evidence
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Shouldn't
you be using a safer, more natural method
of health care?
Safe, Natural,
Effective
Unlike the dangerous
side effects of orthodox drugs, homeopathy has no
side effects. Homeopathic remedies are
all natural, derived from plant, mineral,
and animal substances, and generally
considered to be non-toxic and extremely
safe. With the rising costs of health
care today, you'll find that homeopathy
offers tremendous
savings over traditional
prescription and over-the-counter drugs.
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