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Dr. J. C. Christophers gives the following results of the use
of electricity in chronic rheumatism.* The first case, he says,
was one of three years' duration, and of most intractable char-
acter,— the patient having undergone, long courses of active
medical treatment, besides sea-bathing, and then homoeopathic
treatment. " At first," he says, " I passed a current down the
spine for half an hour, or longer; then from the spine to the
hand for an hour. At the end of a few weeks, she began to ex-
perience a feeling of warmth in the hands, and their strength
gradually returned, so that by degrees she resumed her labors
in her laundry, continuing the galvanism daily, as before. Her
hands have now almost, if not quite, acquired their former
power, (the distortion of course remains,) though she is still
under treatment for the feeble condition of her ankles and
knees, and is galvanized three times a week, with increasing
benefit to both. Last winter this patient was confined entirely
to her bed ; this winter she has not kept her bed a day ; more-
over, she has regularly followed her occupation through a very
severe season, and surrounded by circumstances eminently
tending to produce an accession of her disease.
"Case 2d. — A fine, well-made man, in the prime of life,
was attacked, some years since, with severe pain about the
' hip-joint,' extending to the knee, which was at first treated as
rheumatic, by drugs, counter-irritants, &c, and by the introduc-
tion of needles at short intervals from the hip down to the knee.
No benefit was thence derived, and he was obliged to throw
up his employment. He consulted several practitioners without
obtaining relief, and amongst others myself. He complained of
great pain in the buttock and in the knee-joint. The affected
limb was two inches shorter than the other, much less in circum-
ference, flabby, and cold ; the power of motion was perfect,
though sensation was evidently impaired. Here was another
intractable case, in which a host of remedies had been tried
without success; still there were circumstances about it that
induced me to add electro-galvanism to the number, and with
* Braithewaite's Retrospect, No. 17, p. 288.