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the needles, for one minute ; that is, there were inserted three
pairs of needles, and I made contact with two at a time, and thus
occupied at each sitting some five or six minutes in all. In ten
days this was repeated five times, when she walked down stairs
and about the dining room, as she had not done since the winter
before. She soon recovered, and is still well, and may be seen
every fair day in her carriage about our streets where ladies do
trading.
Case 3. — A truckman, of middle age, applied, with a chronic
neuralgic rheumatism lurking about the parts of the right shoul-
der, but mostly in the deltoid muscle, at its lower end where it
is inserted in the humerus. The shoulder muscles and joint were
so lame and painful, that he could not raise his arm, and the
pains at times were most excruciating. It appeared to me a case
to be most speedily benefited by electro-puncture, and I therefore
inserted one needle in front and below the head of the humerus,
and the other at the insertion of the deltoid, and with an inverse
current of bearable strength, which was five Darnell's batteries;
it was allowed to continue for some five minutes, with as many
interruptions at every thirty seconds. He was greatly "sup-
pled " by this one seance, and two more eradicated the whole
" tangle," as he termed it, so that he swung his arm in all direc-
tions ; only it was not as strong, however, as before the rheu-
matic attack, which was some months previous.
It can be seen, I think, that some chronic rheumatisms and
chronic neuralgias may thus be cut short more surely than by
any other means. No doubt simple acu-punctvre would prove
serviceable in these same selected cases; but it is my opinion,
from experience with both, that every seance with electro-punc-
ture strikes a more effectual blow for disturbing, or for modify-
ing by direct catalysis, and hence changing the polarity of the
morbid nerves, and therefore for eradicating the disease, than
many acu-punctures, or blisters, or other less disturbing forces
can possibly do.
In one extremely bad case of sciatica, I adopted the following
plan: The patient was placed on the operating mattress, lying
on his sound side, with the limb semi-flexed ; placed the posi-