(Original title: Patientendarstellung
und Therapiefindung bei besonderem
Sarkoidoseverlauf. Mit anschliessender Kurzdarstellung der regularen Therapie. Der
Merkurstah 1997; 50: 184-6. Slightly adapted from a presentation made at the Easter
Conference of the Anthroposophical Medical Association held in Kassel on 6-12 April 1997,
followed by a brief discussion of the usual treatment.)
History
A woman aged 42 came to see me for her sarcoidosis in October 1983. As a
child, severe pneumonia, with pleural involvement; appendectomy at 21;
gynecological operation at 22; sterilization at 42. Patient had had repeated
mammographies. Four years earlier, a painful nodule had been removed
from the right clavicle. Pain radiated to the right arm. The diagnosis was
sarcoidosis. Two years later a further nodule developed in the same area.
This too, was removed and diagnosed as sarcoidosis. She was given steroids
and tuberculostatics (Neoteben and Myambutol) for a year. In spite of this, a
further nodule developed, this time in the right axilla, and she developed a
swelling above the right wrist over the radius. The histology of both was
tuberculosis. This diagnosis was revised some months later to atypical
sarcoidosis. The patient was then given high doses of cortisone (60 mg/die).
When she came to us 51/! months later she was still taking 50 mg/die. There
were no other symptoms or signs of sarcoidosis and, above all, no X-ray
evidence of pulmonary changes.
Social aspects
The patient had been married for 17 1/2 years and divorced. She had an
adopted child 10 years of age.
When she came to us, the nodule above the right radius was still present.
This local change appeared as follows: immediately above the right distal
end of the radius of the wrist, was a hard, nodular plate, 6 x 2 1/2 cm in size
and 1 1/2 to 2 cm high. It was subcutaneous and firmly seated on its bony base.
The skin above it was moderately movable. X-ray of the radius showed no
change to the bone. A reddened scar ran lengthwise across the swelling.
Palpation established slight pain on pressure. No other nodules were found.
The hard swelling over the right radius continued to increase to 6 x 4 cm
a year later (October 1985), though slightly reduced in overall height. Two
cherry-sized lymph nodes were then palpable in the right axilla. The patient
had spontaneous pain in the right upper arm, and there was increasing
tension in the region of the nodule above the wrist when she worked in the
office. She had been feeling debilitated for some time.
Diagnosis
Well-established sarcoidosis nodule on right radius (Besnier-Boeck disease).
Treatment
Steroids were gradually reduced over 3 months. The nodule increased in size
after this (see above). The patient took no cortisone for 2 months, then went
back on it for 3 months. After this, cortisone was discontinued for good.
We started to treat her with Phosphorus 5x, 15 drops b.d., and PhosphorusIscador Pini c. Hg strengths 2 and 3 in alternation
3 times a week. The injections increased the pain, and after 6 months we
reduced them to twice a week. The Phosphorus 5x drops were discontinued,
and Viscum mali 5% ointment prescribed for a change of external application. Also Iscador Pini c. Hg strengths 2 and 3 in alternation 3 times a week. The injections increased the pain, and after 6 months we reduced them to twice a week. The Phosphorus 5x drops were discontinued, and Viscum mali 5% ointment prescribed for a change of external application.
This treatment continued for 3 years until October, 1986 with no appre-
ciable change. The nodule was 6x4 cm in size, with only minor variations.
As the injections continued to be painful with slight redness in the
injection site, it was decided to use higher dilutions. It also seemed advisable
to change the host tree.
As this was a neoplasm in the periphery of the body, I chose maple (Acer),
a tree with differentiated, fine-form principles, and also because the form
principles of individual plant organs seemed to match those of the extremities.
The patient injected herself 3 times a week with Abnobaviscum Aceris lOx (the
district nurse had done it before). It was planned to continue for a maximum
of 6 months. If no change occurred, a change would then be made to Fraxini.
After 6 weeks, the nodule began to loosen up, and after 6 months it had
disappeared except for two residual nodules the size of pinheads. The pain
had gone. Treatment was reduced to twice weekly injections for 2 months,
then once a week for 6 months, followed by a break in treatment.
No recurrence developed from 1987 to 1992. Only the non-irritating scar
remained in the site. At the last visit, no nodule could be palpated; the
patient's tiredness had gone. She sent postcards whenever she went on
holiday with her son, reporting that she was well and no new nodules had
appeared. She did not return after 1992, having probably moved away, as a
letter was returned with a note to this effect.
The case history is unusual in that there was not only the rarity of an
awkwardly-placed lesion, a subcutaneous nodule, but it also presents finding
the indicated medicine. The patient was initially treated in the usual way (for
too long), and did not improve. She would not give up her belief that this
approach to treatment would help her, and bore with the pain of it and also
with having to make a trip of several hours by car each time. It was her
reference to the pain that induced the physician to consider a change of treatment, with some inner reluctance and no systematically-developed strategy.
A new therapeutic idea was taken up more or less from an emotional impulse.
The main motive was to have a change of treatment. Relatively limited
powers of imagination seem to have been enough for the right idea to arise.
The desire to make a change and letting the patient's symptoms make an
impression were the elements that led to finding the right medicine (the new
idea consisting of an individual approach to the basic treatment strategy).
When the nodule had disappeared, injections were only given when the
very small residual nodules made themselves felt again. A single injection of
Abnobaviscum Aceris lOx proved sufficient to make them vanish on every
occasion. No injections were needed in the last year of treatment.
Usual treatment of sarcoidosis
A special case has been presented. Below, some general, brief notes on
sarcoidosis.
In 90% of sarcoidosis patients, the disease manifests in the hilar lymph
nodes of the lung, affecting 80% of them in the second stage. Alveolitis is
assumed to be the initial trigger. It is a chronic granulomatous inflammation
with a relatively high spontaneous cure rate, though of variable duration (a
few months to many years). Almost all organs may be affected - lymph
nodes, CNS, eyes, kidneys, liver, spleen, bones, heart, parotid glands, lacri-
mal glands, prostate, subcutis, scar tissue, musculature. Calcium metabolism
may be activated [alveolar macrophages produce increased amounts of 25-
dihydroxyvitamin D which is converted to 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D (calci-
ferol)]. This mainly increases intestinal calcium absorption, but increased
solar radiation also enhances conversion to active vitamin D. Arthropathies
are common, with no evidence in the pathological anatomy of the joints.
Sarcoidosis patients with chronic lung disease suffer from dyspnea, with
the right heart affected. This is in about 15% of patients, with the process
generally continuing for years. Women are slightly more frequently affected
than men, black North Americans more frequently than white ones.
Apart from the specific organic lesions, tiredness is a common symptom
with more than half the patients, often limiting life severely. It does not
necessarily correlate with the spread of lesions. This symptom is a clear
indication that the dynamic of the ether body is severely limited and is, in
fact, a particular signature of sarcoidosis patients. Revitalization, refreshment
in sleep, is impaired. The astral body is frozen, in a way, and the I is not much
present. In the acute form, Loffgren's syndrome, this immense debility may
be the dominant feature, with the frequently found pyrexia a further
explanation. (Note: In some cases, the pathological constellation occurs so
briefly that the patient is hardly aware of it or remains asymptomatic, though
radiology shows definite involvement.) Astral body and ether body get too
close to one another, literally interlocking in chronic cases. Help should
ideally come from the I, which is brought back into the situation.
This is an indication for the treatment approach which, in typical cases
with pulmonary involvement, begins with Phosphorus 6x, 20 drops b.d., and
Ferrum 6x/Graphites 15x, V2 teaspoon t.d.s. as a first step. Phosphorus acts
through warmth to stimulate internal light production, thus creating an
opportunity for the I to take effect again in the respiratory sphere and initiate
the healing process. With careful monitoring it is also possible to give
Phosphorus 5x for a limited period (about 4 weeks). This process, which acts
from below upwards, is met from above by a structuring process which also
gives the I the opportunity to bring form principles into the organism
through respiration. Graphite supports re-organization of the mobile carbon
skeleton in the lower human being and in pulmonary function. As a polar
principle it causes increased light production in the neurosensory system and
brings clarity to thought.
Treatment is intensified in the second stage by giving twice-weekly, low-
dose mistletoe injections (1 mg on average). It will be seen from the above case
report that we begin with mistletoe grown on softwood trees. Here, activation
of the warmth process around the granulomas plays the key role (lymphocyte
activity around the granulomas is activated), especially in the chronic form,
which is common. At this stage, phosphorus and mistletoe (which also has
phosphorus nature) work closely together. The mistletoe action may well be
called immunomodulatory, which is particularly appropriate with sarcoidosis.
For reasons of space, we can only touch briefly on the immunological
aspect. Characteristically, lymphocyte counts are down in the blood and
elevated in affected organs. Bronchoalveolar lavage shows lymphocytosis,
with elevated CD4 helper cell counts. The CD4/CD8 ratio, normally about
1.8:1, is raised to between 5:1 and 20:1 with sarcoidosis. Lymphocyte function
is generally reduced, i.e. they are not fully able to perform their defensive
functions. The above-mentioned energy structures of the organism are thus
also reflected at this cellular level, with the astral body acting one-sidedly and
severely limiting the activities of the ether body, and the I not adequately
present.
Steroid treatment reduces immunological hyperactivity in a one-sided
way (which is helpful in acute situations). The treatment outlined above aims
to stimulate the energy structures of the whole organism from opposite poles
and so activate spontaneous recovery.
Prof. Hans Christoph Kummell
Herdecke Community Hospital, Beckweg 4
D-58313 Herdecke, Germany