Lower Bowel in Health and Disease LIBRARY OR CONGRESS. s&r — ♦ ©xtp^rig^i f xr Shelf .3.2/ Co UNITED STATES OF AMERICA. *«- & "Prevention is better than Cure, and far Cheaper!' The Brotherhood of Man, and the Sisterhood of Women, suggests that if you are blessed with the WEALTH of HEALTH, and do not require help from books on health, that then you will find HAPPINESS, in providing for your less fortunate brother or sister, by confering a blessing on them in pointing the way to HEALTH which is both Wealth and HAPPINESS, by purchasing some of the books in my catalogue, and presenting them to your friends. Send for list of books. W. A. BARNES, West lojd Street, NEW YORK. "Prevention is better than Cure and far Cheaper." THE Lower Bowel IN HEALTH AND DISEASE TREATS OF AU, DISORDERS OF THE RECTUM. THIS BOOK HAS BEEN PREPARED FOR THE EDUCATION OF LAYMEN. / J^^ ' T is folly to be unwise if *r If ignorance is not bliss. ( 0F ~G 181889' PREPAREiyfc.ND PUBLISHED BY ^V^^'NGTOt*' W. A. BARNES, West .[03d Street, N£*V;Yt)RK. m ' *t* Copyrighted 1889 By W. A. BARNES. INDEX. Preface, --..«,. ^ Introduction, - - - - . - 6 The Digestive Tract, - - - - 13 The Rectum, - - - - - - 19 Disorders of the Rectum, 22 Constipation, - - - - - -31 Hemorrhoids or Piles, 61 Prolapsus, - - - - -71 Polypus and Tumors, 74 Ulceration Within the Rectum, - - 77 Stricture, - - - - - 83 Fistula, 86 Fissure and Painful Irritable Ulcer of the Anus, - 91 Itching at the Anus, 96 Neuralgia, - - - - - - 108 Catarrh of the Rectum, - - - no Cancer, - - - - - - -113 Palliative Treatment, - - - 118 Hygiene of the Lower Bowel, ... 123 Influence of the Mind, 129 PREFACE. A notion has somehow possessed a great many persons that almost any disorder of the lower bowel may easily be removed, or at least made bearable from time to time ; that so long as one is not brought to bed by acute suffer- ing, these disorders are like a cold in the head and can as easily be endured, by getting accustomed to them. Common ignorance of physical self, supplemented by the literature and vulgar boastings of the Quack profes- sional pile curer and the manufacturers of ready-made pile medicines, have gone far to sustain the idea that rectal disorders are only passing events, common to the ordinary life, and were probably meant not to be cured, but to be endured. No greater mistake in the economy of human life was ever made than this neglect of a grave and serious disorder. These disorders are undoubtedly the underlying cause oi many serious ill-conditions of the body, which seem strange to the sufferer, because of ignorance of the cause. The enormity and serious influence of disorders of the lower bowel is fully appreciated by the intelligent physician, and there is hardly a case of illness in their practice, either in the office or at the bedside, but that 4 PREFACE. the first question asked is " What is the condition of your bowels ? ' ' With the hope of creating a more general intelligence and correcting many ignorant ideas relative to the sub- jects of which this book treats, this compilation has been made. In its preparation great indebtedness is due to the writings of the late Dr. W. H. Van Buren and Dr. Charles B. Kelsey of New York ; Dr. Allingham, Dr. Lionel S. Beal and Dr. Benj. W. Richardson of England and Dr. Joseph F. Edwards of Philadelphia; Dr. George H. Taylor, Dr. Felix Oswald and Dr. L. B. Sperry, and that admirable Journal, ''Medical Classics" of New York. This indebtedness is not acknowledged in every in- stance by the medium of inverted commas and attaching the names of the authors, for the reason that the exact text has not always been followed, and technical language has been changed into common place phrase. The doctrines of compensation, action and reaction, and dependency, enter very minutely into the economy of the human body. As early as 550 years before the Christian era the following piece of wisdom was written down from the lips of iEssop. *' The Members of the body found fault with the Belly, for spending an idle luxurious life, while they were wholly occupied in laboring for its support and ministering to its wants and pleasures ; so they en- tered into a conspiracy to cut off its supplies for the future. The Hands were no longer to carry food to the Mouth, nor the Mouth to receive the food, nor the Teeth to chew it. PREFACE. 5 They had not long persisted in this course of starv- ing the Belly into subjection, ere they all began one by one, to fall and flag, and the whole body to pine away. Then the members were convinced that the Belly also, cumbersome and useless as it seemed, had an important function of its own; that they could no more do without it, than it could without them ; and that if they would have the constitution of the body in a healthy state, they must work to- gether, each in his proper sphere for the common good of all." The truth which this old fable teaches, may with equal force be applied to the Rectum or lower bowel as well. Throughout this little book there will be found lan- guage, phrase and ideas, which have a marked similarity and which may truly be said, to be repetitions. But we claim to offer these pages as an educational influence against the misfortunes of ignorance, and have therefore kept before us the fact, that true and successful education demands iteration, and reiteration to drive home to the mind the lasting impression. INTRODUCTION. Health is that condition which comprises " a sound state of the body, in which the parts perform their natural functions, and there is mental vigor, moral purit}^ a vigorous body, beauty of face and form, with graceful carriage." In this advanced state of civilization, it is strange how much ignorance exists among all classes, as to the human body and its functions. It is a fact that human beings know something of almost all that goes to make up the sum total of our daily lives, in association with the world. Most men and women know something of the laws which govern countries and communities ; they are acquainted with commerce ; they know how to build ; how to co-operate for common safety and defence ; in a word there is hardly an external condition of human life that is not known to the masses, but when we ask ourselves, what do we know of our human body and its functions f we become aware of our ignorance, and discover 8 INTRODUCTION. that we are utterly dependent upon a select class, known as ' • Doctors of Medicine, ' ' and into their hands we surrender ourselves for life or death. There are notable exceptions, but they only prove the rule. By the strict law of nature a man should die as unconscious of his death as of his birth. ' * In health he should be unconscious of his every day functional life." We often hear people say, "I do not know that I have a stomach, liver, kidneys or bowels. Nature acts with such ease and harmony that I only know I live and move and have a being. " By the hand of Nature death were equally a painless portion." " When we shall have learned this lesson, this benign process of Nature, by a careful study and loyal regard for her laws, then will death cease to be a dread, it will come as a sleep, without pain, anger or sorrow. The Greeks, true lovers of Nature, and obedient followers of her laws, looked upon death in childhood or youth as so untimely that the body was carried to the pyre at the break of day, lest the sun should behold so sad a sight as the young dead." In the preservation of life, health and happiness, there is no one portion of the body that bears so important a part in the economy of our physical INTRODUCTION. 9 nature as the digestive tract, ending with the rectum, or lower bowel as it is called. We cannot commence too early in life the edu- cation of the young person to regard the call of nature, to evacuate refuse matter from the body and thus purify it for the performance of its na- tural functions. We ought to ' ' understand that all habits of life which are beneficial to the general health are for the benefit of the rectum ; while those habits that endanger the general health may first show their evil effects on that organ.' ' " It is quite apt to be so if the rectum for any reason is the weakest organ. Most rectal diseases are curable if rightly managed ; but it is far better, easier and safer to prevent them by taking proper precautions/ ' ' ' Prevention is better than cure and far cheaper. ' ' We must learn to deserve health by the practice of such virtue in living that our Mother Nature will smile upon us and by an influence of which we cannot divine the source, w r e shall be lifted up into that better world of daily experience known as perfect health.^