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ARTICLE |

HYDROTHERAPY IN STOMACH DISEASES.

GEORGE D. KAHLO, M.D.
JAMA. 1899;XXXII(2):70-71. doi:10.1001/jama.1899.92450290020001e.
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ABSTRACT

It is universally conceded that water is essential to the performance of all physiologic functions; yet its importance as a remedial agent is not, I think, so generally recognized.

The tendency in modern therapy is toward the employment of natural rather than artificial agencies, and nowhere have these principles a wider or more fruitful field of application than in the treatment of diseases of the stomach. While I do not wish to be understood as entirely opposing the use of drugs in these affections, as unquestionably they often exert a most beneficial influence, I desire to say emphatically, that I believe water ranks first among all our therapeutic resources. It may be used internally as a drink, in lavage as a douche and as a spray, and externally, either applied locally or generally. Its effects when administered internally will depend upon the condition of the stomach in respect both to

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