Anthrax is an acute infectious disease caused by
the spore-forming bacterium Bacillus anthracis. Anthrax
most commonly occurs in wild and domestic lower vertebrates
(cattle, sheep, goats, camels, antelopes, and other
herbivores), but it can also occur in humans when they are
exposed to infected animals or tissue from infected animals.
Anthrax
is most common in agricultural regions where it occurs in
animals. These include South and Central America, Southern and
Eastern Europe, Asia, Africa, the Caribbean, and the Middle
East. When anthrax affects humans, it is usually due to an
occupational exposure to infected animals or their products.
Workers who are exposed to dead animals and animal products
from other countries where anthrax is more common may become
infected with B. anthracis (industrial anthrax).
Anthrax in wild livestock has occurred in the United States.
How Anthrax is transmitted?
Anthrax infection can occur in three forms: cutaneous (skin),
inhalation, and gastrointestinal. B. anthracis spores
can live in the soil for many years, and humans can become
infected with anthrax by handling products from infected
animals or by inhaling anthrax spores from contaminated animal
products. Anthrax can also be spread by eating undercooked
meat from infected animals. It is rare to find infected
animals in the United States.
Symptoms of Anthrax:
Symptoms of disease vary depending on how the
disease was contracted, but symptoms usually occur within 7
days.
Cutaneous: Most (about 95%)
anthrax infections occur when the bacterium enters a cut or
abrasion on the skin. Skin infection begins as a raised itchy
bump that resembles an insect bite but within 1-2 days
develops into a vesicle and then a painless ulcer, usually 1-3
cm in diameter, with a characteristic black necrotic (dying)
area in the center. Lymph glands in the adjacent area may
swell.
Inhalation: Initial symptoms may
resemble a common cold. After several days, the symptoms may
progress to severe breathing problems and shock. Inhalation
anthrax is usually fatal.
Intestinal: The intestinal
disease form of anthrax may follow the consumption of
contaminated meat and is characterized by an acute
inflammation of the intestinal tract. Initial signs of nausea,
loss of appetite, vomiting, fever are followed by abdominal
pain, vomiting of blood, and severe diarrhea.
Homeopathic Remedies for
Anthrax
The remedy
Anthracinum is prepared from the spleen of
infected sheep, and was introduced into homeopathy by the
veterinarian Lux, a colleague of Hering, as early as 1830. It
quickly proved its worth by preventively and curing the disease in numerous outbreaks among livestock in
the 19th century.
In the
event of known exposure, during the incubation period, or in a
high-risk situation, Anthracinum
30 should be taken three times in a 12-hour period for 2
weeks, or if need be until the emergency
subsides.
For early flu-like symptoms, typhoid
remedies like Bryonia or Baptisia, while in the more advanced septicemic phase the
remedies include Lachesis,
Arsenicum, Crotalus horridus, Secale, Carbolic. Acid.,
Mercurius, Sulphur, Silica, and Arsenicum iod.