Summary
The action of five “low potency” homœopathic remedies, as supplied to the public and
used clinically, on the distance of movement in a given time of guinea-pig macrophages
and human leucocytes was measured. The remedies, Belladonna, Hepar sulphur, Pyrogenium, Silicea and Staphylococcin, were tested in the range 2×10−10 to 10−16 g/ml dilution of the source material, though the actual concentration of any active
agent was probably considerably less than these values.
In four series of experiments with guinea-pig macrophages the remedies were tested
as aqueous or alcoholic tinctures, or absorbed on sugar granules. The results of 533
tests showed statistically significant modification of cell movement in 47 tests (i.e.
95% significant in about 8% of tests). Ten of these differences were significant at
the 99% level and three also at the 99.9% level.
Fifty tests of the aqueous tinctures on leucocytes from four human subjects showed
modification of cell movement in five tests, one test being significant at the 99%
level. Significant effects were obtained with two subjects only.
The remedies facilitated movement in some experiments and inhibited it in others.
The largest effects were obtained with a few sensitive guinea-pigs and one human subject.
The magnitude and direction of the effects depended on the batch of animals being
tested rather than on the set of remedies used.
It is concluded that low potency homœopathic remedies prepared by A. Nelson & Company
Ltd. are capable of modifying the movement of human leucocytes and guinea-pig macrophages
in vitro.