Banana.
The banana is invaluable in
inflammation of all kinds. For this reason it is very useful in cases of
typhoid fever, gastritis, peritonitis, etc., and may constitute the only food
allowed for a time.
Not only does it actually
subdue the inflammation of the intestines, but, in the opinion of at least one
authority, as it consists of 95 per cent. nutriment, it does not possess
sufficient waste matter to irritate the inflamed spots.
But great care should be
taken in its administration. The banana should be thoroughly sound and ripe,
and all the stringy portion carefully removed. It should then be mashed and
beaten to a cream. In severe cases I think it is better to give this neat, but
if not liked by the patient a little lemon juice, well mixed in, may render it
more acceptable. It may also be taken with fresh cream.
A friend who has had a very
wide experience in illness told me that she was once hurriedly sent for at
night to a girl suffering from peritonitis. Not knowing what she might, or
might not, find in the way of remedies when she arrived at her destination, my
friend took with her some strong barley water, bananas, and an enema syringe.
She found the girl lying across the bed screaming, obviously in agony. First of
all my friend administered a warm water enema. A pint of plain warm water was
injected first, and after this had come away as much warm water as could be got
in was injected and then allowed to come away. The object of this was to
thoroughly wash out the bowels. Then the barley water was warmed, the bananas
mashed, beaten to cream, and mixed in with the barley water. A soothing
nutrient lotion was thus prepared, and as much as the patient could bear
comfortably was injected in the bowel and retained as long as possible. The
effect was magical. The pain subsided, and the patient ultimately recovered.
In the absence of perfectly
ripe bananas, baked bananas may be used. But, although better than no fruit at
all, cooked fruit is never so valuable as the fresh fruit, if only the latter
be perfectly ripe. Bananas should be baked in their skins, and the stringy
pieces carefully removed before eating. From twenty minutes to half an hour's
slow cooking is required.
Bananas are excellent food
for anæmic persons on account of the iron they contain. A very palatable way of
taking them is with fresh orange juice.
A comparatively old-fashioned
remedy, for sprained or bruised places that show a tendency to become inflamed
is to apply a plaster of banana skin.
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