Books

Materia Medica Viva – Volume 2 page 395

bed with a temperature of 104. The history narrated to me by the father was as follows:
About two months earlier the girl had an attack of fever. The fever continued for 6 or 7 days. It was suspected as enteric fever and she was put on chloromycetin. But the temperature continued and after a few more days she developed a few scattered rashes which seemed like measles but no one was sure. Then suddenly on the 10th day in the evening the temp, shot up to 107. The parents were upset, even the attending G.P. was worried. So a consultant was called in. He felt that possibly it was a case of measles with recession of the rash. He advised an ice pack and one tablet of aspirin every hour the whole night. He opined that if the temperature was not controlled her life was in danger.
The parents passed an anxious night but fortunately by morning the temp, subsided somewhat and in 2 or 3 days she seemed quite well. Everyone was relieved and happy.
About 15 days later, for no apparent reason at all, one night the child developed temp, again and in 24 hours, by the next night, it shot up to 107. The G.P. was non-plussed and so the consultant was called in. The same opinion was given, same treatment prescribed and in 2 or 3 days the child was "well" again.
After about two weeks the same episode recurred all over again and the same procedure was followed!
By this time the parents had become tired and rather skeptical about the treatment given. So this time, when the child got temp, again they called me.
On examination I found nothing except a coated tongue. I now asked the mother "Can you please think out and tell me, if you can, what brings on the fever every time?"
"O yes," the mother replied at once. "This is an easy question. 1 know it. I have found out that every time she gets fever it is because she has eaten something sour. If only she will avoid eating sour things, I am sure she will never be ill. But she is so crazy after them, she eats them when my back is turned and suffers. I told the other doctors about this but they did not take any notice."
I now asked the mother how the child liked bathing. She replied "That is a funny thing too! Since the first attack of fever, the girl is avoiding a bath somehow or other. This was never the case formerly. She was always a clean child."
I further discovered that the child was thirstless in spite of the fever and this clinched the drug.
1 now gave her Ant-crudum 1M, four doses to be taken every 4 hours till the temp, touched normal. With the second dose itself, the fever disappeared and never returned.
Now it is more than one year she is well.
Dr.P.Sankaran.
The Journal of the American Institute of Homeopathy Vol.58 No.7-8, p.215, July -Aug.1965.
Observation: The case is interesting because of the excessive reaction of the child to the sour food, though I believe that a deeper predisposition for an intermittent fever was lying there all along, triggered by some circumstances that we do not