After a week of this treatment the child was able to bear quite a strong light, to keep the eyes open constantly, and recovered rapidly, without a single scar or blemish on either eye.
M . Preston Noringtown Pa. American Journal of Homeopathic Materia Medica Nov. 1868 p. 198.
2. Dr Teste relates an interesting case of Schirrous ulceration.
The patient was a washer woman, aged fifty years, tall, thin emaciated, of a very irritable temperament; The disease was of long standing. This waman, whose face was of a straw-colour down to the lips inclusive, a characteristic symptom of the cancerous diathesis, was troubled with constant distention of the hypogastrium, which was exceedingly sensitive to contact. Every moment she felt lancing pains in this region, which she compared to pricks with a pin. There was a tension in the groin, and from time to time, crampy pains in the thighs. Her breath was fetid, foul, her appetite pretty good; she was often taken with a diarrhea, or rather lienteria.
The urine was pale, fetid, and profuse especially at night. The mucus membrane of the vagina, which was considerably wrinkled by the descension of the uterus, was almost round; but the neck of the uterus, which was very much swollen, presented only, so to say, a spongy mass so deeply corroded with ulcers in different directions, that it was impossible to discover the os tincae. The purulent, ichorous, and sometimes bloody matter which flowed from these ulcers filled constantly the vagina, from which proceeded such a horrible stench that it would have been impossible for one to remain ten minutes in the same room with this unhappy woman, whose near death seemed to me, and indeed was, inevitable. However, she continued to live for six months, which 1 attribute to the action of Argentum. Various remedies, conium, cicuta uirosa, sepia and lycopodium had been given without any effect. Argentum effected a general improvement almost instantaneously. The diarrhea ceased and the stools became natural. The desire to urinate was diminished one half. The shooting pains in the hypogastrium diminished, so that the patient was sometimes free from them for days. A circumstance which astonished me a good deal was, that the discharge, although still purulent, lost almost entirely and in less than three days, its foul smell. Fleshy, rose-coloured granulations, of a very satisfactory appearance, showed themselves at the neck of the uterus. Her strength even returned visibly, and for two or three weeks, I flattered myself that the patient will get well. Unfortunately, this illusion was not to last long; a relapse took place. The family attributed it to a fit of anger, to which the patient was subject. The diarrhea reappreared, and, with it, all the uterine symptoms. This time Argentum had no effect. Soon the prostration was at its height. Arsenic was of no use. After two days spent in agony death took place.
A.Teste, Homeopathic Materia Medica p.118-119