The second case is still under observation. A gentleman, aged fifty, got an attack of inflammation of the neck of the bladder, apparently from exposure to cold and wet during the late severe weather. The symptoms were of the usual kind; frequent and distressing tenesmus, urine loaded with pus and flakes of the mucus lining of the bladder, prostration, sleeplessness, and discharge of prostatic fluid. Cantharis 3 in a few days effected wonders, but a serious relapse occurred, whether from fresh cold or other cause I know not, and it was then given without effect. Palpitation of the heart, especially at night, was a striking symptoms of this attack, and 1 prescribed asparagus 3 with fair confidence. The result, however, exceeded my most sanguine hopes, for the disease was checked within a few hours; the large patches of mucous membrane in the water became replaced by small shreds, and in forty-eight hours these also had almost disappeared. The subjective symptoms underwent still more rapid abatement, and in less than a week the patient was virtually cured.
Monthly Homoeopathic Review, July 1, 1884, Vol. 20, pp. 410,411