In a case of diarrhoea which came on after eating noodles stained with verdigris, the patient got a yellowish diarrhoea which was repeated four to five times at night, always preceded by stomach ache. A strange symptom in this case was:
‘In the evening a feverish sensation as though a cold wind blew out from under the skin’. This condition, caused by Cuprum aceticum (verdigris), was cured by Cuprum metallicum C30! That is, potentised metallic copper acted as an antidote to acetic copper as a raw substance (see above, ‘Remarks concerning the remedy substance’).
Urinary Organs
Urination may be suppressed or markedly increased. In spasmodic complaints, or cerebral affections, or cholera, the urine is often very scanty, there may even be anuria; uraemic spasms. On the other hand: ‘Profuse evacuation of clear, watery urine during or after an epileptic fit’.
Frequent urging to urinate; has to rise at night to urinate.
Frequent discharge of an offensive, viscid urine, without sediment; or else dark- red, turbid urine with a yellow sediment.
Male Genitalia
Intercourse prevented by nervous cramps of calves or soles; in young men who look prematurely old, or in old men who have been abstinent from sex for a long time, and now want to perform intercourse again.
Female Genitalia
Cuprum may be indicated in spasmodic affections in connection with the menstrual cycle. Abdominal cramps and epileptiform convulsions before, during, and after the menstrual bleeding. ‘Cuprum is to be recom- mended especially in typical paroxysms of the most violent kind, with the most unbearable abdominal cramps, extending up to the chest, exciting nausea, retching, and even vomiting, at the same time affecting the extremities and causing convulsions of limbs that resemble epileptic fits; the patient utters piercing shrieks’ (Hering). Cuprum will be particularly indicated