Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 11 – page 2338

Concomitants: Tongue pale, bloodless and flabby; face blanched.
In this case the type of patient and general symptoms present, rather than any peculiarity of the paroxysm, led to the proper selection. The bloodless tongue and face, prostration and debility, with the other symptoms agreeing, could not be mistaken. Ferrum was stamped on every feature.
Hahnemannian Advocate 1898, vol. XXXVII, No.2
Case of albuminuria
B., a boy aged ten, was placed under my care. His previous history was good, except for an attack of typhoid fever some nine months previous. The boy was hardly to be called sick (from the time of his recovery from the fever until placed under my care), at least for the greater part of the time. Ailing at times for two or three days together, causing great anxiety then, and again appearing to be, and insisting upon the fact of his being, perfectly well.
There had been an occasional slight swelling of the lower limbs – a fact to which the mother attached no importance. When I first saw him he was in bed, and the swelling had been on the gradual increase. I found the lad in a condition of extensive anasarca, the action of the heart very irregular. The urine was only a few ounces in twenty-four hours; sg. 1024; full of albumin and containing granular and hyaline casts. The boy during all this time, a period of nine months of treatment, insisted that he was well.
The sg. of the urine rose as high as 1030, and for a period of eight months the albumin averaged throughout from a third to a sixth. From that time on it decreased from one-fifth to one-twenty-fifth, and during the last five or six days it disappeared entirely. I began treatment by restricting his diet – much to the boy’s chagrin – keeping him to milk and water, jelly, bread and butter, sweet potatoes and peptonized milk toast. Digitalis and, later on, Ferrum continually,