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Materia Medica Viva Volume 11 – page 2565

a slight shock, as the shutting of a door, arrested the paroxysms at once, and then shortened them a good deal. Prescribed Hell. n. cured in two or three days.
Clarke – Dictionary of Practical materia medica
Case of anxiety
Wife of a farmer, Mrs. G.T., aged 58. Exceedingly anxious, with great melancholy. She feared she was going to die. The back part of the head feels sore, as if bruised. Face is pale, and somewhat swollen. Small, white ulcers on the upper surface of the tongue.
At night, when the lamps are lighted, she cannot see well; the light hurts her eyes. Nausea and occasional vomiting of what she has eaten and drank. Stomach is slightly swollen and feels full. Abdomen swollen, with colic-like pains. Stools frequent, white jelly-like, and accompanied with tenesmus. Frequent urging to urinate, with scanty discharge, but no pain. Breathing difficult, as if the chest were constricted. Creeping chills up and down the back in the afternoon, followed by fever lasting three or four hours. Very little thirst. Sweat scanty.
All the symptoms worse from 4 to 8 p.m. Temperature 103°F; pulse rapid, small. Of course the time of aggravation made me think at once of Lycopodium. But Colocynthis and Helleborus have aggravation from 4 to 8 p.m. After comparing these three drugs I decided to use Helleborus. I put a few pellets of the 200th in half a glass of water, and ordered one teaspoonful to be given every four hours. The second day after this, her husband came to my office for more medicine, as his wife was much better.
I sent her six powders of s.l, to be taken as the other was. About ten days more Mrs. T. herself came to the office to see me, feeling better than she had before in several months.
Hahnemannian Advocate – 1896, vol. XXXV, Chicago, No. 7