Hepar is very famous for suppurations and long – standing discharges. Connective tissue and glands are affected producing ten- dency to suppuration. This tendency is very characteristic and has been a strong guiding symptom of this remedy. The patient is often lean and has a tendency to enlargement of glands. Suppuration of axillary and inguinal glands, of soft parts, of joints with profuse sweats day and night, of bones which even take on necrosis and caries, of ulcers, of fistulous tracts, of exanthemsis characteristic of this remedy. The glands of the neck, axilla, groin and the mammary glands swell, become hard with stitching pain, then inflamed with redness and finally they suppurate, discharge and heal slowly. The discharge is scanty, bloody, corroding, smelling like old cheese. The pains are worse at night and by exposure to cold. The lymphatic glands can be generally hard and chronically enlarged without suppuration, until a cold comes and some particular gland may suppurate. The skin over the abscess is highly inflamed, hard, hot and swollen.
Kent says: ‘’Hepar has served a valuable purpose in its ability to establish suppuration around foreign bodies. For instance, a foreign body is under the skin or is somewhere unknown. Perhaps it is the tip end of a projectile after the projectile itself has been taken away, or under the nail a splinter is forming suppuration. It is so small that it is hardly observed and it is supposed often that the splinter has been entirely removed, but an inflammatory condition starts up’’. Silica is another remedy capable of establishing inflammation and suppuration and removes little foreign bodies that cannot be located.
However he points out the careful use of this remedy in conditions such as tuberculosis: Deposits of a tubercular character are often located in a place that they can easily be suppurated out, and the action of the remedy on them would be the same as a foreign body so you should be careful and not give Hepar too often, or too high, in patients that have encysted tubercle in the lungs .
Hepar is a very chilly remedy. The patient has no resistance to cold and all the complaints are aggravated in the cold. These pa-