HYPERICUM CASES
Injury of dental nerves. Traumatic intercostal neuralgia. Traumatic neuralgia of shoulder and arms. Injury of thumb. Bite of a rat. Trau- matic cerebro-spinal meningitis. Tetanus. Injury of head. Hayfever with asthma. Nervous shock. Pain in amputed leg. Lymphangitis. Tendonitis. Asthma. Appendicitis. Injury of the coccyx. Concussion of the brain. Progressive muscular atrophy. Epilepsy.
Injury of dental nerves
I was called to see Mrs. M., who was reported as suffering very much with her head.
Upon reaching the house I found her in bed with her head bandaged and from all appearances suffering intensely. She is a woman of strongly marked nervous development and one whom I had often seen during attacks of physical pain, appeared quite unlike herself. As stated above, her head was bound up and she lay in bed with her eyes covered, her hands pressed to her head, moaning with the pain and at intervals of a few minutes would writhe and shudder and shriek from the intensity of her suffering. At first she seemed not to know that I had entered the room and made no response to my greeting and interrogation as to how she came to have such a severe attack. After a few minutes she ejaculated, Oh, Doctor, I fear we have reached the limit of your skill; it is terrible. What can you do to relieve me? She was suffering from the results of operations upon her teeth, she having made several visits to the dentist within the two or three days previous to the time of my call. She told me she had suffered more or less since going to the dentist, but after her last visit that day she had experienced such an increase in the pain that she could bear it no longer. Regarding this as pretty surely a case of injured dental nerves, I prepared some Hypericum cm in water and administered one dose. In a very few minutes relief came and at the end of fifteen minutes the patient was chatting pleasantly about her experience at the dentist and what he was trying to accomplish in performing some difficult work upon her teeth. Remaining a little longer I found no return of the severe pain and upon taking my leave