It is very frequently valuable in acute diseases when the carefully selected remedy fails to act on account, probably, of constitutional disease; a few does of Sulphur will temporarily modify the condition so that the indicated remedy can antidote the acute trouble.
Chorea.
Neuralgia of various sorts, sometimes periodic.
Chlorosis.
Marasmus.
General effects of the suppression of eruptions.
Various forms of scrofulous diseases.
It is peculiarly indicated for people who have very red lips and redness of the other orifices of the body, often with soreness and burning.
It is particularly suited to people with light complexions.
Frequently indicated for diseases which alternate with some phase of skin trouble, especially when there is a general disagreeable odor of the body, general aggravation from bathing and aversion to it.
Suitable for people who have harsh, rough skins, whose hair is course, but who are weak and liable to eruptions.
Lithaemia, some of its various aspects, indicated by its numerous characteristic symptoms.
The well-known disposition of the Sulphur patient is irritability, sometimes alternating with mental indolence.
Melancholia, with sadness, absentmindedness, sometimes a sense of disgrace.
Melancholia after labor.
Religious melancholia, particularly associated with abdominal plethora.
Neuralgic headaches, with sense of congestion or tightness, < warmth.
Congestive headaches, with heaviness; there are apt to be heavy pressure and heat on the vertex, associated with abdominal symptoms.
Pulsating headache, < stooping and moving (Bry.).
Tendency to hydrocephalus in children, with stupor, suppressed urine and diarrhoea.
In hydrocephalus it is to be compared with Apis, especially in the retrocession of eruptions.
Tubercular hydrocephalus.
Meningitis, secondary stage.
The fontanelles close very late in sickly, scrofulous children.
Eruptions on the head, usually dry, bleeding easily, burning and sore, sometimes cracking; general relief from scratching.
Falling of the hair, with great dryness and soreness of the scalp, excessive itching in the evening when warm in bed.
Blepharitis, with itching and burning.
Eczema of the lids.
Styes and tarsal tumors.
Ulcerations of the lids, which are very red and burning.
Conjunctivitis, from foreign bodies, after Aconite.
Catarrhal conjunctivitis.
Trachoma, acute and chronic, with sharp pains like splinters.
Pustular inflammation of conjunctiva and cornea, always with great photophobia, sharp pain, etc., < bathing; ulcers abscesses.
Keratitis, parenchymatosa.
Kerato-iritis.
Iritis, sometimes syphilitic, often in rheumatics.
Retinitis.
Opacities of the vitreous.
Asthenopia.
In all the eye troubles of Sulphur there are photophobia, nightly aggravation, sharp, stinging pains, like splinters of glass, and great dread of having any water touch the eye and face.
Cataract.
Deafness, with a variety of inflammations in external and middle ear, and perhaps also in the internal ear.
Catarrhs of various sorts, according to the symptoms above.
Facial neuralgia, involving especially r. side of face and head, < night.
(Upper lip more affected. ).
Tonsillitis.
Chronic catarrh of the pharynx (see symptoms above).
Engorgement of the liver, with piles, constipation, bad taste, feeling of fulness, with soreness over the stomach and abdomen.
Incarcerated flatulence in l. side, and constipation.
Colic, with haemorrhoids.
Abdominal dropsy.
In abdominal complaints Sul. follows well after Nux.
Peritonitis
Colitis, with soreness along the transverse colon, < beding forward.
Heavy weight and dragging in the hypogastric region, has to stoop over when walking.
Dysentery, subacute, with burning, tenesmus not violent, but persistent.
Diarrhoea in great variety; stools are generally thin, watery, sometimes mucous, white or green, sometimes with bloody streaks, sometimes undigested, generally very fetid; nearly always < early in morning in bed; the necessity urgent and frequently without pain.
In the chronic diarrhoea of scrofulous children we may find aversion to meat, tendency to stuppor, with cold sweat, generally disagreable odor of the body, with aversion to washing.
Valuable for habitual constipation, especially when the rectum is irritable and dry, frequent ineffectual desire for stool in the rectum, with piles, soreness and burning at the anus, often with congestive headache, engorged liver, etc.
Catarrh of the bladder, burning micturition, urine contains mucus.
Painful ineffectual efforts to urinate, with retention.
Nocturnal enuresis.
Haematuria.
Chronic gonorrhoea, with burning and smarting during micturition.
Chronic nephritis.
Hydrocele.
Pruritus of the vulva, with burning and stinging; with miliary eruption, < heat of bed.
Prolapsus uteri, with aching across the sacrum, constipation.
Various form of uterine inflammations, called for by general indications.
Suppressed menstruation, with congestive headache and cold feet.
Scanty menstruation, with burning heat in hands and soles at night, weight on top of the head, etc.
Dysmenorrhoea, pains running from the groins to the back.
Anteversion, uterus presses on the bladder, < walking.
Leucorrhoea, corrosive, yellow, menstrual flow corrosive (see Kreos.).
Aphonia.
Cough is usually dry day and night, < lying down, especially at night.
Larnygeal and bronchial catarrh, with attacks of suffocation.
Whooping cough (it is said to “kill” the disease if burned in the room or house).
Chronic asthma, with suffocative fits in the forepart of the night, and with burning in the chest.
Valuable in the later stage of pneumonia, when the inflammatory process fails to resolve, the lung continues dull and the cough dry, patient begins to have fever at night, hot hands and feet and hot head; a few doses of Sulphur will then generally cause the cough to loosen and the hepatization to resolve.
In hydrothorax it follow Bry. well.
In the earliest stage of tuberculosis, need of fresh air, feet and head hot, hands and feet burn at night, palpitation, atonic dyspepsia, with need to eat at 11 A. M., etc.
It seems as though the blood rushed to the heart, causing a gasping and need of fresh air, heart feels too large.
Sometimes useful in cardiac dropsies.
Spinal irritations, with suppression of the menses or haemorrhoids, with dry heat; also with weakness of the chest and stomach, and sleepness.
Has been used for so-called congestions of the spinal cord.
Synovitis, especially when there is considerable exudation, particularly in the knee.
Rheumatic gout, especially beginning in the feet and extending upward, with burning heat in feet at night.
Intertrigo, acne, eczema, herpes, in short, all forms of skin eruptions, generally < bathing, associated with burning itching, temporarily relieved by scratching, with the peculiar characteristics of the drug.
It is indicated in various types of fever, idiopathic or symptomatic; in the malarial types there is tendency to torpor, with nocturnal aggravation; heat of the head, with cold feet, or heat of the palms and soles at night.
In eruptive fevers the eruption is partial and scanty; the tongue is usually dry and red at the tip and edges (compare Rhus t.).