Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 11 – page 2543

patient with asthma which had been suppressed by pluralistic homeopathy. The asthma had disappeared and such a state as I have described had supervened. This woman was almost totally psychotic. She would pace about saying, “Save me, save me!” and moaning and agonising.
Later the asthma returned, and the mental pathology subsided. She was travelling and was far from her physician, so she went to another homeopath who treated her asthma superficially (with potentized cortisone because she’d taken cortisone previously). The asthma was again suppressed, and shortly thereafter the patient committed suicide. We can readily conclude in this case that the Helleborus state she had previously been a victim of, returned with a vengeance.
Such a state is not one that can be tolerated for very long. It is not a matter of making a deliberate decision to commit suicide; it is a question of whether or not one can tolerate such suffering for very long. As mentioned, these states can occur in such conditions as meningitis, encephalitis, and other conditions in which the brain’s blood supply is compromised. They can also occur as a conse¬quence of an emotional shock.
In cases of brain and meningeal inflammation and in high fevers, we can see the restlessness of Helleborus translated into rolling of the head on the pillow, but in Helleborus this head rolling has to occur in conjunction with an anxiety that can be seen in the eyes of the patient, adult or child. Due to anxiety they can not remain still for a moment, but because they are unable to move the body, they roll the head from side to side, and repeat this motion constantly.
In Helleborus headaches there is usually pain in the occiput. Closing the eyes ameliorates the pain. ‘Pain in the occiput, better closing the eyes’ is a keynote of Helleborus. Also, there is a fullness in the head while trying to read; this uncomfortable fullness prevents them from comprehending what they have read.