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Materia Medica Viva Volume 12 – page 2666

day after the injury, difficult mobility of the lower jaw became ap- parent, although the slight wound had healed. At the evening of the tenth day, complete tetanus had developed in the child.
The child received at once Hypericum, which I gave in the first deci- mal dilution, two drops every hour. Already, on the next morning, the child having not slept the whole night through and having, from every half to one hour, very violent tetanic convulsions, it appeared somewhat quieter. During the day, tetanic convulsions were less, of shorter duration and less violent than those of the former night. The next night was passed sleeplessly, and shortly before midnight another very violent spasmodic attack, lasting over twenty minutes, appeared, being the last which he had. On the morning of the twelfth day the child was already able to open its teeth a few lines. The night from the twelfth to the thirteenth day passed favorably and the pa- tient slept well. On the morning of the thirteenth day the child nearly recovered; it could again chew solid food and was completely well, there only remaining a difficult mobility of the lower jaw, which, however disappeared in the course of the fourteenth and fifteenth days. Since then, I have always given Hypericum with sure results at the first signs of trismus as well as in completely developed tetanus. Lutze
Tetanus
At 9 a.m. , on the 20th of February, I was called in haste to the of- fice of a neighboring dentist. On arrival I found him applying ice to the head of a lady about 32 years of age, who laid back in his chair perfectly rigid. Noting that the pulse and respiration were normal, I asked the history of the case. He said that the lady had had some toothache the night before and was sleepless from the pain; that she came in and he extracted the molar without an anaesthetic, and that after once expectorating in the cuspidor at the arm of the chair, she had sunk back on the head – rest, her jaws became rigid, and with a shudder she became as she then was, perfectly rigid in every muscle; thus she remained for an hour, in spite of breathings of ether and chloroform, which had only slight and very temporary effect in relax- ation. While we talked, her body slowly rose into opisthotonous, and