Haemorrhoids. Vomiting. Vomiting during pregnancy. Left sided sciatica. Fear of disease and burglars. Masturbation. Mental troubles. Prolapsus of rectum. Prurigo. Anal fissure. Measles. Headache. Sad- ness. Whooping cough. Silent grief. Hypertension. Spinal affection.Periodical headache. Headache. Hollow, spasmodic cough. Eructations. Convulsions from tapeworm. Dysmenorrhea. Convulsions during pregnancy. Sciatica. Epilepsy. Spasmodic affection. Excessive perspiration. Constipation. Nodule in left breast. Hiccough. Tuberculosis. Diphtheria. Dyspepsia. Exophthalmus. Ulcer of cornea. Ciliary neuralgia. Headache. Apoplexy. Mania. Gastric fever. Sadness after suppression of menses. Spasms and mental derangement after a fright. Anxiety and restlessness. Organic heart disease.
The plague
The recent outbreak of plague in the East has recalled the fact that Ignatia has earned a reputation as curative even in that disease. Ho- nigberger relates that it was a common plan when plague was raging in Constantinople for people to wear a bean attached to a string as a prophylactic; he administered minute doses of it to patients af- fected with plague with the best success. Later on he himself caught the disease in India, and cured himself with the same remedy
(H. W., xxxiii. 51).
J.H. Clarke, Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica
Intermittent fever
A lady who had a constantly returning ague each spring for several years, which was annually suppressed by large doses of Quinine, consulted me after a second chill. She was faithless in regard to my small doses, so my cure can hardly be said to be one of the imagina- tion. The symptom that governed me in my prescription was, thirst- lessness in the hot stage, and thirst while the chill was on. I gave her Ignatia and she had no more chills.
G.N. Brigham
Intermittent fever
J.C. , a young man, had been about ten months under different treat