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Materia Medica Viva Volume 12 – page 2765

with uterine haemorrhage, which was of a bright red color, which came away in gushes, which commenced with a fainty nausea, with some retching; face bloodless; pulse small and quick, 120; feet cold and clammy; abdomen hot; clammy perspiration on the face; sick- ening headache; aching over the whole head; heavy ache through the small of the back; aggravated by motion; sore aching through the front of the chest; spasmodic spells of coughing, which aggravated the haemorrhage, which would come in gushes; a stuffed – up feel- ing in the head (probably from crying); heavy pressure through the lower abdomen; and before one of the gushes would have a consid- erable griping in the uterine region; gloomy and despondent; knew that she would bleed to death; thought that she felt the best when she kept perfectly quiet, but could not remain so; flow aggravated by her moving, which would also cause a gush to pass off, and that would make her more gloomy and restless.
Ipecac 10M in water, one teaspoonful every hour until four doses had been taken, or, as soon as the haemorrhage seemed to get low, to take a powder of Sac – lac. At the fourth dose the active haemor- rhage ceased, and the Sac – lac. was taken; the next day there was a slight discharge, which grew gradually less, and did not entirely cease until the third day; and so far there has been no further trouble in that line.
There is a large number of remedies that have a bright red discharge from the uterus; but so far as I know, none of them have the peculiar characteristics of Ipecac. It seems to stand out very prominently in all of its characteristics, and cannot be easily mistaken for any other remedy. One very peculiar characteristic is that the flow in active haemorrhage is the peculiar gushing, which could be compared to that of a pump when the handle is vigorously worked; the stream does not cease, but at every pulsation of the heart there is a peculiar gush, which is not credited to any other remedy, so far as I am aware; and then the blood does not easily coagulate, but remains fluid for sometime, especially when active uterine haemorrhage takes place.
J. R. Haynes