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Materia Medica Viva – Volume 3 page 580

Aggravation lying on left side; from anger.
d. The heart misses beats.
e. Dyspnea worse on excitement… or from anger.
f. Frontal and occipital headache.
g. Bad taste in A.M.
h. No inclination to sweat or cold sweats.
i. Jerks and starts in sleep.
j. Sore over kidneys.
Arsenicum MM, a single dose, cured.
4. Oct 18th. Miss S. had an attack of intermittent fever the previous summer for which she received Quinine. The disease appeared again, and again disappeared under other non-homeopathic treatment. She presented the following symptoms: Chill every other day anticipating three hours, without shivering, but creeping coldness mingled with heat. With the chill, thirst, nausea, stretching, headache, frequent urination, coldness, especially of the feet and hands, nose and knees; cold first in the arms. Heat mostly in upper body with nausea, headache and coldness of the feet in the early part; also thirst and stitches in the stomach near the end of heat. Heat began in cheeks. Sweat comes on in sleep and is profuse, most on chest with headache. Heat, creeping chills and sweat at same time. In the apyrexia – nausea.
Arsenicum 45m. Fincke, a teaspoonful of a solution every two hours in the apyrexia cured permanently in ten days, there being a steady decline in severity and a lengthening of the interval till the chills ceased.
5. A stout German woman of 45, who is on her feet working hard most of the time, bruised her shin four months ago. Shortly afterwards a sore appeared where she was injured, which has persisted in spite of strapping and ointments, discharging a thin, bloody, irritating fluid. Severe biting, burning pain, leg very hot, worse in the afternoons, worse about midnight, waking her every night, worse on soaking in hot water, worse on elevating the leg. Is very restless, does not expect to get well. Has varicose veins for years.
She was given Arsenicum lm, 9m and Cm, and a horse bandage was used to give support. In three monts the ulcer was healed and the pain was gone.
The second patient, also a widow, was eighty-seven years old. A suspicious crusty scab, about a fourth of an inch in diameter, had formed on the right side of her nose over the lower margin of the cartilage and another, smaller one, on the right upper lip. They had been developing for three months; there was a red areolar about each. Some itching, especially of the one on the lip. When scabs exfoliated, slight bleeding. Glandular enlargement at the angle of the jaw.
There was an appalling paucity of symptoms, as she felt quite well, and the nose and lip lesions were not sufficient upon which to prescribe. I remembered that during the seven or eight years I had taken care of her that she had had two attacks of lobar pneumonia, in both of which Arsenicum proved curative and therefore she was given one dose of Arsenicum 50m; this was repeated in a month. She then went away for the summer but reported, in about six weeks, that the lesion on the lip was healed and that on the nose improving. Later she wrote there was more