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Materia Medica Viva Volume 3 – page 645

A female child, six and a half years old, born of great financial wealth and luxury but of unhealthy parentage. To make a short summary of the case, I will say at three years of age the patient contracted Scarlet Fever. The case was a long, protracted illness, being complicated by an Otitis Media, the Drumheads ruptured. About six weeks after the child was operated on for an acute mastoid, on the left side and about two months following, the right mastoid had to undergo radical operation. The wounds did not heal for nearly seven months and then the ear discharge came back, being temporarily stopped for a few weeks at a time, until I saw the case, which was about three and a half years after the beginning of the illness.
The present status of the case was a child suffering with a high grade of malnutrition with marked debility, anaemic, partially deaf, with a stinking, whitish, watery, purulent discharge from both ears, not very profuse. According to indications, as interpreted by me, I prescribed arsenic album, hepar-s., silicea, sulphur, psorinum, with improvement of some of the conditions but the discharge, though much less, continued. But the patient’s general condition was much better. After a careful study of the case, which was an offensive odor of the diseased bone, a white, watery, purulent discharge from the ear, deafness, aggravation at night, I prescribed asafoetida (30). This was April 1, 1923. I raised the potencies from time to time and by June 1st there was absolutely no odor and by Julylst we had dry ears and they have been well ever since, now about three years. The child is now enjoying perfect health, with the exception of the impaired hearing, after surgery had done its best.
Proceedings of the Forty-seventh Annual Session of the International Hahnemannian Association p.296
In regard to mothers’ milk I have had a little experience that may be of interest. One of my patients, the mother of several children, told me that with the first baby the milk failed after six months. The second child she could supply with milk for only four months, and so it kept on diminishing every time. I was called to see her with the fourth child. I found that her mother had been troubled the same way. She was dark, thin; weighed about one hundred and fifteen pounds; she complained of peculiar tingling, creepy sensations in her breast, extremely nervous. I gave her a few doses of Asafoetida, with the result that in two or three days the sensation ceased. I told her to continue to make the effort to nurse her baby. In two weeks the milk was normal in flow and quantity. She had never until that time had milk in both breasts. I would have liked to know what her history was in after pregnancies but she moved out of my neighbourhood and I did not learn. I have used Asafoetida a number of times since but not with such marked success. It is indicated when the milk is thin, poor, bluish and scanty.
Belle Gurney, MD Proceedings of the Twenty-Third Annual Session of the International Hanemannian Association, p.96.