CASES
The homeopath D. M., bom 1939, treated himself for the following sxs:
Very annoying pains left shoulder, frontal part, scapula and upper arm.
The pains occur in paroxysms "like labor-pains" and are shooting, tearing.
The pains are especially strong when he is sitting, holding a book in his hands. But they also come from motion of the whole body in bed.
The pains start in the morning, soon after waking, and can be felt during the day mostly.
He has dreams of flying over the rooftops of a city, looking down and moving his huge wings slowly.
Xanthoxylum has a sx which comes closest to these dreams of flying: "Dreams about flying over rooftops of houses". He took this remedy for some days but didn’t feel any improvement, nor indeed had he felt any improvement with other previous remedies. For this reason he had been changing remedies every few days.
In desperation he now went through all the remedies having produced dreams of flying and soon found the following sxs under Asclepias tuberosa*.
"Shooting from left side of chest to left shoulder, which was painful on motion."
"Pains in left shoulder a few seconds after rising in the morning."
As he read this he saw at once that this modality fit exactly, and his pains actually occured only some seconds after rising and not soon after waking. He now took Asclepias.
The action of this remedy was very impressive. While he had been disturbed by the pain and had never felt any convincing improvement, except for slight changes in intensity – this leading him to try different remedies – he now felt that he had the patience to wait for the progression of the therapeutic action. The pains in the left shoulder abated and after 5 days there were transitory pains in the right foot, similar to previous ones. This showed another sx of Asclepias which is pains occuring diagonally, eg. left arm and right leg, or left wrist and right shoulder.
* Dr. A. Savary, Journal de la Societe Gallicane de Medecine homeopathique, deuxieme serie, tome III, Paris, 1858, page 721. Reported by Dr.G.v.Keller Muhistr.3, 7400 Tubingen.
Two or three years ago the patient began to feel an acute soreness, attended with sharp griping pains in the lower part of the abdomen whenever he indulged freely in smoking, and the soreness and pain increased to such an extent that he was at times unable to walk or ride in a carriage, without great suffering, and the bowels were so irritable that he had five or six stools per day.
The soreness and pain seemed to be in the peritoneal lining of the lower part of the abdomen, and over the fundus of the bladder, but not in the rectum, or bladder, or urethra. There were no symptoms of dysentery or diarrhoea.