Threatening pyaemia; blood-poisoning, with debilitating sweats.
Enlarged scrofulous glands.
Eruptions and ulcerations in syphilitic patients.
Enlarged mesenteric glands, with diarrhoea and cholera infantum.
Scrofulous opthalmia and tendency to ulceration of lower lid.
Parenchymatous keratitis.
Otitis, with fetid corrosive discharge.
Catarrhal inflammation of the throat, nose and middle ear; swelling of the tissues within the nose; hypertrophied condition of the opening of the Eustachian tube and increasing deafness.
Chronic irritability of the middle ear following scarlet fever; thickening of tympanum.
Coryzas, burning, acrid.
Hay fever.
Catarrh, burning sensation, tubercular diathesis.
Epithelioma.
Later stage of diphtheria, with evidence of putrefactive degeneration.
Diphtheritic croup.
Leucorrhoea, bloody, yellow, with hard swelling of the labia, followed by indurations in the axilla.
Mammary tumor, with retracted nipple, sensitive.
Pulmonary tuberculosis, with cavities in lungs, hectic fever, etc.
Chronic catarrh pneumonia, with mucu-purulent expectoration, dyspnoea, night-sweat, etc.
Chronic pneumonia, with abscess in the lung, hectic fever.
Acute catarrhal pneumonia, with caseous degeneration and fibrosis.
Fibroid degeneration of the lung, with inflammation and haemorrhage; commencing cavity.
In general, many cases of pulmonary disease, pneumonia, subacute and chronic, and various forms of phthisis pulmonaris have been cured, the special indications being great debility, night-sweats either after the cavity is formed or when a cavity threatens to form , with a decidedly cachectic condition of the patient.
It seems probable that in the Iodide of Arsenic we have found a remedy most closely allied to manifestations of tuberculosis; it will be indicated by a profound prostration, rapid, irritable pulse, recurring fever and sweats, emaciation, tendency to diarrhoea, etc.
It is especially valuable in nontubercular phthisis.
A number of cases of weakness of the heart have been reported as relieved, and it undoubtedly acts similarly to Arsenic in such cases; unfortunately nearly all the cases reported have been treated with a combination of other drugs with this one, so that perhaps as much credit should be given to the other drugs as to the Arsen.iod.
Eczema of the beard, watery oozing, great itching, < washing.
Night-sweats of phthisis and of many other debilitating diseases.