Cases requiring Iod., when not febrile, are apt to have great appetite, but rapid emaciation.
It is indicated in numerous wasting diseases in scrofulous patients.
Mollities ossium.
Lymphatic tumors in various parts.
The mental condition of the Iod. patient is generally one of despondency, but during fevers and wasting diseases we often meet with excessive irritability and sensitiveness, much like that found under Sul.
Persistent headaches, with vertigo on active exertion, or congestive headaches with vertigo in old people.
Tubercular meningitis.
A valuable remedy in inflammation of the iris, especially if of syphilitic origin.
Chronic deafness, with adhesions in the middle ear or granular enlargement; deafness, with chronic catarrh of the Eustachian tube, inflammation of the tonsils, roaring in ears, etc.
A very valuable remedy in acute fluent coryza, the discharge is hot, the nose becomes sore, headache at root of nose and over frontal sinuses, the attack is attended with fever, sneezing, etc. (compare Ars.).
In subacute and chronic catarrhs, discharge fetid, nose swollen and painful (Nat. m., Aur.).
Acute inflammation of the tonsils, with hoarse cough and deafness, the Eustachian tube seems to be especially involved.
Ulceration of the throat and mouth, syphilitic or mercurial, with swollen glands, aggravation from warmth.
Very rarely indicated in any stage of diphtheria.
A large number of cases of goitre have been cured by the internal administration of Iod., and many cases of goitre have been dissipated and followed by alarming pulmonary symptoms from the external application to the goitre.
Valuable in mumps.
Enlargement of the spleen, with salivation.
Disease of the pancreas, with salivation, vomiting and profuse watery or frothy stools; the cases reported are both acute and chronic; in the chronic form there is constipation; in some of these cases there is a depressed, irritable mood.
Numerous cases of mesenteric disease, glandular enlargement, emaciation, irregular stool, enormous appetite.
Jaundice, with cirrhotic liver, clay-colored stools, tenderness over the region of the liver, especially after the abuse of mercury.
Chronic exhausting, diarrhoea, stools frothy, whitish.
Fatty diarrhoea from disease of the pancreas.
Diabetes, with canine hunger.
Incontinence of urine in old people, with senile degeneration of the prostate.
Enlargement of testicles, with pain extending to abdomen.
Many cases of hydrocele have been cured by the internal administration of the drug.
Amenorrhoea.
Uterine haemorrhage after every stool, with atrophy of the mammae, aggravation from warmth.
Chronic excoriating leucorrhoea, with atrophy of the mammae, goitre, induration of the cervix, etc.
Chronic inflammationof the ovaries, with thick, yellow, burning leucorrhoea.
Many cases of ovarian cysts.
Chronic metritis, with intense pain, nervousness, constant urging to urinate, heat and dryness of the vagina, etc.
Cancer of the uterus, with profuse haemorrhages, corrosive yellow discharge, ravenous appetite, etc.
A characteristic is a wedgelike pain from r. ovary to uterus.
In croup, inflammation of the larynx and trachea, with hard croupy cough, difficult breathing and fever indicate the drug.
A large number of cases of “membranous” croup have been cured by the lower dilutions; our experience is that it is indicate in cases in the early stage with more or less fever, with dry skin and a very dry cough, great difficulty in respiration; it follows closely after Acon.; if Acon. has been given and the patient is not improving, or if Acon. has relieved only the restlessness and extreme anxiety but not the cough, the patient is still dry and hot and the cough is still croupy, then give Iod.; it is, however, rarely useful after febrile excitement has disappeared or if the patient perspire freely; (this stage, together with the attacks of suffocative cough, indicates Brom. instead of Iod.).
In catarrhal laryngitis the larynx is sore to touch, the cough is dry and croupy, and there is an excoriating watery discharge from the nose (compare with Alliumcepa).
Whooping cough, with emaciation and with enormous appetite.
Chronic laryngeal catarrh, with dry croupy cough, sawing respiration, soreness of the upper part of the chest.
It is one of our most valuable remedies for pneumonia; in these cases it must be carefully differentiated on the one side from Acon. and on the other from Bry.; it lacks the anxiety of Acon. and the sticking pains of Bry., but it has the high fever of each; like Bry., it is indicated when hepatization has taken place (contraindicating Acon.) and the cough is dry; it was formerly supposed that left-sided pneumonia indicated Iod., but it is now known that it is equally useful in pneumonia of either side; it is particularly useful in the pneumonia of scrofulous subjects, especially in pneumonia at the apex.
Phthisis pulmonaris, with rough voice, dry cough and night-sweats.
Valvular insufficiency, with periodical attacks of pain about the heart following typhoid, dilatation of the r. side, etc.
Pericarditis complicating pneumonia.
Hypertrophy of the heart.
Articular rheumatism, sometimes with hot shiny swelling of the joints (Bry.), with great swelling, pain, etc.
Articular rheumatism complicated with pericarditis; in these cases there is generally nocturnal aggravation.
Wandering rheumatism, which even seems to attackthe meninges of the brain and finally attacks the heart.
Subacute inflammationof the knee, with fistulous openings discharging bloody serum, nightly boring pains.
Housemaid’s knee.
Scrofulous affections ofthe joints (recently treated with marked success by injections of Iodoform).
Affections of the joints or of the articular extremities of the bones, following mercury or syphilis.
Gonorrhoeal rheumatism.