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Apis mellifica
apis

POISON OF THE HONEY BEE APIUM VIRUS

 

Adapted to the strumous constitution; glands enlarged, indurated; scirrhous or open cancer.

 

Women, especially widows; children and girls who, though generally careful, become awkward, and let things fall while handling them (Bov.).

 

Bad effects of acute exanthema imperfectly developed or suppressed (Zinc.); measles, scarlatina, urticaria.

 

Ailments from jealousy, fright, rage, vexation, bad news.

 

Irritable; nervous; fidgety; hard to please.

 

Weeping disposition; cannot help crying; discouraged, despondent (Puls.).

 

Sudden, shrill, piercing screams from children while waking or sleeping (Hellebore).

 

Oedema; bag-like, puffy swelling UNDER THE EYES (over the eyes, Kali c.) ; of the hands and feet, dropsy, without thirst (with thirst, Acet. ac, Apoc).

 

Extreme sensitiveness to touch (Bell., Lach.).

 

Pain: burning, stinging, sore; suddenly migrating from one part to another (Kali bi., Lac c, Puls.).

 

Thirstlessness; in anasarca; ascites (Acetic acid, but face more waxy and great thirst).

 

Incontinence of urine, with great irritation of the, parts; can scarcely retain the urine a moment, and when passed scalds severely; frequent, painful, scanty, bloody.

 

Constipation: sensation in abdomen as if something tight would break if much effort were used.

 

Diarrhoea: of drunkards; in eruptive diseases, especially if eruption be suppressed; involuntary from every motion, as though ANUS WAS WIDE OPEN (Phos.).

 

Affects right side; enlargement or dropsy of right ovary; right testicle.

 

Intermittent fever; chill 3 P. MV WITH THIRST, always (Ign.); < warm room and from external heat (Thuja, 3 A. M. and at 3 P. M.).

 

 

 

Relations

Complementary: Nat. mur.

Disagrees, when used either before or. after Rhus.

Ars. and Puls, follow Apis well.

Has cured scarlatina albuminuria after Canth., Dig., Hell, failed.

 

 

 

Aggravation

After sleeping (Lach.); closed, especially warmed and heated "rooms are intolerable; from getting wet (Rhus), but better from washing or moistening the part in cold water.

 

 

 

Amelioration

Open air; cold water or cold bathing; uncovering; pains by coughing, walking or changing position; when sitting erect.

 

 

 

 

 

(The Honey-Bee) Acts on cellular tissues causing oedema of skin and mucous membranes. The very characteristic effects of the sting of the bee furnish unerring indications for its employment in disease. Swelling or puffing up of various parts, OEDEMA, red rosy hue, stinging pains, soreness, intolerance of heat, and slightest touch, and afternoon aggravation are some of the general guiding symptoms. Erysipelatous inflammations, dropsical effusions and anasarca, acute, inflammation of kidneys, and other parenchymatous tissues are characteristic pathological states corresponding to Apis. Apis acts especially on outer parts, skin, coatings of inner organs, serous membranes. It produces serous inflammation with effusion, membranes of brain, heart, pleuritic effusion, etc. Extreme sensitiveness to touch and general soreness is marked. CONSTRICTED sensations. Sensation of stiffness and as of something torn off in the interior of the body. Much prostration.

 

Mind

Apathy, indifference, and unconsciousness. AWKWARD; DROPS THINGS READILY. Stupor, with sudden sharp cries and startings. Stupor alternating with erotic mania. Sensation of dying. Listless; cannot think clearly. Jealous, fidgety, hard to please. Sudden shrill, piercing screams. WHINING. TEARFULNESS. Jealously, fright, rage, vexation, grief. Cannot concentrate mind when attempting to read or study.

 

 

Head

Whole brain feels VERY TIRED. Vertigo with sneezing, worse on lying or closing eyes. Heat, throbbing, distensive pains, better on pressure, and worse on motion. Sudden stabbing pains. Dull, heavy sensation in occiput, as from a blow, extending to neck (better on pressure), accompanied with sexual excitement. Bores head into pillow and screams out.

 

 

Eyes

Lids SWOLLEN, red, OEDEMATOUS, everted, inflamed; burn and sting. Conjunctiva bright red, puffy. LACHRYMATION HOT. Photophobia. SUDDEN PIERCING PAINS. Pain around orbits. SEROUS EXUDATION, OEDEMA, AND SHARP PAINS. SUPPURATIVE INFLAMMATION OF EYES. Keratitis with INTENSE CHEMOSIS OF OCULAR CONJUNCTIVA. Staphyloma of cornea following suppurative inflammation. STYES, also prevents their recurrence.

 

 

Ears

External ear red, inflamed, sore; stinging pains.

 

 

Nose

Coldness of tip of nose. RED, SWOLLEN, inflamed, with sharp pains.

 

 

Face

Swollen, red, with piercing pain. Waxy, pale, Oedematous. Erysipelas with stinging burning oedema. Extends from right to left.

 

 

Mouth

Tongue fiery red, swollen, sore, and raw, with vesicles. Scalding in mouth and throat. Tongue feels scalded, red hot, trembling. Gums swollen. Lips swollen, especially upper. Membrane of mouth and throat glossy, as if varnished. RED, SHINING, AND PUFFY, like erysipelas. Cancer of the tongue. Throat. Constricted, stinging pains.UVULA SWOLLEN, saclike. Throat swollen, inside and out; tonsils swollen, PUFFY, FIERY RED. Ulcers on tonsils. FIERY RED MARGIN around leathery membrane. Sensation of fishbone in throat.

 

 

Stomach

Sore feeling. THIRSTLESS. Vomiting of food. CRAVING FOR MILK. (RHUS.)

 

 

Abdomen

SORE, BRUISED on pressure, when sneezing. EXTREMELY TENDER. Dropsy of abdomen. Peritonitis. Swelling in right groin.

 

 

Stool

Involuntary on every motion; ANUS SEEMS OPEN. Bloody, painless. Anus feels raw. Haemorrhoids, with stinging pain, after confinement. Diarrhoea watery, yellow;CHOLERA INFANTUM TYPE. Cannot urinate without a stool. Dark, fetid, worse after eating. Constipation; feels as if something would break on straining. Urine. Burning and soreness when urinating. Suppressed, loaded with casts; frequent and involuntary; stinging pain and strangury; SCANTY, HIGH COLORED. Incontinence. LAST DROPS burn and smart.

 

 

Female

Oedema of labia; relieved by cold water. Soreness and stinging pains; ovaritis; worse in RIGHT ovary. Menses suppressed, with cerebral and head symptoms, especially in young girls. Dysmenorrhoea, with severe ovarian pains. Metrorrhagia profuse, with heavy abdomen, faintness, stinging pain. Sense of tightness. Bearing-down, as if menses were to appear. Ovarian tumors, metritis with stinging pains. Great tenderness over abdomen and uterine region.

 

 

Respiratory

Hoarseness; DYSPNOEA, breathing hurried and difficult. Oedema of larynx. Feels AS IF HE COULD NOT DRAW ANOTHER BREATH. Suffocation; short, dry cough, suprasternal. Hydrothorax.

 

 

Extremities

Oedematous. Synovitis. Felon in beginning. Knee swollen, shiny, sensitive, sore, with stinging pain. Feet swollen and stiff. Feel too large. Rheumatic pain in back and limbs. Tired, bruised feeling. Numbness of hands and tips of fingers. Hives with intolerable itching. Oedematous swellings.

 

 

Skin

Swellings after bites; SORE, SENSITIVE. Stinging. Erysipelas, with sensitiveness and swelling, rosy hue. Carbuncles, with burning, stinging pain. (ARS.; ANTHRAC) Sudden puffing up of whole body.

 

 

Sleep

Very DROWSY. Dreams full of care and toil. Screams and SUDDEN STARTING DURING SLEEP.

 

 

Fever

AFTERNOON CHILL, WITH THIRST; WORSE ON MOTION AND HEAT. External heat, with smothering feeling. Sweat slight, with sleepiness. Perspiration breaks out and dries up frequently. Sleeps AFTER the fever paroxysm. After perspiration, nettle rash, also with shuddering.

 

 

Modalities

Worse, heat in any form; TOUCH; pressure; late in afternoon; after sleeping; in closed and heated rooms. Right side. BETTER, in open air, uncovering, and cold bathing.

 

 

Relationship

Complementary: NAT. MUR. The "chronic," APIS.; also BARYTA CARB., if lymphatics are involved. Inimical. RHUS. Compare: APIUM VIRUS (auto-toxaemia, with pus products); ZINC; CANTH.; VESPA; LACHESIS.

 

 

Dose

Tincture to thirtieth potency. In oedematous conditions the LOWER potencies. Sometimes action is slow; so several days elapse before it is seen to act, and then urine is increased. APIUM VIRUS, sixth trituration.

 

 

For this remedy, we have two names, according to the. manner in which the preparation is made. It is either APIS MELLIFICA, the honey-bearing bee, or APIUM VIRUS, the poison of bees. The original preparations of the remedy were made in this manner: A large white dish was placed under a bell jar, in which there was a perforation through which a stick was inserted. Several hundred bees were then placed beneath the jar. The stick was then moved about, and, irritating the bees, caused them to sting the jar and the dish. After a while, the bees were allowed to escape, and on the bell jar and plate were seen numerous specks. Alcohol was poured over these, and thus we obtained a powerful extract of the poison of the bee. This is Apium virus. Subsequently the whole bee was used. Triturations were made of the entire insect. Thus we obtain APIS MELLIFICA: The symptoms of the two preparations have not been separated. APIS MELLIFICA is a comparatively new remedy, and is an invaluable acquisition to our materia medica. In order to understand its symptomatology, let us look at its toxicology. Take, if you choose, a sting on the hand or finger as an illustration. Just after the sting, which causes a sharp sticking or burning pain, there commences, quite promptly, swelling of the part, which swelling at the start is extremely sore. The part feels as if it had been bruised or pounded. The swelling at first is of a rosy pinkish hue. It spreads very rapidly ; the pains become intense. They are of a burning, stinging, or shooting character, seldom throbbing. Heat of the part increases with the burning and stinging pains. This may end very speedily in resolution or it may go on. If it pursues the latter course, you will notice that this redness, this rosy appearance becomes more intense, in fact assumes an erysipelatous appearance. Still later, it changes its color and takes on a pale but bluish hue, the swelling pits on pressure showing that the parts are cedematous. After a while, if the condition of the system is such as to permit, gangrene of the part takes place. The inflammation produced by Apis is not then of a sthenic type. It is not, for instance, such as would be cured by ACONITE, quick, sudden swelling of the part coming on rapidly and ending in resolution; not such as would be cured by BELLADONNA, bright red swelling with throbbing pains, but ending either in resolution or suppuration; but IT IS such as goes on to destruction of tissue. In one case where the sting was on the hand, the patient suffered also from a carbuncle on the back of the neck.

 

Apis attacks the vital forces as is shown by the following characteristics of the drug: The patient feels strangely as if about to die and yet there is no fear of death, thus differing from ACONITE and ARSENICUM; the brain is tired as if gone to sleep; prostration even to faintness as after exertion ; the body feels bruised ; nervous trembling; great prostration as in diphtheria, even in the beginning of the disease; delirium Low and muttering; sensorial apathy ; a happy expression; tongue can hardly be protruded ; face expressive of anxiety as from visceral disease ; loss of consciousness especially in eruptive diseases; the mind is weakened; awkwardness, lets fall what she is carrying and laughs in a silly manner at the mishap.

 

Apis, may be employed in states of mind resembling hysteria. The fidgetiness, restlessness, excitability, and ill-timed laughing, together with fickleness at work, have led to its successful use for nervous girls. In addition, it has been observed that they are awkward, dropping things, and then laughing in a silly way at their clumsiness. The sexual passion is too active, and they are prone to jealousy.

 

The confusion of mind and unconsciousness just noted indicate the remedy in severe adynamic forms of disease, such as malignant scarlatina, diphtheria,, typhoid fever, etc. Also a complete stupor after apoplexy is said to have yielded to it when OPIUM failed.

 

In scarlatina, the fever runs high, and the attending restlessness is one of nervous agitation. Mouth and throat are very red, with blisters on the borders of the tongue; and swollen puffy fauces; burning stinging, and a scalded, raw feeling in mouth and throat. The skin pricks as from needles, the rash being interspersed with a miliary eruption. There is always puffiness of some part of the surface. Prostration is early. Urine scanty or suppressed. High fever and drowsiness.

 

In typhoid fever the delirium is of the muttering kind. The weakness is so great that the tongue is protruded with difficulty, and the muscles are so relaxed that the patient slides down in bed. The tongue is blistered, dry, cracked, and even ulcerated. Very important is the soreness of the swollen abdomen to touch.

 

In meningitis or in meningeal irritation, Apis holds a prominent position as a curative agent. It is often the remedy, no matter what the ailment, when shrill outcries in sleep lead to the suspicion of cerebral irritation. Such cases frequently begin with the nervous fidgetiness so characteristic of the bee-poison, and advance to more serious conditions. In tubercular meningitis, or in acute cerebral effusions, a suppressed or undeveloped eruption is a good guide to the choice of Apis.

 

We may profitably compare Apis here with: BELLADONNA, HELLEBORUS, ARSENICUM, BRYONIA, ZINC, SULPHUR, CUPRUM, GLONOINE, LACHESIS, RHUS, HYOSCYAMUS, NATRUM MUR., BOVISTA, etc.

 

BELLADONNA is doubtless frequently employed when Apis would suit better. A little care, however, will enable the practitioner to distinguish the fidgety nervousness of the latter from the more intense cerebral irritation of the former. The congestions of the former are more violent, with throbbing of the carotids, injected red eyes; and a drowsiness, broken by starts and frightened outcries. The adynamia is much less than in the Apis. If the disease is scarlatina, the rash is smooth and bright red, not miliary. The skin is hot and the face red, or in sorhe cases pale; but not pale and ©edematous as in Apis. The cervical glands may be swollen, but there is not the cellular infiltration, with an erysipelatous blush as in the bee-poison.

 

If there is meningeal irritation, Belladonna is needed when the symptoms are intense; Apis when the nervous agitation predominates, with the shrill cry, which betokens stabbing-piercing pains or excitement. In meningitis, Belladonna is decreasingly indicated as the symptoms of effusion increase; while Apis is increasingly indicated, so long as symptoms of irritation obtain and the cephalic cry is marked.

 

HELLEBORUS claims precedence when the irritation of Apis gives place to mental torpor, with want of reaction. The forehead is wrinkled, the pupils dilated, and the lower jaw tends to drop; the sopor is complete. Automatic motions of one arm and one leg; forehead is bathed in cold sweat. It may bring about reaction so that another remedy will cure. In typhoid fever, they differ widely. Apis though it has great weakness, apathy, and stupor, has a dry blistered tongue and exquisite soreness of the abdomen. Helleborus has complete sensorial apathy, dark, sooty nostrils, slow pulse, no response to touch or pressure.

 

BRYONIA bears some slight resemblances, especially as, like Apis, it may be needed for cerebral effusions following suppressed exanthemata. But the sensorium is benumbed, though the senses are not so perverted as in either Apis or Helleborus. There is a constant chewing motion ; face dark red, lips parched; when offered drink, it is taken hastily and impatiently. If the child is moved, it screams with pain. Later, when the sensorial depression amounts to sopor, Helleborus follows well, even if the chewing motion and hasty drinking continue. Apis follows, if sopor ensues with a more shrill cephalic cry than in either of the other remedies.

 

CUPRUM compares with Apis when meningitis results from a suppressed exanthem; but the symptoms are quite diverse. Copper causes loud screaming, followed by violent convulsions; the thumbs are clenched and the face is pale, with blue lips; eyeballs constantly rotating. If convulsions occur in the Apis case, they are less violent, consisting of restlessness and twitching of one-half of the body; the other, being lame, trembling.

 

Much more closely related in Suppressed eruptions, is SULPHUR. The two follow each other well.

 

GLONOINE, like Apis, has the cephalic cry, sensation as if the head was enormously expanded, etc. Spasmodic vomiting of cerebral origin is most prominent in the former, as is also intense congestion and throbbing.

 

ZINCUM produces cerebral irritation ; child awakes with fear, rolls the head ; cries out and starts in sleep. Constant fidgety motion of the feet. Anaemic children, too enervated to develop an exanthem. In typhoid states, the prostration is very great, with impending cerebral paralysis. Unconsciousness, blue hands and feet, with coldness, weak pulse, lower jaw dropped. Here the Oxide has been successfully employed.

 

RHUS TOX., though incompatible with Apis, has many similar symptoms. In scarlatina, for instance, both suit in adynamia, swollen throat, erysipelatous inflammation of the skin of the neck, miliary rash, drowsiness, oedema. In Rhus, however, the eruption is darker, the erysipelas ' dusky red, and there is great bodily restlessness—not the fidgetiness of Apis.

 

ARSENICUM is similar to Apis in many respects. Both have anxious change of place, fear of death, restlessness; great weakness. (See also in several instances anon.) But although irritability of mind is in both, it is more an anxiety and fear in Arsenic: more a nervous restlessness in Apis.

 

If they meet in cerebral affections, as possibly they may, especially in hydrocephaloid, Arsenic is to be selected by hot skin, pale and hot face. Child lies in a stupor, suddenly it twists its mouth and a jerk goes through the body; or the child lies as if dead, with half-open eyes, gum on the conjunctivae, and no response to touch of the eyelids.

 

HYOSCYAMUS and LACHESIS are similar in jealousy.

 

NATRUM MUR., BOVISTA, LACHES., AETHUSA, IGNATIA, NUX VOM., have awkwardness; the first is most similar.

 

I have already hinted that Apis might be of use in dropsies. The symptoms calling for it are briefly these. In general dropsies, we find it indicated by the peculiar appearances of the surface of the body. There is a sort of waxen hue to the skin ; the skin has a transparent look, with a whitish or perhaps a slightly yellowish tinge. The urine is scanty, and there is almost always absence of thirst. The characteristic symptoms are the transparency of the skin and the thirstlessress. Now as to cause. Apis is especially useful in dropsies of renal origin, whether the result of scarlatina or not. The urine is scanty and highly albuminous, and contains casts of the uriniferous tubules. There is a swelling about the eye-lids. The surface of the body feels sore and bruised ; in some cases, the pain is of a burning character. If the dropsy is of cardiac origin, the feet are oedematous, especially after walking. This is attended with almost intolerable soreness and burning.

 

Even when the dropsy has invaded the chest and we have hydrothorax, Apis may be the remedy, especially when the trouble is of cardiac origin. The patient is unable to lie down. He has the same constrictive feeling about the chest that we find under LACHESIS. He has a dry cough which seems to start from some place in the trachea or larynx, usually the trachea, the cough not ceasing until a small quantity of phlegm is loosened. Thus far the remedy is exactly like Lachesis. But Apis has in addition to these symptoms a mental symptom which comes from the chest, and that is a constant feeling as though he could not live. It is not that feeling of dyspnoea, but it seems to be a sort of anguish of mind that the patient cannot understand how it would be possible for him to get another breath, so great is this suffocative feeling. Often associated with these chest symptoms, the patient has a strange feeling as though he was going to die, but to distinguish it from ACONITE in febrile states and ARSENIC in hydrothorax, there is no fear of death.

 

In pleuritis with exudation, Apis is one of the best remedies we have to bring about absorption of this fluid. Apis and SULPHUR will cure the majority of these cases.

 

Apis also acts on the synovial membranes, giving you a perfect picture of synovitis, particularly when it affects the knee. It is indicated when there are sharp, lancinating, stinging pains shooting through the joint, with aggravation from the slightest motion.

 

BRYONIA affects the joints and their synovial membranes: but the pains are more stitching, with tension; better from warmth of bed, Apis being better from cold applications.

 

IODINE is useful in dropsy of the knee, and has followed Apis well, especially in scrofulous children (Compare also KALI IOD.).

 

WE have still another form of dropsy in which Apis is a remedy, that is, dropsy of the brain, what used to be called hydrocephalus. It is not so often indicated in the true hydrocephalus, that is when from some mechanical cause there is inflammation set up in the membranes of the brain, followed by accumulation of serum in the brain; but it is in tubercular meningitis in which this remedy is useful. Apis is here indicated in the first stage. The symptoms which call for it, are these: The child bores its head backwards into the pillow, and rolls it from side to side; every little while the child arouses from sleep, with a shrill, piercing cry. This peculiar shriek is due to pain. In addition to this cry, the child is usually convulsed ; one side of the body is convulsed, and the other lies as if paralyzed. Strabismus shows itself. The pulse is rapid and weak, and the urine is scanty. Now there is no remedy which can do any good in this stage if Apis does not. In some cases, there is a peculiarity of Apis which I should mention, and that is slowness of action. Sometimes you will have to wait three or four days before you notice any effects from its administration. The favorable action of the remedy is first shown by increased flow of urine.

 

In dropsies, Apis may be compared first of all with ARSENICUM ALBUM, which has the same transparency of the skin, and is also of use in dropsies of renal, cardiac, or hepatic origin. The differences between the two remedies are these: First, Arsenicum has intolerable thirst, usually drinking but small quantities at a time, because water annoys the stomach. Eating and drinking cause vomiting. I have seen cases in which even a single teaspoonful of medicine provoked vomiting. The patient exhibits marked restlessness.

 

Another remedy for comparison is APOCYNUM CANNABINUM. This is much used in the West for general-dropsies, for swelling of any part of the body, ascites, hydrothorax, etc., usually without any organic disease as a cause. The patient cannot tolerate any food. Food or water is immediately ejected. There is a sunken, gone, exhausted feeling at the pit of the stomach.

 

The next remedy similar to Apis is ACETIC ACID. This is useful in dropsies when the face and the limbs too have this waxen or alabaster appearance. It is especially indicated when the lower parts of the body, the abdomen and limbs, are swollen; hence it is useful in ascites. Thus far, it is similar to Apis. But it has thirst, which Apis has not and there is almost always gastric disturbance present, sour belching, water-brash and diarrhoea. Acetic acid is an undeservedly neglected remedy in dropsy. You see how it stands between Apis and Arsenicum. It differs from both of these remedies in the preponderance of gastric symptoms.

 

Now, in hydrocephalus, the most similar remedy to Apis in the stage of exudation is Sulphur. SULPHUR is indicated more on general principles than for its particular affinity for the meninges. Tubercular meningitis cannot occur in an otherwise healthy child. There must be a diathesis at the bottom of the trouble. Sulphur helps in the same stage as Apis when Apis fails to bring about a reaction, particularly when the child is scrofulous and has other Sulphur symptoms. The child lies in a stupor, with cold sweat on the forehead, with jerking of the limbs, particularly of the legs, with spasms of the big toes and sometimes of the thumbs also. The urine is suppressed. Sulphur is all the more indicated if there had been a retrocession of some eruption before the disease had displayed itself.

 

HELLEBORUS is also similar to Apis in hydrocephalus. Apis is useful while there is still some irritation of the brain as indicated by the cephalic cry. Hellebore is indicated when torpor predominates, when the child lies wholly unconscious. The eyes do not react to light. Th.e urine is suppressed. . There is automatic motion of one side of the body. You will notice, too, a peculiar corrugation of the muscles of the forehead, particularly the occipito-frontalis. In milder cases before the stupor is profound, you will find Helleborus indicated by these symptoms; This corrugation of the muscles of the forehead is present, together with a constant chewing motion of the mouth. The child seems to have no wants. It asks for nothing; yet, when given water, it drinks with avidity.

 

Now, a word respecting the differences between BELLADONNA and Apis. BELLADONNA is not usually indicated in tubercular meningitis. It is the remedy above all others for the simple meningitis but not for the tubercular form of the disease. Belladonna is the very essence of acuteness in its symptomatology. Every symptom appears suddenly and with great intensity. Tubercular meningitis is a slowly developed disease. However, if the premonitory symptoms are violent, you may use Belladonna in tubercular meningitis in the stage of hyperaemia with acute pains, restless, tossing about, crying out in sleep, and boring the head into the pillow, but it ceases to be the remedy when the exudation is established. The range of Belladonna is at an end when that of Apis begins.

 

There is another remedy which sometimes comes in between Belladonna and Apis, and that is BRYONIA, which acts on serous membranes, causing copious exudation. It is indicated after Belladonna. The child becomes more stupid from increased pressure on the brain. The face suddenly flushes up and then pales off, usually a bad symptom. The child cries out, particularly when moved in the least; this is a characteristic symptom. The child is stupid, the abdomen distended, and the tongue is usually coated white down the middle. So much for Apis and its concordant remedies in dropsies.

 

The next use we may make of Apis is in erysipelas. It is useful in erysipelas, particularly of the face when it commences under the right eye or about the eye and spreads thence across the face to the left side, the parts quickly becoming oedematous and at first assuming a pinkish rosy hue. The soreness becomes more severe, and burning stinging pains follow. There is high fever with dry skin, and usually thirst. Now, if the disease is not checked, and the face assumes a purplish livid hue, Apis may be indicated in phlegmonous erysipelas, which dips deeply in the connective tissue and ends in the destruction of the part. The concordant remedies of Apis in erysipelas are several.

 

First of all, BELLADONNA. The difference lies in this: BELLADONNA is indicated in bright red swelling of the face (the smooth form of erysipelas). There is not much tendency to oedema or to the formation of vesicles. The pains are almost always acute with throbbing in the affected parts. The brain almost always sympathizes markedly, giving you throbbing in the head, visions as soon as the patient closes his eyes. The patient jerks in his sleep. The pulse is full and hard.

 

Another remedy, and one, too, more similar to Apis than the Belladonna, is RHUS TOX. You should be particular in differentiating these remedies, because they are inimical, and one cannot be given after the other. Under Rhus tox. the color of the face is dark red, and not the bright red of Belladonna nor the rosy or purplish livid hue of Apis. There is almost always a formation of blisters, which burn and sting, and which are distinguished from those of Apis by the preponderance of itching. Under Rhus tox. the disease usually travels from left to right when attacking the face.

 

LACHESIS may be similar to Apis in some cases when the face is bluish. But the other symptoms will enable you to decide.

 

Apis may be of use in urticaria, when there suddenly appear on the surface of the body long pinkish white blotches raised above the skin. The itching, burning, and stinging are almost intolerable. They may come as a result of cold or during the course of intermittent fever.

 

Here Apis is similar to ARSENICUM, which also produces hives, and to URTICA URENS. This last remedy is indicated in hives when they are in not so large welts as in Apis. The itching and burning are intolerable. It is especially indicated when the disease has been produced by eating shellfish.

 

TEREBINTHINA is also useful in urticaria after eating shellfish.

 

KALI BROMATUM is indicated when the hives occur with nervous diseases.

 

RHUS TOX. when they are an accompaniment of ague or rheumatism.

 

BOVISTA when they are attended with diarrhoea, the stools being followed by tenesmus and burning.

 

PULSATILLA comes in when the hiv«s are of gastric or uterine origin.

 

CALCAREA OSTREARUM is especially suited to chronic cases; and SEPIA is indicated when the trouble is worse in the open air. (Also RUMEX CRISPUS.)

 

Apis may also be used in variola when there are intense itching and swelling.

 

Apis may be used in rheumatism, whether it is of articular or muscular origin. It is more frequently indicated in articular or what is commonly called acute inflammatory rheumatism. You will find the affected parts feeling very stiff and exceedingly sore to any pressure, and often with a sensation of numbness. The joint or joints affected are swollen and give the patient a kind of "stretched-tight feeling." The swelling is rather pale red in color, and there is often some fluctuation about the joint. There are burning, stinging pains, worse on any motion.

 

The paralytic weakness of Apis is that form which is so common a result of animal poisons, and compares with the sudden and violent effects of certain vegetables and minerals. It has often been successfully employed in paralysis following devitalizing affections, such as diphtheria, typhoid fever, and also when meningeal effusions remain after inflammations. In all such cases, suppressed or preexisting exanthemata constitute a leading indication for the bee-poison, and the reappearance of skin symptoms calls for its discontinuance, so long as the improvement thus instituted lasts. Sulphur is a great aid here.

 

In these cases of prostration the patient is either nervous, restless, and oversensitive, or hot and drowsy, whether thirsty or not.

 

Apis is useful in febrile conditions. It produces an intermitting type of fever, and it may, therefore, be used in intermittent fever. It is particularly useful when the chill comes at three o'clock in the afternoon. There may be thirst or there may not. But there is oppression about the chest, with a feeling as if it was too full, which it really is, there being congestion of the thoracic viscera. This chill is followed by burning heat of the whole body, with increase of this oppressive feeling of the chest. The heat is followed by sweat which may, however, be imperfect. There is never any thirst during the sweat. That is characteristic. During the apyrexia many characteristic symptoms are present. The patient often complains of pains under the ribs on either side. The feet are swollen and oedematous, the skin is sallow or waxen, the urine is scanty and urticaria is present. So you see that it is indicated in rather severe forms of the affection, when excessive use of quinine has spoiled the case, and in chronic forms which have undermined the general health and produced disease of the liver, spleen, etc.

 

The most similar concordant to Apis here is NATRUM MUR. This is indicated in exactly the same type of intermittent fever as Apis, the difference between the two remedies lies in the time of appearance of the chill, at ten o'clock in the morning in the case of Natrum mur., and at three o'clock in the afternoon in the case of Apis.

 

In typhoid types of fever, Apis is sometimes indicated. We select it first of all by the mental state. The delirium is not of an active type; the patient lies in a stupor, with muttering; the face is either flushed red, or, more frequently, pale and waxen—at other times there is a happy expression to the face. The skin in this, type of fever we will find to be burning hot 'in some places while in others it is unnaturally cool; the cutaneous surface is almost always dry; should there be any sweat it is almost always of a transient character; the prostration is so great that the patient slides down in bed, he cannot exercise sufficient muscular force to retain his position on the pillow. The tongue is dry and red, and like that of LACHESIS, it catches on the teeth when the attempt is made to protrude it, and trembles; you often find, too, that there may be a whitish or darker coating on the dorsum of the tongue, while the edges, especially about the tip, will be red and covered with little blisters and vesicles.

 

In these cases Apis resembles MURIATIC ACID, which has this prostration, but it has the characteristic acid diathesis.

 

In scarlatina, Apis, as you may have already anticipated from what I have said of the remedy, may be indicated. It is not often the remedy in the Sydenham variety of the disease, in which BELLADONNA is so frequently indicated. But it is of use where the eruption is interspersed with a miliary rash. Here, too, we find the same defective effort on the part of nature to get up a fever. The body is very hot in some places and cool in others. The rash is deep-red in color, very much like that of Belladonna, but differing from that remedy, you remember, in the presence of this miliary eruption which Belladonna does not produce. The child is drowsy, sleeping most of the time, or he is drowsy, but cannot sleep. This symptom you must remember, because it is identical thus far with one of Belladonna. Associated with this sleepy or wakeful state the patient is fidgety and restless. You notice, too, that he is peevish, and manifests every symptom of being very irritable.

 

This restless state of Apis must be distinguished from those of RHUS TOX. and Belladonna. In Rhus tox. it is a general restless state of the whole body, and mind too. The patient lies first on one side of the body and then moves to the other. This is not associated with the Arsenic anxiety. The general feeling is a desire to move about. In Apis it comes from a general nervous feeling.

 

The inability to go to sleep in Belladonna comes from inflammation or congestion of the brain. The hyperaemia gives you this drowsy state, and the brain is so exhausted that the patient cannot go to sleep.

 

In addition to the symptoms already mentioned for scarlatina, we have Apis further indicated when the condition advances to effusion of serum about the brain. The throat symptoms are unimportant. You often find diphtheritic patches on the tonsils. The throat inside is swollen and rosy-red, while externally it is engorged, with erysipelatous blush to it. Apis may also be used late in the disease for the sequelae, that is, when the kidneys become affected and dropsy appears with albuminuria.

 

Again, we find Apis indicated in diphtheria, and I think that the remedy is indicated in the genuine disease. From the very beginning the child is thoroughly prostrated. There is not much fever; in fact there is a suspicious absence of heat. The pulse is rapid but not strong. At first you find the throat having a varnished appearance, as though the tonsils and fauces particularly were coated with a glossy red varnish. The membrane forms on either tonsil, oftener on the right than on the left, and it is thick, looking like wash-leather. The tongue is often swollen so that the child can scarcely swallow. If the child is old enough, he will complain of a feeling of fulness in the throat which necessitates swallowing, but makes it very difficult. The explanation of this is found in the next symptom, that is the uvula is swollen and cedematous, consequently there is a feeling of fulness. If you examine the throat thoroughly you will find the rim of the glottis swollen, red and oedematous, making the breathing very difficult. Breathing is labored owipg to the narrowing of the entrance of the larynx. In some of these cases the breath is very foetid, while in others there is little or no foetor. In still other cases you will find as characteristic of Apis a red rash over the surface of the body and this rash at first makes you think you have a case of scarlatina. We find the external throat swollen and erysipelatous. Now, there are several remedies similar to Apis in diphtheria. One of them is Arsenic.

 

ARSENICUM is indicated in rather severe cases of diphtheria, as you might expect, when the throat is very much swollen, inside and outside, when the membrane has a dark hue, and there is great foetor. There is thin excoriating discharge from the nose. The throat is osdematous, just as it is in Apis; the patient is restless, especially after midnight; the urine is scanty, and the bowels are either constipated or else there is offensive watery diarrhoea.

 

In still other cases, when, despite the dark purplish hue of the throat, and the great swelling and great prostration, there is not much pain, NATRUM ARSENICOSUM is the remedy. Here, the uvula hangs down like a sac of water.

 

Still another remedy is KALI PERMANGAN.. This remedy, which is seldom used in the high potencies, is indicated when the throat inside and outside is swollen, the membrane in the throat is horribly offensive, the throat oedematous, and thin discharge from the nose. The great characteristic is the extreme foetor.

 

Apis causes an irritation of the mucous lining of the larynx and trachea, and also soreness in the chest-walls.

 

It has been found most useful when laryngeal symptoms accompany erysipelas, oedema of the throat, glottis, or larynx, or suppresion of eruptions ; less often in simple laryngitis or laryngeal catarrh.

 

Difficult breathing, and especially the unique symptom, "he does not see how he can get another breath," has led to the successful employment of the drug in hydrothorax, hydropericardium, oedema pulmonum and asthma.

 

The lancinating, darting pains, palpitation, orthopnoea, etc., have rendered Apis valuable in cardiac inflammations and dropsy. Essential symptoms seem to be, oedema or sudden mucous swelling, dyspnoea, and sudden, lancinating, or stinging pains; restlessness and anxiety. Compare: LACHESIS, ARSENIC, SULPHUR, BELLADONNA, KALI CARB., SPIGELIA, DIGITALIS, ASPARAGUS, APOCYNUM CANNABIN.

 

ARSENIC has many resemblances. So apparently alike are the restlessness, changing of place, and dyspnoea, that the two are often misapplied, the one for the other. The best distinction lies in the fidgety restlessness peculiar to Apis. If dropsy obtains, both may be needed in pale, tensely swollen limbs, but Apis often has a redness, itching or erysipelatous condition present, as well as thirstlessness.

 

BELLADONNA is too often mistaken for Apis in laryngeal affections. The latter has the most cedematous swelling, with consequent dyspnoea; the former most spasmodic constriction.

 

In cardiac affections ARSENIC, APOCYNUM CANNABINUM, DIGITALIS, and ASPARAGUS, bear some similarities with Apis, especially with great debility and dropsy. APOCYNUM CANNABINUM is needed when the pulse is small and weak, heart-beat irregular, now weak, now stronger ; sinking at the epigastrium. ASPARAGUS suits in the aged, with weak pulse and pain about the left acromion. DIGITALIS causes a doughy appearance of the skin ; pulse slow or weak, quickening with every bodily movement; gone, deathly sick feeling at the epigastrium, soon after eating.

 

The cough of Apis is a not uncommon symptom, when this remedy is needed. It resembles more or less, LACHESIS, CARBO VEG., RUMEX, BELLADONNA, CHAMOMILLA, CROTALUS HORRIDUS, NUX VOMICA, BRYONIA, IGNATIA, ARSENIC,. HYOSCYAMUS.

 

LACHESIS, NUX, BRYONIA, and HYOSCYAMUS agree in adherent mucus.

 

But LACHESIS has intolerance of touch, even of clothing, about neck, a symptom not marked in Apis, except with the sense of suffocation.

 

RUMEX has a teasing, persistent cough, aggravated by cool air, or by anything which increases the volume or rapidity of the inspired air.

 

CHAMOMILLA differs mentally.

 

NUX VOMICA cures cough from adherent mucus high up in the trachea; but there is a rough, scraped feeling in the throat.

 

BRYONIA adds epigastric irritation to the suprasternal, and the pains in the trachea and chest-walls are sharp, stitching, as well as bruised, aching.

 

IGNATIA induces a nervous cough, and the more the patient coughs, the more annoying is the irritation.

 

ARSENIC causes more a burning tickling in the fossa; but since it so often concurs with Apis, it should be compared with the latter, especially when cough accompanies dropsy, heart disease, etc. Arsenic, then, is really a concomitant.

 

BELLADONNA may be misapplied for Apis, but we ought to be able to distinguish the former by its greater constriction of the throat, and deeper inflammatory redness.

 

CARBO VEG. agrees in hoarseness, rawness, and tickling cough, but the irritation is as from vapor of sulphur.

 

Now, the action of Apis on the genital organs. Apis is often indicated in diseases of the female organs. Nearly all the provers experienced symptoms referable to the uterus and ovaries. It must be given cautiously during pregnancy, because if given in low potency and frequent doses it may bring about a miscarriage especially before or at the third month, because Apis produces bearing down in the uterus. We may use it in amenorrhoaa when we have congestion to the head as a result, with bearing down in the uterine region without the appearance of the menses. Particularly is it indicated in girls at the age of puberty, when they are somewhat hysterical with this amenorrhoea; they are nervous and awkward, it is not a natural awkwardness but one that comes from inco5rdination of the muscles. With these symptoms there is flushing of the face.

 

We may also use Apis in affections of the ovaries, especially of the right. It holds the same relation to the right ovary as LACHESIS does to the left. It is indicated in ovaritis with extreme soreness in the right inguinal region, together with burning or stinging sensations, and some tumefaction directed either over the pelvis or more characteristically through the rectum or vagina.

 

In ovarian cysts, Apis is an excellent remedy to control the trouble, especially in the incipient stages. We have here, in addition to the burning and stinging pains, numbness down the thigh and over the right side of the body, feeling of tightness across the chest, with cough. This is not a symptom of lung disease, but is reflex from the uterus.

 

Now there is a combination of honey with salt, known as MEL CUM SALE. This was for years a popular remedy in Germany for bladder troubles and for diseases peculiar to women. I have used this remedy in prolapsus uteri and even in chronic metritis, especially when associated with sub-involution and inflammation of the cervix. The special symptom which leads you to the remedy is a feeling of soreness across the hypogastrium from ilium to ilium.

 

Apis may be of use in diseases of the eyes. I have had several cases of asthenopia cured by this remedy when reading causes smarting in the eyes, with lachrymation and itching of the eye-lids and some burning and stinging. Apis is also a remedy for staphyloma, whether of the cornea or sclerotic. In external diseases of the eye, Apis is not without value. The eyes are over sensitive to light. The conjunctiva is reddened or puffy and chemosed. Still this swelling of the palpebral conjunctiva under Apis is more from congestion than from a true chemosis as under RHUS TOX., which is very similar, especially in oedematous swelling of lids ; chemosis ; hot, gushing lachrymation ; erysipelas. But Apis has less tendency to the formation of pus—a symptom highly characteristic of Rhus. In the former the pains are stinging, the time of exacerbation is evening, and cold water relieves the inflamed lids. If erysipelatous, the lids are a blue-red, looking watery as if semi-transparent. In the latter, the pains are worse at night, particularly after midnight, warmth relieves; the erysipelatous lids are of a dusky red, and together with the cheeks are studded with small watery vesicles. The pains are usually drawing, tearing ; though in erysipelas they may be burning, stinging, but with more itching than the bee-poison. The eyelids often feel heavy and stiff.

 

ARSENIC compares with Apis in hot tears, violent pains, oedematous lids. But the lachrymation is more acrid. The oedematous lids are pale, not blue-red. The palpebral conjunctiva and edges of lids are very red. The restlessness is more pronounced. Relief is usually obtained from warm applications, though the scrofulous patient can open his eyes in the open cool air, but not in the room, even if dark. Worse at and after 12 P.M.

 

To return to the eye symptoms of Apis, the lids are swollen, red and (edematous. There is burning of the tarsi, with agglutination of the lids. Sudden and very severe pains shoot through the eyes, and these are relieved by the application of cold water. The eyes are generally worse in the first part of the night. Apis is often indicated in scrofulous ophthalmia, in which affection it is often followed by KALI BICHROMICUM.

 

It now only remains for me to speak of the intestinal symptoms of Apis. It may be of value in diarrhoea, such, for instance, as comes on during the course of typhoid fever or scarlatina, or as the result of the debilitating influence of continued heat.

 

You will find it useful in the diarrhoea of children who are very much debilitated. There is generally present irritability of the brain, with the condition known as hydrocephaloid. The symptoms are much like those indicating Apis in hydrocephalus. The child wakens up with a scream. The stools are thin, watery, yellow in color and usually worse in the morning. At every motion of the body the bowels move as though the anus had no power. The stools may or may not be offensive.

 

It differs from BRYONIA, which has morning diarrhoea worse from motion ; in that under Apis, the motion aggravates, not because of its general effects, but because the anus is so uncertain.

 

In bad cases you will find the urine scanty.

 

Apis may also be thought of in panaritium. The finger swells rapidly with tense glossy-red surface and violent burning, stinging pains.

 

In this respect, Apis is very similar to SULPHUR, and may be followed by Sulphur when its action is imperfect.

 

Apis is antidoted by PLANTAIN and LACHESIS and is complementary to NATRUM MUR.

 

LEDUM was proposed by Teste as an antidote for stings of insects. Dr. Drysdale has cured nightly itching of the feet with it.

 

In closing let me ask you to remember the relation of Apis to ARSENIC, ACETIC ACID, BELLADONNA, RHUS and SULPHUR. Remember also its inimical relation to RHUS TOX.

 

 

 

 

This remedy has so many symptoms on the surface of the body we will study the outer aspect first. All over the body is found a thick rash, sometimes of a rose color. It is rough and can be felt as a rough rash under the fingers. The patient at this time is greatly distressed by heat and the skin is sensitive to touch with the rash or without it. Nodular swellings here and there come and go. Then conies an erysipelatous inflammatory condition, in patches, here and there, about the head, with great tumefaction about the face, eyes and eyelids. Erysipelas may occur anywhere, but it more commonly belongs to the face and runs to a high degree of inflammatory action, with stinging, burning and oedema. In the extremities we have a marked dropsy, swelling with pitting upon pressure. A general anasarca may appear. The face is greatly swollen at times, the eyelids look like water bags, the uvula hangs down like a water bag, the abdominal walls are of great thickness and pit upon pressure, and the mucous membranes in any part look as if they would discharge water if they were punctured. Puffing or oedema, with pitting upon pressure, is a general condition that may be present in any inflammatory state. There is a general amelioration from cold and aggravation from heat. The skin symptoms and the patient are aggravated from heat. This prevails also in the mental state, in inflammatory conditions; in cardiac conditions, in dropsy, in sore throat, etc. Sometimes this aggravation amounts to aggravation from warm drinks, warm room, warm clothing, warmth of the fire, etc.; if it is heat the patient is greatly disturbed. In brain troubles, if you put an Apis patient with congestion of the brain into a warm bath he will go into convulsions, and consequently warm bathing is not always "good for fits." It is taught in old school text-books so much that the old women and nurses know that a hot bath is good for fits, and before you get there just as like as not you will have a dead baby. This congestion of the brain, with little twitchings and threatening convulsions, makes them put the baby in a hot bath, and it is in an awful state when you get there. If the baby needs OPIUM or Apis in congestion of the brain the fits become worse by bathing in hot water. If the nurse has been doing that kind of business you have learned the remedy as soon as you enter the house, for she will say the child has been worse ever since the warm bath, has become pale as a ghost and she was afraid he was going to die. There you have convulsions worse from heat, pointing especially to OPIUM and Apis. That is the way with Apis all through. It is not laid down in the books that Apis is worse in the throat symptoms from warm drinks and wants altogether cold things, and will not take warm things which aggravate, but one of our graduates wrote me that by making use simply of the generals, as he had been instructed, Apis conforming to all the rest of the case, he made a beautiful cure of a case of diphtheria which had the relief from cold, which shows how generals are continued into particulars and how they can be made use of. The generals continue to build and enlarge our Materia Medica.

 

Upon the outer surface then we see that Apis is full of dropsy, red rash, eruptions, urticaria, erysipelas, which inflammations extend to the mucous membranes. The outer part of man is his skin and mucous membrane. When we are dealing with man from centre to circumference, we think of the innermost as the brain and heart and internal organs that are vital, while their coatings and coverings are external. Apis affects the things that are external; it affects the envelopes, the coverings. You notice how frequently it affects the skin and the tissues near the skin, and it also affects the envelopes or coverings of organs; for example, the pericardium. It establishes serous inflammations with effusion. Apis produces an inflammation of the membranes of the brain. In the serous sac which encloses the heart, pericardium, and also in the peritoneum it produces the same kind of inflammation. Thus we see that the coverings are especially affected by Apis, viz., the skin and mucous membranes and the coverings of organs; and with these we get dropsy, catarrh and erysipelas. In all of these inflammatory conditions there is stinging and burning; burning like coals of fire at times, and stinging as if needles or small splinters were sticking in.

 

The MENTAL SYMPTOMS of Apis are very striking, and the most striking thing throughout the mental state is the aggravation from heat and from a warm room. The symptoms themselves are great sadness, constant tearfulness without any cause, weeping night and day; cannot sleep from tantalizing thoughts and worrying about everything. Depression of spirits with constant weeping. Sadness and melancholy; extreme irritability; borrowing trouble about everything. Foolishly suspicious and jealous. Absolutely joyless. Absolutely indifferent to everything that would make her happy or joyful. No ability to apply things that would make her happy to herself, they must mean someone else. Foolish, silly, childish behavior in a woman in confinement, in a woman in advanced years; talking foolish twaddle, such as a child would talk, on serious occasions. Another aspect of the mental state is the delirium, which comes on in serious forms of brain affections in children. The child gradually goes into a state of unconsciousness. Lies in a stupor, one side of the body twitching, the other side motionless, rolling head from side to side; head drawn back rigidly; pupils contracted or dilated, eyes very red, face flushed, a stupid state or state of semi-consciousness. Child lying with the eyes partly closed, as if benumbed. It is suitable in congestion of the brain, meningitis or cerebro-spinal meningitis with opisthotonos when all the symptoms are aggravated from heat. The child puts on a more dreadful state if the room becomes overheated; becomes extremely death-like or pale if the room becomes overheated. If the child is able to do so it kicks the covers off. If it is in a position where it can look into a large open grate it will be much aggravated. I have seen Apis children who had to be removed from near an open fire. They will cry to get away from the heat that comes upon them from the register or open fire. The heat increases every symptom, and sometimes causes them to break out in a cold sweat all over the body, which does not ameliorate their fever nor the burning heat. Very often the head is rolling and tossing, the teeth gnashing, and the eyes flashing with threatening convulsions, the child carrying the hand to the head at times, a state of semi-consciousness, and the child screams out with that peculiar scream which is known to mean congestion of the brain—cri encephalique — the brain cry. The shriek is a very strong Apis feature. The child cries out with this shriek in sleep when going into brain troubles. It says in the text: "Sopor interrupted by piercing shrieks." We must be able to see in the general beginning of provings the disease which they resemble, for we do not always see the remedy in the advanced state. We see the disease in a state of progress, and must be able to see it in its beginning. As was the disease in the beginning so was the remedy in the beginning. Things that have similar beginnings may have similar endings.

 

Apis also has muttering, delirium and loquacity. All kinds of screaming and shrieking, shrill and otherwise, violent and less violent. Premonition of death, dread of death, fear of apoplexy. "Very busy, restless, changing kind of work, with awkwardness." Awkwardness is especially found under the fingers, toes and limbs in Apis. The whole nervous system shows a disturbance in co-ordination. This disturbance in co-ordination runs through the remedy, awkwardness, staggering with the eyes shut. Dizziness when the eyes are shut. "Ailments from fright, rage, vexation, jealousy or hearing bad news." "After severe mental shock paralyzed on the whole right side."

 

The complaints of Apis are attended with violence and rapidity. They come on with great rapidity, rush on with violence, until unconsciousness is reached. It has been my fortune to see many violent cases of poisoning from the sting of the honey-bee. When the oversensitive patient is poisoned by the sting he is dreadfully sick. The majority of people in the course of their life have been stung by the honey-bee and a mere little swelling occurs in the region of the sting, a swelling as big as a robin's egg or a hen's egg at most, without constitutional states; that is, when the individual is not sensitive to Apis. He may have been stung in half a dozen places, and each one gives him a little lump. But you meet one who is sensitive to the sting of the honey-bee, and if he gets one little sting on any place in his body, he comes down with nausea and anxiety that makes him feel that he is dying, and in about ten minutes he is covered with urticaria from head to foot; he stings and burns and wants to be bathed in cold water; he fears that he will die if something is not done to mitigate his suffering, rolls and tosses as if he would tear himself to pieces. I have seen all these symptoms come on after Apis. The antidote for that is CARBOLIC ACID. I have seen CARBOLIC ACID administered in that state, and the patient described the sensation of the CARBOLIC ACID going down his throat as a cooling comfort. He says "Why, doctor, I can feel that dose go to the ends of my fingers." When you administer an antidote under such circumstances listen to what your patient says. When you get the true natural antidote, and, at times, when you get the true curative medicine in a case, no matter how high the potency is, the patient will say: "I feel that to the roots of my hair and to the ends of my toes." Such is the feeling it gives when the true antidotal medicine goes to the innermost portions of his economy, and that is the way we want to get our medicines always, to be guided by the symptoms of our patient that they will tell us what medicines to administer, and when the medicine is administered its highest reaction is of that sort.

 

If we are well acquainted with the symptoms of Apis we can many times get along without having a specialist to treat the eyes. They make more people blind with their lotions, caustic solutions, etc., than they benefit. The old-fashioned way was to cauterize with copper and silver nitrate solution, and the modern things are not much better. At the present day the homeopathic physician who is not capable of taking eye symptoms as well as lung symptoms and symptoms of any part of the body is not competent to practice medicine. Eye cases can be prescribed for by the physician. In Homeopathy there is no such thing as treating the eye and other organs of the body, but the patient with all his organs, not the patient with one or two organs.

 

Apis is a great remedy for the eyes. It has deep-seated inflammatory complaints of the eyes as a result of disease. Inflammations that are erysipelatous in character, that leave thickening of the mucous membrane and lids, and white spots over the eye; opacities. Inflammation with opacities very extensive or in patches. Enlarged bloodvessels. When the inflammatory condition is active it is attended with oedema of the lids, both upper and lower, and the whole face is sometimes in a state of oedema, such as you would expect to see after a bee sting. The swelling of the mucous membranes of the lids is so enormous that they roll out, looking like pieces of raw beef. The fluid will run out over the cheeks in great abundance. Burning and stinging like fire, better from washing, from cold applications, worse from heat. Chronic eye troubles that are worse from looking into an open fire, worse from radiated heat; wants something cold applied. Chronic granular lids. The results of chronic inflammation are numerous and extensive. Worse from looking at white things, worse from looking at the snow. Pain in the eyeballs, pain deep in the eyeballs, stitches, burning, stinging and shooting. Chemosis. Apis is often suitable for old scrofulous affections of the eyes. Vascular, affections, the veins are enlarged. "Iritis." "Congestion to the eyes, blood-vessels injected;" whole conjunctiva inflamed. Photophobia. Rheumatic ophthalmia, that is, a high grade of inflammation of the eyes in rheumatic subjects. Catarrhal inflammation of the eyes; scrofulous inflammation of the eyes. Hot tears gush out of the eyes; burning in the eyes. Erysipelas of the eyes and sides of the face, EXTENDING FROM THE RIGHT TO THE LEFT. This direction is an Apis feature in many other respects. Erysipelas commences on the right side of the face, extends over the nose to the left side. Inflammation commences in the right side of the abdominal viscera and extends over to the left. In inflammation of the ovary the right is preferred to the left. The right side of the uterus is preferred. Pains in the whole right side of the pelvis extending over towards the left. Burning stinging here and there extending from right to left.

 

Inflammation of the middle ear in connection with or after scarlet fever.

 

Now we come to the throat troubles of Apis, We have much throat trouble. Apis cures diphtheria, especially when there is a high grade of inflammation and the membrane is scanty or comes slowly or insidiously, and it is somewhat of a surprise the gradual progress it makes; the parts are oedematous and the soft palate is puffed like a water-bag, and the uvula hangs down with a semi-transparent appearance like a bag of water. All around the throat and mouth there is an oedematous condition looking as if it would flow water if pricked. Burning, stinging pains in the throat ameliorated by cold and aggravated by heat. Aversion to all warm substances and drinks. The tongue swells until it fills the mouth, worse on the right half of the tongue, or involving the right side first. Raw beef appearance, denuded appearance of the tongue and buccal cavity and throat. Various kinds of swelling in the throat; benign swellings, with burning, stinging and redness. Ulcers in the throat that come as a result of this inflammation. Apis is suitable in the severest forms of sore throat accompanying scarlet fever. It cures scarlet fever when the symptoms agree, and it is not an uncommon thing for Apis to be suited to scarlet fever, though the rash is sometimes rough. The scarlet fever rash is not always smooth and shiny. When the rash does not come out at all the face is very pallid, with a high grade of inflammation of the throat; the scarlet fever is in the family, and the skin is red without any rash; in those cases that are worse from heat, want the covers off, and are sensitive to the heat of the room. The patient desires a low temperature in the room, is worse from heat, wants cool things, worse from radiated heat especially, or hot air that comes from a register or fire. He suffocates when a little warm air is radiating over the body. He is disturbed from heat even in the chill of an intermittent fever; if in a warm room when having a chill, he suffocates. So it is with the scarlet fever, with the sore throat, and in diphtheria; from the least whiff of radiated heat he suffocates. He wants the doors and windows open, wants something cold. Sometimes the scarlet fever patient will go into convulsions because the rash fails to come out. Apis is sometimes a suitable remedy and must be compared with CUPRUM, ZINCUM and BRYONIA. A warm bath will intensify the convulsion.

 

"Sensation of constriction and erosion in the throat in the morning." Throat sore and swollen; stinging pains. "Could not swallow solid food." With these complaints there is often shivering, shuddering, little chills intermingled with the febrile state. Many times you will think to comfort him by covering him up with a warm blanket, but it will make him worse, he will throw it off. A child will kick off the covers. An adult who is shivering while covered up will kick off the covers. These strange and peculiar things are guiding features, things that cannot be accounted for.

 

In Apis there is vomiting, nausea, retching and vomiting, with great anxiety. Vomiting of bile and everything eaten. Vomiting of bitter and sour fluids.

 

Apis causes soreness and tightness throughout the abdomen and hypochondria. Sensation of tightness runs through many of the complaints of Apis. The abdomen is distended with gas. Meteoritic condition, great tension and fulness, hard and drum-like. In all inflammatory complaints, in peritonitis, inflammation of the liver, inflammation of the pelvis, there is great tension, tightness; but this tightness is not always general, sometimes it is local; sometimes it is with little congestion, but tightness prevails throughout the abdomen, and this tightness makes it impossible for the patient to cough for fear something will burst. The cough makes him feel as if something would be torn. Cannot strain at stool. This is common in the abdominal and pelvic complaints of women. The woman will say she cannot strain at stool, because of the feeling that if she strains something will break loose. The same state exists in the chest. It seems that on coughing something will tear loose, as if the fibres are in a state of tension or stretching.

 

Hypersensitive state of the liver; inflammation of the liver and spleen. Pain under the short ribs, worse on the left side. "Pains from below the ribs spreading upward. Obliged to bend forward from a painful contracted feeling in the hypochondria." All the complaints are likely to make the patient bend forward and flex the limbs, because the state of tension is painful. Sensitiveness of the stomach to touch. Over the whole abdomen she is so sore that touch is extremely painful; in all the inflammatory complaints of women the abdomen is very sore and painful. Soreness, distension and stinging burning pains through the abdomen. Burning heat in the stomach.

 

In the external abdomen there is an oedamatous state. Dropsy, sometimes alone, sometimes with anasarca. Limbs swollen to the full extent, pitting upon pressure, the feet and limbs swollen, with burning, stinging and numbness in the limbs.

 

Feeling as if the intestines were bruised. Watery diarrhoea is common in Apis; yellow stools, green stools, olive green stools, watery stools, etc. Every day six to eight diarrhoeic stools, which smell like carrion. It is especially useful in a peculiar kind of stool occurring in children and infants, an intermingling of blood, mucus and food, giving the stool an appearance like tomato sauce. The anus protrudes with stool and seems to remain open, an open anus like PHOSPH. and PULS. Chronic diarrhoea, dysentery, haemorrhage from the bowels. In its constipation it is related more commonly to head troubles. He goes many days without a stool. The bowels seem to be perfectly paralyzed, with congestion of the brain and acute hydrocephalus.

 

The urinary troubles are numerous in Apis. The urine is scanty, coming only in drops. Much straining before the urine will start, and then only a few drops; dribbling a little hot urine, burning urine, bloody urine. As soon as a few drops collect in the bladder the urging comes, constant, ineffectual urging. Later the urine is almost suppressed. Infants go a long time without passing urine, screeching and carrying the hand to the head, crying out in sleep, kicking off the covers. Very often a dose of Apis will be found useful. It is often called for in scarlet fever when the urine is loaded with albumen. Urinary troubles, with swelling of the genitals, and the swelling is oedematous. Scanty urine in little boys, with the foreskin enormously distended, or in hydrocele. Every time the call to urinate comes he will shriek, because he remembers the pain he had the last time. Inflammatory complaints of the kidneys and ureters, bladder and urethra. The whole urinary tract is irritated, very much like CANTHARIS, and these two medicines antidote each other. If you are called to a child that has been drugged with crude Apis you can generally antidote it with CANTHARIS. If you go to a woman who has taken CANTHARIS for vicious purposes, you can very often overcome it with Apis. The violent frenzy that has been brought on by CANTHARIS will be overcome by Apis. The smarting, burning and stinging along the urinary tract will be found under Apis. "Flow of urine unconscious." Stitching pain in the urethra with enuresis. Morbid irritability of the urinary organs. "Strangury. Agony in voiding urine. Retention of urine in nursing infants." It is queer how the old women knew, long before Apis was proved, that when the little new-born baby did not pass its water they could find a cure by going out to the bee-hive and catching a few bees, over which they poured hot water, arid of which they gave the baby a teaspoonful. Some domestic things like that have been known among families and among nurses, and it is consistent because it is just like what we give Apis for. "Urine scanty and foetid, containing albumen and blood corpuscles." Especially in acute albuminuria. The acute inflammatory affection of the kidney with albuminuria, such as occurs in scarlet fever or diphtheria, or after these, such as occurs as a sequel of acute disease. Inflammation of the kidney closes up the case and kills off a good many in allopathic hands, never in homeopathic hands. It is closely related to the genital organs of both male and female. Swelling and oedematous state of the genitals. Apis is a great friend of the woman. It cures all of her inflammatory complaints it seems, when the symptoms agree. That is to say, it produces inflammation of the uterus and ovaries and dreadful sufferings in the external and internal parts, and we have only to discover when the symptoms agree to cure most of these inflammatory troubles. It even stops abortion. It will stop abortion after some miserable scoundrel has attempted to get rid of the offspring, and she has taken drugs and brought on pains, pains strong enough to expel the contents of the uterus, especially in the first, second and third months. A little haemorrhage has come on, a mere threatening, the membranes are not yet ruptured, but they soon will be, and she has stinging, burning pains, and lies uncovered and suffers from the heat, probably from the overdose of ERGOT. Apis will overcome this greatly to her regret. This kind of villainy prevails. But women have accidents and weakness, whereby, in spite of the fact that they desire to hold their offspring, they are threatened with abortion, and Apis is a great friend to the prospective mother. Burning and stinging pains in the ovaries, especially the right; when greatly enlarged and even cystic, Apis has proved a curative remedy, has often cured tumors, and has caused cystic formations to stop growing or to disappear. The right ovarian region is very sensitive. Pain in the uterus and ovaries before and during menstruation. Stinging, rending, tearing pains cutting like knives, worse from heat. It is a very easily got symptom. because in most painful symptoms heat or the hot water bag are tried with the natural hope of relief, but with this remedy it aggravates. She throws it aside, for the pain is worse from heat. "Ovaries enlarged," etc. Dropsy of right ovary. Ovarian tumor.

 

 

 

Burning, stinging pains (like bee stings); eyelids; throat; panaritium or felon, haemorrhoids, ovaries (especially right one), breasts (mastitis), skin (erysipelas, urticaria, carbuncles).

GREAT OEDEMA; general or local (face, ears, eyelids, especially lower); throat (diphtheria); genitals (especially scrotum); skin (erysipelas and urticaria); everywhere; general anasarca, abdomen. These oedemas are accompanied with the characteristic pains, or no pain at all.

Stupor, with sharp, sudden, shrill cries in brain disease (CRIE ENCEPHALIQUE).

Thirstlessness, especially in dropsies and during heat of intermittents.

Skin alternately dry and perspiring.

Suffocative; feels as if every breath would be his last, especially in dropsical conditions or hot stage of intermittents.

Modalities: < after sleep, on touch (very sensitive), from heat and warm room; > cold room or air and cold applications.

Bad effects from suppressed or retrocedent exanthemata; measles, scarlatina, urticaria.

Involuntary diarrhoea, with sensation as if anus were wide open.

# # # # #

It seems to me that in this remedy also the leading characteristic is to be found in its sensation—BURNING, stinging

PAINS. They are sharp and quick, like the sting of the bee. These pains are as characteristic of this remedy as are the ITCHING-LIKE CHILLBLAINS OF AGARICUS, or the burnings of ARSENICUM and SULPHUR; but the burnings of APIS are relieved by cold, while those of ARSENIC are relieved by heat. The stinging appears in many diseases, and kinds of tissue. In the serous membranes or the brain coverings, when we get those "shrill, sudden piercing screams"—"CRI CEREBRALE," which attend such dangerous affections as hydrocephalus, cerebro-spinal meningitis and typhus cerebralis, APIS is the remedy. Again we get these pains in the mucous membranes, as in the throat and haemorrhoids, and the burning is almost always more or less present at the same time. It is also found very prominent in the ovaries. It has proved a very valuable remedy in cancers, even open ones, when this stinging, burning pain was present; also in panaritium. I have seen rapid cures follow its exhibition in felon. Hering puts it—"REDNESS AND SWELLING WITH STINGING AND BURNING PAIN IN THE EYES, EYELIDS, EARS, FACE, LIPS, TONGUE, THROAT, ANUS, TESTICLES." (> by cold applications ought to be added.)

So we see how generally the system comes under the action of this remedy. In skin affections, especially the acute exanthems, this is the grand leading symptom, and is especially indicated in affections of the brain and meninges caused by a sudden suppression of skin diseases.

The next general condition for which this remedy seems to be as near specific as any remedy can be is an infiltrated cellular tissue; an oedematous or dropsical condition. This condition obtains almost from the beginning of inflammatory affections and extends to the stage of exudation, and even to chronic dropsical states. In those intensely violent and rapid cases of diphtheria in which the whole throat fills right up with oedematous swelling, the vulva hanging down like a transparent sac filled with water (KALI BICHROMICUM, RHUS TOXICOD.), and the patient is in imminent danger of death by suffocation from actual closure of the throat and larynx, there is no remedy like APIS. The stinging, burning pains may be present in these cases; or what is more dangerous still, because there is no complaint until the case is far advanced, is an ABSOLUTELY PAINLESS condition. BAPTISIA has painlessness in throat affections, but the swelling is not so rapid as APIS, and there is no oedema. A number of years ago I was called to Watkins Glen, N. Y., in consultation in a very bad case of diphtheria. One had already died in the family and four lay dead in the place that day. Over forty cases had died in the place and there was an exodus going on for fair. Her attending physician, a noble, white-haired old man, and withal a good and able man, said, when I looked up to him and remarked I was rather young to counsel him: "Doctor, I am on my knees to anybody, for every case has died that has been attacked." The patient was two rooms away from us, but I could hear her difficult breathing even then. APIS was comparatively a new remedy then for that disease, but as I looked into her throat I saw APIS in a moment, and a few questions confirmed it. I told the doctor what I thought and asked him if he had tried it. He said, no he had not thought of it, but it was a POWERFUL BLOOD POISON; try it. It cured the case, and not one case that took this remedy from the beginning, and persistently, died. It was the remedy for the GENUS EPIDEMICUS. See my report of this in Vol. XII., HAHNEMANNIAN MONTHLY.

This oedematous condition of APIS may be found in almost any part of the body, but is especially prominent in mouth and throat, eyelids and face, AROUND the eyes (PHOSPHORUS, whole face); lower lids hang down like bags of water. (KALICARB., upper lids.) In erysipelas the swelling of the skin is of this oedematous appearance, and generally with stinging pains. Sometimes the oedema increases until it forms large blister-like bags of water.

The dropsical effusion may be general or local. It is found in the thoracic cavity, in ovaries, in abdominal cavity, scrotum, and genitals of females. One peculiar symptom which helps to choose between it and other remedies in dropsy is the almost absolute ABSENCE OF THIRST (with thirst, ACETIC ACID, ARSENIC and APOCYNUM).

I will now, in addition to what I have written, call attention to some particular affections and symptoms in which APIS should be remembered. A very important symptom not yet mentioned is TENDERNESS OR SENSITIVENESS TO TOUCH, as if bruised. This is particularly true in the abdominal, uterine, and ovarian regions, but is not by any means confined there, for we may find the whole surface of the body exceedingly sensitive to touch; even the hair seems sore (CHINA OFFICINALIS). This condition is often found in cerebro-spinal meningitis and is a strong indication for APIS. In erysipelas this tenderness is often present, and is found under HEPAR SULPHUR, as well as APIS.

The sleep of APIS is either very restless, or in brain diseases there is DEEP STUPOR, interrupted occasionally bY PIERCING SCREAMS. Never forget APIS then. In all inflammatory affections and in intermittent fevers, if you find tne patient ALTERNATELY DRY AND HOT, OR PERSPIRING, think again of APIS.

No remedy has this alternation so strong as APIS. SENSATION AS IF EVERY BREATH WOULD BE HIS LAST is very characteristic, and occurs not only in dropsical troubles of the chest, but seems also to be a nervous symptom. In scarlatina APIS is especially indicated if the eruption is retarded or retrocedent and serious brain troubles result, and it is no less efficacious in post-scarlatinal dropsies if the symptoms do not indicate some other remedies.

 

ABIES CANADENSIS

ABIES CANADENSIS (abies-c) Mucous membranes are affected by Abies Can. and gastric symptoms are most marked, and a catarrhal condition of the stomach is produced. There are peculiar cravings and chilly sensations that are very characteristic, especially for women with uterine displacement, probably due to defective nutrition with debility. Respiration and heart action labored. Wants to lie down all the time; skin cold and clammy, hands cold; very faint. Right lung and liver feel small and hard. Gleet. Head Feels light-headed, tipsy. Irritable. Stomach Canine hunger with torpid liver. GNAWING, HUNGRY, FAINT FEELING at the epigastrium. Great appetite, craving for meat, pickles, radishes, turnips, artichokes, coarse food. TENDENCY TO EAT

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Abies canadensis – Boericke

Mucous membranes are affected by Abies Can. and gastric symptoms are most marked, and a catarrhal condition of the stomach is produced. There are peculiar cravings and chilly sensations that are very characteristic, especially for women with uterine displacement, probably due to defective nutrition with debility. Respiration and heart action labored. Wants to lie down all the time; skin cold and clammy, hands cold; very faint. Right lung and liver feel small and hard. Gleet.   Head Feels light-headed, tipsy. Irritable.   Stomach Canine hunger with torpid liver. GNAWING, HUNGRY, FAINT FEELING at the epigastrium. Great appetite, craving for meat, pickles, radishes, turnips, artichokes, coarse food. TENDENCY TO EAT FAR

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Abies nigra – Boericke

(Black Spruce) A powerful and long-acting remedy, in various forms of disease, whenever the characteristic stomach symptoms are present. Most of the symptoms are associated with the gastric disturbances. IN DYSPEPTIC TROUBLES OF THE AGED, with functional heart symptoms; also after tea or tobacco. CONSTIPATION. Pain in external meatus.   Head Hot, with flushed cheeks. Low-spirited. Dull during the day, wakeful at night. Unable to think.   Stomach PAIN IN STOMACH ALWAYS COMES ON AFTER EATING. Sensation of a lump that hurts, AS IF A HARD-BOILED EGG HAD LODGED IN THE CARDIAC END OF STOMACH; continual distressing constriction just above the pit of the stomach, as if everything were knotted

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Abies nigra – Farrington

  I cannot forbear mentioning a symptom of this Abies nigra, a symptom, too, that has been frequently confirmed. I refer to the application of the drug in dyspepsia when the patient complains of a feeling as though he had swallowed some indigestible substance which had stuck at the cardiac extremity of the stomach. That is the main symptom and the keynote of the drug. There are also present, the low spiritedness, the hypochondriasis, and the constipation incident to dyspepsia.  

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Abrotanum – Allen

SOUTHERNWOOD COMPOSITAE   Alternate constipation and diarrhoea: lienteria. Marasmus of children with marked emaciation, especially of legs (Iod., Sanic, Tub.); the skin is flabby and hangs loose in folds (of neck, Nat. m., Sanic). In marasmus, head weak, cannot hold it up. (AETH.) Marasmus of lower extremities only. Ravenous hunger; losing flesh while eating well (Iod., Nat. m., Sanic, Tub.). Painful contractions of the limbs from cramps or following colic. Rheumatism: for the excessive pain before the swelling commences; from suddenly-checked diarrhea or other secretions; alternates with hemorrhoids, with dysentery. Gout: joints stiff, swollen, with pricking sensation; wrists and ankle-joints painful and inflamed. Very lame and sore all over. Itching

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Abrotanum – Boericke

(Southernwood) A very useful remedy in MARASMUS, especially of lower extremities only, yet with good appetite. METASTASIS. Rheumatism following checked diarrhoea. Ill effects of suppressed conditions especially in gouty subjects. TUBERCULOUS PERITONITIS. EXUDATIVE PLEURISY and other exudative processes. After operation upon the chest for hydrothorax or empyaemia, a pressing sensation remains. Aggravation of haemorrhoids when rheumatism improves. Nosebleed and hydrocele in boys. Great weakness after influenza. ( KALI PHOS.)   Mind Cross, irritable, anxious, depressed.   Face Wrinkled, cold, dry, pale. Blue rings around dull-looking eyes. Comedones, with emaciation. Nosebleed. ANGIOMA OF THE FACE.   Stomach Slimy taste. Appetite good, but emaciation progresses. Food passes undigested. Pain in stomach; worse

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Abrotanum – Kent

  This very valuable remedy should be more frequently used. It is indicated in such conditions as are cured by BRYONIA and RHUS TOX., but its symptoms mark out its own individual cases. Rheumatic conditions with heart irritation; epistaxis; bloody urine; anxiety and trembling, when there has been a history of diarrhoea. A suddenly checked diarrhoea will be followed by the above symptoms in a case requiring Abrot. A suddenly suppressed rheumatism of any joint followed by violent cardiac symptoms; it is much like LEDUM, AURUM and KALMIA.   In marasmus of children it is a very useful remedy and not unfrequently indicated. The emaciation begins IN THE LOWER LIMBS

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Absinthium – Boericke

(Common Wormwood) A perfect picture of epileptiform seizure is produced-by this drug. Nervous tremors precede attack. Sudden and severe giddiness, delirium with hallucinations and loss of consciousness. Nervous excitement and sleeplessness. Cerebral irritation, hysterical and infantile spasms come within range of this remedy. Poisoning by mushrooms. Chorea. TREMOR. Nervousness, excitement, and sleeplessness in children.   Mind Hallucinations. Frightful visions. Kleptomania. Loss of memory. Forgets what has recently happened. Wants nothing to do with anybody. Brutal.   Head VERTIGO, WITH TENDENCY TO FALL BACKWARD. General confusion. Wants head low. Pupils dilated unequally. Face blue. SPASMODIC FACIAL TWITCHING. Dull occipital headache. (GELSEM. PICRIC AC. )   Mouth Jaws fixed. Bites tongue; trembles;

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Absinthium – Farrington

Absinthium, another form of wormwood, is of interest to you not only as a medicine but also because you will meet with cases of its abuse in those who indulge in it as a drink. The first effect of Absinthe is an exhilaration of the mind which is of course followed by damaging results, among which is a horrible delirium. In this delirium, the patient is obliged to walk about. You will note this symptom running through all the remedies of the order. Chamomilla and Cina have relief from moving about; and Artemisia has desire to move about; and here under Absinthium, the patient walks about in distress, seeing all

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Acalypha indica – Boericke

(Indian Nettle) A drug having a marked action on the alimentary canal and respiratory organs. It is indicated in incipient phthisis, with bard, racking cough, bloody expectoration, arterial haemorrhage, but no febrile disturbance. Very weak in the morning, gains strength during day. Progressive emaciation. All pathological haemorrhages having notably A MORNING AGGRAVATION.   Chest COUGH DRY, HARD, FOLLOWED BY HOEMOPTYSIS; worse in morning and at night. Constant and severe pain in chest. Blood bright red and not profuse in morning; dark and clotted in afternoon. Pulse soft and compressible. Burning in pharynx, oesophagus, and stomach.   Abdomen Burning in intestines. SPLUTTERING DIARRHOEA WITH FORCIBLE EXPULSION OF NOISY FLATUS, bearing down

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Acetanilidum – Boericke

(Antifebrinum) Depresses heart, respiration and blood pressure, lowers temperature. Cyanosis and collapse. Increased susceptibility to cold. Destroys red blood corpuscles; pallor. Head Enlarged sensation. Fainting. Moral depravity.   Eyes Pallor of optic discs, contracted visual field and shrinking retinal vessel; mydriasis.   Heart Weak, irregular, with blue mucous membranes, albuminuria, oedema of feet and ankles.   Relationship Compare: ANTIPYRIN.   Dose Used as a sedative and antipyretic for various forms of headache and neuralgia in doses of one to three grains. For the homeopathic indications use the third potency.      

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Acetic acidum – Allen

GLACIAL ACETIC ACID   Adapted to pale, lean persons with lax, flabby muscles.; FACE PALE, WAXY (Fer.). Haemorrhage: from every mucous outlet, nose, throat, lungs, stomach, bowels, uterus (Fer., Mill.): metrorrhagia; vicarious; traumatic epistaxis (Arn.). Marasmus and other wasting diseases of children (Abrot., Iod., Sanic, Tub.).   GREAT PROSTRATION: AFTER INJURIES (Sulph. ac.) ; AFTER SURGICAL SHOCK; AFTER ANESTHETICS. Thirst: intense, burning, insatiable even for large quantities in dropsy, diabetes, chronic diarrhoea; but no thirst in fever.   Sour belching and vomiting of pregnancy, burning water-brash and profuse salivation, day and night (Lac. ac salivation < at night, Mer. s.). Diarrhoea: copious, exhausting, great thirst; in dropsy, typhus, phthisis; with

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Acetic acidum – Boericke

(Glacial Acetic Acid) This drug produces a condition of profound anaemia, with some dropsical symptoms, great debility, frequent fainting, dyspnoea, weak heart, vomiting, profuse urination and sweat. Haemorrhage from any part. Especially indicated in pale, lean persons, with lax, flabby muscles. WASTING AND DEBILITY. Acetic acid has the power to LIQUIFY ALBUMINOUS AND FIBRINOUS DEPOSITS. Epithelial cancer, internally and locally (W. Owens). Sycosis with nodules and formations in the joints. Hard chancre. The lx solution will soften and cause formation of pus.   Mind Irritable, worried about business affairs.   Head Nervous headache, from abuse of narcotics. Blood rushes to head with delirium. Temporal vessels distended. Pain across root of

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Acetic acidum – Kent

This remedy is useful in complaints of pale, sickly people. Patients who have been weak for many years, who have inherited phthisis. Emaciation, weakness, anaemia, loss of appetite, burning thirst and copious pale urine are a combination calling for Acetic acid. Sensation of heat with pulsation coming and going, like orgasms; chlorosis in young girls; dropsical conditions in general; bad effects from stings and bites, have been cured by this remedy. Vinegar is an old remedy for bad effects from chloroform. It is useful in the hsemorrhagic constipation. Bleeding from various mucous membranes, nose, stomach, rectum, lungs and from ulcers. Sensitive to cold. Confusion of mind; does not know her

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