The patient sleeps on his left side. In his dreams he is able to walk again “like in the old days”, and feels healthy.
Remedies given so far: I started treatment in June 1988, after Syringomyelia was diagnosed, with Opium. I saw no result. In August, I prescribed Alumina, also without result. In January, I tried Calcium but, again, I don’t think there was any result (Calcarea carbonica), and finally, out of despair, Plumbum ioda-tum. That is the range of remedies I’ve prescribed to date.
(G.V.): What symptom disturbs you the most at the moment? (M.P.): The thing that bothers me the most is that walking is becoming increasingly more difficult, particularly with my left leg. But since I am gradually experiencing problems with my right leg as well, I guess my real problem is just walking in general.(G.V.): How does this problem manifest itself? Do you experi-ence pain, or paralysis, or both?
(M.P.): It’s less a question of pain than of numbness and a lack of feeling in the legs, paralysis. It’s very difficult to walk when I’m unable to use my limbs. At night I have cramps, which I’ve already described to my doctors, and then there’s also the pain in my left knee.
(G.V.): Is it the numbness that disturbs you?
(M.P.): Yes, I lack hot and cold sensations, and I cannot distin-guish between hot and cold in my knees.
(Therapist): It’s a symptom of the disease- an isolated disturbance of sensitivity for hot and cold sensations.
(G.V.): Only in your knees?
(M.P.): No, my entire leg is insensitive. Sometimes this feeling of numbness goes right up to my navel.
(G.V.): Where exactly do you have these cramps? In your foot, calf, thighs?
(M.P.): The cramps are more around the area of my lower leg, in the calf.