One-berry
- Head symptoms marked and verified.
- Sensation of expansion and consequent tension.
- Coldness of right side of body, left hot.
- Catarrhal complaints, stuffed feeling at root of nose.
- Disorder of sense of touch.
One-berry
Dr. Cartier gave an account of this nosode in his paper read at the
International Homceopathic Congress, 1896 (Transactions, Part "Essays and Communications,"
p. 187). Aviaire acts most prominently on the apices of the lungs, and it corresponds most closely
to the bronchitis of influenza, which simulates tuberculosis, having cured several hopeless-
looking cases. It has also done excellently in some cases of bronchitis following measles. The
bacillus of avian tuberculosis has been identified with that of human tuberculosis, but the clinical
properties of the two nosodes are not identical.
Imaginary foul smells. Feels too large. Garrulous, prattling, vivacious.
Affections of the eyebrows. Eyes feel heavy, as if they were projected; sensation of a string through eyeballs. Expanded, as though lids did not cover.
Neuralgia; hot stitches in left malar bone, which is very sore. Has relieved in inflammation of the antrum, where eye symptoms co-existed.
Tongue dry when awaking-Coated white, without thirst, with bitter or diminished taste.
Third potency.
Open the workspace. Type a real case from this week — one you're still chewing on. Watch Repertify rank Paris against the totality, cite the rubrics, and surface the §246-correct posology with the rule inline. You'll know by the third turn.
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