Sage
Controls excessive sweating when circulation is enfeebled; of less use in phthisis with night-sweats and suffocating tickling cough. Galactorrhoea. Exerts a tonic influence on the skin.
Sage
Controls excessive sweating when circulation is enfeebled; of less use in phthisis with night-sweats and suffocating tickling cough. Galactorrhoea. Exerts a tonic influence on the skin.
Living in a malarial region, Bowen hit upon the idea of finding remedies for
the prevalent malarial complaints he had to deal with by producing experimental malaria and
finding antidotes thereto. He hired persons to inhale the gases from jars containing vegetable
matter in various stages of decomposition. In the first stage the odour was not very offensive.
The effects were: "Headache, nausea, distress in stomach, tongue coated white." These
developed in from one to two hours after inhaling, and lasted two or three days. In the second
stage the effects do not come on until from twelve to twenty-four hours. Then there were:
"Fearful headache, nausea, aversion to food, distress through hypochondriac region, first in the
spleen, then liver and stomach, and on the third day the chills." Then antidotes had to be resorted
or four days. Then came, first, extreme lassitude, continued fever, pains and aches impeding
and compelled the provers to take to their beds (New, Old, and Forgotten Remedies, in which the
chief papers on this remedy will be found collected. —I have added later experiences from recent
numbers of H. R). George Herring has recalled an observation by Casanova that malaria
antidotes phthisis, and Herring relates an experience of his own in a converse sense. On board a
Liverpool steamer he put into Aspinwall on the swampy isthmus of Panama for nine days. On
the ship's return several of the sailors were prostrated with Panama fever, whilst Herring, who
had formerly suffered from tubercular disease of the lungs, remained unaffected. From which it
would seem that a consumptive habit may be antidotal to malaria. Bowen gave to a lady,
apparently in the last stage of consumption, herself the last survivor of five, all the rest having
died of the same disease as well as several in the preceding generation, a dose from the watery
solution of No. II. On the fifth day she had a fairly perceptible chill, and a harder one the sixth
and seventh days. Antidotes were here called into requisition, but when cured of her malaria she
pounds, could scarcely walk for two years from rheumatism in back and limbs. Malar. 1x, ten
foreman in a large saw mills, his work involving frequent wettings, had rheumatism of malarial
heemorrhoidal troubles, which were remedied, but still he could not walk or get out of a chair. He
said his back had been injured when in the army. Ruta and Rhus enabled him to get up one or
two steps; but Bowen finally concluded that the complaint was really rheumatism of malarial
house and walked up and down the flight of steps alone. In five more days he walked three miles
dizzy and drowsy at all times, < mornings. Eyes weak, blurring, reading difficult. Laryngeal
irritation with cough and secretion of bloody mucus. Slow pulse. Right arm gets numb and has to
be rubbed. Cold extremities; poor appetite but food does not distress her. Urine red, scanty.
pilules every three hours. Better in three days; in a week nearly well. A month later there was a
slight defect of vision in left eye, inclined to be drowsy, somewhat forgetful, singing causes
some irritation in the throat. Malar. was again given night and morning, and she became quite
Kansas volunteer, 28, after a week in camp in rainy, chilly weather had chill and fever,
continuous nausea, vomiting bile, retching. Tongue white, thick coat. Mouth feels dry but is
Diarrhcea in morning; stools thin, yellow, foul. Bitter taste; parched mouth; tongue white.
removed (each letter refers to a separate case): (a) Chilly with flushes of heat. Great desire for
fresh air. Cannot breathe on account of pain in liver, < lying down, must jump up; > by hard
pressure on liver. During day no trouble and no tenderness; raves, sings, and talks all night. (b)
Ague every other day begins about noon. Weak and drowsy between attacks (has taken much
Quinine). (c) Drawing or pricking feeling in region of liver (left after the second dose). (7) Dumb
chills. (e) When in open air seems cold and shakes inside till she fairly cramps. Aching under
half-minute guns, when talking and when turning over in bed. (/) Steady dull ache in liver region
> after urinating. In the proving the symptoms were > by eating, and there was a great desire to
stretch.
General sense of weariness; from a very short walk; esp. through pelvis,
sacral region, and upper thighs; strong desire to lie down.—A kind of simmering all through the
emaciation.
Feeling as though he would become dizzy.—Waving dizziness on falling
asleep.—Dizziness on rising from reclining position —Dull aching through forehead.—(Dull
headache, dizzy and drowsy.)
blurring, reading difficult.)
A kind of concentration of feeling at root of nose and just above, as though I should
have a severe cold like hay-fever.
Itching on r. cheek over malar bone (and various parts of face and limbs); > by slight
rubbing or scratching.—Face becomes warm as if flushed; and spreads over body.
Pain in upper |. teeth.—Sensation on point of tongue as if a few specks of pepper
were there.—Saliva more profuse than usual, keeps him swallowing often.—Had a good night's
rest and felt better and brighter from that time (curative).—(Bitter taste, parched mouth; tongue
white.)
Unusually hearty appetite (for supper).—Odour from cooking is pleasing, but no
desire for dinner; on sitting down eats a good dinner with relish.—Feels better after eating
dinner.—Easy belching, several times, no taste-—Qualmish.—Nausea.
Sense of heat in abdomen.—Tired feeling through abdomen and
chest.—Sensation as though he would have a very loose stool (it passed off without).—Sensation
abdomen.—Liver, spleen, and kidneys affected.—(Cannot breathe on account of pain in liver, <
scapula.)
Tickling cough, especially in consumption.
Shallow breathing, which seems from languor, desire to breathe deep,
occasionally.—Residence in malarial districts is said to cure phthisis.—A consumptive
constitution is protected against malaria.—(Singing causes some irritation in the throat.)
When leaning face on |. hand, elbow on table, perceptible feeling of heart-beats
through upper body and neck.
Neck feels tired, with slight aching in upper part on moving the
head.—Lumbar region tired as though it would ache —(Rheumatism of back and limbs, with
scapula; cramping in liver.)
Aching in both elbows.—Aching and tired feeling in wrists; tired ache in the
hands.—Arms tired.
Pain, upper part of r. ilium.—Tired ache in knees and for some distance
weary from a short walk.—Legs restless, feel like stretching and moving them.
Soft, relaxed, with enfeebled circulation and cold extremities. Colliquative perspiration.
Impelled to lie down, and on falling asleep a sense of waving dizziness passes all
over, preventing sleep.—Gaping, yawning, and desire to stretch.
(When in open air seems cold and shakes inside till she fairly cramps.).—Coldness
ascending over body from legs.—Face feels warm as if flushed, also head; spreads over body, as
if feverish.—A feeling as if he would have a chill, then as if he would become feverish, though
affections of.
Malar. belongs to the same order of remedies as Pyrogen (product of decaying
Tincture, in twenty-drop doses, in a little water. The effects manifest themselves quickly two hours after taking a dose, and they persist for from two to six days.
Chilly sensation in |. forearm; soon followed by chilly feeling in hands and fingers;
feet are cold with sensation as if chilliness were about to creep up the legs; a few moments later
knees feel cold.—A sense of coldness ascending from body from the legs.—Gout.
Open the workspace. Type a real case from this week — one you're still chewing on. Watch Repertify rank Salvia 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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