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BASIC REMEDIES
POLYCHRESTS
TISSUE SALTS
FLOWER REMEDIES
NOSODES
etc.
IMPONDERABILIA
GEM REMEDIES
RX GROUPS
RX
RELATIONSHIPS
HERBS
NUTRITION
LIFESTYLE
NEW RX'S
RX IN FOCUS
RXS
IN RYHME
POISONOUS
PLANTS
ORGAN
RXS
CHILDREN'S
TYPES
PROVINGS
SIMON'S
SECTION
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(Buchu — from Cape of Good Hope)
General
Pathogenically it produces: Somnolence; nervous insomnia; night
sweats. Erratic pains, with bad humor, desire to weep or fear
of sickness. Violent vertigo. Cephalalgia, chiefly frontal, radiating
to the occiput. Eyes brilliant, with lachrymation or itching,
the conditions accompanied by a species of stupefaction, with
hardness of hearing or noises from aural pressure. Earthy face
with disseminated rosaceous eruption. Nausea, fetid breath, with
sensation of emptiness. SENSATION OF METEORISM, WITH STINGING
PAINS IN THE SPLEEN. Painful sensation in the abdomen, with pubic
pressure — the pressure of the clothing becomes insupportable,
with emission of high-colored, bloody urine. Frequent yellow diarrhoea,
worse at night. Catamenia abundant, anticipating, sometimes metrorrhagic
in type; crampy pains on ingesting food. Sensation of heat or
of cold in the hands, with convulsive movements of the fingers.
Weakness of the legs, aggravated by sitting down. Clinically,
this pathogeny should be useful in cerebral affections with dullness
or stupefaction; in convulsive or epileptiform attacks; in HYSTERIA;
in HEPATITIS (cirrhosis or atrophy); in hematuria with ovarian
or uterine lesions. In splenitis, where it should surpass Ceanothus.
Mental disorders in nervous or ascetic individuals, particularly
where there is constant fear of death, or erotic or maniacal attacks.
GASTRALGIA. GASTRO-ENTERITIS. Sudden fright, with trembling and
weakness of the legs. (Dr. C. Leal La Rota.)
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