|
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
|
(Cyanide of Mercury)
General
Acute infections, pneumonia, nephritis. Its action is similar
to that of the toxins of infectious diseases. Great and rapid
prostration, tendency toward hemorrhages, from the different orifices,
of dark fluid blood, cyanosis, rapid respiration and heart action,
albuminuria and twitching and jerking of muscles. Typhoid pneumonia.
Livid states from great struggling, where suffocation is imminent
and paralysis of lung threatening; great sweat.
Affects most prominently the buccal cavity. This, together with
marked prostration, gives it a place in the treatment of DIPHTHERIA,
where it has achieved unquestioned great results. Malignant types,
with prostration. Coldness and nausea. Syphilitic ulcers when
perforation threatens.
Head.
Great excitement, fits of passion; fury; talkativeness. Atrocious
headache. Eyes sunken; face pale.
Mouth.
Covered with ulceration. Tongue pale. Free salivation. Fetor of
breath. Pain and swelling of salivary glands. Astringent taste.
ULCERATIONS of mouth have a gray membrane.
Throat.
Feels raw and sore. Mucous membranes broken down, ulcerated. Looks
raw in spots, especially in public speakers. Hoarseness, and talking
is painful. NECROTIC DESTRUCTION OF SOFT PARTS OF PALATE AND FAUCES.
Intense redness of fauces. Swallowing very difficult. Dark blood
from nose. Diphtheria of the larynx and nose. [KALI. BICH.]
Stomach.
Nausea, vomiting, bilious, bloody; hiccough; abdomen painful,
tender to pressure.
Rectum.
Intolerable pain. Redness around anus. Frequent hemorrhage; stools
with tenesmus. Discharge of fetid liquid with gangrenous odor.
Black stools.
Urinary Organs.
Amber color, painful, albuminous, scanty. Nephritis with great
debility and chilliness. Suppression of urine.
Skin.
Moisture, with icy coldness.
Dose.
Sixth to thirtieth potency. Aggravation is apt to occur from potencies
below the sixth.
|