Hull's Jahr : a new manual of homoeopathic practice.
- George Heinrich Gottlieb Jahr
- Date:
- 1870
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Hull's Jahr : a new manual of homoeopathic practice. Source: Wellcome Collection.
Provider: This material has been provided by the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, through the Medical Heritage Library. The original may be consulted at the Francis A. Countway Library of Medicine, Harvard Medical School.
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![[Arthritic-like Fa.im,—°Iod., mag.-artif., ran.-h., *sangum.t °silic. Aconite—For opiercing pains and paralytic sensation in the su^» fering parts. , ; Causticum—For *drawing and lacerating pains. GuAicuM—For ° piercing and lacerating pains with contraction of the suffering parts. Heracleum—For lacerating pain in the limbs. Magn.-artif.—For bruise and fatigue-like pains in the small of the back, knees, and all the joints, occurring in the morning, in bed, after resisting a desire for coition. Mercurius—For ^excessive pains in the limbs and joints of muscles and tendons. NiTRUM—For pains in previously painless nodes. Petroleum—For pains at night, in the hip, knee, and foot-joint. Rhododendron—For °pains excited by unpleasant and stormy weather, and aggravated by rest, night, and warmth of tJie bed; °sub-inflammatory state after subduing the inflammation by Aeon., am., sulph. ^ Sepia—For drawing pains in the knees and finger-joints. Spigelia—For piercing and lacerating pains.—Ed.] ArtIirOCaC€.—°Coloc. and ^phos.-ac.? have been chiefly recom- mended against that morbid state which sometimes accompanies chronic inflammations of the joints.—It may also be well to refer to: Calc., hep., sil., and °sulph. [Merc.?] AspllJ'^ia or Apparent Death.—Homoeopathic medicines may be administered in almost all cases, either by putting some globules on the tongue of the patient, or by dissolving them in water, and apply- ing them in the form of a clyster. It is obvious that mechanical aids ought not to be neglected, but blood-letting, which in the majority of cases cannot fail to prove most injurious, ought to be avoided.—• (Chinin ?) [In those cases of Asphyxia (more properly defined a pulseless state) in which there is apoplexy of the lungs, accompanied by laborious breathing, venesection is not only admissible, but abso- lutely required by sound experience and true medical philosophy.— Ed.] If Asphyxia be caused by a Fall, Am. may be used, especially if the patient has not been bled. In the contrary case, or if con- siderable loss of blood should have been occasioned by the fall itself, it will be better to administer China first, and Arnica after* wards.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21060666_0036.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


