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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No text description is available for this image
No text description is available for this image
No text description is available for this image![be affected by rbeumatisra, as well as the Concomitant Symptoms, Conditions, and Sufferings, in Sections 2, 3, and 4, under thi;.. head. In the cases in which none of the preceding remedies appear tt be indicated, recourse may be had to : Camph., cann., cole, cupr. ^ euph., kreos., magn., mez., ranunc, spig., squill., stann., tart., valerA —Consult also Art. Arthritis and Neuralgia. Scroftllat—The remedies which have hitherto been employed with success are, in general : Ars., asa., bar., bell., calc, cm. con., hep., iod., lye, mere, rhiis, silic, sulph., also : Aur.-mur., carb.-an., carb.- veg., cist., dulc, graph., kreos., lach., pinus, staph.—Aur., aur.-s. chin. ? \^''Broiii., merc.-iod., pimpin.—Ed.] At the Commencement of the Disease, when children evince a tardiness in learning to ivalk, the principal medicines are: Bell., calc, sil., and sulph., and, perhaps, recourse may also be had to: Ars., chin., cin.,fer., lye, magn., pinus, j^uls., rhab., sep. At the Second Stage, when there are Glandular Affections, the medicines are especially : Bar.-e, bell., [brom.] calc, cist., con., dulc, hep., lye, mere, phos., rhus, sil., staph., sulph. (Compare Glands.) Cutaneous Affections (eruptions, tetters, ulcers, &c.) chiefly require: Aur., bar.-c., cede, cist., clem., co7i., dule, hep., lye, mere, mur.-ae, rhus, silie, and sidph. (See Chap. II., Cutaneous Affec- tions.) For affections of the Osseous System, especially : Aur., calc, cist, lye, mere, phos., phos.-ae, puis., sil., and sulph. (Compare Bones, and Rachitis.) Lastly, Abdominal Obstruction or Mesenteric Atrophy requires, principally : Sidph., followed by calc, or else : Ars., bar.-e, bell., chin., cin., lye, n.-vom., puis., rhics, &c. \^Plumb.-acet.—Ed. ] (See Atrophy.) The manifestations of this disease are so numerous and complex that it is extremely difficult to lay down the particular iNDiCATioNa which should determine the choice of each remedy, without repeating their entire pathogenesy. The following rules may, however, be found useful: Arsenicum—Is indicated chiefly by: Atrophy, with excessive emaciation, swelling of the glands of the neck or of the nape of the neck, hard and distended abdomen ; puffed face ; loose evacuations; great debility, with continued necessity to remain lying down ; leuco- phlegmatic constitution, tetters, and ulcers ; scald-head; ophthalmia; cancerous affections, &c. Asa—When there are : Exostosis, caries, distortion or incurva](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b21060666_0069.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)