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email address ashahrdar@yahoo.com
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mentioning the name of the remedy.
Find the name of the following remedy:
This small remedy is mostly indicated in motor
dysfunctions and paralytic affections.
Parkinson's disease is one of the conditions that may
be helped by the remedy (Of course when it is suitable
for the totality of symptoms)
The patient suffers from unsteady and tottering gait.
There is severe trembling in upper and lower
extremities. Trembling of tongue prevents proper
speech. Awkward in every aspect; drops things,...
One of the interesting peculiar features of this
remedy is yawning accompanied by eructations.
Sincerely,
Ardavan Shahrdar, MD, DIHom, RIHA
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http://www.minutus.org/Find.htm
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"Life is beautiful, if you look at it in a beautiful way."
Dr Ardavan Shahrdar, MD, DIHom
President of Iranian Homeopathic Association
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FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (139)
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Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (139)
From Vermeulen:
REGION
Central nervous system. Gastrointestinal tract. Heart.
-
LEADING SYMPTOMS
M OVERSENSITIVENESS [persisting for weeks in provers].
CHILLS when touching velvet, paper, coal,
from squeaking of door, scratching on glass, moving of furniture,
etc.
G Constant chilliness.
G Better Eating [headache; cramping pain in stomach]. [Leeser]
"Wakes at night with violent cramps in stomach; must bend double;
temporarily better hand on stomach; worse any motion, better flatus."
[Mezger]
G Vertigo.
Worse Motion; walking.
Better Rest; sitting; closing eyes.
& Staggering gait.
"Sensation at every step that he is moving backward the same
distance and is therefore making no progress." [Mezger]
& Nausea; loss of speech.
P Sensation as if head were stuffed with a thick substance that
presses outward through ears and forehead. [Mezger]
Sensation as if ears were stuffed with wool. Hearing impaired.
P Sensation as of a lump of ice on occiput. [Mezger]
P Food tastes horrible, as if it were vomited.
Nausea, esp. after drinking sweetened coffee. [Mezger]
P Hands.
Awkwardness and trembling of hands.
Sensation as if hands were enlarged.
P Stiffness, redness and swelling of finger joints; sensitive on
pressure, painful on moving fingers; as if stung by insects.
Violent itching on second or third day, with appearance in the
evening of pin-head sized vesicles, which itch violently during the night.
[Mezger]
P Cramps in calves; as if bound with cords.
-
RUBRICS
MIND : Awkward [2]. Insanity & paralysis [1].
VERTIGO : Reeling [2].
EAR : Noises, sounds of cymbals and drums [1; Lob.].
STOMACH : Eructations, waterbrash with vile taste [3/1].
EXTREMITIES : Awkwardness of hands, drops things [1]. Constriction
of legs as with a garter [1]. Trembling, cannot hold a glass of water
[1/1]; cannot write [1/1].
SLEEP : Yawning & eructations [1]; & nausea [1].
GENERALITIES : Pains appear gradually and disappear gradually [1].
-
FOOD
Aversion: Coffee [1]; sweets [1].
Worse: Sweetened coffee [1].
Regards
Wendy Howard
REGION
Central nervous system. Gastrointestinal tract. Heart.
-
LEADING SYMPTOMS
M OVERSENSITIVENESS [persisting for weeks in provers].
CHILLS when touching velvet, paper, coal,
from squeaking of door, scratching on glass, moving of furniture,
etc.
G Constant chilliness.
G Better Eating [headache; cramping pain in stomach]. [Leeser]
"Wakes at night with violent cramps in stomach; must bend double;
temporarily better hand on stomach; worse any motion, better flatus."
[Mezger]
G Vertigo.
Worse Motion; walking.
Better Rest; sitting; closing eyes.
& Staggering gait.
"Sensation at every step that he is moving backward the same
distance and is therefore making no progress." [Mezger]
& Nausea; loss of speech.
P Sensation as if head were stuffed with a thick substance that
presses outward through ears and forehead. [Mezger]
Sensation as if ears were stuffed with wool. Hearing impaired.
P Sensation as of a lump of ice on occiput. [Mezger]
P Food tastes horrible, as if it were vomited.
Nausea, esp. after drinking sweetened coffee. [Mezger]
P Hands.
Awkwardness and trembling of hands.
Sensation as if hands were enlarged.
P Stiffness, redness and swelling of finger joints; sensitive on
pressure, painful on moving fingers; as if stung by insects.
Violent itching on second or third day, with appearance in the
evening of pin-head sized vesicles, which itch violently during the night.
[Mezger]
P Cramps in calves; as if bound with cords.
-
RUBRICS
MIND : Awkward [2]. Insanity & paralysis [1].
VERTIGO : Reeling [2].
EAR : Noises, sounds of cymbals and drums [1; Lob.].
STOMACH : Eructations, waterbrash with vile taste [3/1].
EXTREMITIES : Awkwardness of hands, drops things [1]. Constriction
of legs as with a garter [1]. Trembling, cannot hold a glass of water
[1/1]; cannot write [1/1].
SLEEP : Yawning & eructations [1]; & nausea [1].
GENERALITIES : Pains appear gradually and disappear gradually [1].
-
FOOD
Aversion: Coffee [1]; sweets [1].
Worse: Sweetened coffee [1].
Regards
Wendy Howard
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- Joined: Wed Apr 08, 2020 3:47 pm
Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (139)
Weakly, scrofulous children prone to brain troubles. Especially at
dentition.
Melancholia; silent despair; stupidity or unintelligent muttering; agg.
consolation; irritability; mind loses control over body; strong
concentration needed before muscles will act.
Acute brain affections; hydrocephalus, during stage of effusion;
stupefaction or insensibility; head rolls from side to side, bores into
pillow or is beaten with hands; sudden screams; eyes wide open, pupils
insensible to light; chewing motions with mouth; grinding of teeth;
automatic motion of one arm or leg; urine generally suppressed; may be
convulsions. Meningitis.
Sudden dropsical swellings; urine red or black scanty coffee-ground
sediment; or urine suppressed; characteristic stupefaction and mental
torpor.
Modalities; agg. 4-9 p.m. (Lyc.) especially sinking sensation and headache.
Dave Hartley
www.localcomputermart.com/dave
Santa Cruz, CA (831)423-4284
dentition.
Melancholia; silent despair; stupidity or unintelligent muttering; agg.
consolation; irritability; mind loses control over body; strong
concentration needed before muscles will act.
Acute brain affections; hydrocephalus, during stage of effusion;
stupefaction or insensibility; head rolls from side to side, bores into
pillow or is beaten with hands; sudden screams; eyes wide open, pupils
insensible to light; chewing motions with mouth; grinding of teeth;
automatic motion of one arm or leg; urine generally suppressed; may be
convulsions. Meningitis.
Sudden dropsical swellings; urine red or black scanty coffee-ground
sediment; or urine suppressed; characteristic stupefaction and mental
torpor.
Modalities; agg. 4-9 p.m. (Lyc.) especially sinking sensation and headache.
Dave Hartley
www.localcomputermart.com/dave
Santa Cruz, CA (831)423-4284
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- Joined: Wed Apr 01, 2020 10:00 pm
Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (139)
From Phatak:
GENERALITIES: This remedy is useful in paralytic conditions. Tremors and convulsions; paralysis agitans, Prostration and restlessness.
WORSE: Wet; wet season.
MIND: Anxious and depressed
HEAD: Vertigo, must close eyes. Head heavy.
MOUTH: tongue tremulous. Speech difficult, cannot pronounce the whole word.
STOMACH: Nausea, vomiting. Severe purging.
EXTREMITIES: Gait unsteady,. Trembling of all limbs, cannot write, or hold a glass of water. Spasm of arms and legs. Violent pain in
calves, as if bound by a cord.
FEVER: Cold rigor all over, esp. in limbs.
RELATED: Lathy; Sec.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
GENERALITIES: This remedy is useful in paralytic conditions. Tremors and convulsions; paralysis agitans, Prostration and restlessness.
WORSE: Wet; wet season.
MIND: Anxious and depressed
HEAD: Vertigo, must close eyes. Head heavy.
MOUTH: tongue tremulous. Speech difficult, cannot pronounce the whole word.
STOMACH: Nausea, vomiting. Severe purging.
EXTREMITIES: Gait unsteady,. Trembling of all limbs, cannot write, or hold a glass of water. Spasm of arms and legs. Violent pain in
calves, as if bound by a cord.
FEVER: Cold rigor all over, esp. in limbs.
RELATED: Lathy; Sec.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (139)
The grass can be found all over the world and has a great number of folk
names, all of which emphasise the plant's anaesthetic, dizzying aspect. It
has a stiff, erect stem with a blue-green tint and a separate spike, which
grows to 30 centimetres. It has a preference for dank fields and in high
rainfall years, it often appears in cornfields. The plant has long been
known
for its narcotic-toxic effect. The ancients supposed it to cause blindness,
hence with the Romans, ........., to live on Darnel, was a phrase
applied to a dim-sighted person. Poisonings occurred often, usually through
the contamination of flour with..........seed. The seed used to be added to
beer to increase its intoxicant effect. In Turkey and Arabia,
.................. was used
as an anaesthetising agent in cataract and bladder operations.
There is little known about its toxic effects. According to some authors,
the
effects are due to a parasitic fungus which occurs on ........... In that
case,
the grass type would belong to the same category as Secale [Claviceps
purpurea] and Ustilago. Both are smuts. Secale is a parasite to rye,
Ustilago
to maize, while ............is said to be related to oats or barley.
"Professor
Henslow considers too that as the use of Darnel in the sixteenth century was
similar to that of Ergot - a diseased condition of rye - it is more probable
that the injurious nature of .......... has been due to an ergotised
condition,
especially as experiments have shown that perfectly healthy
..............seeds have
no injurious effects." [Grieve] A better reason for making a fungus
responsible for the toxic effect is that ..........particularly occurs in
cornfields during damp summers. The level of poison has been found to be
very
inconsistent and only becomes active when the seed ripens. The ash contains
approx. 50 percent silicic acid, but this cannot be the reason for the
effects, since all grasses contain an abundance of silicic acid.
Rochelle
www.rochellemarsden.co.uk
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names, all of which emphasise the plant's anaesthetic, dizzying aspect. It
has a stiff, erect stem with a blue-green tint and a separate spike, which
grows to 30 centimetres. It has a preference for dank fields and in high
rainfall years, it often appears in cornfields. The plant has long been
known
for its narcotic-toxic effect. The ancients supposed it to cause blindness,
hence with the Romans, ........., to live on Darnel, was a phrase
applied to a dim-sighted person. Poisonings occurred often, usually through
the contamination of flour with..........seed. The seed used to be added to
beer to increase its intoxicant effect. In Turkey and Arabia,
.................. was used
as an anaesthetising agent in cataract and bladder operations.
There is little known about its toxic effects. According to some authors,
the
effects are due to a parasitic fungus which occurs on ........... In that
case,
the grass type would belong to the same category as Secale [Claviceps
purpurea] and Ustilago. Both are smuts. Secale is a parasite to rye,
Ustilago
to maize, while ............is said to be related to oats or barley.
"Professor
Henslow considers too that as the use of Darnel in the sixteenth century was
similar to that of Ergot - a diseased condition of rye - it is more probable
that the injurious nature of .......... has been due to an ergotised
condition,
especially as experiments have shown that perfectly healthy
..............seeds have
no injurious effects." [Grieve] A better reason for making a fungus
responsible for the toxic effect is that ..........particularly occurs in
cornfields during damp summers. The level of poison has been found to be
very
inconsistent and only becomes active when the seed ripens. The ash contains
approx. 50 percent silicic acid, but this cannot be the reason for the
effects, since all grasses contain an abundance of silicic acid.
Rochelle
www.rochellemarsden.co.uk
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Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free.
Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com).
Version: 6.0.361 / Virus Database: 199 - Release Date: 07/05/02
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Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (139)
From Anschutz(EH):
- The use of the drug by Dr. Bonino was truly homoeopathic for the short
proving of it.
- Allen's Encyclopedia reports trembling of the limbs and hand so great that
"he could not hold a glass of water".)
- A carpenter, aged twenty-nine years, had been suffering, ever since his
eighteenth year, of trembling in both hands, especially in the morning; of
late his legs also began to tremble.
- It is remarkable that both father and his brother were subject to the same
ailment, while no definite cause could be indicated.
- He was first given Mercurius vivusn then Agaricus, which brought a partial
but only transitory improvement.
- Finally I prescribed .#########, which within a short time effected a
cure.
- (On this Dr. Mossa comments as follows.)
- The pathogenetic effects of this remedy which has not yet been proved at
all are only known to some degree from its effects when it has been mixed
with grain and baked into bread.
- It has caused chest troubles, vertigo (thence the name darnel-grass, in
German Taumellolch), trembling, paralysis with anguish and distress,
vomiting, failing of the memory, blindness, headache, epileptic attacks, deep
sleep and insanity.
- The good success obtained by its use in the case given above shows what
curative effects may be expected from it in severe affections of the brain or
spinal marrow.
- An Italian physician, Fantoni, has tried it in cephalalgia, meningitis
rheumatica and ischias.
Jim Gregorich
- The use of the drug by Dr. Bonino was truly homoeopathic for the short
proving of it.
- Allen's Encyclopedia reports trembling of the limbs and hand so great that
"he could not hold a glass of water".)
- A carpenter, aged twenty-nine years, had been suffering, ever since his
eighteenth year, of trembling in both hands, especially in the morning; of
late his legs also began to tremble.
- It is remarkable that both father and his brother were subject to the same
ailment, while no definite cause could be indicated.
- He was first given Mercurius vivusn then Agaricus, which brought a partial
but only transitory improvement.
- Finally I prescribed .#########, which within a short time effected a
cure.
- (On this Dr. Mossa comments as follows.)
- The pathogenetic effects of this remedy which has not yet been proved at
all are only known to some degree from its effects when it has been mixed
with grain and baked into bread.
- It has caused chest troubles, vertigo (thence the name darnel-grass, in
German Taumellolch), trembling, paralysis with anguish and distress,
vomiting, failing of the memory, blindness, headache, epileptic attacks, deep
sleep and insanity.
- The good success obtained by its use in the case given above shows what
curative effects may be expected from it in severe affections of the brain or
spinal marrow.
- An Italian physician, Fantoni, has tried it in cephalalgia, meningitis
rheumatica and ischias.
Jim Gregorich