treatment of Benign prostatic hyperplasia

Here you will find all the discussions from the time this group was hosted on YahooGroups and groups.io
You can browse through these topics and reply to them as needed.
It is not possible to start new topics in this forum. Please use the respective other forums most related to your topic.
Post Reply
Ellen Madono
Posts: 2012
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 10:00 pm

treatment of Benign prostatic hyperplasia

Post by Ellen Madono »

Hi All,
Has anyone had luck with benign prostatic hyperplasia? I am open to suggestions.
The problem is a catheter is keeping the urieter open, but he has lost most control of the sphincter. The Urologist said come back on June 5th for more tests. That seems like a long wait.
Benign prostatic hyperplasia is a common condition for elderly males. The patient is 76 years old. The prostate swells and squeezes the urethra that runs through it. For years before the ureter closed, he had the typical probls, with urination.
My patient has a catheter so I have been waiting for the catheter to be removed so that I can have some symptoms that are not caused by the catheter. It has been a month since the urine stop making the catheter necessary. Antibiotics are being given because the urethra is also infected.
The patient has a family history of venous return problems and his aorta is partially narrowed by plaque. So, I am thinking of giving a snake remedy that matches his personality. Cenchris contortrix. Mainly I am thinking about blood flow to the prostate.
At the time of when the ureter stopped passing urine, I took the case. I got Lycopodium and Silicea. Silicea is a gppd remedy for his other problems. I gave Lyc, but it did nothing in that emergency.
He is being given Sabal (Saw Pallemeto) in tincture and in potency 6c, occasional Staphasagria for the insult to a sexual organ, Crategus (Hawthorn) in herbal tincture.
He is becoming very irritable because of the antibiotic. He is able to push out a little urine when he takes off the cap from the catheter. Now, for most of the day, he does not use a bag. He says he is pushing the urine out from around the catheter. Clearly exercise such as walking improves his condition, but after a month of this catheter he is also becoming depressed and moves less.
I am open to any tips or thoughts. I saw an interesting article on Uro lift. It looks like a mechnical method to open up the ureter where it runs through the prostate. http://www.ucihealth.org/medical-servic ... thral-lift Has anyone had experience with it?
Best,
Ellen Madono


Dale Moss
Posts: 1544
Joined: Wed Jul 31, 2002 10:00 pm

Re: treatment of Benign prostatic hyperplasia

Post by Dale Moss »

Assuming it’s only BPH and nothing else going on (like a history of STDs, or cancer, or paralysis of the bladder or its sphincter), the following rubric might give you some suggestions:

bladder; RETENTION of urine; catheter, had to be emptied by (19) : 4OP., 4SOLID., 3Caust., 3Lob., 3Pareir., 3Sabal., 3Sec., 3Sulph., 2apis, ap-g., arn., ars., cadm-p., kali-cy., phos., polytr., sulfon., thlaspi, vesi.

Peace,
Dale


Ellen Madono
Posts: 2012
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 10:00 pm

Re: treatment of Benign prostatic hyperplasia

Post by Ellen Madono »

Hi Dale,
That’s a nice rubric. Did you get it in Synthesis? I should look up catheter in the literature.
Thank you,
Ellen


Laurence Mckenna
Posts: 12
Joined: Tue Aug 29, 2006 10:00 pm

Re: treatment of Benign prostatic hyperplasia

Post by Laurence Mckenna »

I had cuccesss with this.
https://homeopathyplus.com/product/pros ... largement/
Laurence
Sent: Sunday, May 19, 2019 at 11:47 PM
From: "Ellen Madono ellen.madono@gmail.com [minutus]"
To: "minutus@yahoogroups.com"
Subject: [Minutus] treatment of Benign prostatic hyperplasia
Hi All,
Has anyone had luck with benign prostatic hyperplasia? I am open to suggestions.
The problem is a catheter is keeping the urieter open, but he has lost most control of the sphincter. The Urologist said come back on June 5th for more tests. That seems like a long wait.
Benign prostatic hyperplasia is a common condition for elderly males. The patient is 76 years old. The prostate swells and squeezes the urethra that runs through it. For years before the ureter closed, he had the typical probls, with urination.
My patient has a catheter so I have been waiting for the catheter to be removed so that I can have some symptoms that are not caused by the catheter. It has been a month since the urine stop making the catheter necessary. Antibiotics are being given because the urethra is also infected.
The patient has a family history of venous return problems and his aorta is partially narrowed by plaque. So, I am thinking of giving a snake remedy that matches his personality. Cenchris contortrix. Mainly I am thinking about blood flow to the prostate.
At the time of when the ureter stopped passing urine, I took the case. I got Lycopodium and Silicea. Silicea is a gppd remedy for his other problems. I gave Lyc, but it did nothing in that emergency.
He is being given Sabal (Saw Pallemeto) in tincture and in potency 6c, occasional Staphasagria for the insult to a sexual organ, Crategus (Hawthorn) in herbal tincture.
He is becoming very irritable because of the antibiotic. He is able to push out a little urine when he takes off the cap from the catheter. Now, for most of the day, he does not use a bag. He says he is pushing the urine out from around the catheter. Clearly exercise such as walking improves his condition, but after a month of this catheter he is also becoming depressed and moves less.
I am open to any tips or thoughts. I saw an interesting article on Uro lift. It looks like a mechnical method to open up the ureter where it runs through the prostate. http://www.ucihealth.org/medical-servic ... thral-lift Has anyone had experience with it?
Best,
Ellen Madono


Ellen Madono
Posts: 2012
Joined: Fri Aug 15, 2003 10:00 pm

Re: treatment of Benign prostatic hyperplasia

Post by Ellen Madono »

Interesting. Polypharmacy. I would be using the Saw Pallemeto (Sabal) in potency and something from Dale's rubric. So, two remedies at once, but I would try to match the remedy to the patient. Thanks,
Ellen


Dale Moss
Posts: 1544
Joined: Wed Jul 31, 2002 10:00 pm

Re: treatment of Benign prostatic hyperplasia

Post by Dale Moss »

Hi, Ellen

The rubric came from MacRep. Solidago is worth considering. Note this from Anshutz: "A lady, by administering, morning and evening, an infusion of the dry leaves and flowers of Golden Rod (Solidago virgaurea) tells me that she cured her husband of an affection of the bladder which had compelled him to use a catheter for a year or more.
"A friend of homeopathy desired to test the energetics of this plant. He had the first dilution of its tincture to be taken three times a day by seven patients. From forty-two to seventy-fours years of age. They had been obliged to catheterize themselves for weeks, months and years.
"Homeopathy cured them so thoroughly that they had no relapses. Surgeons who spend much time in catheterizing such patients for months and years could often cure them much more rapidly by prescribing for them the remedy just mentioned."

Are you sure there’s no history of STDs? If the patient had gonorrhea in the past, he may have tissue overgrowth within the urethra, which would require somewhat different treatment (or a roto-rooter operation).

Peace,
Dale


Dr. Joe Rozencwajg, NMD
Posts: 2279
Joined: Wed Jul 31, 2002 10:00 pm

Re: treatment of Benign prostatic hyperplasia

Post by Dr. Joe Rozencwajg, NMD »

There is nothing wrong with poly-pharmacy, as long as:

1. each remedy is chosen according to the needs of the patient and more specifically the expression of the problem to be treated

2. it is well understood that the aim of the treatment is local, focal and temporary

I consider both benign and malignant tumours as "one-sided pathologies" that have escaped the control of the normal physiology; although reinforcing and normalising the physiology can and does help restore control, there is no reason no to help it with other interventions. Our goal is to help and cure the patient, and nothing else.
Dr. J. Rozencwajg, NMD
"The greatest enemy of any science is a closed mind"

www.naturamedica.co.nz


Post Reply

Return to “Minutus YahooGroup Archives”