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FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (160)

Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2003 6:10 pm
by Ardavan Shahrdar
Attention please!!

Post your answers to my private email address
ashahrdar@yahoo.com

You can send related material to the group without
mentioning the name of the remedy.
Find the name of the following remedy:
This small remedy is famous for its indication in
obese patients with alergic asthma esp when
accompanied by bronchitis.

Dyspnea is prominently aggravated from slight exertion
and esp from walking in a forest. The patient shows
severe allergic reaction to mouldy leaves; so the
worst condition is walking in the forest in Autumn.

< Cold and wet weather
It is compared with Calc and Nat-s.
Regards,

Ardavan Shahrdar, MD, DIHom, RIHA

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Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (160)

Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2003 7:19 pm
by Patti Mount
from:
MORRISON R., Seminar Burgh Haamstede Sept 1987

It is mainly a remedy for asthma.
It is a remedy you will confuse with Calcarea, because:
- They are plump, fat people.
- They have dyspnoea and, with their dyspnoea, slight exertion aggravates.
It is a remedy you may confuse with Ferrum, because:
- They look robust.
- They look flushed.
- Yet they feel very weak and they cannot do very much.
Asthma
With this specific information, that the aggravation occurs when they get
around mouldy leaves from the tree (leaves fall down and they get mouldy).
This is what triggers off the asthma. Not in cellars, it is a different type
of mouldy. It must be a specific type of mould, it could be from other
moulds, but it is especially from rotting leaves.

regards Patti @ iantd.com

Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (160)

Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2003 10:02 pm
by Dave Hartley
- Some years ago an elderly gentleman had long been suffering from
asthma, for over twenty years
- He took all measures and tried different methods of both recognized
and unrecognized medical treatments, but unfortunately all proved in
vain.
- At last he gave up all treatments and was getting fits daily.
- He was brought to such a deplorable condition that he was left to
suffer.
- He was in the habit of taking tea.
- One afternoon as usual he drank his cup of tea
- afterwards he noticed that his oppression in the chest was much less
and that he was feeling unusually better, so much so that he felt
himself a different being.
- This led him and his friends to enquire into the cause of it.
- He immediately inferred that the relief was due to the drinking of the
tea, although he habitually drank the same tea but never before had
experienced any such changes.
- o this change he attributed to something in the tea.
- The servant who prepared the tea was sent for and questioned.
- His reply was that he made the tea as usual and there was nothing new
in it.
- The residue of the tea-cup was carefully examined, nothing was found
there, but on examining the tea-pot XXXXXX was discovered. - So it was
concluded that this infusion of XXXXXX did the gentleman a world of
good. - The very day he drank that cup of tea he had hardly any fit of
asthma at night, and in a few days he got entirely well to his and his
friends' surprise
Dave Hartley
www.localcomputermart.com/dave
Santa Cruz, CA (831)464-8127

Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (160)

Posted: Sat Feb 01, 2003 11:53 pm
by Rochelle
I know this Rx as one to look for when a patient has an allergy ,
particularly asthma from eating Chocolate!!!!

Regards,
Rochelle
www.rochellemarsden.co.uk
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Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (160)

Posted: Sun Feb 02, 2003 6:10 am
by Glenda Wilks
Hi Ardavan,

From Morrison
Regards

Glenda

Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (160)

Posted: Sun Feb 02, 2003 7:55 am
by Dave Hartley
There is a link, but Choc. is not the right remedy.

Also, if you want to let everyone else play, don't post the remedy name.

Post a bit of MM or something that shows you know it, but doesn't
totally give it away.
Dave Hartley
www.localcomputermart.com/dave
Santa Cruz, CA (831)464-8127

Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (160)

Posted: Mon Feb 03, 2003 6:25 pm
by Dale Moss
From Vithoulkas:

X patients have a tendency to catch cold, as well as a sensitivity in the bronchi which are easily irritated and inflamed. A X case often starts with a common cold which develops into severe bronchitis and coughing; this in turn creates respiratory problems which eventually turn into chronic asthma.

X will prove to be one of the most important remedies for asthma attacks which begin after an inflammation of the bronchi and end as asthma and finally emphysema.

This remedy is mainly indicated when the asthma attacks are much worse during the night and the patient cannot get any rest or sleep because it is not possible to lie down at all. He has to sit up, propped up with pillows all night to avoid suffocation. The patient is drenched in sweat from his efforts to cough out the mucus, but little expectoration is raised. These symptoms mean that difficulties may be experienced in the differential diagnosis with such remedies as Ant-t., Ars. and Sambucus negra. X is very similar to Sambucus in severe cases of chronic asthma where respiration is difficult all night and profuse cold perspiration accompanies the exhaustion. Indeed, in most of these cases, Sambucus or Carb-v. are usually prescribed instead of X.

Peace,
Cinnabar

Re: FIND THE REMEDY'S NAME (160)

Posted: Tue Feb 04, 2003 4:17 am
by jpgregorich@aol.com
From Phatak:

Generalities
- This remedy is mainly used in the affections of the Sciatic nerve; though
it has some useful abdominal and female symptoms.
- Offensive diarrhoea with colic agg. morning.
- Weight and heaviness in pelvis.
- Dysmenorrhoea, with scanty menses and very painful the first day.
- Intense sciatic pain; alternating with or followed by numbness agg. lying
down, motion, stepping; amel. by flexing the limbs on abdomen, by sitting in
a chair.
- Lumbago with numbness of part and weight and heaviness in pelvis.
- Anterior crural neuralgia.
- Pain in joints as if they lacked oil.
Worse
- Walking.
- Lying.
- Cold damp.
Better
- Flexing limbs.
- Sitting; in a chair.
Related
- Colo.
Jim Gregorich