Digest Number 1228 - PCOS

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Barbara *
Posts: 20
Joined: Wed Apr 08, 2020 4:18 pm

Digest Number 1228 - PCOS

Post by Barbara * »

Lynn wrote:

I had a client diagnosed with PCOS who was put on the pill at age 16
because
her menses wouldn't stop. She was on the pill for six years, got
married
and went off the pill to get pregnant. The flooding periods returned,
she
got anemic. Homeopathic treatment started lessening the duration of the
periods for awhile but nothing seemed to help them return to normal.
She
ate organic food, was happily married (no sexual desire during the heavy
parts of the period), was significantly overweight (she did lose 35
pounds
after beginning homeopathy), liked her job. The main issues in her life
had
to do with her mother's death two years before from ovarian cancer and
that
she had lost her only sibling, her brother, to his nasty wife. Her
family
was of primary importance. It was very frustrating not to have found a
remedy that would resolve the case.

I've had two other PCOS cases and they resolved, one with Sepia and one
with
Phosphorus. The phosphorus case also suffered from SADD which has
lessened
but not totally resolved.

I am very interested in PCOS cases and what has worked and why.

Lynn
Dear Lynn,

Thanks for sharing this. My experience in one case was fairly close: NBWS
"lost her brother to his nasty wife", plus rejection by same. In the other
two, I
only know the mother's case, not the daughter's, but the mother was married
because she was pregnant (she was from a strict Roman Catholic background,
and in those days it was the right thing to do), but he subsequently
rejected her after 3 children together (the eldest being the daughter with
PCOS). So in
that case I can discount the Pill being involved in the mother passing it on
to the daughter, which might mean that there could be a hereditary factor ?
Anyone else seen this?

Best wishes,
Barbara

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Joy Lucas
Posts: 3350
Joined: Wed Apr 01, 2020 10:00 pm

Re: Digest Number 1228 - PCOS

Post by Joy Lucas »

Any hereditary factors are very important and will probably increase the
susceptibility but don't discount the 'pill' being involved as this could
well be the exciting cause which wakens the susceptibility which otherwise
might lay dormant.

I would add Lilium tig and Fraxinus americana to the NBWS the pill scenario.

Best, Joy

www.homeopathicmateriamedica.com
on 11/6/03 11:35 AM, Barbara * at barbara_hamilton2@hotmail.com wrote:
Dear Lynn,

Thanks for sharing this. My experience in one case was fairly close: NBWS
"lost her brother to his nasty wife", plus rejection by same. In the other
two, I
only know the mother's case, not the daughter's, but the mother was married
because she was pregnant (she was from a strict Roman Catholic background,
and in those days it was the right thing to do), but he subsequently
rejected her after 3 children together (the eldest being the daughter with
PCOS). So in
that case I can discount the Pill being involved in the mother passing it on
to the daughter, which might mean that there could be a hereditary factor ?
Anyone else seen this?

Best wishes,
Barbara
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]


Lynn Lammer
Posts: 17
Joined: Wed Apr 01, 2020 10:00 pm

Re: Digest Number 1228 - PCOS

Post by Lynn Lammer »

On 11/6/03 6:03 AM, "Joy Lucas" wrote:

Hi Joy,
Calc c and lil t were tried with no changes. I am not familiar with
fraxinus so will study that. Thanks.
Lynn


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