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Symphatum
Posted: Tue Feb 04, 2020 8:00 pm
by Carol Orr
Is it dangerous to give symphatum to someone who has their broken hand repaired with pins?
Sent from my iPhone
Re: Symphatum
Posted: Tue Feb 04, 2020 11:15 pm
by Dale Moss
Shouldn’t be. I recently gave it to my sister-in-law, who was threatened with amputation because her broken foot wasn’t healing properly. Rather, it was healing too slowly, probably because she has adult-onset diabetes. Her break is pinned.
Peace,
Dale
Re: Symphatum
Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2020 12:34 am
by Tamar Patti Schaeffer
Hi Carol,
A few years ago my Rottweiler (very big dog) ruptured his Cruciate Ligament and surgery included breaking the leg bone, retying Ligament and resetting the bone with pins, etc.
I only gave him lots of doses of Rescue Remedy and Symphytum 1M which was quickly tapered off based on Painfulness Response. My Veterinarian was shocked to see how unstressed the dog remained throughout the healing process but also by the speed that complete bone healing took place. In 4 weeks post surgery the X-rays showed 90%+ healing accomplished.
It was a great protocol and obvious painfulness was totally minimal as per the almost complete absence of panting by the dog and his desire to run around and play within 24 hours of surgery. Of course we kept the dog quiet and didn't allow the play activity just lots of short walks...
Best regards, Tamar Reznik
Re: Symphatum
Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2020 12:57 am
by Sherill
Carol,
Great story!
Are you willing to say anything about your choice of potency for your dog?
Sherill
From:
minutus@yahoogroups.com [mailto:
minutus@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Tuesday, February 04, 2020 4:35 PM
To:
minutus@yahoogroups.com; carol
Subject: Re: [Minutus] Symphatum
Hi Carol,
A few years ago my Rottweiler (very big dog) ruptured his Cruciate Ligament and surgery included breaking the leg bone, retying Ligament and resetting the bone with pins, etc.
I only gave him lots of doses of Rescue Remedy and Symphytum 1M which was quickly tapered off based on Painfulness Response. My Veterinarian was shocked to see how unstressed the dog remained throughout the healing process but also by the speed that complete bone healing took place. In 4 weeks post surgery the X-rays showed 90%+ healing accomplished.
It was a great protocol and obvious painfulness was totally minimal as per the almost complete absence of panting by the dog and his desire to run around and play within 24 hours of surgery. Of course we kept the dog quiet and didn't allow the play activity just lots of short walks...
Best regards, Tamar Reznik
Re: Symphatum
Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2020 2:13 am
by Tamar Patti Schaeffer
Hi Sherill,
This is Tamar. It's my dog. I was talking to Carol here....
This particular Rottweiler is very tall and wiry and bursts of high energy. I didn't feel that frequent low potency fit his needs. The 1M dosing was perfect for him and helped his Vital Force to allow him fast and pain-free healing. He always had everyone smiling and laughing over his antics.
Thanks for asking, Tamar
Re: Symphatum
Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2020 3:00 am
by Carol Orr
Thanks, Dale
Sent from my iPhone
Re: Symphatum
Posted: Wed Feb 05, 2020 4:52 am
by Sherill
So sorry Tamar - I did mix up the names.
Thanks for the explanation, I follow your logic!
Sherill
From:
minutus@yahoogroups.com [mailto:
minutus@yahoogroups.com]
Sent: Tuesday, February 04, 2020 6:13 PM
To:
homeopath@sherill.net
Cc:
minutus@yahoogroups.com; carol
Subject: Re: [Minutus] Symphatum
Hi Sherill,
This is Tamar. It's my dog. I was talking to Carol here....
This particular Rottweiler is very tall and wiry and bursts of high energy. I didn't feel that frequent low potency fit his needs. The 1M dosing was perfect for him and helped his Vital Force to allow him fast and pain-free healing. He always had everyone smiling and laughing over his antics.
Thanks for asking, Tamar