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Generalities: From the
time of Hahnemann to the present day Arsenicum has been one of
the most frequently indicated medicines, and one of the most extensively used. In the Old
School it is most extensively abused, in the form of Fowler's solution.
Arsenic affects every
part of man; it seems to exaggerate or depress almost all his faculties, to excite or
disturb all his functions. When all our medicines have been as well proved we will effect
wonderful cures. It is a substance easily proved because of its active nature, and from its
very abuse we have learned much of its general nature.
While Arsenic impresses the whole economy and disturbs all the
functions and tissues of man, there are certain prevailing and striking features in it.
Striking features: Anxiety, restlessness, prostration, burning and cadaveric odors are prominent characteristics.
The surface of the body is pale, cold, clammy, and sweating, and the
aspect is cadaveric. In chronic sickness with great debility, anaemia, from long exposure to
malarial influence, in the poorly fed and from syphilis this remedy is of great service.
The anxiety that is found in Ars. is intermingled with fear, with impulses, with
suicidal inclinations, with sudden freaks and with mania.
It has delusions and various kinds of insanity; in the more active form,
delirium and excitement. Sadness prevails to a great extreme. So sad that he is weary of
life; he loathes life, and wants to die, and the Arsenic patient does
commit suicide. It is a remedy full of suicidal
tendencies.
The anxiety takes form also in the restlessness, in which he constantly
moves. If he is able to get up lie goes from chair to. chair; the child goes front nurse to
mother, and from one person to another. When in bed, unable to sit up, the patient tosses
and turns from side to side; if he is able, he climbs out of bed and sits in the chair,
keeps moving from one place to another, and when thoroughly exhausted, he gets back into bed
again.
The restlessness seems to be mostly in the mind; it is an anxious
restlessness, or an anguish, with the idea that anguish is a deathly anxiety. That is an
effort to express it in the extreme. It seems that he cannot live, and it is not pain that
drives him to anguish, but it is an anxiety intermingled with restlessness and sadness.
This state prevails in all diseases intermingled with prostration. An
uneasiness comes in the early stage of disease, and lasts but until the prostration becomes
marked. While lying in bed, at first he moves his whole body, moves himself in bed and out
of bed; but the prostration becomes so marked that he is able to move only his limbs until
at last he becomes so weak that he is no longer able to move and he lies in perfect quiet in
extreme prostration.
It seems that prostration takes the place of anxiety and restlessness,
and he appears like a cadaver. So remember that these states of anxiety and restlessness go
towards the cadaveric aspect, towards death. This is seen, for instance, in the typhoid,
where Arsenicum is indicated. At first there is that anxious restlessness with fear, but the
increasing weakness tends towards prostration.
Running all through the remedy there is the burning mentioned as one of its most marked generals. There is
burning in the brain, which makes him want to wash his head in cold water. This sensation of
heat in the inner head with pulsation is ameliorated by the cold bathing, but when there is
a rheumatic state that affects the scalp and outward nerves, and there is burning, the
burning then is ameliorated by heat.
When the headache is of a congestive character, with the sensation of
heat and burning inside the head, and there is a feeling as if the head, would burst, and
the face is flushed and hot, that headache is better from cold applications and in the cool
open air.
So marked is this that I have seen the patient sitting in the room with
clothing piled on to keep the body warm and with the window open to relieve the congestion
of the head.
Therefore, we say a striking feature belonging to this medicine is relief
of all the complaints of the body from wrapping up and from warmth in general, and relief of
the complaints of the head by cold, except the external complaints of the head, which are
better from heat and from wrapping up. The neuralgias of the face and eyes, and above the
eyes, are better from heat.
The burning is felt in the stomach; there is burning in the bladder, in
the vagina, in the lungs. It feels as if coals of fire were in the, lungs at times, when
gangrenous inflammation is threatened, and in certain stages of pneumonia.
There is burning in the throat and burning in all the mucous membranes.
The skin burns with itching, and he scratches until the skin is raw, and then it burns, but
the itching ceases; as soon as the smarting lets up a trifle the itching commences again.
All night the itching and burning alternate, burning for a minute, when be scratches it
until it is raw, but soon the itching begins again and it seems that he has no rest.
The secretions and excretions of Arsenic are acrid;
they excoriate the parts, causing burning. The discharge from the nose and eyes causes
redness around the parts, and this is true of all the fluids from the various orifices.
In ulcers there is burning, and the thin, bloody fluid discharged
excoriates the parts round about. The odor
of the discharge is putrid. If
you have ever discovered the odor of gangrene, of mortified flesh, you know the odor of the Arsenicum discharges.
The stool is putrid, like decomposed flesh, putrid blood. The discharges
from the uterus, the menstrual flow, the leucorrhoea, the faeces, the urine, the
expectoration, all the discharges are putrid. The ulcer is so putrid that it smells like
decomposing flesh.
Arsenic produces a
tendency to bleeding. The patient bleeds easily and may bleed from any place. There is vomiting of
blood; bleeding from the lungs and throat. Bloody discharge from the mucous membrane, at
times, when inflammation is running high; haemorrhage from the bowels, kidneys, bladder and
uterus; anywhere that mucous membrane exists, there may be haemorrhage. Haemorrhage of black
blood and discharges that are offensive.
Gangrene and sudden inflammatory conditions like gangrenous and
erysipelatous inflammations are common in Arsenic. Parts suddenly take on erysipelas, or
parts that are injured suddenly take on gangrene.
Gangrene in internal organs, malignant inflammations, erysipelatous
inflammation. No matter how you look upon the condition, no matter what it is called, if it
is a sudden inflammation that tends to produce malignancy in the part it belongs to Arsenicum. Inflammation will go on in the bowels for a few days attended with a
horribly offensive discharge, vomiting of clots of blood, great burning in the bowels with
tympanitic condition.
You may almost look upon this as a gangrenous inflammation, so violent,
sudden and malignant is it, and it has the anxiety, prostration, fear of death, and
chilliness, the patient wanting to be covered warmly.
When with this inflammation of the bowels the patient is relieved by
heat, it means Arsenic.
You should remember that Secale has a similar state; it has all the tympanitic
condition, all the ulceration and prostration, all the offensive odor and expulsion of
offensive clots, and all the burning, but the Secale patient wants to be uncovered, wants things cold,
wants the windows open.
The only distinguishing feature between these two remedies in a case may
be that Secale wants cold and Arsenicum wants heat, but this is the way we individualize in
our homoeopathic prescribing.
When there is gangrenous inflammation in the lungs, we find the patient
has been taken with a chill, there has been restlessness, prostration, anxiety and fear; as
we enter the room we detect a horrible odor, and on looking into the pan we see the patient
has been spitting up by the mouthful, black, foul expectoration.
Look and see if the patient wants to be covered warmly; if he is easily
chilled, and heat feels good; then it is a hard thing to cover that case outside of Arsenicum. The prostration, the vomiting, the anxiety, the restlessness the cadaveric
aspect are present, and where will you find a remedy with that totality outside of Arsenic.
I have many times gone a long distance to detect, from the very aspect of
things, these symptoms that could be gotten while walking from the door to the bedside.
Every symptom is Arsenic; he looks like in acts like it and smells like it.
You may go to a patient with high grade inflammation of the bladder, with frequent urging to
urinate, straining to urinate, and there is bloody urine intermingled with clots.
It has been found by the attending physician when he introduces the
catheter to draw off the urine that clots dam up the catheter, a little is drawn off and
then it stops. We have a history of restlessness, anxiety, fear of death, amelioration from
heat, great prostration.
You must give Arsenic, not because there is inflammation of the bladder,
but because it is a rapidly progressing inflammation, and because it is gangrenous in
character. The whole bladder will be involved in a short time, but Arsenic will
stop that.
So it is with all the internal organs, the liver, lungs, etc.; any of
them may take on violent and rapid inflammation. We are not now speaking of the particulars,
but only illustrating the general state of Arsenic, in order to
bring out what runs through the whole nature of it.
We shall find when we take up the remedy and go through it in a more
particular way these features will stand out everywhere.
Mind: The mental symptoms show in the
beginning anxious restlessness, and from this a continuation towards delirium and even
insanity with all that it involves; disturbance of the intellect and will.
"He thinks he must die."
I went to the bedside of a typhoid patient once with all the general
aspect I have described; he was able to talk, and he looked up at me and said:
"There is no use of your coming, I am going to die; you might as
well go home; my whole insides are mortifying."
His friend was seated on one side of the bed, giving him a few drops of
water, and just about as often as he could get there with it he wanted it again.
That was all he wanted; his mouth was black, parched and dry. He got Arsenic. One of the characteristic features of Arsenic is thirst for small quantities often, just enough to wet the mouth. It is commonly used as a
distinguishing feature between Bryonia
and Arsenic for the purpose of
memorizing the Bryonia has thirst for large quantities far apart, but Arsenicum little
and often, or violent unquenchable thirst.
"Thoughts of death and of the incurability of his complaints."
"Thoughts crowd upon him; he is too weak to keep them off or to hold
on to one idea."
That is, he lies in bed tormented day and night by depressing ideas and
distressing thoughts. This is one form of his anxiety; when tormented with thoughts, he is
anxious. In the delirium he sees all kinds of vermin on his bed.
"Picks the bedclothes."
"Delirium during sleep, unconscious mania."
"Whimpering and gnashing teeth."
"Loud moaning, groaning and weeping."
"Lamentations, despair of life."
"Screaming with pains."
"Fear drives him out of bed, he hides in a closet."
These are instances of insanity that take on first a state of anxiety,
restlessness, and fear. Religious insanity, with the delusion that she has sinned away her
day of grace, the biblical promise of salvation do not apply to her, there is no hope for
her, she is doomed to punishment.
She has been thinking on religious matters until she is insane. Finally
she enters into a more complete insane state, a state of tranquility; silent, and with
aversion to talk. So we see one stage enters into another; we have to take the whole case
together; we have to note the course that the case has run in order to see it clearly and
note that in one stage there were certain symptoms and, in another stage, other symptoms.
For instance, we know that in the acute conditions of Arsenicum there is
either thirst for ice cold water, and for only enough to moisten the mouth, or there is
thirst for water in large quantities and yet it does not quench the thirst; but this thirsty
stage goes on to another in which there is aversion to water, and hence we see that in chronic diseases.
Arsenicum is
thirstless. So it is in a case of mania; in the chronic state he is tranquil, but in the
earlier stages, in order to be an Arsenicum case, he must have gone through the Arsenicum restlessness, anxiety and fear.
Fear is a strong element in the mental state, fear
to be alone; fears something is going to injure him when he is alone; full of horror; he
dreads solitude and wants company, because in company he can talk and put off the fear; but
as this insanity increases he fails to appreciate company and the fear comes in spite of it.
He has a violent increase of his fear and horror in the dark and many complaints come on in
the evening as darkness is coming on.
Many of the mental troubles, as well as the physical troubles, come on
and are increased at certain times. While some complaints, pains and aches are worse in the
morning, most of the sufferings of Arsenicum are worse from 1-2 P.M. and from
1-2 A.M. After midnight, very soon
after midnight sometimes, his sufferings begin, and from 1-2 o'clock they are intensified.
Extreme anxiety in the evening in bed.
"Averse to meeting acquaintances, because he imagines he has
formerly offended them."
Great mental depression, great sadness, melancholy, despair, despair of
recovery. He has dread of death when alone, or on going to bed with anxiety and
restlessness. He thinks he is going to die and wants somebody with him.
The attacks of anxiety at night drive him out of bed. This is an anxiety
that affects the heart, and so the mental anxiety and cardiac anxiety almost seem to
coincide. A sudden anxious fear comes over him at night; he jumps out of bed with fear that
he is going to die, or that he is going to suffocate.
It is full of dyspnoea, cardiac dyspnoea, and varying forms of asthma.
The spells come on in the evening in bed or after midnight; from 1-2 o'clock he is attacked
with mental anxiety, dyspnoea, fear of death, coldness, and is covered with, cold sweat.
"Anxiety like one who has committed murder."
This is one form of his anxiety; he finally works up to the idea that the
officers are coming after him, and watches to see if they are coming in to arrest him. Some
unusual evil is going to happen to him; always looking for something terrible to happen.
"Irritable, discouraged, restless."
"Restlessness, cannot rest anywhere."
"As a consequence of fright, inclination to, commit suicide."
The Arsenicum patient with this mental state is always freezing,
hovers around the fire, cannot get clothing enough to keep warm, a great sufferer from
the cold.
Chronic Arsenicum invalids cannot get warm; they are always chilly,
pale and waxy, and in such invalids, after they have bad several unusual weak spells,
dropsical conditions come on.
Arsenicum is full of
puffiness and dropsy; oedematous condition of the extremities; dropsy of the shut sacs or of
the cavities; swelling about the eyes; swelling of the face, so that it pits upon pressure. Arsenicum in these swellings is especially related to the lower eyelid rather than
the upper, while in Kali carb. the swelling is more in the upper eyelid than the lower, between the lid and
the brow.
There are times when Kali carb. looks very similar to Arsenic, and little
features like that will be distinguishing points. If they run together in generals, then we
must observe their particular peculiarities.
Periodicity: In the headaches we have a striking
general feature of Arsenicum, brought out in their periodicity. Running all
through this remedy there is periodicity, and for this reason it has been extensively useful in malarial affections
which have, as a characteristic of their nature, periodicity.
The periodical complaints of Arsenic come on every other day, or every
fourth day, or every seven days, or every two weeks. The headaches come on these cycles,
every other, or third, or fourth, seventh or fourteenth day.
The more chronic the complaint is, the longer is its cycle, so that we
will find the more acute and sharp troubles in which Arsenic is suitable will
have every other day aggravations and every fourth day aggravations: but, as the trouble
becomes chronic and deep-seated, it takes on the seventh day aggravation, and in the psoric
manifestations of a long, lingering and deep-seated kind there is a fourteenth day
aggravation.
This appearing in cycles is common to a good many remedies, but is
especially marked in China and Arsenic. These two remedies are similar to each other in many respects, and they
are quite similar in their general nature to the manifestations that often occur in malaria.
It is true, however, that Arsenic is more frequently indicated than China. In every epidemic
of malarial fever that I have gone through I have found Arsenicum symptoms more
common than those of China.
These headaches bring out the interesting point that we mentioned above. Arsenicum has in its nature an
alternation of states, and this carries with it certain generals. Arsenicum in all of its bodily complaints is a cold remedy; the patient sits over the
fire and shivers, wants plenty of clothing, and wants to be in a warm room.
So long as the complaints are in the body this is so; but when the
complaints are in the head, while he wants the body warm he wants the head washed in cold
water, or wants the cold air upon it.
The complaints of the head must conform to the generals that apply to the
head, and the complaints of the body must be associated with the generals that apply to the
body. It is a difficult thing to say which one of these two circumstances is most general,
and it is sometimes difficult to say which one is the general of the patient himself,
because he confuses you by saying:
"I am worse in the cold," but when his headache is on he says:
"I am better in the cold, I want to be in the cold."
It is really only the head, and you have to single these out and study
them by the parts affected. When things are so striking you must examine into it to see what
it is that brings about modality.
You will see a similar state running through Phosphorus; the complaints of the stomach and head are better from
cold, i. e., he wants cold applications upon the head with head sufferings, and wants
cold things in the stomach with stomach complaints, but in all the complaints of the body be
is ameliorated from heat.
If he steps out into the cool air, he will commence to cough, if he have
a chest trouble. So we see that the modalities that belong to the part affected must always
be taken into account. For instance, you have a patient suffering from neuralgia or
rheumatic affections and these same pains, extend, to the head, then he wants the head
wrapped up because they are ameliorated from heat.
But when it comes to cases of congestive conditions of the head, he then
is better with his head very cold. Now, as I have said, there is an alternation of these
states in Arsenicum.
I will illustrate by mentioning a case.
Once a patient had been dragging along with periodical sick headaches.
The sick headaches were better from cold water, cold applications to the head, could hardly
get them cold enough, and the colder the better. These headaches came every two weeks, and
so long as they were present he desired cold to the head.
Then these periodical headaches would be better, for long periods; but
when they were away he was suffering from rheumatism of the joints, which was also
periodical, and also more or less tenacious, and when this rheumatism of the joints and
extremities, with more or less swelling and oedema, was present he could not get warm
enough; he was at the fire and wrapped up; he was relieved by heat, and wanted warm air and
a warm room.
This would last for a period and then subside, and back would come his
sick headaches and last for a while. That is what I meant by the alternation of states. Arsenicum cured that man, and he never had any of them afterwards.
The alternation of states sometimes means that there are two diseases in
the body, and sometimes the remedy covers the whole feature in alternation of states.
I remember another case, which will illustrate this peculiar nature of
alternation of complaints, which is shared by other remedies besides Arsenic.
A patient suffered from a pressure in the top of the head, such as I
recently described to you under Alumen.
She would suffer for weeks from that pressure on the top of the head, and
the only relief she could get was from hard pressure; she tired herself out with hard
pressure and would contrive all kinds of weights to put upon the head.
That would go away in the night and she would wake up the next morning
with constant urging to urinate. The irritable bladder alternated with pain on top of the
head.
Alumen cured. In many of these anti-psoric remedies we have
an alternation of states.
This illustrates the necessity for getting the symptoms of all the states
that present themselves for cure, otherwise you will many times prescribe in a chronic case
of psoric character and temporarily relieve it, when back comes another aspect of it.
You have only hastened the disease a little faster than it would go if
let alone. But that is not homoeopathic prescribing. Be sure, when a remedy presents one
state, that it is a clearly indicated in the other state, otherwise that remedy is not the
similimum.
You must hunt until you find the remedy that has both states, or you will
be disappointed. We sometimes do not discover this alternation of states until we have
brought it back two or three times by incorrect prescribing.
Some people are so reticent and so difficult to get symptoms from that we
do not always get these symptoms.
But you examine your record and you find where - you have made a foolish
prescription, that you drove a new condition away and back came the first trouble, and you
kept on with this see-saw business.
Now remember in doing this your patient is not improving, and that you
must re-study the whole case, taking the alternating states into, account. In Arsenic, the head symptoms alternate with physical symptoms.
You will find running through certain remedies, as a part of their
nature, that mental symptoms alternate with physical symptoms; when the physical symptoms
are present, then mental symptoms are not trates the necessity for getting the symptoms of
all the states that is determined it is a good point, but sometimes you do not find a
remedy, because many of our remedies are not well recorded; they have not yet been observed
in their alternations and marked as such.
We find in Podophyllum the peculiar feature that the headaches alternate with diarrhea; he is
subject to sick headaches and to diarrhea, and one or other will be present.
In Arnica the mental symptoms alternate with uterine symptoms. The uterine symptoms,
when ob served, look like Arnica, but these go away in the night and mental symptoms come on, the mind being
heavy, gloomy and cloudy.
When you have remedies that have these manifestations it requires a
greater depth of vision to see the alternation of states, because these things are not
always brought out in the proving, for the reason that one prover had one group of symptoms,
and another.
Yet a remedy that is capable of bringing out the two groups of symptoms
is sufficient to cure this alternation of states. The periodical headaches of Arsenic are
found in all parts of the head.
They are the congestive headaches with throbbing and burning, with
anxiety and restlessness; hot head and relief from cold, There are headaches in the
forehead, which are throbbing, worse from light, intensified from motion, often attended
with great restlessness, forcing him to move, with great anxiety.
Most of the headaches are attended with nausea and vomiting. The sick
headaches are of the worst sort, especially those that come every two weeks. In some of
these old, broken-down constitutions you will find he is cold, pallid, sickly; he is always
chilly and freezing except when the headache is on, and it is better from cold; the face
much wrinkled, great anxiety and no desire for water.
Remember that it was said in the acute state of Arsenic there is
thirst, thirst for little and often, dry mouth and desire for water enough to moisten the
lips, but in the chronic states of Arsenic he is generally thirstless.
Headaches: There are
headaches on one side of the head involving the scalp, one-half of the head, worse from
motion, better from cold washing, better from walking in the cold air, though very often the
jar or stepping starts up a feeling as of a wave of pain, shaking, vibration or looseness in
the brain; such are the sensations and these are conditions of pulsation.
Then there are dreadful occipital headaches, so severe that the patient
feels stunned or dazed. They come on after midnight, from excitement, from exertion; they
come on from becoming heated in walking, which produces determination of blood to the head. Nat. mur. is a medicine.
analogous to this in its periodicity and in many of its complaints. It has congestive
headaches from walking and becoming heated; especially from walking in the sun.
The Arsenicum headaches are generally worse from light and noise,
better from lying down in a dark room, lying with the head on two pillows. Many of the
headaches commence in the afternoon from I to 3 o'clock, after the noon meal, grow worse
into the afternoon, lasting all night.
They are often attended with great pallor, nausea, prostration, deathly
weakness The pain is paroxysmal; violent head pain during the chill of an intermittent
fever; headache as if the skull would burst during an intermittent fever. Arsenicum has this head pain of a congestive character in intermittent fever, as if
the head would burst.
A peculiar feature of the thirst is that there is no thirst during the
chill except for hot drinks; during the heat there is thirst little and often for water
enough to moisten the mouth, which is almost no thirst, and during the sweat there is thirst
for large drinks.
Thirst begins with the beginning of the heat and increases as the dryness
of the mouth; he desires only to moisten the mouth until he breaks out in a sweat, and then
the thirst becomes a desire for large quantities very often, and the more he sweats the more
desire he has for water.
The headache is during the chill; it increases, so that it becomes a
congestive, throbbing headache during the chill and heat; this grows better towards the end
of the heat as the sweat breaks out, it is ameliorated by the sweat.
In chronic headaches, congestive headaches and malarial complaints, a tendency to shrivel is observed upon the
skin; a prematurely old, wrinkled appearance of the skin comes on. The mucous membrane of
the lips and mouth often shrivels and becomes wrinkled.
This is also found in the diphtheritic membrane of the throat as a
peculiar feature of Arsenic, and belongs, as far as I know, to no other remedy.
The exudation in the throat is leathery looking and shriveled.
A shriveled membrane is not a sure indication for Arsenic, but when Arsenic is indicated you would be likely to find this kind of
membrane; such cases as are very malignant in character, very offensive, putrid, those with
a gangrenous odor.
At times the head is in constant motion when there are complaints in the
body, because parts of the body are too sore to be moved; then the motion of the head comes
on because of restlessness and uneasiness, and he keeps it in motion even though it does not
ameliorate.
The face and head are subject to oedema; dropsy of the scalp and
erysipelatous inflammation of the face and head.
The scalp pits upon pressure and there is a little crepitation under it
from pressure. The scalp is subject to eruptions and is very sensitive. So sensitive is the
scalp that the hair cannot be combed; it seems as if the touch of the comb or brush when
rubbing over the scalp went into the brain.
Sensitiveness is a feature of Arsenic; sensitiveness to smell and touch; over sensitiveness
of all the senses. A peculiar feature that perhaps I have not brought out is the over
sensitiveness to the circumstances and surroundings of the room.
The Arsenicum patient is an extremely fastidious patient. Hering
once described him as "the gold
headed cane patient." If this is
carried out in a woman who is sick in bed she is in great distress if every picture on the
wall does not hang perfectly straight.
Those who are sensitive to disorder and confusion and the disturbed and
made worse until everything is placed in order have a morbid fastidiousness which has its
similimum in Arsenic.
Eyes: The eye symptoms
of this remedy are very prominent. In old cases of suppressed malaria, in broken down
constitutions, in pallid, sickly people who are subject to general catarrhal conditions, and
such catarrhal conditions as localize more especially in the nose and eyes, the eye symptoms
will be troublesome.
There are discharges from the eyes. It may be a conjunctivitis, in a
general way involving the lids and the globe, going on sometimes to ulceration with thin,
bloody discharge, increasing to thick, acrid discharge that excoriates the eye, making the
canthi red and causing granulation with burning.
The burning is better from washing in cool water and also better from dry
heat. Very often ulcers appear on the globe of the eye, often upon the cornea.
It has various kinds of hypertrophy beginning in patches that will form
scars, and in old ulcerated patches little growth similar to a pterygium growing towards the
centre of the eye and threatening blindness.
The inflammations are sometimes attended with swelling, burning and
excoriating discharge; this swelling is bag-like in character, and so we find "baggy" lids and little bags forming under the eyes.
The face is waxy and pale, presenting the appearance of a broken down
constitution or a dropsical condition.
The catarrhal state involves throat and nose, and it is sometimes
difficult to separate the nose symptoms, from the throat symptoms.
The Arsenicum patient is always taking cold in the nose, always
sneezing from every change in the weather. He is always chilly and suffers from drafts, and
is worse in cold, damp weather; always freezing, chilled through.
These pale, waxy, broken down constitutions with catarrhal discharges
from the nose on looking at a bright light become blind.
Sneezing and coryza with inflammatory conditions through the whole nasal
cavity, throat, larynx and chest.
The cold begins in the nose and goes down into the throat, very often
causing hoarseness with dry, tickling, hard, rasping cough.
It is a difficult matter to find remedies for a coryza that begins in the
nose and extends into the chest with bronchial troubles; very often you require a change of
remedy, as the chest symptoms often run to a different remedy. It is difficult to find a
remedy that covers the symptoms of both nose and chest.
Arsenicum is the
remedy for old, chronic catarrhal troubles of die nose where the nose bleeds easily, and he
is always sneezing and taking cold, always chilly and pallid, tired, restless, full of
anxiety in the night and has troublesome dreams.
The mucous membrane is easily inflamed, producing patches of red and
ulcers that bleed easily. Great crusts form in the back of the nose.
There is a striking tendency too ulcerate in Arsenicum. If it
is a sore throat it ulcerates; if colds settle in the eyes, they may end in ulceration;
catarrhal troubles in the nose end in ulceration; and this ulceration tendency, no matter
where the troubles locates, is a very strong feature of Arsenicum.
It is the remedy for catarrhal complaints of the nose and other places in
broken down constitutions from syphilis or malaria, or a constitution that has gone through
blood poisoning of some kind, either poisoning from a dissecting wound, or from erysipelas
or typhoid fever or other zymotic states improperly treated, or poisoning with quinine and
like substances that break down the blood and establish a state of anaemia. If an ulcer
comes upon the leg, if a leucorrhea comes on, if any discharge is established the patient is
relieved thereby.
Now let some of these discharges slack up and you have a chronic state
apparently from retained secretions, but it is a form of blood poisoning. So it is with
suppressed ear discharges, suppressed throat discharges, suppressed leucorrhea and
ulcerations.
Arsenicum is one of
the medicines that will conform to the anaemic state that follows each suppression. At the
present day it is fashionable to use the cautery, to make local applications to stop
leucorrhoea and other discharges and to heal up ulcers.
Now, when these external troubles go there is an anaemic state
established in the economy, the patient becomes waxy and pallid, sickly looking, and these
catarrhal discharges come on as a means of relief because of the suppression of some other
condition.
For instance, since the suppression of a leucorrhoea the woman has had
thick, bloody or watery discharge from the nose. It is frequently suitable to the
constitution when an ulcer has been dried up by salves, or an old car discharge has been
stopped by the outward application of powders. The doctor thinks he has done a clever thing
in stopping such discharges, but he has only succeeded in damming up the secretions which
are really a relief to the patient.
Such medicines as Sulphur,
Calcarea and Arsenicum are suitable for
the catarrhal discharges that come from these suppressions, in broken down constitutions.
Arsenic is also like
unto the condition that has been brought about from the absorption of animal poisons. It
goes to the very root of the evil, as it is similar to the symptoms brought on from a
dissecting wound. Arsenic and Lachesis are medicines that will go to the cause at once and
antidote the poison, establishing harmony and turning things into order.
The nose symptoms, then, of Arsenic are very
troublesome and furnish and extensive part of the symptom image of an Arsenicum patient.
They always take cold easily, are always sensitive to cold and the catarrh is always roused
up on the slightest provocation.
When an Arsenicum patient is at his best he has discharge more or less
of a thick character, but when he takes a little cold it becomes thin; the thick discharge
that is necessary to his comfort slacks up, and then he gets headache and on comes thirst,
restlessness, anxiety and distress.
This goes on to a catarrhal fever of two or three days duration, and then
the thick discharge starts up again and he feels better; all his pains and aches disappear.
It has been of great service in epithelioma of nose and lips.
Inflammation of the throat and tonsils with burning, increased by cold
and better by warm drinks. There is redness and a shriveled condition of the mucous
membrane.
When there is blood poisoning going on, as in diphtheria, and exudate
appears upon the mucous membrane and it becomes gray and shriveled, ashy colored, and this
sometimes covers the whole of the soft palate and the arches. It looks withered. He is
prostrated, anxious, sinking, weak, not a great deal of fever, but much dryness of the
mouth.
The catarrhal state goes down into the larynx with hoarseness, and into
the trachea with burning, worse from coughing, and then comes constriction of the chest,
asthmatic dyspnoea and dry, hacking cough with no expectoration.
This testing cough is attended with anxiety, prostration, restlessness,
exhaustion and sweat, and the cough does not seem to do any good.
The cough is the early part of it and keeps on as a dry, rasping, harsh
cough for several days without doing any good; and then asthmatic symptoms come on, when be
expectorates great. quantities of thin, watery sputum.
There is constriction about the chest a great sense of tightness and
wheezing, and he feels he will suffocate. Bloody mucus is expectorated at times, but the
symptoms are more generally of a catarrhal character.
Symptoms of pneumonia sometimes appear with the rusty expectoration. The
expectoration is excoriating. There is in the chest a sense of burning, as if coals of fire
were in the chest, and it goes on to bleeding and liver-colored expectoration.
Arsenicum is a
bleeding medicine, one that predisposes to haemorrhage, and bleeding takes place from all
mucous membranes; commonly of bright red blood, but in this region the parts take on a
gangrenous state and the hemorrhages become black and there are little clots like portions
of liver.
The same are found in the vomited matter and in the stools. The
expectoration is horribly offensive, so much so that you soon get the idea that there is a
state of gangrene.
The patient is at this time going into a state that perhaps cannot be any
better described than a gangrenous inflammation; there will be signs to indicate the
inflammatory condition, and there will be the smell of the expectoration which you will
detect as soon as you open the door,
The expectoration is a thin, watery fluid intermingled with clots. In the
pan you will find this watery expectoration looking like prune juice, and in the midst of it
will be clots of blood; the offensiveness is horrible. He has gone through the period of
restlessness and is now prostrated, sinking, pallid, and likely enough covered with a cold
sweat.
Stomach and bowels:
When we come to the stomach we find everything that may be called a gastritis, vomiting of
everything taken, even a teaspoonful of water, extreme irritation of the stomach, great
prostration, horrible anxiety; dry mouth; a very little hot water will sometimes comfort him
for a minute, but soon it must come up; cold fluids are vomited immediately. The whole
oesophagus is in a state of inflammation; everything burns that comes up or goes down.
Vomiting of bile and blood.
Extreme sensitiveness of the stomach is present; he does not want to be
touched. Heat applied externally relieves, and there is a temporary relief from warm drinks;
the heat is grateful. In the bowels we have much trouble; this remedy has all the symptoms
of peritonitis; distension of the abdomen, a tympanitic state; cannot be handled or touched,
yet he will keep moving because he is so restless, he cannot keep still, but finally he
becomes so weak that exhaustion takes the place of restlessness.
Dysentery is likely to come on, with involuntary passages of urine and
faeces, one or both, with haemorrhage from the bowels and bloody urine.
As the bowels move, we get the cadaveric odor to the stool, a smell like
putrid flesh. The stool is bloody, watery, brown like prune juice, or black and horribly
offensive.
Sometimes dysenteric in character with dreadful straining and burning of
the anus; every stool burns as though there were coals of fire in the rectum; burning it!
the bowels, burning all the way through. The pain in the abdomen is better from the
application of hot things. The tympanitic condition is extreme.
Sometimes there is a gastro-enteritis that takes on a gangrenous
character that in olden times used to be talked about as gangrene of the bowel, a
mortification that always ended in death.
A thick, bloody discharge is passed with a horrible odor, all substances
are vomited, the patient desires to be in a very warm room, wants to be well covered, wants
hot applications and warm drinks, looks cadaveric and smells cadaveric, with a dry, pungent
odor that penetrates everything, but if he wants the covers off, wants a cool room and
windows open, wants to be sponged with cold water, and wants ice cold drinks then he must
have Secale.
Bowels: I want to warn
you against the too promiscuous use of Arsenic in the summer complaints of young babies, for
dysentery and cholera infantum. It has so many little symptoms that are so common to these
complaints. that if you do not look out and are not warned you will be likely to give your
patient Arsenic, suppress some of the symptoms, changing the aspect of the case so
that you cannot find a remedy for it and yet not cure the case with Arsenic.
There is a strong tendency to be routine and give Arsenic without a sufficient number of generals being present; i.e., if you give it
on particulars and not on the generals of the case.
This medicine is full of diarrhea and dysenteric symptoms; in these
conditions there will be the pallor, the anxiety, the cadaveric aspect and the cadaveric
odors.
In the dysentery there is most distressing and frequent urging to stool,
scanty, slimy, black, fluid, inky stools with cadaveric smell, great prostration,
restlessness and pallor. In the bowel troubles, in low forms of disease, the stool becomes
involuntary.
This is a condition of the rectum, a relaxation of the rectum, great
prostration. Involuntary stool generally indicates either local or general exhaustion, and
in this remedy there is terrible exhaustion, so that there is involuntary diarrhea in
typhoid and in low forms of zymotic disease; involuntary urine.
Purging is sometimes present in Arsenic, but generally be
does not have much purging, such as we find in Podophyllum, Phos. ac. Usually there will be little, frequent gushes, little
spurts with flatus and the great exhaustion that occurs in cholera, little spurts with
mucus, slimy, whitish stools.
Arsenic is not so
commonly indicated in cholera, i. e., during the gushing period, but sometimes after
the gushing is over and the vomiting and purging have passed, leaving a state of extreme
exhaustion, we have a state that appears like coma, the patient looks almost as if dead,
except that he breathes. We find, then, that Arsenicum will establish
reaction.
Cholera infantum with great prostration, sinking and cadaveric
appearance, great coldness, covered with told sweat, cold extremities, cold as death;
cadaveric, sickly, foul, pungent, penetrating odor in the room from the faeces and urine and
even of what is vomited.
The passages from the bowels are acrid, excoriating, causing redness and
burning. Very often the burning extends into the bowels.
The rectum and anus burn, smarting all about the anus. It has tenesmus,
painful, unbearable urging, great distress in the lower bowel, in rectum and anus, terrible
state of anxiety of the patient and the pain is so violent and the suffering so intense, the
anguish so intense, that he can think of nothing but death the fearfulness and frightful
feelings are such as he has never experience in his life, and he feels confident these mean
he is going to die.
This, like all other complaints, is attended with restlessness, and when
not at stool he is walking the floor, going from bed to chair and from chair to bed. He will
get on the stool and then back to bed, then he is hurried to stool again, sometimes he loses
it.
Sometimes there is a chronic hoemorrhoidal state with burning, and the
hemorrhoids protrude when at stool, he is much exhausted after getting back into bed after a
stool, with these protruding lumps which are like grapes and feel like coals of fire. They
are hot, dry and bleeding. Fissures of the rectum that bleed at every stool, with burning
Itching and eczematous eruptions about the anus with burning.
This kind of pain may be felt anywhere in the body; burning is
characteristic of Arsenic, stitching is characteristic of Arsenic. Now, put these together and the patient often describes it as being stuck
with red hot needless all over him. This red hot sensation, which is a common feature all
over, is felt at the anus, and especially when there are hemorrhoids, burning and sticking
like hot needles in the hemorrhoids
At times when a patent is coming down with the early stage of a violent
attack he will have all the rigor and chill that it is possible to find in the Materia
Medica and that can be found in disease. Rigors and chills of violent character, and at such
times he describes a feeling as if the blood flowing through the vessels were ice water. He
feels a rushing through the body of ice cold waves.
When the fever comes on, he is intensely hot from head to foot, before
the sweat has appeared, he feels that boiling water is going through the blood vessels. Then
comes on the sweat and dyspnoea and all complaints in which he is prostrated and becomes
cold.
While the sweat some times relieves the fever and pains, yet it is
prolonged and attended with great exhaustion and does not relieve his exhaustion.
Many of his complaints are increased with the sweat; for instance, thirst
is increased, the drinking is copious and does not relieve, it seems he cannot get enough
and patients will say:
"I can drink the well dry," or
"Give me a bucket of water."
Such things are indicative of the state of thirst. During the fever he
wants little and often; during the chill he wants hot drinks.
Arsenicum is a very
useful medicine in the eruptions of the genitals with burning.
In little ulcers that burn, even when they are syphilitic; herpetic
vesicles that appear upon the foreskin and upon the labia; chancre or cancroids with
burning, smarting and stinging, but especially in those that are weak, that offer no
willingness to heal, but that do the very opposite, that spread, those that we call
phagedenic, those that eat from their outer margins, become larger and larger.
Ulcerations: Arsenic and Merc corr. are the two principal medicines for spreading ulcerations
such as eat in every direction, very offensive. Such ulcerations as follow the opening of a
bubo in the inguinal region where there is no tendency to heal.
A little, watery, offensive discharge keeps coming and extending,
ulceration keeps spreading round about the opening, no tendency to heal.
Or the patient has been in the hands of a surgeon who has passed his
knife down the threatening suppurating bubo and it has been followed by red, angry,
erysipelatous appearance and shows no tendency to heal.
The edges have been removed by ulceration, and now the surface has
cleared off, leaving a surface the size of a dollar; sometimes becoming serpiginous. These
ulcers are sensitive to touch and burn like fire.
Genitals: In the male
and female sexual organs there are many symptoms of importance. In the male organs a
dropsical condition, dropsy of the penis, oedematous appearance, so that the penis is
enormously swollen and looks like a water bag; the scrotum, especially the skin of the
scrotum, greatly swollen and humid round about, the parts.
In the female the labia are enormously swollen with burning, stinging
pains, hard and swollen. Erysipelatous inflammation of these organs, ulcerations, of a
syphilitic character; these when such symptoms burning, smarting and stinging are present.
In the female, violent, burning pains in the genitals with or without
swelling, burning that extends up into the vagina, with great dryness and itching of the
vagina.
The leucorrhoeal discharge excoriates the parts, causing itching and
burning with great suffering. Whitish, watery, thin discharges that excoriate; so copious
sometimes that it will run down the thighs.
The Arsenicum menstrual flow is very often excoriating in
character. Copious leucorrhoeal flow intermixed with menstrual flow, very profuse and very
acrid.
Suppressed menstruation going on for months; amenorrhoea in prostrated,
nervous patients, wrinkled, careworn, haggard facet.
Of course, Arsenic has a wonderful reputation in the old school for
anaemia, and it is said to be as good as Ferrum for anaemia.
Ferrum and Arsenic are
the strong drugs for anaemia, so that it is not to be wondered at that these pallid mortals
find benefit from Arsenic.
"During menstruation, stitches in the rectum."
"Leucorrhoea acrid, corroding, thick and yellow," etc.
After parturition the woman does not pass the urine; no urine in the
bladder; suppression, or the bladder is full and it does not pass.
In connection with this subject you will find Causticum the most frequently
indicated remedy when you go back and the woman has not passed the urine and it is time that
she should; you will frequently find it indicated when you have no other symptoms to go on. Aconite will be more
frequently indicated than any other remedy if the infant has not passed the urine.
This is keynote practice and is to be condemned when there are other
symptoms to indicate a remedy.
If there are no other symptoms study Aconite and
Causticum and see if there is any reason
why they should not be given.
Cancer: Another
feature in connection with the woman, Arsenic is a wonderful palliative in cancerous affections,
such as occur in the uterus and mammary glands.
Burning, stinging pains have entirely disappeared, in incurable cases, of
course. It becomes one of the palliatives.
Larynx and chest: Arsenic has loss of voice, laryngitis, with dry teasing cough; a cough that does
not seem to do any good; hacking constantly, dry, hacking cough.
Study its relation to asthma and difficult breathing, dyspnoea. Arsenic has cured some long standing cases of asthma of a nervous character; asthma
that comes on after midnight, in patients who suffer from the cold, those who are very
pallid, dry wheezing cough, must sit up in bed and hold the chest, anxious restlessness with
prostration.
The heart symptoms are troublesome to manage when they get to be like
Arsenic; the symptoms correspond to a state of great weakness, great palpitation,
palpitation from the least exertion or excitement, great anxiety, anguish, weakness; he
cannot walk, he cannot go upstairs, he can hardly move without increasing the palpitation;
every excitement brings on palpitation.
"Severe paroxysms of palpitation or attacks of syncope during
endocarditis."
Arsenicum corresponds
to most serious complaints of the heart, corresponds to many of the incurable complaints of
the heart; i. e., when you see Arsenic corresponding in all of the symptoms with these
marked cardiac affections, dropsy of the pericardium, etc., you have a class of cases that
are very serious,
"Angina pectoris," etc.
"Rheumatism affecting the heart," etc.
"Hydropericardium with great irritability," etc.
"Pulse frequent, small, trembling."
"Pulsation through whole body," etc., etc.
Again this goes on to another state when the heart becomes weak, pulse
thread-like, patient pale and cold, covered with sweat, pulse very feeble. When this is not
a state of the heart itself then Arsenic becomes a wonderful remedy; that is, it is capable of
cure.
Fever: I want to say a
few things concerning a few essentials, some few things most general to the Arsenicum type of intermittent.
You can read the general state of intermittent fever and fevers generally
and apply what has been said.
Arsenic has all the violence of the chill that you can find in any
remedy, with excitement, headache, prostration, dry mouth, desire for hot drinks and to be
covered up warmly, with all the anxious restlessness and prostration that you can find in
any medicine; but the time of the Arsenic case is an important thing.
A striking feature of the Arsenic time of chill is
its irregularity, coming not twice alike, coming at any time. It has afternoon chill and
after midnight chill, sometimes in the morning, sometimes at 3 or 4 P.M., sometimes at 1
P.M.
It has a striking periodicity in its nature. Hence it has an intermittent
nature. It has a striking feature of thirst.
During the chill, while there is sometimes great thirst, he has aversion
to cold things, hence can take only hot drinks, hot teas, etc.
During the fever the thirst increases because he has dry mouth, and he
drinks little and often, just a teaspoonful to wet his dry mouth.
Water does not quench his thirst, for he wants but a tablespoonful,
little and often. This runs on into the sweat with prostration, increased coldness, desire
for copious drinks, unquenchable thirst for cold drinks.
The chill is attended with great aching in the bones, likely to commence
in the extremities, and during the chill there is a great head congestion with purple
fingers and toes.
Put these things together and the prostration that occurs with the awful
anxiety, and you can most always in a general way pick out the Arsenic case.
But it has so many details in its chill, fever and sweat that if you take
the details of symptoms and leave these general features out you will be likely to be able
to cover almost any case of chills, i.e., you may think you will, but unless some of
these general nates are present that stamp it as Arsenic you will fail.
It is one thing to stamp the whole case as Arsenic and
another thing to say that these are Arsenicum symptoms.
So it is with China
and Quinine; they have numerous particular
symptoms, and yet to make the case a China
or Quinine case the striking general features must be
present.
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