domingo, 11 de outubro de 2015

Kent's cases 27: Chronic arthritis Lycopodium et Rhus tox.

Mrs. N., Age, about thirty-eight, has for about ten years been an invalid as
a result of chronic arthritis of the left knee. When it was in the acute stage
she was treated by Dr. Hammer, a well-known St. Louis surgeon.
It was cupped and blistered but the disease progressed. She was treated by
the best allopathic surgeons and still it progressed. The last to have control
of it was our lamented Dr. Hodgen, who placed it in a splint, saying that if
anchylosis could not be accomplished it must come off. "A stiff leg or no
leg," was his language. Two months in a splint failed to accomplish
anchylosis.


July 16th, 1881.,
I was called to the case. The knee was painful and extremely sore to touch,
enlarged to twice the size of the well one and very hard. The thigh was
emaciated and the ankle and feet were oedematous. The limb was wrapped
and she was in bed. She could sit up but the limb could not be moved
much, it was so painful from motion. There was great burning in the soles
and top of the head.
Sulph. 55000 one dose dry. Sac. lac.
The husband came to me the next morning, saying that Mrs. N. was much
worse. She had suffered greatly during the night and had pain all over the
body. I visited her and urged her to bear her suffering, that it would pass off
soon.
She took Sac. lac till August 20th, and Sulph. 81m was given, one dose dry.
Slight aggravation followed, but she said she could bear it, as the first
medicine which aggravated had been followed by such relief.
September 1st.
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The pain has all subsided and she is moving about the house on crutches.
September 20th,
she sent for me. I found crepe on the door and learned that her husband had
been sick a week and had died under allopathic treatment; that she had been
up night and day attending him and was very nervous and the limb was
much more painful.
She took Ignatia for some days until the sad occasion had passed over a
little, when I again paid my attention to the knee.
October 8th
she took Sulph. 81m and she thought it gave her rest, but not much
improvement in the knee. She continued Sac. Lac. to November 12th. The
joint has grown smaller, the foot is not so oedematous, no burning in the
soles or top of head. Her appetite is good and she is gaining strength. In a
general way she is much improved. Not seeing. How matters could be
improved by medicine, without better indications, I concluded to continue
Sac. Lac.
December 3d.
She complained of cold feet and that every change in the weather from
warm to cold gave her pain in the knee and she had a craving for eggs. She
had difficulty in keeping warm.
Calc. 85m and Sac Lac for a month.
January 7th, 1882
Feeling very comfortable; slept well most of her nights; feet warm, and
there was not much pain in the knee; swelling in knee going down; she is
about the house on crutches; the sensitiveness is gradually going out of the
knee. Sac Lac.
During all this time there has been limited motion in the limb, but the
slightest motion has always caused pain, but she has been able to swing it
off the bed, holding the foot up to prevent flexion and then with her
crutches she has been going about the house with comparative comfort.
February 3d.-Calc. 85m. Improving slowly.
March 25th.
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There is some motion in the knee without much pain; the joint is slowly
growing smaller; no swelling of the foot; she now wears a shoe that mates
the right, the first time f or ten years or more. Sac. Lac.
April 4th.
No new symptoms; improvement has ceased.
Calc-c. 85m and Sac. Lac.
May 3d.
No change from last date; no new symptoms; eating well, sleeping well;
countenance looks well. What shall I do? Prescribe for the knee? No. I
wait. Sac. Lac.
June 3d.
Sour eructations that seem to burn the pharynx but do not come up into the
mouth; knee more painful; nights restless; must move about, which seems
to relieve; drawing pain in the knee; gnawing pain in the stomach.
"A sour eructation, the taste of which does not remain in the mouth, but the
acid gnaws in the stomach" Lyc.
"Incomplete burning eructations which only rise into the pharynx, where
they cause a burning for several hours" (Allen) Lyc.
Lycopodium having all the rest of the symptoms, it was given 71m, and
Sac. Lac.
The knee became very painful and she was compelled to keep her bed for
several days. Each day I visited her and she took Sac. Lac.
July 2d.
She is walking with crutches and has very little pain in the knee; no pain in
stomach or eructation. Improving.
August 3d.-Improving. Sac. Lac.
September 2d.-Lycop. 71m and Sac. Lac.
September 6th.-- Slight aggravation front the Lyc. Improving.
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October Ist.-Improving. Sac. Lac.
November 8th.-Improving. Sac. Lac.
December 15th.-Lycopod 71m and Sac Lac.
January, 1883.
It is now eighteen months since taking this case. The patient is in good
flesh, and the knee is the only thing that gives her trouble. There is still
limited motion. The motion is not much painful except when forced flexion
is attempted. She goes about the yard and out into the road. I furnished her
a cane and advised laying aside one of the crutches. She has no fear of the
knee being hit, which heretofore has been a great factor in the case.
May 1
She walks with a crutch and cane. Limbs gaining motion continuously. No
new symptoms, knee nearly natural. She can bear some weight on the left
foot.
Lyc. 71m dry and Sac. Lac.
July 8th
Rheumatism pains in both knees and such restlessness that she moves all
night. Stiffness in joints, which passes off by motion; while in motion she
feels better,
Rhus. tox. 1m in water every three hours.
July 10th.
Improved. Restlessness all gone. Stiffness some better. Sac. Lac,
August 5th-Improving. Rhus tox 32m one dose, and Sac. Lac.
September 1st
I found her walking with one cane. She moved over the house to show me
how well she could walk.
October 1st. -Improving. Rhus. tox. 32m one dose, and San Lac.
November 8th.-Rhus. tox. 32m one dose, and Sac Lac.
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December 5th
She walked with the aid of her cane two blocks to a street car, and came to
my office without the aid of the cane.
January 7th., 1884.
Came to my office. She walks with a limp. Limited motion in the knee, but
the soreness has gone. I asked her if she regretted going under
constitutional treatment, to which she answered:
"Ten thousand times, no."
I have referred to two distinguished allopathic attendants, simply to show
that the best surgical skill had been applied, and that the value of the purely
homoeopathic method may be the better appreciated. Ten years she grew
worse, and in two and one-half year she was cured. If it can be argued that
she recovered without medicine, then the means that had been used were
destroying her life.
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