| Does everyone remember this case? If not, I'll re-print
it here:
Dear Elaine.
Santiago is quite sick [2-year-old boy],
I may have to hire you for this one, I am lost! He doesn't eat all
day, at night he eats ravenously! Then in the morning he has cadaveric
diarrhea containing undigested food and mucus, which in my opinion,
is from milk, which he has to have or he screams his head off! He
has a loose, rattling cough--green and bloody mucus, sometimes sticky
yellow, worse lying down; drinks constantly--at first milk and juice,
now just milk, he doesn't like water. He's out of humor and irritable.
Warmth of the bed aggravates, he starts sweating and turns red.
The illness started as a conjunctivitis with yellow discharge from
the eyes, super-high fever that lasted two days and was brought
down with Hydrastis and Belladonna, consecutively. Then after that
part was over, he became scared of me leaving and had nightmares,
so I gave Stramonium. He stopped being scared but the nose discharge
and the rattling in the chest continued. I gave Sulphur; but, it
stopped working and to be honest, I can't keep up, I am exhausted
with this case, I need your help! Hope you can do it!--Gabi.
***
The first thing to change after the remedy
was his good humour [returned], then the diarrhea [went away], and
irritability, rattling in chest and milk craving went last.
I gave three doses of 30c in two days (3
in all). Then the third day just one of 200C--because I couldn't
find the 30C bottle!-- and it was all gone--the whole illness!
How amazing it is!
It never ceases to amaze me. As soon as I
gave the first dose, his sense of humor came back, it was immediate!
Gabi
________________________
Eighteen enthusiastic responses came in! Here were the remedies
chosen:
Aloe, Lyc., Mag-c., Phos-ac., Sulphur, China (2), Bry. (2), Borax,
Phos. (3), Psor., Cham.(2), Kali s., and Aethusa.
And the winner is, Aethusa! Sent in by clearly our smartest
reader, but, unfortunately, not smart enough to sign his name! So,
yes, the award goes to Anonymous!
Since Anonymous couldn't be here with us today, I suggest the award
go to Alyona from Russia, who gave the most logical answer, and
here it is:
"When I read this case I thought - it sounds like Sulphur
(and my 4 yo son too, who is still craves milk at night, before
taking Sulphur he had problems with stool, he is hot etc.)
And as it is told Sulphur worked in this case presented
by you. The potention was not mentioned, so if a boy got ,say, 6C
and it stopped working I would try 30C. It's my first conclusion."
Right, so, if a remedy works and it stops working, the first thing
is to repeat it or go to a higher potency before giving up on it;
and Gabi may have tried that. And of course, there is a lot of Sulphur
in this case--sweating and turning red, worse heat of the bed, yellow
mucus and so on. So, Sulphur in a higher potency was a good suggestion!
So, Alyona, send Dr. B a note at webmaster@hpathy.com and tell him
you'd like something special, like maybe a lake in South Africa.
So, here was how I came up with Aethusa. When we look
at a case, we ask, as Hahnemann says in paragraph 153 of the Organon,
what is the most striking, strange, rare or peculiar aspect of the
case? What stands out? Clearly in this case, the milk obsession
could be described as the most "striking" and the most
"peculiar" part of the case. When I read "screams
his head off" if you don't give him milk; I thought, "This
is quite extreme!"
Another way of looking at this is that the milk obsession is the
"Concomitant" in the case. In case-taking, the concomitant--the
symptom that comes with the complaint despite having nothing to
do with the actual complaint, can be the deciding factor in determining
a remedy. Here's an example of this:
headache with vomiting--Ipecac
headache with despair--Aurum
headache with anguish--Arsenicum
headache with burping--Carbo veg.
So, you can see how the concomitant influences the choice of the
remedy. So, in this case, I felt the concomitant was a milk allergy--the
craving of a substance that, at the same time, makes the person
worse. So, I said, "We need a milk allergy remedy here!"
I had remembered that Aethusa was famous for this, and indeed, it
is in bold in Murphy's MM for "Milk allergy", and as a
confirmatory symptom I also found "burning thirst" under
Aethusa, and clearly, Gabi mentioned that Santiago was drinking
"constantly". So, I went with Aethusa, a little
trepidatious because I had never prescribed this remedy before,
but, once again, it proves the value of a strong concomitant or
striking, peculiar symptom in a case!
Read Comments on Case of Santiago
by Mir Mostafa Kamal
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