| Dear Elaine Lewis,
On
attempting to analyze the case, you have pointed out Aphorism 153
from the Organon. Thank you very much. In reality, we
often forget about the teachings of Hahnemann, and to my judgment
– the diverse prescriptions being made by different
homeopaths for a certain case is mostly due to this reason.
PQRS
of the Case
You
started analysis of the case stating -
‘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’.
EXACTLY
SO!
BUT
you stopped there! – for reason unknown,
and jumped onto another topic -
“concomitant”, and you stated -
“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.”
Why
do we need to look at the other way in this case???
Don’t our Materia
Medicae or repertories contain remedies for these two PQRS symptoms
(Craving for milk, and Anger if refused), which should be underlined,
I think, four times, and the craving for milk may safely be made
‘eliminating symptom’ in this case?
To
my understanding, the following four rubrics (I take these from
Synthesis 9) describe the two most essential symptoms of the case
in hand:
GENERALS - FOOD and DRINKS - milk – desire (104)
MIND - ANGER - refused; when things he wants are (4)
|
MIND - ANGER - contradiction; from (64)
| [Combine]
MIND - CONTRADICTION - intolerant of contradiction (129)
|
“Striking”
point is that – Aethusa does not turn up in any of the rubrics!
Singular term super-rubrics
like ‘Irritability’, ‘Ill humor (~fretful)’, etc. are too general
and too big – containing most of the known remedies of our MM!
Concomitant
You said “the
concomitant -- the symptom that comes with the complaint despite
having nothing to do with the actual complaint”. However, I’m not
sure whether the examples you put after that statement really fit
to what you stated or clarified the aspect of concomitants.
Anyway, a little exercise with your examples:
| Symptom |
Kent |
Murphy |
Synthesis
9/[RU] |
Elaine |
|
Headache
with vomiting |
IP, MELI, PULS, SANG and many remedies with
1 and 2 |
IP, IRIS, NUX V and many
remedies with 1 and 2 |
IP, [IRIS], MELI, PULS, SANG, [SEP], and
many remedies with 1 and 2 |
Ip |
|
Headache
with despair |
Rubric NA! |
Rubric NA! |
Rubric NA!
[Arn(1), Ars(2),
Bell(1), Coff(2),
Zinc-val(1) - RU] |
Aur |
|
Headache
with anguish |
Rubric NA! |
Rubric NA! |
Acon(2), Aur(2),
Coloc(1), Glon(1)
[Same remedies – RU] |
Ars |
|
Headache
with burping |
Rubric NA! |
Rubric NA! |
Chel(1)
[Calc(2) – RU] |
Carb
veg. |
(So, Dr. Elaine, you need to re-check your references for the 2nd,
3rd and 4th rubrics!).
Boenninghausen’s
method of analysis with Location, Phenomenon (sensation), Modality
and Concomitant is absolutely sound and rational. However, the
concomitants invariably mean symptom(s) that accompany the totality
in a symbiotic mode – be there any apparent reason/explanation or
not. In the case of Santiago,
following your examples, we need actually “milk craving with
milk allergy” –not ‘milk allergy’ alone.
Milk “Allergy”
I think, you meant Milk
Agg.
In fact, there are around
a dozen of bold-face remedies in the repertories for Milk Agg:
|
Symptom |
Kent |
Murphy |
Synthesis
9 |
|
Milk,
agg. |
AETH, CALC, CALC-S, CHIN, CON, LAC-D, HOM-XYZ,
MAG-M, NIT-AC, SEP, SULPH and many remedies with 1 and 2 |
AETH, CALC, CALC-S, CHIN, CON, LAC-D, MAG-M,
NAT-C, NIT-AC, SEP, STAPH, SULPH, TUB and many remedies with
1 and 2 |
AETH,
CALC, CALC-S, CHIN, CON, LAC-D, HOM-XYZ, MAG-M, NIT-AC, SEP,
STAPH, SULPH, TUB and many remedies with 1 and 2 |
So,
why only Aethusa came to your mind for ‘Milk Allergy (agg!)?
Yes, Aethusa
is quite famous for Milk Intolerance. But what other symptoms
make the case an Aethusa case?
One point
worthy to be reflected upon:
A little
kid of two, after fasting a whole day – drank ravenously (and
almost constantly) milk (and juice?) in the night; prior to
this, the boy’s vital force have already been weakened (and also
vitiated by the use of 3-4 remedies?) seriously by severe inflammatory
processes. Then, having diarrhea in the following morning - -
- is it really striking? Is there any such evidence in
the past that whenever Santiago drinks milk – his stomach/abdomen
upsets? I think, you have much over-rated
the ‘Mik Agg’ symptom in this particular
case.
You confirmed your choice in consideration of Aethusa’s
‘burning thirst’.
OK, another little exercise:
|
Symptom |
Kent |
Murphy |
Synthesis
9 |
|
Burning
(vehement) Thirst |
ACET-AC, BRY, MERC, PHOS, TARENT and many
remedies with 1 and 2 |
ACET-AC, BRY, CANN-I, MERC, PHOS, TARENT
and many remedies with 1 and 2 |
ACET-AC,
BRY, CANN-I, MERC, PHOS, TARENT and many remedies with 1 and
2 |
In
all the repertories, Aethusa is only a 1!
Well,
taking into account the two rubrics (Milk, Agg. and Burning Thirst),
Kent’s yields the following result as
shown in the figure:
You see,
along with Aethusa, there are nearly two dozens of remedies
(using Kent only!) for the two symptoms you
considered; and having the same intensity of milk aggravation, there
are 5 other remedies: Calc, Sulph,
Chin, Mag-m and Nit-ac.
What,
then, is the compelling reason to select Aethusa for the
case in hand?
Where
is the violence of Aethusa in this case? The
characteristic vomiting of milk? None, in fact! And
should we simply forget about the characteristic nasal discharge
(green, bloody) and the rattling in chest – for which no mention
of Aethusa has been found in even Synthesis 9 or RU.
The
Other Way Around
Let’s
look a little other way around. It’s that, Aethusa is known
to have marked aversion to milk (at least, my knowledge says so).
I checked that in the repertories, and it came up like this:
|
Symptom |
Kent |
Murphy |
Synthesis
9 |
RU |
|
Milk,
aversion |
Aeth
(2) |
AETH (3) |
Aeth
(2) |
AETH
(3) |
It
is interesting to note that in Murphy, there are only four remedies
with 3 for Aversion to Milk – and Aethusa is one of them!
When,
a remedy’s characteristic symptom(s) go directly against the PQRS
symptom(s) of a case in hand, what do we do? Look at “concomitant”,
according to your definition?
In
fact, in line with your examples of concomitant, the desired rubric
for the case of Santiago should be – ‘Desire for milk which
agg’, NOT “Milk Agg” alone!
In fact,
you also stated: “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.”
But, then again, you jumped to the conclusion, “So, I said,
"We need a milk allergy remedy here!” You excluded the extreme
craving for milk, and took into consideration a general symptom
only – the ‘milk allergy’! That’s really, really strange!!
There
is an interesting concomitant of this case having ‘Burning Thirst’,
which is Santiago’s ‘Aversion to Water’. Why don’t
you consider this? It’s also quite prominent in the case.
The Sick Image
Let’s forget about the extractions from repertory stuff. When one
closes his/her eyes to portray Santiago’s sickness, what is painted? Something like this –
A two years’ old boy, after passing tough
time of severe conjunctivitis and fever, and then fear of being
alone and nightmare, has green-bloody nasal discharge and rattling
in the chest; after fasting a whole day, he drank milk ravenously
in the night – and got diarrhea in the morning. He is drinking
milk constantly – he must have it, nothing else; no desire for water
even. He is fretful, and is much aggravated by the warmth of
the bed.
Is this
Aethusa???
To refresh
my understanding of Aethusa, I again went through Boericke, Boger, Nash, Blackwood,
Allen (Keynotes), Tyler, Phatak, and Clarke
of course. Sorry – I can’t match Santiago’s sick image with any of the pictures
of Aethusa contained in these authentic Materia Medicae!
Analyzing ‘Fool’s Parsley’ . . . . I really feel foolish!
A Refresher
Robin
Murphy in his Keynotes of Materia Medica wrote about Aethusa:
‘This is “Fool’s parsley”. Why did they
call it “Fool’s parsley”? Because if you
eat it, you will immediately start having severe projectile vomiting.
You thought it looked like parsley, you thought it was parsley,
and you were a fool for eating it! So it’s Fool’s parsley – you
eat it and you get immediate, severe projectile vomiting.
Aethusa and Natrum carb are your two major milk allergy remedies
in children. Natrum carb is from stomach down, it has belching and
regurgitation of milk, but it has more gas, bloating and diarrhea.
Aethusa has more vomiting and spasms.
A joke I used to tell is that when you come in to treat one of these
children, you have a shield in front of you, and you look at the
child and you get ready to protect yourself. Or you walk in and
you look around the room and you see vomit on the walls and you
write on your chart “Aethusa”.’
What a lucid deliberation
on Aethusa! I was not taught by Dr Murphy, but I salute him several
times for putting down the genius of all the useful remedies in
his Keynotes.
Conclusion
Dear Dr Elaine!
You concluded by saying
-
“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!”
You have abandoned the
most striking, peculiar symptom (Craving for Milk) of this case
in the first place. And considered ‘Milk Allergy’ alone as the “concomitant
or striking, peculiar” symptom. To me (apology in advance!), your
argument is regrettably crippled and unsound. Notional prescription
like “this remedy is famous for that” is absolutely outside
of the perspective of true homeopathic prescribing – which you know.
Abelmoschus has an abnormal fear
of animals – insects, spiders, snakes, ……
etc. But surely, we do not prescribe Abelmoschus
in all the cases with strong fear of animals. Why? – every
homeopath knows!
Postscript
In the April issue of
Hpathy’s e-zine, the Editor (many
thanks to Dr Bhatia!) has rightly pointed out one important aspect
as below:
“Every school of homeopathy
(!) tries to show their supremacy. The
time has now come when unified efforts are required at international
front to find answers to the questions that still puzzle the homeopathic
community and give food to the sceptics. Let us take a pledge today
to rise above our personal differences and work together for the
cause of homeopathy.”
To my opinion, I would
like to reiterate that these differences in the thoughts and approaches
are principally due to non-adherence to our Master’s teachings.
To rise above ‘personal differences’ (it should be little or no
actually), we need to stick to Hahnemann – in the beginning,
in the middle and up to the last.
Hpathy’s
e-zine is an excellent platform to expedite
the process of coming together. As such, I propose the following,
for you as well as those who submit case reports, to present
in the e-zine in every case (I also draw
the kind attention of the Editor on this respect):
1.
Evaluation of symptoms, considered for analysis, in the order of
importance
2.
Underlining of the symptoms to show their relative weights
3.
Repertorization of the case (preferably with Kent’s,
as it’s available with most of the homeopaths; occasional reference
to modern ones would be fine)
4.
Differential analysis of the most prominent remedies
5.
Compelling reason to select the prescribed remedy.
I hope, if the five
points are clearly presented in the case analyses, our differences
would reduce to the minimum in course of time. This educative manner
of presentation is the most desirable – if we really want to share/learn
something from case reports.
Warm regards.
Mir Mostafa Kamal
Dhaka, Bangladesh.
-- Elaine Lewis' Reply
--
Dear Dr. Kamal,
Thank you for the information you've given. Yes, it's true what
you say about Aethusa--being better known for vomiting than diarrhea,
being more likely to dislike milk than having a craving it.
Still, something must account for the fact that this remedy worked
so resoundingly. My starting-off point was that a food allergy is
frequently, paradoxically, attended by a craving for the very food
one is allergic to. The fact that Aethusa is rated so high for "aversion"
to milk, signals--because of the phenomenon of "polarities"--that
it may also have the opposite case as well. For instance, Nat-mur.
may have a craving or an aversion to salt. Thuja may hate onions
and garlic or love them. So, when I saw "milk allergy"
in bold in Murphy's MM for Aethusa, I didn't rule out the possibility
that it could desire milk as well as have an aversion to it. As
you know, our Repertory is incomplete and many remedies are missing
from rubrics where they clearly belong.
However, I was able to find Aethusa as a "3" in Murphy's
Repertory under:
Rectum: diarrhea, children, in
and
Rectum: diarrhea, milk, after
Thanks again for taking the time to write to us!
Elaine Lewis, DHom
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