| It's time for the
answer to last month's quiz! Do you remember it? Here it is again:
Hi Elaine,
My mother, K______, has developed a bad cough and we need your
help please. She says she thinks it started Thursday, after having
the carpet cleaned the day before. She says she stayed in the house
while they sprayed the pre-treatment solution and wonders if that
exposure to chemicals is what caused the upper respiratory problem.
She has always had a weak upper respiratory system since having
whooping cough in childhood and then an exposure to chemicals in
the early 1960's. She wanted to clean a rug and mixed some cleaning
products together -- probably ammonia and bleach -- and then had
trouble breathing. I mention this because she thinks that episode
is what has caused her upper respiratory weakness.
The symptoms she presents now are what I would call a dry, nonproductive,
sort of hollow sounding cough. Earlier she said it started in her
throat. She said it strains her throat to cough. She cannot suppress
the cough. It hurts to cough. Earlier she said her chest didn't
hurt but now she says her chest hurts.
One of the most significant things I noticed is her eyes: Her eyes
are like slits. Definitely not her usual look. Sort of the droopy
eyelids in Gelsemium but not really what I would call "besotted".
Hard to describe except to say her eyes are like slits. She also
says they are watery and seem to have a film. I noticed "gunk"
in the inner corners. I would say her expression is somewhat pained.
She has incontinence with the cough. She always has an incontinence
problem -- from sneezing or coughing -- but it is so much worse
when she has a hacking cough like this.
She normally lives alone and if I hadn't gone over to see her,
I think she would have been in the bed all day. When I was over
earlier we sat outside some and she may have been better for the
fresh air. I'm not sure if it was the fresh air or having the company
of my daughter, who is with her now and they are doing a crossword
puzzle and she said she was better for having her there, that it
kept her mind off feeling bad.
Can't think of anything else to report. Not better for eating or
drinking. Says she has no appetite. No desire for anything in particular.
Just says she is "aggravated" with the cough. Sounds impatient
and irritated about being sick.
This is the sickest she has been in a long time, though, and I
am concerned. Would really appreciate your help.
D.
______________________________
So how well did all of you do? Not
too well! Do you know that almost everyone came up with a different
answer? We had Spongia, Kali carb., Amonium carb., Phosphorus, Sepia,
Arsenicum, Bromium, one person voted for three remedies--not fair!--and
then finally we got a correct answer from Gabi-- BRYONIA!
You know, as soon as I hear "dry
painful cough", I think of Bryonia! If you see a keynote of
a remedy in a case? Go for it! Of course, you do have to confirm
it. "Can I confirm Bryonia," I asked myself? "Hmm...cough
is dry, patient is irritable, patient stayed in bed all day, yep,
that's Bryonia!"
I knew it also covered the involuntary
urination from coughing; I didn't know about the eyes half-closed
though, I had to look that one up (Eyes: open, eyelids half open).
I can see that a lot of you zeroed-in
on symptoms of lesser significance or lesser clarity in the case,
like the loss of urine while coughing (those were the Sepia voters!)
and the ailments from Ammonia (but that was a supposition by "D"
and her mother, and actually, the immediate result from breathing
in the carpet cleaner chemicals was difficulty in breathing; maybe
Ammonium carb. would have been a good remedy to take right then
and there to combat that symptom and maybe stop the cough or cold
before it started). But by the time the cough develops, and we're
not sure how long that takes, we have a specific cough presentation
that we have to deal with.
The rubric the remedy has to be in
is "Painful cough" (Cough: painful). If you look under
that rubric, you have Bryonia as a 3, Causticum as a 3, Cuprum as
a 3 and Allium Cepa as a 3. There is no confirmation for any of
these except Bryonia. Causticum is ameliorated by cold drinks, so
is Cuprum. "D", in this case, states that her mother was
not ameliorated by drinking. There's nothing to support Allium cepa
with its runny nose and eyes, sneezing and worse in a warm room;
there were not too many remedies in italics in this rubric either,
just Caps, Agar., Merc., and Ail. ... there's no confirmation for
any of these; so, Bryonia wins, hands-down!
So remember folks, when you hear
"painful cough", don't forget Bryonia!
What does our lovely winner, Gabi,
win today, Dr. B?
----------------------------------------------------
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