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I hope that one of the doctors she'll be seeing in L.A. is a homeopath. Jenny Mc Carthy was supposed to be setting her up with appointments to see doctors who treat vaccine damage. Maybe even Gina??
To me, it looks like Mercury poisoning. I would imagine she'd respond well to Mercurius, and possibly Thimerisol, as well. Look at these symptoms from Mercurius's proving and clinical cases:
GENERALITIES; VACCINATION; after (K1410, SRII-672, G1163) (41) : acon., ant-t., apis, ars., bac., bapt., bcg, bell., bufo, carc., crot-h., diph., echi., graph., gunp., hep., kali-chl., lac-v., lepro., Maland., med., merc., merc-cy., Mez., nat-bic., ped., phos., psor., rhus-t., sabin., sarr., sars., sep., SIL., skook., SULPH., syc-co., THUJ., Tub., Vac., vario.
He could not walk at all, hardly speak, and when he attempted to move, or was asked a question, his whole frame was thrown into the most immoderate convulsive actions.
Speech very thick; the words are drawled out, but he often fails to complete them.
After he has been talking a little time, articulation becomes less and less distinct, apparently from defective control over the muscles.
Tremors; when he is not talking the face is tranquil, but directly he begins to speak all the face muscles became tremulous.
When told to open his mouth he gets marked tremor of muscles of mastication.
Tongue very tremulous when protruded; no nystagmus.
Coarse tremor of whole right upper limb elicited on movement.
LEG: DANCE, AND PERFORM RAPID MOTIONS, ON ATTEMPTING TO WALK.
Limbs: lower,: trembling: walking, when.
Limbs: lower,: giving way. 0>3>0
Limbs: lower,: movements: involuntary. 0>2>0
LIMBS: LOWER,: MOVEMENTS: SLOW. 0>1>0
LIMBS: LOWER,: SHAKING: SPASMODIC VIBRATIONS, BY.
From Ward’s Repertory:
So much difficulty in walking that he often fell to the ground on his back, as if from some external force, even when striving to keep himself up by bending forwards.
From Allen’s Encyclopedia:
The principal affection under which he labored was not, as has sometimes been described in these cases, a constant tremor of the limbs and seesaw of the head, such as occur in old paralytic persons, but a sort of rapid convulsive agitation of the limbs (whenever the act of volition was exerted upon the muscles), which moved the extremities quickly in all directions except that which the will prompted. Thus, he could sit on his chair still and nearly unmoved, but the moment he got up and attempted to walk, his legs began to dance, as it were, in spite of himself and performed very rapid and irregular motions, with so much violence as to compel him to drop on his chair again or to throw him down. Somewhat similar motions were performed by his arms, if he attempted to use them; so that he was unable to carry anything to his mouth, and the smallest quantity of liquid was immediately dashed out of any vessel from which he made an attempt to drink.
Sudden jerking of the extremities, so that he could scarcely walk or eat; the fear of falling induced him to keep his bed.
Trembling.
General tremors.
•Involuntary tremors.
•General involuntary tremor.
•Mercurial tremors affect the muscles which are usually under the control of the will, so that one is never master of his own motions the affected muscles exhibit normal electrical irritability, but are not able to respond to the will; on attempting to respond the muscles begin to tremble and twitch excessively; they frequently make all sorts of motions, as in chorea, before the desired motion is affected, or are sometimes affected with violent convulsive motions, which also involve neighboring groups of muscles; these muscles are better able to hold heavy objects than light ones, as for example, a knife or fork cannot be used because they are jerked out of the hand, while a heavy object may be held firmly for a long time; the hands and arms are first affected, the lower extremities next, while the head becomes affected later and only in violent cases; the general trembling of the body seems to alternate with the stammering of speech; sometimes the speech is very stammering and unintelligible, while the rest of the body is not affected; at other times the whole body trembles, twitches immoderately, while the speech though tremulous and interrupted is yet intelligible; sometimes one-half of the body is more affected than the other; sometimes the patients are unable to walk, drink, eat, dress, speak intelligibly, or indeed to utter an articulate sound; sometimes patients are able to ascend and descend steps, though with difficulty, like patients with tabes dorsalis, but are not able to eat or drink, while in others these conditions are reversed; some are no longer able to drink without assistance because the water is spilled before it reaches the mouth, while they are still able to carry food to the mouth by supporting the arm; one patient was obliged to be held by several people whenever he attempted to drink; sometimes chewing is absolutely impossible; in the convulsive from patients are obliged to be tied in bed to prevent their being thrown out by the convulsions.
At times tremors occur in paroxysms of varying severity and duration; these paroxysms are brought on by emotional excitement, physical exertion, and sometimes occur without assignable cause.
From Hughes’ Cyclopedia:
b. Tremor mercurialis. This sometimes comes on suddenly without any premonitory symptoms, are unattended by any other derangement of health. But as a rule it is preceded by erethism if longer or shorter duration. Those muscles which in health are most subject to the will are those chiefly affected. The muscles react slowly to electricity, but are no longer able to perform intended movements. They certainly obey the impulse of the will by contracting, but these contractions are not such as the patient desires. The muscles begin to tremble and twitch and set other muscles aging in the same way, and the will loses all power over these muscles. The patients cannot grasp or use small objects, but they can generally use heavy objects. One patient who could hold a heavy thick stick in his hand, with considerable trembling, when he took a small stick in his hand, after some violent convulsive movements it flew away out of his hand. It is generally the hands and arms over witch the control of the will is lost, and which tremble and twitch at the least exertion or emotion. Sometimes, but rarely, the general trembling is preceded by stammering, which may amount to incomprehensible speech and aphonia. Sometimes the legs are first affected with great weakness, and when an effort is made to walk or even to stand, there comes on staggering and falling down. Trembling and twitching of head usually comes later, and the facial muscles are first affected.
The different muscular spheres are sometimes affected in a very unequal manner; one part may be quite lost to the will whilst another remains subject to it. Thus speech may be gone altogether, while arms and legs are only occasionally affected with trembling from emotion; or the whole body trembles and twitches incessantly, while the speech remains intelligible though trembling and interrupted. One side of the body is occasionally more strongly affected than the other. According to the degree and extent of the paresis the patient may be unable to stand, walk, drink, eat, put on or take off his clothes, speak intelligibly, or utter articulate sounds. The gait of those still able to walk is laboured, and the feet wide apart as in people with tabes dorsalis. Many cannot drink, because they spill all the liquid in the glass before they can bring it to their mouth. Sometimes the patient is unable to chew. In the convulsive spasm it is sometimes necessary to strap the patient down to prevent him being thrown out of bed by the convulsions.
From Allen’s Handbook:
Trembling (Arg. nit., Plat.) of hands and tongue; of neck and hands; limbs and head; fingers and arms, then knees, limbs and tongue; agg. limbs, especially thighs, legs and forearms, while dorsal and gluteal muscles and those of pelvis and shoulder were less affected, those of upper arm, anterior chest and face not at all; after long sanding or walking, amel. rest; on attempting to move; on muscular exertion, except of neck and face, then they extended to muscles not in motion, so that the outstretched hands trembled, agg. motion, so that the outstretched hand trembled, agg. stretching figure, and on repeated pronation and supination of arm the whole body trembled and the protruded tongue trembled; agg. night; agg. surprise or fear; agg. excitement, preventing speech; beginning in hands, agg. attempting to hold anything, attacking knees and rarely neck; agg. closing eyes, when it is noticed even in feet, amel. walking and standing; of muscles of head and spine, amel. sleep i bed; sudden; alternating with convulsions; usually prevents sleep, or a convulsive shock wakes him as soon as he falls asleep and the T. begins anew; paralytic. Paroxysmal trembling; generally worse in morning than in evening; from excitement or physical exertion, at times resembling the shaking of ague; so that he was liable to break whatever he touched, movement of legs os irregular that in descending stairs he must sometimes jump over two or three steps at once, to avoid this he crawled backward and on his hands, if he drank out of a glass it was crushed by the spasmodic clenching of jaws; and regular vibrations of almost the whole locomotive apparatus, apparently caused by alternate muscular relaxation and contraction, more in upper than lower limbs and on left side, agg. attempting certain movements, especially if of a tonic character, and these more disordered in proportion as they required precision and voluntary effort. Those who had salivation rarely had tremors.
Jerking (Plumb.); in tendons of fingers, toes and tendo - achillis in evening, with shaking chill that tossed him into the air; of head, arms and fingers, left, angles of mouth retracted, brows twitching, head constantly thrown back, but the agitations scarcely raised the arms, nostrils spasmodically dilated, short, rapid and painful contractions of sterno - mastoid, trapezius, scaleni, diaphragm and abdominal muscles, hiccough, speech interrupted and indistinct from jerking of tongue, attacks caused by a sudden cold blast, application of cold hand to the skin or abrupt entrance of any person into the ward, when he transmitted volition to any part it was instantly affected, when he tried to raise his foot from the ground it quivered and fell useless, then he attempted to put a vessel to his lips he carried it towards his ear, nose or forehead and spilled the contents on his face or neck. Motions as in chorea before the desired motion is affected, or convulsive motions involving neighboring groups of muscles, better able to hold heavy objects than light ones, hands and arms affected first, then lower limbs, then head in violent cases, the general trembling alternates with stammering, sometimes one half of body affected more than the other, sometimes they can ascend and descend steps with difficulty, as in tabes dorsalis, but cannot eat or drink, while in others these conditions are reversed, some cannot drink without assistance, because the water is spilled before it reaches the mouth, but they can carry food to the mouth by supporting the arm, one has to be held by several persons while he drinks. In its first attack it may be taken for St. Vitus, s dance, in its later stages fro delirium tremens.
Convulsions; agg. left hand; of whole frame if he attempted to move or was asked a question, could not walk, hardly speak; during which he rarely lost consciousness, amel. tightly binding body and limbs; agg. evening, with loud screams, consciousness not wholly lost; whole body tossed to and fro, every muscle in activity, head rolled about, jerked backward and forward and from side to side, eyelids opened and closed, eyeballs rolled from side to side, wings of nose and corners of mouth twitched, face distorted, jaw moved backward and forward, limbs jerked as a whole and each muscle by itself, it tossed him to and fro and threw him out of bed; clonic, in right half of body, affecting one or several groups of muscles and certain fibres.
Lower Extremities. - Oedema. Veins dilated; saphena vein as large as the thumb. Coarse tremor of right when told to raise leg of the ground white sitting. Movements slow, those of hip - joint difficult. Inability to stand steadily. Staggering; when eyes are closed, would fall unless prevented. Gait hesitating and difficult; H. and uneven; as in tabes dorsalis. Inability to walk. Heaviness; causing unsteady gait.
Thigh. Shining, transparent swelling of T. and legs. Must lie down in forenoon on account of jerking ad heaviness in t. and general sweat. Cramp above hollow of knee. Cramplike pain in tendon on outside near knee when sitting. Sticking in T. and legs on motion; in right hip - joint when walking. Tearing in hip - joint at night; sticking, in muscles of right. Boring in right gluteals when sitting. Bruised pain in right, agg. touch and walking. Tensive pain in right when sitting; T. pain in left nates as far as hollow of knee, agg. along crease between nates and thigh, when dozing at night, amel. lying on back with something under thigh, agg. resting thigh on chair when sitting, and worse periodically. Drawing pain on anterior surface of left; D. pain extending through leg. Dragging downward deeper than muscles. hamstrings feel too short. Weariness above knees when walking. Paralysis as if asleep.
Knee - jerking and feeling as if too large. Sticking when walking in open air; tearing, in right when sitting and walking. Tearing. Pain at times; Pain as if broken when lying; Pain in right as if stiff. Throbbing. Weakness and giving way; W. of K amel. and ankles, as if tendons had lost their power and steadiness, agg. standing.
From Neatby’s Hom Therapeautics:
Nervous System. Some of the most striking symptoms observed in chronic mercurial poisoning are those relating to the nervous system. They have been collected mainly from workmen engaged in work involving the use of mercury, such as mirror and barometer makers. A mercurial erethism is produced, the patient becomes abnormally irritable and sensitive; though not usually shy he feels confused on being looked at, every trifle makes him excited and hurried, he is ill - humored and easily angered, and he has rapid transitions from passionate outbursts to pusillanimity. Memory and judgment are weakened, there are melancholy and great depression, he weeps and laments, screams with terror, and tries to get out of bed and flee away. Sleeplessness, terrifying short dreams and hallucinations may occur and the patient may talk of committing suicide. These nervous symptoms are more or less prominent with the one great characteristic nervous phenomenon of mercurius, namely, the tremors. They occur first in the hands and arms, then in the legs, and sometimes they extend to the muscles of the neck and trunk. They affect principally those muscles which in health are most subject to the will. The will loses power over the muscles, co - ordination is impaired, the patient cannot grasp small objects but he can generally lift heavy ones. In the first degree the tremors are small in compass, like those of paralysis agitans, but they afterwards become more convulsive and then approach to the movements of chorea; the head, arms and hands are in incessant motion of unequal and spasmodic character, the speech is broken and indistinct from spasm of the diaphragm and trembling of the tongue, the patient falls if he attempts to walk and there may be vertigo. Attacks of tremor may be induced when he is quiet, from a cold draught blowing on him, from any emotional excitement or unexpected incident, such as some one coming suddenly into the room. The spasms are always clonic, never tonic in character. Additional nervous symptoms caused by mercury are shooting pains along the nerves and in the joints, circumscribed areas of partial anaesthesia, amblyopia, anosmia and deafness. Localized paralyses of the muscles of the arms or legs may occur, but there is no wasting of muscles, as is the case with lead paralysis. Delirium and transitory hallucinations are sometimes observed, but in poisoning by mercury the mind is usually remarkably clear. The tremor and general muscular weakness are probably of central origin; at one of the autopsies on a fatal case, a bloody covering, a third of an inch thick, was found over both hemispheres extending as far back as the tentorium. The paralyses sometimes observed are believed to be caused by the poison acting on the peripheral nerves and destroying the myaline sheath.
Blood. The condition of the blood is altered by mercury, which renders it more fluid, the fibrin, albumin and red corpuscles are diminished, and it coagulates with difficulty and forms a very soft clot. There results a cachexia and general anasarcous state of the body, with palpitation, panting respiration and general prostration. Large doses of mercury lead to an increase in the number and size of the vessels to the bone - marrow, the fat cells atrophy; later, gelatinous degeneration follows and the cellular elements of the marrow disappear.
GENERALITIES; VACCINATION; after From Ward’s Repertory:From Ward’s Repertory:From Allen’s Encyclopedia:
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