For the lymphatic temperament.
Great prostration, with disposition to decomposition of fluids
( Pyr. ); ulceration of mucous membranes.
All exhalations and discharges fetid, especially in typhoid or
other acute disease; breath, stool, urine, perspiration, ulcers
( Psor. , Pyr. ).
Aversion to mental exertion; indisposed, or want of power to think.
Perfect indifference, don't care to do anything, inability to fix
the mind to work.
Stupor; falls asleep while being spoken to or in the midst of his
answer (when spoken to, answers correctly, but delirium returns
at once, Arn. ).
Tongue: at first coated white with red papillae; dry and yellow-brown
in center; later dry, cracked, ulcerated.
Face flushed, dusky, dark-red, with a stupid, besotted drunken
expression ( Gels. ).
Can swallow liquids only ( Bar. c. ); least solid food gags (can
swallow liquids only, but has aversion to them, Sil. ).
Painless sore throat; tonsils, soft palate and parotids dark red,
swollen; putrid, offensive discharge ( Diph. ).
Dysentery of old people; diarrhoea of children, especially when
very offensive ( Carbo v. , Pod. , Psor. ).
Cannot go to sleep because she cannot get herself together; head
or body feels scattered about the bed; tosses about to get the pieces
together; thought she was three persons, could not keep them covered
( Petr. ).
In whatever position the patient lies, the parts rested upon feel
sore and bruised ( Pyr. - compare, Arn. , Pyr. ).
Decubitus in typhoid ( Arn. , Mur. ac. , Pyr. ).
Relation. - Similar: to, Arn. , Ars. , Bry. , Gels. , in the early
stages of fever with malaise, nervousness, flushed face, drowsiness,
and muscular soreness.
When Ars. has been properly given or too often repeated in typhoid
or typhus.
After Baptisia : Crot. , Ham. , Nit. ac. and Tereb. act well in
haemorrhage of typhoid and typhus.
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