Especially adapted to complaints of first and second childhood;
the psoric or tubercular.
Memory deficient; forgetful, inattentive; child cannot be taught
for it cannot remember; threatened idiocy.
Scrofulous, dwarfish children who do not grow (children who grow
too rapidly, Cal. ); scrofulous ophthalmia, cornea opaque; abdomen
swollen; frequent attacks of colic; face bloated; general emaciation.
Children both physically and mentally weak.
Dwarfish, hysterical women and old maids with scanty menses; deficient
heat, always cold and chilly.
Old, cachectic people; scrofulous, especially when fat; or those
who suffer from gouty complaints ( Fluor. ac. ).
Diseases of old men; hypertrophy or induration of prostrate and
testes; mental and physical weakness.
Apoplectic tendency in old people; complaints of old drunkards;
headache of aged people, who are childish.
Persons subject to quinsy, take cold easily, or with every, even
the least, cold have an attack of tonsillitis prone to suppuration
( Hep. , Psor. ).
Inability to swallow anything but liquids ( Bap. , Sil. ).
Haemorrhoids protrude every time he urinates ( Mur. ac. ).
Chronic cough in psoric children; enlarged tonsils or elongated
uvula; < after slight cold ( Alum. ).
Swelling and indurations, or incipient suppuration of glands, especially
cervical and inguinal.
Offensive foot sweat; toes and soles get sore; of the heels; throat
affections after checked foot sweat (compare, Graph. , Psor. , Sanic.
, Sil. ).
Great sensitiveness to cold ( Cal. , Kali c. , Psor. ).
Relation. - Frequently useful before or after Psor. , Sulph. ,
and Tub.
After Bar. c. , Psor will often eradicate the constitutional tendency
to quinsy.
Similar: to, Alum , [Cal. iod.], Dul. , Fluor. ac. , Iod. , Sil.
Incompatible: after Calc. in scrofulous affections.
Aggravation. - When thinking of his disease ( Oxal. ac. ); lying
on painful side; after meals; washing affected parts.
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