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Articular neuralgia
| Treatment No. : |
CD0059 |
| Dosage & Instructions: |
15 drops in some plain water twice a day.
|
| Composition: |
Berberis vulgaris D2
Acid oxalium D8
Colchium D3
Colocynthis D3
Betula fol D1
Ononis spinosa D2
Natrum sulf D2
gnaphalium polyc D2
Pulsatilla D4
Terebinthina D3 |
| Contra-Indications: |
None established |
| Storage: |
Store in a cool and dry place |
| Precautions: |
Keep away from the reach of children |
| Standard Packaging : |
30 ml Drops |
|
Order Online:
|
One 30 ml bottle for $79.99
Two 30 ml bottles for $129.99
|
Condition Overview:
Articular neuralgia is consisting of malaise, stiffness, painful condition of
the joints.
The period of incubation is short and not characteristic. There may be
prodromal symptoms, consisting of malaise, stiffness, painful condition of the
joints, and sore throat, especially tonsillitis. Usually, however, the disease
is ushered in with chilly sensations, or even a rigor. The fever rapidly rises
to 103° or 104°; there is not only pain in the head and back, but soreness of
the whole body; the skin is hot, though often moist; the tongue is white and
furred, the bowels constipated, and the secretion from the kidneys scanty,
high-colored, and excessively acid; the pulse is full and frequent, ranging"
from 100 to 140 beats per minute. With the advent of the fever, a joint, usually
the knee, ankle, elbow, or wrist, begins to swell and becomes red, hot, and
exquisitely painful. If the joint is moved, the patient cries out with pain, and
even the presence of the bedclothes may cause suffering. The fever may run quite
high for several days, and then gradually decline. The mind remains clear save
when the temperature is excessively high.Some time during the twenty-four hours,
usually at night, the patient breaks out in a profuse perspiration, which is of
a sour odor, and is often attended by sudamina and miliary vesicles. These daily
or nightly sweats leave the patient quite prostrated for a time; after
twenty-four or forty-eight hours of heat and pain in a joint, the swelling
begins to subside, the color and pain disappear, and the part, though tender,
takes on a normal appearance; but, to the disgust of patient and physician, the
swelling, heat, pain, and redness occupy the attention of its opposite fellow,
or perhaps another member on the same side. Thus it may go from joint to joint,
or alternate with the part first affected. The swelling varies, usually confined
to the joint, though often involving the s-heaths and tendons.
The blood-changes are very marked, few diseases showing the marked anemia of
rheumatism. The duration of the disease is variable, and no one can tell at the
beginning of an attack whether it will terminate in six days or six weeks. It is
one of the most painful and distressing of all diseases. Day after day the
patient may lie with a red, puffy, and tender joint, unable to move it without
the greatest pain, and, to add to his discomfort, a profuse, sour sweat occurs,
the odor of which adds to his misery. As the days pass, the sweat loses its
acidity, and may even become alkaline.
The heart may early feel the force of the infection, and the murmur in the
apex region is the note of warning. This organ should be examined daily that we
may be prepared with treatment to modify the force of the disease. |