Schmerzmittelgruppe Anhang 4

Schmerzmittel:

Arn.                Verletzung/Myalgie

Bell.                Fieber, Entzündung, Krampf

Bry.                Neuralgie

Cimic.             Schmerz Wirbelsäule

Dulc.               Gelenkentzündung (Nässe/Kälte)

Gels.               Kopfschmerz

Mez.               Neuralgie (Zoster)

Ran-b.             Nervenschmerz (Brustkorb)

Rhod.             Wettermittel

Rhus-t.            Schmerz nach Überbelastung

Spig.               Kopfschmerz

 

[Agarwal]

Arg-n.: Schmerz: brennend, stechend wie von einem Splitter, einschnürend; Modalitäten: < im warmen Zimmer/Rechtslage/Bewegung/Eis und Zucker, > frische Luft/Abwärtsbewegung;

Ätiologie: Prüfungsangst, Besorgnis, Furcht und Schreck;

Gemütsverfassung, Stimmung: nervös, impulsiv, unruhig, ängstlich; Begleitsymptome: lautes explosives Aufstoßen, Magen und Abdomen aufgetrieben,

Übelkeit, Schleimerbrechen, Aphthen, saurer Geschmack

Ars.: Schmerz: brennend, stechend; Modalitäten: < vorgebeugtes Sitzen und Bewegung; > Bewegung der Füße/Wärme;

Ätiologie: Sorgen, Kummer, Kontrollverlust über Emotionen, verdorbene Speisen (Fleischgerichte);

Gemütsverfassung, Stimmung: unruhig, sehr ängstlich und besorgt um die Gesundheit

Cham: Schmerz: krampfartig, unerträglich; Modalitäten: < Kälte/Angesprochen werden/Widerspruch; > Wärme/ bedingungslose Zuwendung;

Ätiologie: Ärger; Gemütsverfassung, Stimmung: sehr reizbar und überempfindlich, schimpft über seine Schmerzen, wälzt sich unruhig hin und her;

Begleitsymptome: galliges Erbrechen, Durchfall, heißer Schweiß

Coloc: Lokalisation: Ausstrahlung nach unten; Schmerz: schneidend, bohrend, stechend, krallend;

Modalitäten: < Strecken; > Zusammenkrümmen/Gegendruck/Wärme;

Ätiologie: Streit, Ärger, Schreck, Kälte; Begleitsymptome: übler Uringeruch; Neigung zu Neuralgien, linksseitiger Kopfschmerz

Ign: Schmerz: krampfartig an kleinen umschriebenen Stellen; Modalitäten: < morgens erwachend/Kälte/körperliche Anstrengung/nach dem Essen/Kaffee; > essend;

Ätiologie: Kränkung, Enttäuschung, unterdrückter Ärger;

Gemütsverfassung, Stimmung: Gefühlsausbrüche, Übertreibung, hysterisches Verhalten, wechselhafte Stimmung, leicht erregt und schnell wieder gefasst;

Begleitsymptome: Schluckauf mit Aufstoßen, leer oder bitter, Übelkeit, Erbrechen, flaues Leeregefühl

Nux-v: Lokalisation: Ausstrahlung in den gesamten Oberbauch; Schmerz: krampfartig, zusammenziehend;

Modalitäten: < am frühen Morgen ab 3 h. und abends/Kälte/Alkohol/üppiges Essen; > Wärme;

Ätiologie: Schlafmangel, Überarbeitung, Ärger; Gemütsverfassung, Stimmung: reizbar, mürrisch, jähzornig, überheblich, weiß alles besser;

Begleitsymptome: Übelkeit, schmerzhaftes Aufstoßen

Phos: Schmerz: brennend und reißend; Modalitäten: < morgens und abends/in der Dämmerung/im vollen Zimmer/kalter Wind/Linkslage/warme Speisen (verlangt kalte Getränke),

> frische Luft; Ätiologie: Erschöpfung, Kummer, insbesondere Liebeskummer, geistige Anstrengung, Gewitter; Gemütsverfassung, Stimmung: überempfindlich gegen äußere

Eindrücke, aber leicht zu beruhigen, begeisterungsfähig, starkes Mitgefühl; Begleitsymptome: leichte Blutungen, Schwindel beim Aufstehen und Gehen, häufiges Aufstoßen, leer oder

von Speisen

Staph: Lokalisation: Ausstrahlung in Rücken und Oberschenkel; Schmerz: stechend, schneidend; Modalitäten: < bei Berührung/nach Koitus;

Ätiologie: demütigender persönlicher Angriff; Gemütsverfassung, Stimmung: empört und verletzt, aber um Fassung bemüht

 

[Douglas Morris Borland]

ACUTE COLIC

In cases of acute colic, renal, hepatic, or intestinal, one can give quick relief by fairly snapshot prescribing. When you go to such a case and know that morphia and atropin will relieve the spasm, it is very tempting to us them.

If you cannot get your homoeopathic drug in a snapshot way I think you are bound to give the patient relief with your hypodermic. To my mind the disadvantages of this procedure are twofold.

First, there is the disadvantage that after such relief, it is necessary to begin to treat that case now masked, if not actually complicated, by the action of the morphia.

Secondly, there is always the danger that in an acute case of this kind the morphia may conceal the development of surgical emergency which in consequence may be missed. Suppose you have a hepatic colic, it is quite likely due to a stone pressing down into the bile ducts, which may perforate. If morphia has been used it is quite possible that owing to the sedative, indications of the perforation are not detected for hours afterwards.

The clinical picture is masked, and you are exposing the patient to a very grave risk. So if there is a method of dealing with these colics apart from morphia I think it is wise to use it. But you are only justified in using it if you are getting relief, because these conditions are so painful that it is not fair to let the patient suffer merely because you would prefer using a homoeopathic drug to a sedative.

Fortunately the indications in these colics are usually pretty definite.

A first attack of colic, whether it be hepatic or renal, is a very devastating experience for the patient and he is usually terrified. The pains are usually extreme and nearly drive the patient crazy.

Acon.: feels frightfully cold, very anxious, faint whenever he sits up or stands up, and yet cannot bear the room being hot.

Seldom indications for Aconite in repeated attacks. The patients somehow begin to realize that although the condition is frightfully painful it is not mortal, so the mental anxiety necessary for the administration of Aconite is not present, and without that mental anxiety Aconite does not seem to act.

Bell.: has repeated attacks, each short in duration, developing quite suddenly, stopping as suddenly + a feeling of fullness in the epigastrium, and where the attacks are induced, or very << by any fluids + flushing of the face, dilated pupils and a full bounding pulse.

Chel.: liver symptoms for some time: vague discomfort, slight fullness in the right hypochondrium, a good deal of flatulence, intolerance of fats, and who is losing condition, becoming sallow and slightly yellow. He develops an acute hepatic colic, with violent shoot of pain going right through to the back (to the angle of the r. scapula), which subside and leave a constant ache in the hepatic region, and then he gets another violent colicky attack. > very hot applications/drinking of water as hot as it can be swallowed. In these case X-rays usually reveal a number of gallstones. And, in contrast with what happens with morphia and atropine treatment, subsequent X-rays after CHEL. has been given frequently shows that one or more of these gallstones have passed almost painlessly.

There are quite a number of other drugs for these colics, some of them hepatic, some renal, and same intestinal, and they all have their own individual points which are very easy to pick up at the beside. If one memorizes them in this way it is astonishing the east of your work in acute cases. You see I am not giving you the full description of these drugs, I am picking out only the points which apply to this type of case. That is how you have to do it in practice, but you must remember that these drugs I am giving you for these conditions are the common ones, and that every now and then you meet a case which appears to call for one of these drugs and yet the patient dose not respond. There ar certain homoeopathic physicians who sometimes call me out in consultation for acute cases and I know perfectly well before I leave my room that it is no use my thinking of these drugs as they will already have been given, and what I have to get is something that is not common but our of the way. I remember seeing a case of gallstone colic with one of our very good physicians. It was an elderly woman, and she had that typical CHEL. picture. Of course she had had CHEL. already, but without benefit. The doctor said, “I dont understand this case at all: I think she must have a malignant liver.” I asked why, and he said. “Because she has all the CHEL. indications and she does not respond.” That is the sort of odd case you will meet with. so if that should happen to be your first one do not think therefore that Homoeopathy does not work: you will find that as time goes on you get more and more cases that do work and the exceptions are fewer and fewer. As a matter of fact that particular case responded to a dose of one of the Snake Poisons, but I have never seen another case that had a Snake Poison for that condition, and one gave it purely because she had already had her CHEL.; had I seen the case in the first instance I should certainly have given CHEL. In spite of the odd cases it is worth while getting these ordinary drugs at your finger ends so that when cases crop up you can prescribe easily on the few indications of the acute condition as presented to you.

 

Two other drugs very helpful in these colics.

Berb.: extremely useful in renal or gallstone colic. Always from one centre the pain radiates in all directions. Suppose you have a renal colic-and when Berb. is indicated I think it is more commonly on the left side than the right-you will find that where you get indications for Berb. the colicky pain starting in the renal region, or in the course of the ureter, there is one centre of acute pain, and from that centre the pain radiates in all directions. If you have a hepatic colic you get the centre intensity in the gallbladder, and from there that pain radiates in all directions, it goes through to the back, into the chest, into the abdomen. That is the outstanding point about these Berberis colics.

In addition to that, where you are dealing with a renal colic you almost always get an acute urging to urinate, and a good deal of pain on urination. Where you are dealing with a biliary colic, it is usually accompanied by a very marked aggravation from any movement, this is present to a slight extent in the renal colics, but it is not so marked; and in both the patient is very distresses, and has a pale, earthy looking complexion. The pallor, I think, is more marked in the renal cases, and where there has been a previous gallstone colic you may get a jaundiced tinge in the hepatic cases.

Very useful drug, and I do not know any other which has the extent of radiation of pain that you get in BERBERIS. It is surprising widespread the area of tenderness can be which is associated with a Berberis colic, so much so that in gallstone attacks you get so much tenderness and resistance that you are very afraid of a perforated gallbladder, you get such a resistant right upper rectus, and you may be very suspicious of a peri-renal abscess in the renal cases, again because of the extreme resistance of the muscles on the side of the abdomen.

In a Berberis renal case the urine is as a rule rather suggestive. More commonly it is not blood-stained, but contains a quantity of greyish-white deposit which may be pure pus, but mostly contains pus and a quantity of amorphous material usually phosphates, sometimes urates. Although it is a very dirty looking urine it is surprisingly inoffensive.

 

There are two drugs drugs which one always thinks of for colics of any kind, and they are COLOC. and MAG-P. It does not matter where the colic is; when you have an acute abdominal colic of any kind one always thinks of the possibility of either COLOC. or MAG-P. Both remedies are often useful for colic in any area, uterine, intestinal, bile ducts, or renal-it does not matter which it is. The point about these drugs is the they are almost identical, that always in their colics the pain is very extreme, and the patients are doubled up with pain. In both cases the pains are relieved by external pressure, and by heat. In MAG-P. there is rather more relief from rubbing than there is in COLOC., which prefers steady, hard pressure.

 

The next thing about them is that their colics are intermitted. The patients get spasms of pain which come up to a head and then subside.

 

There are one or two features which help you to choose between COLOC. and MAG-p.

COLOC. = in colic you always find the intensely irritable. He is frightfully impatient, wants something done at once, wants immediate relief, and liable to be violently angry if relief is not forthcoming.

MAG-p. not the same degree of irritability, and the patient is distraught because of the intensity of the pain rather than violently angry.

Sometimes helps in the selection that COLOC. tends to have a slightly coated tongue, particularly if it is the digestive tract is upset, whereas MAG-P. it is usually  clean.

 

Both drugs < marked aggravation from cold, a little more marked in MAG-P. than in COLOC. For instance, MAG-P. is exceedingly sensitive to a draught on the area, whereas COLOC., though it likes hot applications, is not so extremely sensitive to cold air in its neighbourhood.

Another distinguishing point between the two is that in COLOC. there is apt to be a tendency to giddiness, particularly on turning more especially to the left, but this is not present in MAG-P.

Where you have a report that the colic -this applies much more commonly to uterine than to intestinal colic- has followed on an attack of anger it is almost certainly COLOC. required.

 

Colic result of over-indulgence in cheese it is COLOC. indicated, not MAG-p. If the pain is the result of exposure to cold, either a dysmenorrhoea or an abdominal colic, it is much more likely to be MAG-p. than COLOC.

These are two of the most useful drugs in the Materia Medica for colics, and it is surprising the relief you can get, even in cases of intestinal obstruction, from the administration of COLOC. or MAG-P.

In intestinal carcinoma with partial obstruction in which the patients were suffering from intense recurring colicky pain coming to a head and then subsiding, where MAG-P. has given the most astonishing relief. Less commonly in cases where there has been marked irritability in addition to the local symptoms. COLOC. has also done wonders. Very often one or other of these drugs has kept a patient in a surprising degree of comfort till death supervened. In these malignant colics I never go high: a 30th potency is sufficient. In an ordinary acute colic, say dysmenorrhoea, I give a 10m and the relief is almost immediate, and the same applies to intestinal colics.

 

There is another drug which is very useful as a contrast to these two, and it has very much the same sort of pain, a very violent, spasmodic colic coming on quite suddenly, rising up to a head, then subsiding, and that is DIOS..

 

DIOS. > same from applied heat, and it is sometimes more comfortable for firm pressure, but, in contradistinction to the other two drugs, instead of the patients being doubled up with pain they are hyper-extended; you find them bending back as far as possible. And the only drug I know which has that violent abdominal colic which does get relief from extreme extention is DIOS. It has been is useful in gallbladder attacks, in a few intestinal colics, and in a case of violent dysmenorrhoea. I have never tried it in a renal case. Where you get that extreme extension of the spine give DIOS. every time without asking any further questions.

Ip. is one of the most useful colic drugs we have, and the indications for it are very clear and definite. The character of the pain described in IP. is much more cutting than the acute spasmodic pain occurring in most other drugs.

But the outstanding feature of IP. is the feeling of intense nausea which develops with each spasms of pain. Accompanying that nausea is the other IP. characteristic that in spite of that feeling of deathly sickness the patient has a clean tongue. You will see quite a number of adolescent girls who get most violent dysmenorrhoea, they are rather warm-blooded people, and with the spasms of pain they very often describe it as cutting pain in the lower abdomen -they get hot and sweaty and deadly sick so that they cannot stand up and < any movement. They have a perfectly clean tongue and a normal temperature, and very often Ipecac. will stop the attack, and even the tendency to dysmenorrhoea.

I have seen several cases of renal colic, associated with the same intense nausea, which have responded to IP. but I think that is more rare: it is more commonly in uterine cases that you get indications for it.

 

Associating with colics. LYC., RAPH., and OP., the reason being that in all three the colic is accompanied by violent abdominal flatulence. In intestinal colic in which to expect to find indications for one or other of these drugs. It may be associated with a gallbladder disturbance, and if so it is much more likely to be LYC. than either of the other two.

In all three there is a tendency for the flatulence to be stuck in various pockets in the abdomen, that is to say, you get irregular areas of distension. In all three you are likely to get indications in post-operative abdominal distensions, semi- paralytic conditions of the bowel. Where you have definite paralytic conditions like paralytic ileus following abdominal section you are more likely to get indication for RAPH. and OP. than for LYC., but if the paralytic condition happens to be ore in the region of the caecum the indications are probably for LYC. rather than for the other two.

That is the general picture, and there are none or two distinguishing points which help you.

In LYC. the colicky pain is likely to start on the right side of the abdomen, down towards the right iliac fossa, and spread over to the left side, whereas in the other two it remains more or less localized in the one definite area.

In LYC. you are very liable to get a late afternoon period of extreme distress, the ordinary 16 – 20 h. aggravation of LYC. There is likely to be very much more rumbling and gurgling in the abdomen in LYC., and there is more tendency to eructation, whereas in the other two the patients does not seem to get the wind up to the same extent. Where there is eructation the patients usually complain of a very sour taste in Lyc. cases.

In LYC. you usually have a somewhat emaciated patient with a rather sallow, pale complexion.

There are one or two points that lead you to OP. instead of the other two. In OP. apt to be a definite area of distention, and the patient may say that he gets a feeling as if everything simply churned up to one point and

could not get past it, or as if something were trying to squeeze the intestinal contents past some obstructing band, or as if something were being forced through a very narrow opening.

Another point that leads to the selection of OP. is that with these attacks of colic the Op. patient tends to become very flushed and hot, feels the bed abominably hot, wants to push the blankets off, and after the spasm has subsided tends to become very pale, limp, and often stuporose.

The area of distension in OP. is likely to be in the centre of the abdomen rather than in the right iliac fossa, and it is one of the most commonly indicated drugs in a paralytic ileus.

Another point that sometimes puts you on to OP. is that when the pains are developing up to a head the Op. patients develop an extreme hyperaesthesia to noise. I remember one patient who had a paralytic ileus after an abdominal section and as he was working up to another attack of vomiting he had that hyperaesthesia to noise more marked than I have ever seen it. If the nurse in the room happened to jangle the basin into which he was going to be sick he nearly went off his head and he turned and fairly cursed her. That hyperaesthesia to noise make me think of OP., and it completely controlled his attack and the whole condition subsided. This hyperaesthesia is worth remembering as it is so different from the sluggish condition induced by the administration of OP. in material doses.

The RAPH. type of post-operative colic is again slightly different. Instead of getting the right side of the abdomen distended as in Lyc., or the swelling up in the middle as in Op., in RAPH. you get pockets of wind, a small area coming up in one place, getting quite hard, and then subsiding, followed by fresh area doing exactly the same. These pockets of wind may be in any part of the abdomen. In the acute attacks of pain the patients tend to get a little flushed, but not so flushed as the Op. patients, and they do not have the tendency to eructation that one associates with LYC., in fact they do not seem to be able to get rid of their wind at all either upwards or down wards. But it is these small isolated pockets coming up in irregular areas throughout the abdomen which give you your main lead in RAPH. cases, and I have seen quite a number of them now, post-operative cases, and it is astonishing how quickly after a dose of this remedy the disturbance subsides and the patient begins to pass flatulence quite comfortably.

In post-operative cases I usually give LYC. in 200th potency. In RAPH. I always use the 200s, having found this potency worked I have stuck to it. In OP. I usually give a higher potency because these cases are pretty extreme.

 

There are, of course, endless other drugs which have colic, but I am trying to pick out those most useful in emergencies. PODO. is useful in hepatic colic mainly, It is helpful in intestinal colics associated with diarrhoea,

I mean with acute diarrhoea, but then you prescribe it much more on the diarrhoea symptoms than on those of the colic. But you do get indication for it in hepatic colics purely on the local symptoms.

 

I think in these cases where you have PODO. indicated in hepatic colic you always have degree of infection of the gallbladder, and one of the first things that makes you think of the possibility of PODO. is the fact that the maximum temperature is in the morning and not in the evening (7 h. peak temperature).

 

In addition to that, the Podo. patients are very miserable and depressed, almost disgusted with life.

There is always a degree of jaundice in the gallbladder cases, and it may be pretty marked.

In the majority of these cases the pain is not definitely localized in the gallbladder area, it s more in the epigastrium as a whole, and tends to spread across from the middle of the epigastrium towards the liver region. The pains are twisting towards the liver region. The pains are twisting in character, and they are much aggravated by taking food.

In these PODO. cases when the acute pain has subsided there is a horrible feeling of soreness in the liver region, and you find these patients lying stroking the liver, which gives a great sense of comfort. When I see an infected gallbladder with a morning temperature instead of an evening one I immediately think of PODO. It is astonishing how often one gets his indication, and then you generally see the patients lying in bed stroking the liver region. In every case where the morning temperature and that relief forms stroking have put me on to PODO. I have found that the other symptoms fitted in.

 

Acute abdominal colic: either Coloc. or Mag-p. are often useful for colic in any area. uterine. intestinal. bile ducts. or renal - it does not matter where it is.

These remedies are almost identical with PAIN. patients doubled up with pain/> by external pressure/heat. Colics are intermitting/spasms of pain which come up to a head and then subside.

Coloc: prefers steady. hard pressure/always IRritable/IMpatient. wants something done at once. wants immediate relief. and is liable to be violently angry if the relief is not forthcoming/slightly coated tongue (the digestive tract is upset). << cold/likes hot applications. not so extremely sensitive to cold air in its neighbourhood. tends to giddiness (turning more especially to the left).

Mag-p: more relief from rubbing/not the same degree of irritability. patient is distraught because of the intensity of the pain rather than violently angry/tongue is usually clean. << cold/SENsitive to a draught on the affected area. No giddiness. Pain results of exposure to cold (dysmenorrhoea/abdominal colic).

Dios: ViolENT. spasmodic colic coming on quite suddenly. rising up to a height. then subsiding. Some relief from applied heat. Tossing to get relief. Contradicted to Coloc and Mag-p. (doubled up) is hyper-extended;

In gallbladder attacks. in a few intestinal colics. and in a case of violent dysmenorrhoea. I have never tried it in a renal case. Where you get that extreme extension of the spine you can give Dios. without asking any further questions.

Ip: Pain MORE cutting than the acute spasmodic pain occurring in most other drugs. + intense nausea which each spasm of pain with clean tongue.

Sin-n.: Dios.-Kolik-ähnlich + very offensive breath,

 

Were’s Does It Hurt?

Have you ever wondered where these body parts are located?

Below are locations on the abdomen. some pathologies associated with them and a sample of remedies for those problems.

 

Abdominal pain – Location of Pathologies and Remedies.

 

 

PAIN

Right Upper Quadrant

 

Cholecystitis = Inflammation of Gallbladder: Chol. Lach. Phos. Pyrog (septic).

Gall Bladder Colic: Ars. Bapt. Bell. Berb. Bry. Calc. Card-m. Cham. Chel. China. Chion. Chlf. Chol. Coloc. Dios. Hep. Hydr. Ip. Iris. Kali-bi. Kali-c. Lach. Lept. Lith. Lyc. Nat-s. Nux-v. Phos. Sep. Ter. Verat.

With jaundice: Bell. Card-m. Merc. Nux-v. Podo.

Radiating pain: Berb.

Clay colored stools & vomiting: Chel.

Hepatitis: Acon. Bell. Card-m. Chel. Chin. Lyc. Nat-s. Nux-v. Phos.

Perforated Duodenal ulcer: Arg-n. Kali-bi. Uran-n. Calen. Aloe.

 

_________________________________________________________________

Right Lower Quadrant

 

Appendicitis: Lach. Rhus-t. Iris-t. Pyrog. Ign. Merc. Dios. Coloc. Echi.

[Myron H. Adams] Acon.: Chill, fever and thirst, with nausea and vomiting, fear and restlessness; pulse full and rapid. Skin dry and hot.

Bell.: Gripping, clutching pain; cannot bear jar or noise; face fiery red; head throbbing with pain and excitement.

Bry.: pain sharp over the appendix; cannot move or be moved. Nausea on rising; begs to be left quiet.

Der McBurney-Punkt bezeichnet eine Stelle zwischen dem äußeren und mittleren Drittel der Verbindungslinie zwischen dem rechten vorderen oberen Darmbeinstachel (Spina iliaca anterior superior) und dem Bauchnabel. Ein Druckschmerz (eigentlich ein „Loslass-Schmerz“, da bei Appendizitis der Schmerz beim Loslassen des Fingers wesentlich stärker ist als beim Druck) in diesem Bereich weist auf eine Appendizitis („Blinddarmentzündung“) hin, ist jedoch für die Diagnose weder erforderlich noch beweisend. Der Punkt ist benannt nach Charles McBurney (1845–1913), einem amerikanischen Chirurgen, der ihn zuerst beschrieb.

Diverticulitis: Bell. Bry. Lach. Cham. Coloc. Mag-p. Aloe. Ars. Podo. Cinch.

Mesenteric Adenitis: Apis. Bell. Bism. Carc. Dulc. Hep. Iodof. Kali-i. Merc. Merc-i-r. Phyt. Sil-mar. Phos. Bar-m. Calc. Nux-v. Acon.

 

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Left Upper Quadrant

 

Gastritis: Ant-t. Ars. Bell. Bry. Hydr. Ip. Kali-bi. Ox-ac. Hyos. Lyc. Nux-v. Phos. Verat. Arg-n. Bar-m. Bism. Canth. Ip.

Spleen Disorders: Cean. Chin. Apis. Arn. Bry. Nat-m. Nit-ac. Nux-v. Carb-v. Chel. Ran-b. Sul-ac. Ign. Asaf. Iod.  Stann.

 

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Left Lower Quadrant

 

Sigmoid Diverticulitis : Ant-c. Ars. Carb-v. Rhus-t. Cham. Cina. Bell. Bry. Lach. Cham. Coloc. Mag-p. Aloe. Ars. Podo. Chin.

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Right or Left upper quadrant

 

Pancreatitis: Bell. Spong. Iris. Phos. Con. Coloc.

Herpes Zoster: Ars. Iris. Merc. Mez. Nat-m. Ran-b. Rhus-t. Sep. Caust. Vario. Canth. Cist. Clem. Lach. Kali-bi. Sul. Thuj.

Lower Lobe Pneumonia: Chel. Nat-s. Sulph.

Myocardial Ischemia: Acon. Cact. Ars. Lat-m. Iod. Spong

Radiculitis: Aconite. Ars. Bell. Coloc. Hyper. Ign. Mag-p. Spig. Bry. Caust. Cham. Iris. Kali-bi. Lyc. Mag-c. Merc. Nux-v. Rhus-t. Sang. Sulph. Verat.

 

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Right or Left Lower Quadrant

 

Abdominal Abscess: Hep. Sil. Merc. Rhus-t. Crot-h. Sulph.

Hematoma: Arn. Calc-f. Merc. Sil

Cystitis: Acon. APis. Canth. Equis. Lach. Lyc. Med. Puls. Sep. Staph. Sars. Ter. Thlasp. Caust. Hep. Merc.

Endometriosis: Acon. Apis. Ars. Bell. Bry. Gels. Iod. Mel-c-s. Merc-c. Puls. Sab. Sec. Sep. Sil.,

Renal Stone: Berb. Dios. Acon. Bell. Mag-p. Coloc. Nux-v. Oci-c. Caust. Calc. Sars. Ip. Benz-ac.

Incarcerated/Strangulated Hernia: Bell. Nux-v. Op. Plb. Mill. Carbo-v. Cocc. Coff. Dig. Sulph. Sul-ac. Tab. All-c.

Inflammatory Bowel Disease: Acet. Acon. Ant t. Apis. Bell. Bry. Ter. Cact. Cham. Colch. Lach. Merc. Ox-ac.

Mittelschmerz: Lach. Apis. Bell. Cimic. Coloc. Lil-t.

Pelvic Inflammatory Disease: Acon. Apis. Ars. Bell. Bry. Gels. Iod. Merc-c.  Puls. Sab. Sec. Sep. Sil. Verat-v.

 

Ruptured abdomen aortic aneurysm: Immediate Surgery

Ruptured Ectopic Pregnancy: Surgery

Torsion of ovarian cyst or testes: Surgery

 

 

Vorwort/Suchen                                Zeichen/Abkürzungen                                   Impressum.