Mercurius sublimatus corrosvus
Mercury has been known to mankind since ancient times; its name means living silver. And it is no coincidence: the restorative abilities of mercury in fermentation, tissue transformation, and also in stimulating consciousness have long been known.
Table of contents:
- Mercurius sublimatus corrosvus
- Mercurius corrosvus in homeopathy
- Type and psyche of the patient
- Indications, symptoms and effects
- Features of taking the drug and compatibility
- Sore throat purulent (follicular)
- Homeopathy
- Homeopathic clinical pharmacology
- 54th LECTURE. Mercury preparations (Mercurius)
- Merkur (homeopathy, indications for use)
- Mercurius (according to Farrington)
- Merkur (according to Vithoulkas)
- Merkur (according to Berwick)
- Mercur (according to Kent)
- Mercurius vivus solubilis (according to Grangeorge)
Mercurius sublimatus corrosivus is mercury dichloride, sublimate, which causes the most severe symptoms of all products in the category of mercury salts, since chlorine enhances the effect of mercury. Sublimate, as an antiseptic and disinfectant, has long helped with wounds and operations. It has always been used as a diuretic for constipation, heart disease, externally as a powder and anti-inflammatory ointment for eye diseases, and syphilitic rashes.
Mercurius corrosvus in homeopathy
Mercurius corrosivus is mercury dichloride, sublimate, which causes the most severe symptoms of all products in the category of mercury salts, since chlorine enhances the effect of mercury.
Treated mercury has a healing property, with a blue tint in the center and dazzling white around the edge. In homeopathy it is considered a powerful antiulcer and disinfectant. Source: flickr (mining-geo).
Type and psyche of the patient
Constantly chilly, with a feeling of cold especially in the head, Mercurius corrosivus patients are susceptible to cold sweating.
They often experience increased excitability and activity. There are changes from aggression to depression. Often being in a negative, joyless mood suddenly gives way to unexpected joy.
Sometimes they may be in a inhibited state, when they do not understand the questions addressed to them, and show weakness in mental activity. Despite this, they have a very mobile look of shiny bulging eyes, the pupils of which are narrowed and irregular in shape.
Mercurius often experience a fear of light, which causes them to produce copious amounts of tear fluid. They may experience double vision and objects may appear small. Pus may accumulate in the ocular anterior chamber.
The lips are always dry, cracked, black, and the upper lip may be turned out. They complain of pain in the jaw and maxillary sinuses.
The distorted face is pale, with a trace of anxiety that does not allow them to sleep. The patient often lies on his back with his knees bent, hiccups in his sleep, and dreams of murders and fires. Predisposed to bleeding due to ulcers of the stomach and related organs. The body exudes a mercury odor and is jaundiced. Suffering from unbearable thirst.
Mercurius corrosivus has a greater effect on the male body, causing burning pain with tears that eat the skin of the face until the bones around the eyes hurt.
The patient experiences a burning sensation, itchy tightening of the skin of the glans penis, erectile pain, tenesmus of the bladder and intestines.
Indications, symptoms and effects
Mercurius sublimatus corrosivus is a very strong poison that affects the entire body, most of all the kidneys, gastric mucosa, intestines and eyes, causing rapidly increasing ulcers. It causes swelling of the gums, vomiting, a sharp decrease in heart pressure, a rare pulse to the point of fainting.
Prescribed for the following indications:
- A rare autoimmune disease that destroys intestinal tissue is ulcerative colitis. Blood, duodenal and stomach ulcers.
- Tenesmus of the bladder - intense burning, you want to go to the toilet, while urinating a little or in spasms. May be combined with dysentery. Blood in the urine, mucus, increased protein excretion.
- Extensive inflammatory process in the throat and gums with ulcers, swelling of the tongue, stench, enlarged lymph nodes, burning pain, like hot coals.
- Keratotic, syphilitic change in the cornea of the eye.
- Ulcerative varicose veins, in which there is a burning pain.
- Swelling of the skin and soft tissues, especially in the legs.
- Condylomas, irritations of the skin of the cheeks, hands, gray nails.
- Rheumatic fever.
- Dysentery in severe form, when it is impossible to hold back loose stools with blood, burning of the anus.
The specificity of Mercurius corrosivus is inflammation of the iris during syphilis. Another symptom is dysenteric diarrhea, recurring in the summer-autumn period, stabbing, tearing pains in various parts of the body, especially in the sternum.
The patient gets feverish at the slightest movement and suffers from colic. Chills in the evening and at night with profuse, sticky, cold, foul-smelling sweat, especially on the forehead. In this case, burning of the skin causes fever. The blood rushes to the face and head, burns the cheeks, shoots into the forehead, and gives off a nagging pain in the skull. There is a smelly pus discharge in the ears. After 12 days the left ear shoots so hard that tears flow from the eyes. Although literally after 3 minutes it disappears, as if it never happened. Breastfeeding women suffer from cracked nipples.
The patient with Mercurius corrosivus experiences relief at rest. Worse - in the warmth, at night, when taking warm drinks. Source: flickr (Gala Gnkina).
Features of taking the drug and compatibility
In patients of this type, the uvula is elongated, which provokes a cough.
Prescribing a low dilution of the medicine immediately eliminates the problem.
The patient needs an active form of mercury. Used in 3 and 6 dilutions.
Release form - granules and drops C3, C6 and higher.
Milk and chicken egg white are considered the antidote to Mercurius corrosivus.
In homeopathy, the antidote for Mercurius corrosivus is the related mercury salt Mercurius solubilis, as well as Sepia and Calcium sulphate.
Silicea – neutralizes Mercurius corrosivus and it, in turn, is an antidote for it, they are incompatible.
Like Mercurius corrosivus, they act on the pelvic organs and to suppress spasms, irritability, fever, menstruation, vomiting, thirst - Leonurus, Arsenicum (Ars), Lachesis (Lach), and for dysentery - large doses of Monsonia.
Source: http://www.gomeo-patiya.ru/lekarstva/247/mercurius-corrosivus-instrukciya-po-primeneniyu.html
Sore throat purulent (follicular)
By general and local signs, the pathogenesis of the drug corresponds to the critical course
Severe form of the disease.
Severe form of the disease.
Sharp pain when swallowing.
Bright red throat, copious purulent discharge.
The inflammatory process penetrates deeply, a strong burning sensation is felt in the throat and
Severe headache with burning sensation.
Prevents the formation of abscess in lacunar tonsillitis.
Gray throat with white spots and enlarged tonsils.
Severe form of the disease.
The drug is similar to Mercurius solubilis, but the picture is not so dramatic.
Mercurius cyanatus (Mercurius cyanatus)
Indicated for the formation of purulent films on the tonsils.
The tonsils are dark or bluish-red, swollen, with suppurating follicles or
Helps open a mature abscess.
Pain at the root of the tongue, which radiates to the ears when swallowing.
Severe form of the disease.
In case of slow, torpid formation of an abscess, it is possible to use Silicea
Read the description of all drugs and choose the drug that best suits your needs.
Source: http://homeopat-sam.com/-/a60
Homeopathy
Homeopathic clinical pharmacology
54th LECTURE. Mercury preparations (Mercurius)
Mercurius vivus et solubilis
Mercurius praecipitatus ruber
We will devote today's lecture to the study of mercury and its compounds. Mercury has long been known and used as a medicine by the old school of medicine. The abuse of this drug, when used in excess or in inappropriate cases, has made it very unpopular with the public. There are many doctors in the so-called old school who have tried to replace mercury with another drug that, while serving the same purpose, would not have harmful effects. Their efforts were accompanied by more or less success, but still they were unable to find anything equivalent to this remedy in terms of its actual benefits. Lately there are not many allopathic doctors prescribing those large doses of Otuti which were formerly so common. This caution in prescribing is not a consequence of the changed, in a scientific sense, view of the medical world on this drug, but is explained only by the fact that doctors were forced to do this by their failures and the murmur of the public. There are doctors who are afraid to tell their patients that they are treating them with mercury. Eclecticists replaced it with plants such as Podophyllum and Leptandra, especially for liver diseases. We homeopaths are not afraid to use mercurial drugs, since we do this according to a certain law that guides us when applying them to the human body. Therefore, those bad consequences that occur after an excessive dose or improper use of this remedy are impossible in our practice. You see that I have placed a whole series of mercury preparations in the table. They all have some medical features, but we have neither the time nor the particular need to dwell on each of them in detail. It is especially important for us to study the main effects of mercury in general and to show the most important characteristic features that would give you the opportunity to give an advantage to one of these drugs over the other. Suppose, based on the general nature of the disease, you find that the patient needs to be prescribed some kind of mercury drug and you want to know which one. We have two drugs here. Mercurius vivus and solubilis, which I have placed in the same line because, as far as I know, there is no symptomatic difference between them. Although tests of their action are placed separately in the Allen Encyclopedia, I am not able to establish the difference between them. These preparations are living silver, or metallic mercury (Mercurius vivus) and Hahnemann's soluble mercury (Mercurius solubilis Hahnemanni). Mercurius solubilis is not a pure mercury preparation. It contains a little ammonia and nitric acid. Although it contains only traces of nitric acid, these traces must in some way modify its symptoms. But to what extent, I don’t know. The studies of Mercurius solubilis are excellent and much more complete than those of the metallic mercury. The latter are collected more from poisoning phenomena and clinical cases than from actual trials. If, therefore, the symptoms are clearly placed in the encyclopedia under Mercurius solubilis, then I would advise you to use this last remedy. Below Mercurius vivus and solubilis we have on the table two preparations of mercury with chlorine (M. dulcis and M. corrosivus). Next comes Mercurius aceticus, for which we have but few symptoms. After it are two mercury iodide compounds, which are very important. Mercury biodide (Mercurius biiodatus) is red, and mercury monodide (Protoiodatus) is yellow. Next comes cyanide (Mercurius cyanatus). Next is Cinnabaris (cinnabar), which is a sulfur compound of mercury (Mercurius sulphuratus). Below we have mercuric sulfate (mercuric sulfate, or Mercurius sulphuricus) and, finally, Mercurius praecipitatus ruber. There are only a few symptoms for them. Cinnabaris, two iodine compounds, corrosivus (sublimate), solubilis and vivus are the most commonly used mercury preparations.
On the right side of the table you see a range of antidotes for mercury. This list alone shows you the many bad consequences that can result from the abuse of this drug. They are not all shown equally well. As I have mentioned elsewhere, Hepar is the most important antidote for mercury, as well as many other metals.
Acidum nitricum must be remembered especially when affecting lower-order tissues such as periosteum, bones and fibrous tissues. The patient has pain in the bones, worsening at night, pain in the lower leg bones in damp weather, ulcers in the pharynx; especially if secondary syphilis is complicated by mercury poisoning.
Cinchona is considered an antidote for chronic drooling produced by mercury.
Dulcamara has been used with success against mercurial salivation, especially if it worsens with any change of weather to damp.
Kali hydrojodicum, or potassium iodide, is a well-known antidote for Mercurius; it has come into practice in recent years and is prescribed by both schools of medicine in very wide quantities, no matter whether the case is syphilitic or not. Like Acidum nitricum, it is especially indicated when syphilis and Mercurius together upset the health of the patient, especially when lower tissues such as bones, periosteum and glands are affected; when there is the well-known syphilitic coryza with thin, watery discharge from the nose, causing soreness and abrasions on the upper lip. You will find Kali hydrojodicum the best remedy we have against recurring nasal catarrhs following abuse of mercury. The slightest influence of a humid atmosphere or even cold air causes a runny nose. Remember that this is a case of mercury poisoning for which Kali hydrojodicum is the antidote. The eyes are hot, watery and swollen. In this case, there is neuralgic pain in one or both cheeks, the nose is stuffy and swollen, and at the same time copious watery, hot mucus is secreted from it. These symptoms are accompanied by a more or less severe sore throat and return with every cold. There is hardly any other remedy that can cure such cases more quickly than Kali hydrojodicum.
Another potassium salt that serves as an antidote to mercury is Kali chloricum. It is a valid antidote when the poison has caused a type of scurvy (scurvy) of an aphthous nature and bad breath.
Aurum deserves immediate mention. We find it especially necessary for caries, especially the bones of the nose, palate and others.
Asa foetida is also a remedy to remember for bone affections caused by Mercurius. As a characteristic symptom that distinguishes it from other remedies, you find here extreme sensitivity in the circumference of the diseased part of the bone. For example, in the case of an ulcer communicating with a corroded (carious) part of the tibia, the surrounding area is so painful that the patient can hardly bear the bandage you apply. You will find the tissue tightly adhered to the bone at a small distance around the inflamed part of it. Further, Asa foetida is sometimes indicated for inflammation of the iris (iritis) occurring after mercurialization. And here, to distinguish it from other remedies, you have the same characteristic symptom - extreme sensitivity of the bones around the eye.
Staphysagria serves as an antidote for Mercurius, and, moreover, in more severe cases, when the body is very strongly depressed by mercury poison. We find the patient very weak and pale, with dark circles around the eyes, with clearly expressed mercurial changes in the mouth and pharynx, spongy gums, a sluggish tongue, ulcers on it and in the pharynx, and clearly expressed pains in the bones.
Lachesis is an occasional antidote for some symptoms, but we have no specific indications for it.
Iodium is an antidote when the glands are affected.
Mezereum is an excellent antidote when mercury poison affects the nervous system and neuralgia develops. This neuralgia may appear in the face, eyes, or any other part of the body.
In conclusion, we have Stillingia.
Mercury is known to bind poorly to body tissue. It is found in all tissues and can be excreted from the body in almost all ways. It has been found in sweat, urine, bile, feces and saliva. It was found even in a child in the womb, as well as in an infant if the mother took this remedy. I said that the connection of mercury with tissues is fragile, and by this I wanted to express that it is easily released from them. If someone is poisoned with mercury, then this poison will be easily isolated by one of the above remedies. You may be troubled only by chronic cases, which can lead to despair due to the difficulties of their treatment. When mercurialism is combined with other poisons, such as syphilis or scrofula, then you will have even greater difficulties.
Symptoms of mercury poisoning are presented in the following form: under the influence of this poison, the patient’s breath acquires a special kind of unpleasant, painful odor, which is difficult to describe, but easy to remember. There is also a certain kind of metallic taste in the mouth. These are very early phenomena, appearing long before the appearance of the well-known characteristic symptoms of the remedy. The patient feels weak and often suffers from stomach pain. He vomits food for no apparent reason. His face becomes quite pale, with dark circles around his eyes, his lips are usually purple, dark blue. The patient complains of heat, especially in the forehead and at the root of the nose. He cannot bear the warmth of the bed; as soon as he warms up in bed, his suffering and pain return. Then he begins to feel pain in his mouth. The mucous membrane of the mouth becomes engorged, swollen and abnormally red. The salivary glands begin to produce their secretions faster, and the mouth is filled with saliva, the composition of which, however, remains normal. In more severe cases of poisoning, the composition of saliva changes. She no longer represents a clean department, since the glands are working excessively. The breath becomes more and more foul, the gums become swollen and sensitive to the touch, and the teeth become loose. Sometimes a dark red stripe appears on the gums, at the bottom of the teeth. Later the gums become spongy, yellowish-white, ulcerated and secrete a foul-smelling substance. The tongue becomes swollen and can easily become imprinted with teeth. Then the glands are affected, and you find more or less considerable swelling near the ear or cervical glands. Other glands are also affected by mercury. Thus, we find the pancreas affected by it. The effect of this poison also extends to the liver. Mercury causes catarrh of the duodenum, and this catarrh spreads through the bile ducts to the liver. This is the form of suffering which often causes jaundice, and the form in which Mercurius is useful. It also caused and cured inflammation of the liver, especially when one or more abscesses had formed in the liver. Individual susceptibility significantly modifies these symptoms. You will notice that drooling (under the influence of mercury drugs) is more difficult to develop in children than in adults. In some people, drooling occurs from very minor intakes, while in others it is difficult to achieve the same. Scrofulous, as everyone knows, is very seriously affected by mercury.
Later symptoms of mercury poisoning are as follows: you notice blood depletion. The protein and fibrin of this fluid are affected. Their number decreases, and instead of them you find some kind of fatty substance, the composition of which I don’t know for sure. Subsequently, exhaustion and emaciation of the body develop as a prominent symptom. The patient suffers from a fever of a rather debilitating nature. The periosteum is affected, and then a characteristic group of mercurial pains results: pain in the bones, worsened by changes in weather and from the warmth of the bed, chills during or after bowel movements. The skin takes on a slightly brownish tint. Ulcers form, especially on the legs; they are stubborn and do not heal. The patient suffers from insomnia and agitation of the blood at night; he is hot and cannot sleep; perspiration appears quickly, but this sweat does not bring relief. The whole body also suffers and you have two series of symptoms here. Firstly, the patient becomes fearful and restless and cannot remain calm; he changes his position, moves from place to place; Apparently, especially at night, he has severe anxiety in the region of the heart, precordial melancholy, as it is called. Then, in another series of symptoms, there is a tossing of the limbs, giving the patient the appearance of being possessed by the dance of St. Vitus. Or, what happens more often, you notice shaking of your hands; this trembling is completely beyond the control of the patient and gradually spreads to the whole body, presenting you with a resemblance to shaking paralysis (paralysis agitans).
I have presented to you on the board in tabular form a list of mercurial salts along with the parts of the body on which they act. Wherever you see a cross, this means that the corresponding drug acts on the part of the body that is placed on that line. I present this table only for convenience: there is nothing practical or scientific in it.
Taking Mercurius vivus as the type of the whole group, we find that it is indicated in scrofulous persons, with an active glandular system. This activity of the glands is expressed in two ways. First of all, we can have a condition that simulates plethora (plethora). In more advanced stages, Mercurius may be indicated for enlarged glands with emaciation and insufficiency of the blood. We find Mercurius also indicated for scrofulous children with an unusually large head and open fontanels, especially the anterior one. They learn to walk slowly, the formation of teeth is imperfect and slow, the limbs are usually cold, wet and sticky to the touch. You can distinguish Mercurius from Calcarea, Silicea and Sulfur by the following characteristic signs: with Mercurius the head tends to sweat, but this sweat is unpleasant-smelling and oily. This remedy is not so often indicated as Calcarea, Silicea or Sulfur, and does not exhibit such definite permanent effects as these latter. But Mercurius is useful as a remedy for frequent relief, and may be indicated as an intercurrent remedy in the treatment of Sulfur when that latter remedy is weak. You notice that where Mercurius is indicated, the patient has plethora associated with anxiety and insomnia; he rushes here and there, moves from place to place. This is one of the remedies used for nostalgia, or homesickness. The patient becomes restless and irritable. This anxiety seems to be caused by the condition of the blood, since it is always accompanied by agitation of the blood. This is where Mercurius differs from other tools.
Flushing from Mercurius shows this remedy after Belladonna. There are similarities between these two remedies, which are fully confirmed by clinical experiments. Mercurius often follows Belladonna in inflammation, even in inflammation of the membranes of the brain, when there is, as with Belladonna, the same hasty speech and lively nervous talkativeness; the child speaks so quickly that one word merges with another. His manners are as lively and nervous as his speech. You will notice a very strong rush of blood to the face, as with Belladonna, but also as a distinguishing feature of this remedy - swelling of the glands and a tendency to disease of the mouth.
Mercurius is often indicated in catarrhal or gastric fevers, when the face is swollen, the throat is swollen internally and externally due to damage to the glands and tissue; when there is acute pain in the joints, which is worse from the warmth of the bed and is not improved by sweating. Moreover, you will always find a tendency to catarrh of the intestines. It is characterized by slimy, bloody stools accompanied by severe straining. Moreover, these tenesmus do not stop after stool. And in these cases you will notice that Mercurius follows Belladonna favorably.
We find Mercurius indicated for bleeding. It is often required for nosebleeds (epistaxis), especially if the blood coagulates and hangs from the nostrils in the form of icicles. This is a useful sign. Suppose that a plethoric patient, for example, a boy at the age when flushes of blood are so often noticed, or a scrofulous child, has a nosebleed. You have prescribed Belladonna, Hamamelis and Erigeron to the patient, but the bleeding does not stop. The blood is very bright in color, flows in a stream and is not stopped by these medications. Then comes the indication for Mercurius. You give this remedy and cure not only this attack, but prevent the return of others. The same indications occur for uterine bleeding or menorrhagia, when the flow is profuse, dark in color and coagulates. In these cases, if other symptoms correspond - tumors of the glands, diseases of the mouth, etc. - Mercurius will probably be a suitable remedy.
We find Mercurius often indicated for inflammation of the lungs (pneumonia). Here it is required when the right lung is affected and when there are also icteric symptoms. The skin is yellow. There is a sharp stabbing pain in the lower part of the right lung. In this case, there may be other symptoms that are common with pneumonia, but they do not need a separate description.
We find Mercurius indicated for inflammation of the peritoneum (peritonitis), and here it follows Belladonna, when suppuration begins, the abdomen becomes tympanic, there are signs of effusion into the peritoneal cavity, which will be partly serous and partly purulent, and sweat, chills, etc.
Mercurius is useful here, and it prevents the further development of the suppurative process.
Another condition in which we can use Mercurius is inflammation in which suppuration has appeared, be it a boil, inflammation of the tonsils, or some form of inflammation. Here we find Mercurius together with an interesting small group of remedies that you will use very often; these are Belladonna, Hepar, Mercurius, Lachesis. To these we can add Silicea and Sulfur. We prefer Belladonna at the beginning of inflammation, for example, with inflammation of the tonsils. The throat is bright red and swollen, swallowing liquids is difficult, and there is sharp pain in the tonsils.
You should go to Hepar when sharp, stitching pains and chills indicate the onset of suppuration. It can prevent suppuration if given early in the process.
Mercurius comes in a state even more advanced, when the pus has already formed and you wish to remove it. If you give it too early, you will only hurt the matter. Mercurius does not prevent the formation of pus, but rather promotes it. In nailworm, if given in low doses, it usually promotes the rapid formation of pus.
Silicea follows Hepar more favorably than Mercurius if the pus continues to discharge and the wound does not heal. In some of these cases the favorable course under the influence of Silicea may cease. Then one or two doses of Sulfur will excite the reaction, and Silicea may complete the cure.
Lachesis is indicated when the pus degenerates (changes) and becomes dark in color, thin and smelly.
We find Mercurius vivus indicated for inflammation in the eyes and around them, usually of scrofulous or syphilitic origin. We notice that the patient cannot stand the shine and heat of fire, so he avoids fire and warm rooms. You will sometimes find this remedy indicated for inflammation of the eyelids in people who work near fire, such as foundry workers. The pain is usually worse at night. The eyelids are thickened, especially at their tarsal (cartilaginous) edges, and a liquid, acrid, mucopurulent matter is discharged from the eyes. It causes diseases in the cheeks and you find pimples scattered on the cheeks. Ulcers may form on the cornea. These ulcers are usually superficial and have an opaque appearance, as if there was pus between the layers of the cornea. Mercurius solubilis will sometimes be indicated in syphilitic inflammation of the iris (iritis), when there is hypopyon (an accumulation of pus in the anterior chamber of the eye). Let us now determine the difference between this and other mercury preparations.
Mercurius biiodatus is indicated for inflammation of the eyes. Its symptoms are very similar to those of metallic mercury (M. vivus), but the swelling of the glands is more pronounced with mercury diiodide.
Mercurius protoiodatus is more often indicated for eye diseases than mercury diiodide. It is required for corneal ulcers that look like they were scratched with a fingernail. This remedy is usually healing when there is a thick yellow coating on the base of the tongue, but its anterior part is clean and red.
Mercurius dulcis, or calomel, is more often chosen for its general symptoms, namely, it is indicated in scrofulous children with a pale complexion and tumors of the cervical and other glands. The skin is rather flabby and poorly nourished. This sluggish puffiness and pallor serve as indications for calomel.
Next to it we have mercury dichloride, or Mercurius corrosivus (sublimate). No mercury preparation causes such intense symptoms as sublimate. It causes burning, excruciating pain with severe photophobia and profuse, caustic lacrimation, producing soreness in the cheeks, on which the skin is almost peeling off, so caustic are these tears. In this case, there is tearing pain in the bones around the eye. There is ulceration of the cornea with a tendency to perforate it. In such cases, you will, of course, observe a hypopyon. Mercurius corrosivus is almost specific for syphilitic inflammation of the iris. If the symptoms of this case do not indicate any other remedy, then you should give sublimate for this disease. If you consider it necessary to use local atropine, then do so to prevent adhesions, which otherwise will almost inevitably occur with this disease. You will also find Mercurius corrosivus indicated for albuminuric inflammation of the retina (retinitis albuminurica).
Next up is Cinnabaris. This is a medicine for various types of inflammation of the eye. I will give you only one symptom for it: it is pain shooting through the eye from one corner to the other, or as if going along the circumference of the eye.
Let us now move on to consider the effect of mercury on the nose. Mercurius vivus is indicated for catarrh of the nose and throat caused by damp cold weather or damp cool evening air. The nose is itchy, hot and stuffy; with a runny nose. The throat feels raw and painful. Pain in various joints. The symptoms described will indicate Mercurius, both from the cause that produced them and from the nature of the symptoms present. Along with them you can observe a feeling of heat. Blood rushes to the face and it turns red, sweat appears, but it does not bring relief. Another form of coryza in which you can give Mercurius is when the coryza is said to be "ripe" - when the discharge from the nose becomes yellowish-green, thick and mucopurulent.
Here it is rivaled by Pulsatilla, which is also useful for that thick, yellowish-green nasal discharge. Pulsatilla, regardless of its other symptoms, differs here in that the discharge is never irritating.
You must also distinguish Mercurius from Nux vomica, which is useful for runny nose due to dry cold weather, and in which there is pain, rawness and an unpleasant scraping sensation in the throat. With Mercurius there is always a feeling of burning pain or rawness.
The throat symptoms of Mercurius vivus may sometimes lead you to think of it in diphtheria. Think about it as much as you want, but only to abandon it. It is not indicated for diphtheria. But there are drugs that can be used in such cases. We will point first of all to Mercurius biiodatus. Mercurius biiodatus and protoiodatus are both indicated for diphtheritic inflammation of the pharynx. Mercurius diodide is used when a plaque forms on the left side, when the left tonsil is inflamed and a yellowish-gray film forms on it. The cervical glands become swollen. The tissue around the pharynx also becomes diseased. The patient may have a buildup of viscous, sticky mucus in the mouth and throat. The symptoms are worse from empty swallowing. Simply trying to swallow saliva causes more pain than swallowing food.
Mercurius protoiodatus is more suitable when the deposits begin on the right side of the pharynx and are accompanied by swelling of the cervical glands and an accumulation of the same viscous mucus in the pharynx. There is almost always a thick yellow dirty coating on the base and back of the tongue, while the top and sides of this organ are red.
After this, turn your attention to Mercurius cyanatus, which is a compound of mercury and hydrocyanic acid. In it we have one of the best remedies for diphtheria, especially when it is of the truly adynamic or malignant type. Due to the content of hydrocyanic acid, this remedy is indicated in cases where the patient has a very significant loss of strength from the very beginning. Pulse speed; it can reach beats per minute and have almost no volume at all. The film is initially white and covers the velum and tonsils. Soon these glands begin to swell, and then the film darkens, threatening to even become gangrenous. Weakness is extreme; breath is foul. Lost appetite. The tongue is covered with a brown coating, in some cases even black. There is a nosebleed, which, as you know, is a dangerous symptom.
You will notice the similarity between Mercurius cyanatus and Kali bichromicum in diphtheritic croup. It lies in the location of the disease, i.e. in the larynx, and in the existence of thick, viscous sputum that is difficult to discharge. The difference is determined by the following: with Mercurius cyanatus there is great weakness. This weakness is not a simple loss of strength (prostration) resulting from the child’s efforts to breathe. It depends on blood poisoning, which is detected by blueness of the surface of the body, coldness of the extremities and an accelerated weak pulse. If these symptoms are absent, then Kali bichromicum should be preferred.
Cinnabaris is a remedy not often remembered for catarrhal diseases. It is indicated for nasal catarrh, when there is strong pressure at the root of the nose, as if something heavy were pressing on the nose, like heavy glasses. We often also find throat symptoms in connection with this form of catarrh. The throat is swollen, the tonsils are enlarged and redder than normal. Severe dryness in the throat; it bothers the patient more often at night, causing him to wake up. Remember this sensation in the bridge of the nose and the nature of the throat symptoms that exist in connection with this. These symptoms may appear in syphilitics, scrofulous patients, or in persons prone to catarrh. We have found Cinnabaris useful in inflammation of the fauces in scarlet fever, which is often of a diphtheritic nature, when there is a strong accumulation of fibrous mucus in the posterior openings of the nose (choanae). If this symptom be prominent, then cinnabar will be the appropriate remedy for this complication.
I have used Mercurius corrosivus with success when there is an accumulation of very thick, almost glue-like mucus in the nose. In some cases of syphilitic disease of the nose you will find Mercurius corrosivus indicated on the ground that the ulcers perforate the nasal septum. In these cases, there is a burning pain, the discharge is acrid and ulcerates the tissue through which it flows.
The throat symptoms of Mercurius corrosivus are very strong. The uvula is dark red, swollen and elongated. There is a strong burning in the throat, as intense as in cases calling for Arsenicum album, Arsenicum iodatum or Capsicum. This burning pain is made unbearable by external pressure. It is accompanied by a strong tightening in the throat. Any attempt to swallow liquid or solid food causes a strong spasm in the pharynx, with immediate eruption of what has been swallowed.
Given the spasmodic nature of these symptoms, a similarity to Belladonna is noticed, but Mercurius corrosivus (Culema) is immediately distinguished from it by the inflammatory tendency of its symptoms, manifested by these extremely burning pains. Therefore, it has the contracting properties of Belladonna plus the most intense destructive (accompanying loss of tissue) inflammation of the pharynx. Further, it is easy to distinguish these two remedies by pulse. The pulse of Mercurius corrosivus is quick, weak and irregular, and not full and strong, as in Belladonna.
Mercury preparations have long been used in the treatment of syphilis. Mercurius solubilis and vivus are indicated in primary syphilis with the so-called soft chancre or chancroid. The ulceration spreads more superficially than in depth, and the bottom of the ulcer has a dirty, greasy appearance. Mercurius solubilis caused a similar ulcer, and therefore it should cure it. The sore throat with which syphilitic fever often begins six or seven weeks after the initial attack is also observed with Mercurius solubilis.
Iodine preparations, Mercurius protoiodatus and biiodatus, are preferable for Gunter's, or chancroid. This is the form of ulcer that both of these iodide mercury preparations caused, and therefore they will both cure it. There is no need for any external means, such as cauterizing ones, since a suitable internal medicine, if it does not completely prevent the onset of secondary symptoms, will at least reduce their intensity.
Mercurius corrosivus should be preferred to any of the other remedies mentioned for syphilitic symptoms, if the ulcerations are of a very destructive nature. The ulcer is serpiginous (spreads); it has irregular outlines and corrodes and destroys almost half of the penis in a few days.
Secondary syphilis can be treated with one or another of the drugs mentioned, if this drug was not abused in the primary stages. Mercurius solubilis helps very quickly against syphiloderm (syphilitic inflammation of the skin) on the palms of the hands. They are red, slightly itchy and flaky.
Returning to Mercurius vivus, I want to say a few words regarding its use in liver diseases. The tongue is covered with a dirty yellowish-white coating and bears teeth marks. In this case, there are often scurvy symptoms. The gums become ulcerated and spongy. Bad breath. The skin and connective membranes of the eyes have a clearly defined icteric or icteric coloration. There is a tendency to have a rush of blood to the head. The liver area is painful to the touch. The abdomen is usually tympanic and swollen, especially in the epigastric region and hypochondrium. The patient cannot lie on his right side. You will find the liver enlarged and often hardened. The stools are either clay-colored due to the lack of bile, or they are yellowish-green, bilious, and come out with strong effort. Mercurius is indicated for dysentery.
Nux vomica in its action has some similarities with Mercurius, but differs in that with it, after the end of the bowel movement, the pain and discomfort usually stop, whereas with Mercurius they continue even after.
Another remedy which should be mentioned in connection with Mercurius for bilious diseases is Leptandra. Both have the same yellowish-green or pitch-black stool that smells terribly bad. The difference between them is as follows: with Leptandra there is an urge to the bottom, contractions that continue after bowel movement, but there is no vitality. With Leptandra there is often a dull, painful, burning sensation (pain) in the back of the liver.
Source: http://1796web.com/homeopathy/essence/farrington/54.htm
Merkur (homeopathy, indications for use)
Mercurius (according to Farrington)
We will devote today's lecture to the study of Mercury and its compounds. Mercurius has long been known and used as a medicine by the old school of medicine. The abuse of this remedy, when used in excessive quantities or in inappropriate cases, has made it very unpopular among the public. There are many doctors in the so-called old school who have tried to replace Mercury with another drug that, while serving the same purpose, would not have harmful effects. Their efforts were accompanied by more or less success, but still they were unable to find anything equivalent to this remedy in terms of its actual benefits. Lately there are not many allopathic doctors prescribing those large doses of Mercury which were formerly so common. This caution in prescribing is not a consequence of the changed, in a scientific sense, view of the medical world on this drug, but is explained only by the fact that doctors were forced to do this by their failures and the murmur of the public. There are doctors who are afraid to tell their patients that they are treating them with Mercury. Eclecticists replaced it with plants such as Podophyllum and Leptandra, especially for liver diseases. We homeopaths are not afraid to use Mercurius remedies, since we do so according to a certain law that guides us when applying them to the human body. Therefore, those bad consequences that follow an excessive dose or improper use of this remedy are impossible in our practice. You see that I have placed in the table a whole series of Mercury preparations. They all have some medical features, but we have neither the time nor the particular need to dwell on each of them in detail. It is especially important for us to study the main actions of Mercurius in general and to show the most important characteristic features that would enable you to give an advantage to one of these drugs over the other. Suppose, based on the general nature of the disease, you find that the patient needs to be prescribed some kind of mercury drug and you want to know which one. We have two drugs here. Mercurius vivus and solubilis, which I have placed in the same line because, as far as I know, there is no symptomatic difference between them. Although tests of their action are placed separately in the Allen Encyclopedia, I am not able to establish the difference between them. These preparations are living silver or metallic mercury (Mercurius vivus) and soluble Hahnemann’s Mercury (Mercurius solubilis Hahnemanni). Mercurius solubilis is not a pure mercury preparation. It contains a little ammonia and nitric acid. Although it contains only traces of Nitric acid, yet these traces must in some way modify its symptoms. But to what extent, I don’t know. The studies of Mercurius solubilis are excellent and much more complete than those of the metallic mercury. The latter are collected more from poisoning phenomena and clinical cases than from actual trials. If, therefore, the symptoms are clearly stated in the Encyclopedia for Mercurius solubilis, then I would advise you to use this last remedy. Below Mercurius vivus and solubilis we have on the table two preparations of Mercury with Chlorine (M. dulcis and M. corrosivus). Next comes Mercurius aceticus, for which we have but few symptoms. After it are two iodine compounds of Mercury, which are very important. Mercury biodide (Merc. bijodatus) is red, and Mercury monoiodide (Protojodatus) is yellow. Next comes Mercury Cyanide (Merc. cyanatus). Next is Cinnabaris (cinnabar), which represents the sulfur compound of Mercury (Mercurius sulphuratus). Below we have Mercury Sulphate (Sulphate of Mercury or Mercurius sulphuricus) and finally Mercurius praecipitatus ruber. There are only a few symptoms for them. Cinnabaris, two iodine compounds, corrosivus (sublimate), solubilis and vivus are the most commonly used mercury preparations.
On the right side of the table you see a range of antidotes for Mercury. This list alone shows you the many bad consequences that can result from the abuse of this drug. They are not all shown equally well. As I have mentioned elsewhere, Hepar is the most important antidote to Mercury, as well as many other metals.
About Acid. nitricum must be remembered especially when affecting lower-order tissues, such as periosteum, bones and fibrous tissues. The patient has pain in the bones, worsening at night, pain in the lower leg bones in damp weather, ulcers in the pharynx; especially if secondary syphilis is complicated by mercury poisoning.
Cinchona is considered an antidote for chronic drooling produced by mercury.
Dulcamara has been used with success against mercurial salivation, especially if it worsens with any change of weather to damp.
Kali hydrojodicum or Kali iodatum is a well known antidote to Mercury; it has come into practice in recent years and is prescribed by both schools of medicine in very wide quantities, no matter whether the case is syphilitic or not. Like Acid. nitricum, it is especially indicated when syphilis and Mercury together upset the patient’s health, especially when lower-order tissues such as bones, periosteum and glands are affected; when there is the well-known syphilitic coryza, with thin, watery discharge from the nose, causing soreness and abrasions on the upper lip. You will find Kali hydrojodicum the best remedy we have against recurring nasal catarrhs following abuse of mercury. The slightest influence of a humid atmosphere or even cold air causes a runny nose. Remember that this is a case of mercury poisoning for which Kali iodatum is the antidote. The eyes are hot, watery and swollen. In this case, there are neuralgic pains in one or both cheeks, the nose is stuffy and swollen, and at the same time copious, watery, hot mucus is secreted from it. These symptoms are accompanied by a more or less severe sore throat and return with every cold. There is scarcely any other remedy which can cure such cases more quickly than Kali iodatum.
Another Potassium salt that serves as an antidote to Mercury is Kali chloricum. It is a valid antidote when the poison has caused a type of scurvy (scurvy) of an aphthous nature and bad breath.
Aurum deserves immediate mention. We find it especially necessary for caries, especially the bones of the nose, palate and others.
Asa foetida is also a remedy to remember for bone damage caused by Mercury. As a characteristic symptom that distinguishes it from other remedies, you find here extreme sensitivity in the circumference of the diseased part of the bone. For example, in the case of an ulcer communicating with a corroded (carious) part of the tibia, the surrounding area is so painful that the patient can hardly bear the bandage you apply. You will find the tissue tightly adhered to the bone at a small distance around the inflamed part of it. Further, Asa foetida is sometimes indicated for inflammation of the iris (iritis) that occurs after mercurization. And here, to distinguish it from other remedies, you have the same characteristic symptom - extreme sensitivity of the bones around the eye.
Staphisagria serves as an antidote for Mercury, and, moreover, in more severe cases, when the body is very strongly depressed by mercury poison. We find the patient very weak and pale, with dark circles around the eyes, with clearly expressed mercurial changes in the mouth and pharynx, spongy gums, a sluggish tongue, ulcers on it and in the pharynx, and clearly expressed pains in the bones.
Lachesis is an occasional antidote for some symptoms, but we have no specific indications for it.
Jodium is an antidote when the glands are affected.
Mezereum is an excellent antidote when mercury poison affects the nervous system and neuralgia develops. This neuralgia may appear in the face, eyes, or any other part of the body.
In conclusion, we have Stillingia.
Mercury is known to bind poorly to body tissue. It is found in all tissues and can be excreted from the body in almost all ways. It was found in sweat, urine, bile, feces and saliva. It was found even in a child in the womb, as well as in an infant if the mother took this remedy. I said that the connection of Mercury with tissues is fragile, and by this I wanted to express that it is easily released from them. If anyone is poisoned with Mercury, the poison will be easily removed by one of the above remedies. You may be troubled only by chronic cases, which can lead to despair due to the difficulties of their treatment. When mercurialism is combined with other poisons, such as syphilis or scrofula, then you will have even greater difficulties.
Symptoms of Mercury poisoning are presented in the following form: under the influence of this poison, the patient’s breath acquires a special kind of unpleasant, painful odor, which is difficult to describe, but easy to remember. There is also a certain kind of metallic taste in the mouth. These are very early phenomena, appearing long before the appearance of the well-known characteristic symptoms of the remedy. The patient feels weak and often suffers from stomach pain. He vomits food for no apparent reason. His face becomes quite pale, with dark circles around his eyes, his lips are usually purple, dark blue. The patient complains of heat, especially in the forehead and at the root of the nose. He cannot bear the warmth of the bed; as soon as he warms up in bed, his suffering and pain return. Then he begins to feel pain in his mouth. The mucous membrane of the mouth becomes engorged, swollen and abnormally red. The salivary glands begin to produce their secretions more quickly, and the mouth is filled with saliva, the composition of which, however, remains normal. In more severe cases of poisoning, the composition of saliva changes. She no longer represents a clean department, since the glands are working excessively. The breath becomes more and more foul, the gums become swollen and sensitive to the touch, and the teeth become loose. Sometimes a dark red stripe appears on the gums, at the bottom of the teeth. Later, the gums become spongy, yellowish-white, ulcerated and secrete a foul-smelling substance. The tongue swells and teeth marks easily appear on it. Then the glands are affected, and you find more or less considerable swelling near the ear or cervical glands. Other glands are also affected by Mercury. Thus, we find the pancreas affected by it. The effect of this poison also extends to the liver. Mercury causes catarrh of the duodenum, and this catarrh spreads through the bile ducts to the liver. This is the form of suffering that often causes jaundice, and the form in which Mercurius is useful. It also caused and cured liver inflammation (hepatitis), especially when one or more abscesses had formed in the liver. Individual susceptibility significantly modifies these symptoms. You will notice that drooling (under the influence of mercury drugs) is more difficult to develop in children than in adults. In some people, drooling occurs from very minor intakes, while in others it is difficult to achieve the same. Scrofulous, as everyone knows, is very seriously affected by Mercury.
Later symptoms of mercury poisoning are as follows: you notice blood depletion. The protein and fibrin of this fluid are affected. Their number decreases, and instead of them you find some kind of fatty substance, the composition of which I don’t know for sure. Subsequently, exhaustion and emaciation of the body develop as a prominent symptom. The patient suffers from a fever of a rather debilitating nature. The periosteum is affected, and then a characteristic group of mercurial pains results: pain in the bones, worsened by changes in weather, by the warmth of the bed and chills during or after bowel movements. The skin takes on a slightly brownish tint. Ulcers form, especially on the legs; they are stubborn and do not heal. The patient suffers from insomnia and agitation of the blood at night; he is hot and cannot sleep; perspiration appears quickly, but this sweat does not bring relief. The whole body also suffers and you have two series of symptoms here. Firstly, the patient becomes fearful and restless and cannot remain calm; he changes his position; moves from place to place; Apparently, especially at night, he has severe anxiety in the region of the heart, precordial melancholy, as it is called. Then, in another series of symptoms, there is a tossing of the limbs, giving the patient the appearance of being possessed by the dance of St. Vitus. Or, what happens more often, you notice shaking of your hands; this trembling is completely beyond the control of the patient and gradually spreads to the whole body, presenting you with a resemblance to shaking paralysis (paralysis agitanis).
I have presented to you on the board in tabular form a list of mercurial salts along with the parts of the body on which they act. Wherever you see a cross, it denotes that the corresponding remedy acts on that part of the body which is placed on that horizontal line, under the heading Mercurius vivus. I present this table only for convenience: there is nothing practical or scientific in it.
Taking Mercurius vivus as the type of the whole group, we find that it is indicated in scrofulous persons, with an active glandular system. This activity of the glands is expressed in two ways. First of all, we can have a condition that simulates plethora (plethora). In more advanced stages, Mercurius may be indicated for enlarged glands with emaciation and blood deficiency. We find Mercurius also indicated for scrofulous children, with an unusually large head and open fontanelles, especially the anterior one. They learn to walk slowly, the formation of teeth is imperfect and slow, the limbs are usually cold, wet and sticky to the touch. You can distinguish Mercurius from Calcarea, Silicea and Sulfur by the following characteristic signs: with Mercurius the head tends to sweat, but this sweat is unpleasant-smelling and oily. This remedy is not so often indicated as Calcarea, Silicea or Sulfur and does not show such definite, permanent effects as these latter. But Mercurius is useful as a remedy of frequent relief, and may be indicated as an intercurrent remedy in the treatment of Sulfur when that latter remedy proves weak. You notice that where Mercurius is indicated, the patient has plethora associated with anxiety and insomnia; he rushes here and there, moves from place to place. This is one of the remedies used for nostalgia or homesickness. The patient becomes restless and irritable. This anxiety seems to be caused by the condition of the blood, since it is always accompanied by agitation of the blood. This is where Mercurius differs from other tools.
Flushing from Mercurius shows this remedy after Belladonna. There are similarities between these two remedies, which are fully confirmed by clinical experiments. Mercurius often follows Belladonna in inflammation, even in inflammation of the membranes of the brain, when there is, as with Belladonna, the same hasty speech and lively nervous talkativeness; the child speaks so quickly that one word merges with another. His manners are as lively and nervous as his speech. You will notice a very strong congestion of the face, as with Belladonna, but also, as a distinguishing feature of this remedy, swelling of the glands and a tendency to disease of the mouth.
Mercurius is often indicated in catarrhal or gastric fevers, when the face is swollen, the throat is swollen inside and outside, due to damage to the glands and tissue; when there is acute pain in the joints, which is worse from the warmth of the bed and is not improved by sweating. Moreover, you will always find a tendency towards catarrh of the intestines. It is characterized by slimy, bloody stools accompanied by severe straining. Moreover, these tenesmus do not stop after stool. And in these cases you will notice that Mercurius follows Belladonna favorably.
We find Mercurius indicated for bleeding. It is often required for nosebleeds (epistaxis), especially if the blood coagulates and hangs from the nostrils in the form of icicles. This is a useful sign. Let us assume that a plethoric patient, for example a boy, at the age of 15–16 years, when flushes of blood are so often noticed, or a scrofulous child, has a nosebleed. You have prescribed Belladonna, Hamamelis and Erigeron to the patient, but the bleeding does not stop. The blood is very bright in color, flows in a stream and is not stopped by these medications. Then comes the indication for Mercurius. You give this remedy and cure not only this attack, but prevent the return of others. The same indications occur for uterine bleeding or menorrhagia, when the flow is profuse, dark in color and coagulates. In these cases, if other symptoms correspond - tumors of the glands, diseases of the mouth, etc. - Mercurius will probably be a suitable remedy.
We find Mercurius often indicated for inflammation of the lungs (pneumonia). Here it is required when the right lung is affected and when there are also icteric symptoms. The skin is yellow. There is a sharp, stabbing pain in the lower part of the right lung. In this case, there may be other symptoms that are common with pneumonia, but they do not need a separate description.
We find Mercurius indicated for inflammation of the peritoneum (peritonitis), and here it follows Belladonna, when suppuration begins, the abdomen becomes tympanic, there are signs of effusion into the peritoneal cavity, which will be partly serous and partly purulent, and sweat, chills, etc.
Mercurius is useful here and it prevents the further development of the suppurative process.
Another condition in which we can use Mercurius is inflammation in which suppuration has appeared, be it a boil, inflammation of the tonsils, or some form of inflammation. Here we find Mercurius together with an interesting small group of medicines that you will use very often; these are Belladonna, Hepar, Mercurius, Lachesis. To these we can add Silicea and Sulfur. We prefer Belladonna at the beginning of inflammation, for example, with inflammation of the tonsils. The throat is bright red and swollen, swallowing liquids is difficult, and there is sharp pain in the tonsils.
You should go to Hepar when sharp, stitching pains and chills indicate the onset of suppuration. It can prevent suppuration if given early in the process.
Mercurius comes in a state even more advanced, when the pus has already formed and you want to remove it. If you give it too early, you will only hurt the matter. Mercurius does not prevent the formation of pus, but rather promotes it. In nailworm, if given in low doses, it usually promotes the rapid formation of pus.
Silicea follows Hepar more favorably than Mercurius if the pus continues to discharge and the wound does not heal. In some of these cases, the favorable course under the influence of Silicea may cease. Then one or two doses of Sulfur will excite the reaction, and Silicea may complete the cure.
Lachesis is indicated when the pus degenerates (changes) and becomes dark in color, thin and smelly.
We find Mercurius vivus indicated for inflammation in the eyes and around them, usually of scrofulous or syphilitic origin. We notice that the patient cannot stand the shine and heat of fire, so he avoids fire and warm rooms. You will sometimes find this remedy indicated for inflammation of the eyelids in people who work near fire, such as foundry workers. The pain is usually worse at night. The eyelids are thickened, especially at their tarsal (cartilaginous) edges, and a liquid, acrid, mucopurulent matter is discharged from the eyes. It causes diseases of the cheeks and you find pimples scattered on the cheeks. Ulcers may form on the cornea. These ulcers are usually superficial and have an opaque appearance, as if there was pus between the layers of the cornea. Mercurius solubilis will sometimes be indicated in syphilitic inflammation of the iris (iritis), when there is hypopyon (accumulation of pus in the anterior chamber of the eye). Let us now determine the difference between this and other Mercury preparations.
Mercurius bijodatus is indicated for inflammation of the eyes. Its symptoms are very similar to those of metallic mercury (M. vivus), but the swelling of the glands is more pronounced in Merc. bijodatus.
Mercurius protojodatus is more often indicated for eye diseases than Merc. bijodatus. It is required for corneal ulcers that look like they were scratched with a fingernail. This remedy is usually healing when there is a thick yellow coating on the base of the tongue, but its anterior part is clean and red.
Mercurius dulcis or Calomel is more often chosen for its general symptoms, namely, it is indicated in scrofulous children with a pale complexion and swellings of the cervical and other glands. The skin is rather flabby and poorly nourished. This sluggish puffiness and pallor are indications for Calomel.
Next to it we have Mercury Dichloride or Mercurius corrosivus (Sublimate). No Mercury preparation produces such intense symptoms as Mercurius corrosivus. It causes burning, excruciating pain with severe photophobia and profuse, caustic lacrimation, producing soreness in the cheeks, on which the skin is almost peeling off, so caustic are these tears. In this case, there is tearing pain in the bones around the eye. There is ulceration of the cornea with a tendency to perforate it. In such cases you will of course observe hypopyon. Mercurius corrosivus is almost specific for syphilitic inflammation of the iris. If the symptoms of the case do not indicate any other remedy as a cure, then you should give Mercurius corrosivus for this disease. If you find it necessary to apply Atropinum locally, do so to prevent the adhesions which otherwise will almost inevitably occur in this disease. You will also find Mercurius corrosivus indicated for albuminuric inflammation of the retina (retinitis albuminurica).
Next up is Cinnabaris. This is a medicine for various types of inflammation of the eye. I will give you only one symptom for it: it is pain shooting through the eye from one corner to the other, or as if going along the circumference of the eye.
Let us now move on to consider the effect of Mercury on the nose. Mercurius vivus is indicated for catarrh of the nose and throat caused by damp, cold weather or damp, cool evening air. The nose is itchy, hot and stuffy; with a runny nose. The throat feels raw and painful. Pain in various joints. The symptoms described will indicate Mercury, both from the cause that produced them and from the nature of the existing symptoms. Along with them you can observe a feeling of heat. Blood rushes to the face and it turns red, sweat appears, but it does not bring relief. Another form of coryza in which you can give Mercurius is when the coryza is said to be "ripe" - when the discharge from the nose becomes yellowish-green, thick and mucopurulent.
Here it is rivaled by Pulsatilla, which is also useful for that thick, yellowish-green nasal discharge. Pulsatilla, regardless of its other symptoms, differs here in that the discharge is never irritating.
You must also distinguish Mercurius from Nux vomica, which is useful for runny nose due to dry cold weather, and in which there is pain, rawness and an unpleasant, scraping sensation in the throat. With Mercurius there is always a feeling of burning pain or rawness.
The throat symptoms of Mercurius vivus may sometimes lead you to think of it in diphtheria. Think about it as much as you want, but only to abandon it. It is not indicated for diphtheria. But there are drugs that can be used in such cases. We will point first of all to Mercurius bijodatus. Mercurius bijodatus and protojodatus are both indicated for diphtheritic inflammation of the pharynx. Merc. bijodatus is used when plaque forms on the left side, when the left tonsil is inflamed and a yellowish-gray film forms on it. The cervical glands become swollen. The tissue around the pharynx also becomes diseased. The patient may have a buildup of viscous, sticky mucus in the mouth and throat. The symptoms are worse from empty swallowing. Simply trying to swallow saliva causes more pain than swallowing food.
Mercurius protojodatus is more suitable when the deposits begin on the right side of the pharynx and are accompanied by swelling of the cervical glands and an accumulation of the same viscous mucus in the pharynx. There is almost always a thick, yellow, dirty coating on the base and back of the tongue, while the top and sides of this organ are red.
After this, turn your attention to Mercurius cyanatus, which is a compound of Mercury and Hydrocyanic acid. In it we have one of the best remedies for diphtheria, especially when it is of the truly adynamic or malignant type. Due to the content of hydrocyanic acid, this remedy is indicated in cases where the patient has a very significant loss of strength from the very beginning. Pulse speed; it can reach 130–140 beats per minute and have almost no volume at all. The film is initially white and covers the velum and tonsils. Soon these glands begin to swell, and then the film darkens, threatening to even become gangrenous. Weakness is extreme; breath is foul. Lost appetite. The tongue is covered with a brown coating, in some cases even black. There is a nosebleed, which, as you know, is a dangerous symptom.
You will notice the similarity between Mercurius cyanatus and Kali bichromicum in diphtheritic croup. It lies in the location of the disease, i.e. in the larynx, and in the existence of thick, viscous, difficult-to-discharge sputum. The difference is determined by the following: with Mercurius cyanatus there is great weakness. This weakness is not a simple loss of strength (prostration) resulting from the child’s efforts to breathe. It depends on blood poisoning, which is detected by blueness of the surface of the body, coldness of the extremities and an accelerated weak pulse. If these symptoms are absent, then Kali bichromicum should be preferred.
Cinnabaris is a remedy not often remembered for catarrhal diseases. It is indicated for nasal catarrh, when there is strong pressure at the root of the nose, as if something heavy were pressing on the nose, like heavy glasses. We often also find throat symptoms in connection with this form of catarrh. The throat is swollen, the tonsils are enlarged and redder than normal. Severe dryness in the throat; it bothers the patient more often at night, causing him to wake up. Remember this sensation in the bridge of the nose and the nature of the throat symptoms that exist in connection with this. These symptoms may appear in syphilitics, scrofulous patients, or in persons prone to catarrh. We have found Cinnabaris useful in inflammation of the pharynx in scarlet fever, which is often diphtheritic in nature, when there is a strong accumulation of fibrous mucus in the posterior openings of the nose (choanae). If this symptom is prominent, then Cinnabaris will be the appropriate remedy for this complication.
I have used Mercurius corrosivus with success when there is an accumulation of very thick, almost glue-like mucus in the nose. In some cases of syphilitic disease of the nose you will find Mercurius corrosivus indicated on the ground that the ulcers perforate the nasal septum. In these cases, there is a burning pain, the secretion is caustic and ulcerates the tissues through which it flows.
The throat symptoms of Mercurius corrosivus are very strong. The uvula is dark red, swollen and elongated. There is a strong burning in the throat, as intense as in cases calling for Arsenicum album, Arsenicum jodatum or Capsicum. This burning pain is made unbearable by external pressure. It is accompanied by a strong tightening in the throat. Any attempt to swallow liquid or solid food causes a strong spasm in the pharynx, with immediate eruption of what has been swallowed.
Given the spasmodic nature of these symptoms, a similarity to Belladonna is noticed, but Mercurius corrosivus (Culema) is immediately distinguished from it by the inflammatory tendency of its symptoms, manifested by these extremely burning pains. Therefore, it has the contracting properties of Belladonna plus the most intense destructive (accompanying loss of tissue) inflammation of the pharynx. Further, it is easy to distinguish these two remedies by pulse. The pulse of Mercurius corrosivus is fast, weak and irregular, and not full and strong in Belladonna.
Mercury preparations have long been used in the treatment of syphilis. Mercurius solubilis and vivus are indicated in primary syphilis with the so-called soft chancre or chancroid. The ulceration spreads more superficially than in depth, and the bottom of the ulcer has a dirty, greasy appearance. Mercurius solubilis caused a similar ulcer, and therefore it should cure it. The sore throat with which syphilitic fever often begins, six or seven weeks after the initial attack, is also observed with Mercurius solubilis.
Iodine preparations, Mercurius protojodatus and bijodatus, are preferable for Gunter's, or chancroid. This is the form of ulcer that these two iodide preparations of Mercury caused, and therefore they both will cure it. There is no need for any external means, such as cauterizing ones, since a suitable internal medicine, if it does not completely prevent the onset of secondary symptoms, will at least reduce their intensity.
Mercurius corrosivus should be preferred to any of the other remedies mentioned for syphilitic symptoms, if the ulcerations are of a very destructive nature. The ulcer is serpiginous (spreads); it has irregular outlines and corrodes and destroys almost half of the penis in a few days.
Secondary syphilis can be treated with one or another of the drugs mentioned, if this drug was not abused in the primary stages. Mercurius solubilis helps very quickly against syphiloderm (syphilitic inflammation of the skin) on the palms of the hands. They are red, slightly itchy and flaky.
Returning to Mercurius vivus, I want to say a few words regarding its use in liver diseases. The tongue is covered with a dirty, yellowish-white coating and bears teeth marks. In this case, there are often scurvy symptoms. The gums become ulcerated and spongy. Bad breath. The skin and connective membranes of the eyes have a clearly defined icteric or icteric coloration. There is a tendency to a rush of blood to the head. The liver area is painful to the touch. The abdomen is usually tympanic and swollen, especially in the epigastric region and hypochondrium. The patient cannot lie on his right side. You will find the liver enlarged and often hardened. The stools are either clay-colored due to the lack of bile, or they are yellowish-green, bilious, and come out with strong effort. Mercurius is indicated for dysentery.
Nux vomica in its action has some similarities with Mercurius, but differs in that with it, after the end of the bowel movement, the pain and discomfort usually stop, whereas with Mercurius they continue even after.
Another remedy which should be mentioned in connection with Mercurius for bilious diseases is Leptandra. Both have the same yellowish-green or pitch-black stool that smells terribly bad. The difference between them is as follows: with Leptandra there is an urge to the bottom, contractions that continue after bowel movement, but there is no vitality. With Leptandra there is often a dull, painful, burning sensation (pain) in the back of the liver.
Merkur (according to Vithoulkas)
The study of Mercurius is the first example of how the concept of the essence of a drug can clarify the mass of data that seems to overwhelm the student. Mercurius is one of the widely tried and widely used remedies of the Materia Medica, and presents a solid array of symptoms for the beginner to study. This is a real textbook of pathological conditions. However, after repeated and prolonged study and reflection on the Materia Medica, it is gradually possible to discern a thread, a theme that runs through this entire preparation. Once it is understood, all the “data” falls into place in one unique image.
For Mercurius, there is no single word or phrase that adequately describes this thread. The main idea is the lack of reaction power combined with instability or ineffectiveness of functions. A healthy body has a defense mechanism, reactivity, which allows it to create a stable, effective balance after exposure to many physical and emotional stimuli in the environment.
In Mercurius this force of reaction is weakened, becomes unstable and does not perform its functions. Almost all stimuli are absorbed by the patient without sufficient protection, resulting in a pathological condition.
The lack of defensive power makes the Mercurius patient sensitive to everything. When we study the Materia Medica we find that the Mercurius patient is WORSE from everything - heat, cold, open air, damp weather, change of weather, warmth of bed, sweating, tension, different foods, etc. On the contrary, there appears to be very little improvement. The patient can absorb very little that would make him comfortable because the system cannot properly adjust to anything. As an interesting demonstration (though not recommended as a general method of study), one may look through the "General" section of the repertory for the many rubrics where it is listed in italics or bold as a remedy aggravated or ameliorated by physical influence. There are only 7 areas with improvement (5 of which are related to the situation when the patient lies down) and at the same time 55 rubrics describing deterioration. Because of this extreme vulnerability we see that the Mercurius patient has a very narrow range of tolerance for everything; for example, such a patient feels comfortable only in a very narrow range of temperatures and begins to feel discomfort at the slightest heat or cold.
Intolerance to heat and cold illustrates the instability that characterizes Mercurius's particular weakness. As Kent said, the patient is a “living thermometer.” At one moment he suffers from cold and strives for warmth, and having warmed up, he experiences worsening from heat. This occurs not only during fever, but also chronically. There is also weakness and instability of emotional expression, alternating crying with laughter. Unlike Ignatia, in which this symptom is a manifestation of a hysterical state from uncontrolled emotion, the crying and laughing of Mercurius is due to a more mechanical instability. While crying, Mercurius feels the arising of some mood, which leads to a deviation to the opposite extreme - laughter. Mechanically, laughter and crying are often very similar, and thus Mercurius madness causes the patient to move from one state to the other very easily.
The instability and ineffective functioning of Megcurius can be perfectly illustrated by thinking about the physical state of mercury. If you break a mercury thermometer, you will find that mercury exists in a state between a liquid and a solid. It flows like a liquid, but usually retains its shape to some extent, like a solid. If you try to pick it up with your fingers, it will seem that it is avoiding you: it does not allow itself to be grabbed like a solid body, and does not stick to your skin like a liquid. In its physical form, Mercurius exhibits erratic functioning, similar to how it is unstable and ineffective in its pathological state.
Thus it is easy to see that the weakness of Mercurius is not the same as that of other remedies. Arsenicum may show weakness in the form of prostration, but this is quite different from the instability of Mercurius.
Of course, Arsenicum has many specific pathological symptoms in common with Mercurius, but the intolerance of cold in the Arsenicum patient is relieved by warmth; Of course, it is also true that psychically Arsenicum demonstrates a much greater capacity for reaction - anxiety, incessant mental activity, insight. Also, remedies with very weak reactivity, but without the instability and ineffectiveness of Mercurius, are Stannum, Helonias and Baptisia.
This weakness of Mercurius reaction is not a sudden event. This is a slow and insidious process that can be difficult to understand in the early stages for the patient and therefore the homeopath. It develops so slowly that the patient barely mentions vulnerability to stimuli. By the time a patient consults a homeopath for a particular complaint, most of the symptoms have been forgotten and are no longer considered abnormal. Having learned to adapt to a narrow range of tolerance, the patient reports only the immediate symptoms that brought him to the consultation. In the early stages, patient, skilled and thoughtful questioning is required to identify homeopathic symptoms that may not be different from other people's experiences.
Since the mental state is the center of personality, we will describe in detail the stages of development of pathology at the mental level. The first effect observed is the slowness of the Mercurius mind. The patient answers questions slowly (like Phosphorus and Acidum phosphoricum and other remedies). He is slow to realize what is happening or what is being asked of him. At first it is not confusion or weak memory, but real slowness, misunderstanding, a kind of stupidity. Slowness of mind is, of course, inherent in Calc. carb., but Calcarea is a smart person; having understood the thought, Calcarea can use it effectively. Mercurius is both slow in mind and weak in understanding.
The Mercurius mentality is characterized by some inefficiency at work. Mercurius is one of the remedies characterized by haste and restlessness, but it is haste in which the person does nothing. A task that takes half an hour to solve will take a Mercurius patient one and a half hours. Remedies such as Tarentula, Acidum sulphuricum, Nux vomica and Natrum mur. are also rushed to a pathological degree, but their work is nevertheless productive and effective.
The second stage is characterized by impulsiveness. Because of its vulnerability to stimuli from both outside and inside, the Mercurius mind is unable to focus exclusively in one direction. A healthy person can focus his mind on a subject or task, despite the many chaotic thoughts and ideas that may try to interfere. The Mercurius mind does not have the strength for such concentration. Every random thought that comes to his mind becomes an event to which the patient considers it necessary to react. This trait refers to the inefficiency of the mind, but becomes even more extreme as the pathology develops. Eventually the Mercurius patient becomes susceptible to every impulse imaginable. He may have an impulse to hit, break things, kill someone over a slight offense, or even kill a loved one (Mercurius, Nux vomica and Platinum are the only remedies indicated for this impulse).
However, it is not easy for the interviewing physician to see these impulses. The Mercurius patient feels the urge but resists it. This is a closed person, slow to respond, reluctant to reveal his feelings to others. He is sufficiently aware of his position, and knows about his vulnerability to irritants and impulses. Realizing that this sensitivity could bring him trouble, he simply keeps them inside, preventing them from being socially visible. This is a fragile strategy; the person is also vulnerable and must expend considerable energy to maintain control over himself.
As the pathology progresses to the third stage, mental inefficiency, poor understanding, impulsivity and vulnerability ultimately create a paranoid state. The patient feels so vulnerable that he begins to consider everyone his enemies. The fragile control mechanism has failed, so the patient inevitably perceives everyone as an adversary, as someone from whom he must defend himself.
By this time the patient is not truly insane, but sometimes feels that he is going crazy and experiences fears of madness, especially at night.
At the final stage of mental pathology, we do not observe the development of open psychosis, as with many other drugs. Mercurius has such a lack of reaction power that he cannot even generate a state of psychosis. Instead, imbecility develops. It seems as if the mind has softened and is unable to react at all. All stimuli are absorbed, but are no longer conscious.
The sequence of events in the development of Mercurius disease on the physical and mental levels is one of the classic examples of the development of pathology, well understood by the science of homeopathy. Although Mercurius can affect any organ system, most often we see that its “ultimate target” is first the skin and mucous membranes, then the spinal column, and finally the brain. The slow and insidious progression of the disease in these organs suggests that Mercurius may have a special predilection for structures of ectodermal origin. As is well known in biology, the embryo differentiates into three derivative tissues: ectoderm, mesoderm and endoderm. Each of these tissues performs its own function in a mature organism. Ectodermal structures include, in particular, the skin and mucous membranes at the surface of the body, the eyes and the nervous system. These are the structures that Mercurius is prone to.
The weakness of the defensive reaction is evident throughout the physical symptomatology of Mercurius. As stated earlier, Mercurius patients have one of the narrowest ranges of heat and cold tolerance of all drugs. Due to the weakness of the defense mechanism, there is great instability in the Mercurius system. This manifests itself obviously in the many physical symptoms for which Mercurius is well known.
Mercurius is known for the ease of sweating and the lack of relief from it. Sweating is a normal function designed to cool the body when it is overheated, as well as to release toxic products. However, in Mercurius the slightest stimulus or exertion causes sweating due to his hypersensitivity. This is an overreaction to a minimal stimulus. Sweating itself then becomes a source of aggravation for a person with such a narrow tolerance range.
Insufficient force of reaction is the chief cause of the characteristic aggravation of Mercurius from suppressed discharges, such as those of otorrhoea and other diseases involving suppuration. In Mercurius this suppression occurs very easily under orthodox treatment. Unlike the healthy defense, which ultimately has the power to restore the secretions in one form or another, the Mercurius system simply absorbs the disease-causing influence, allowing it to cause pathology at a deeper level.
There is a tendency to chronic suppurations of all kinds, which can persist for many years. There is simply not enough defense power to eliminate the infection and so a stalemate ensues until the homeopath intervenes and suppresses the infection to a deeper level.
Mercurius has many ulcers, especially on the skin and mucous membranes (aphthae). These are phagedenic ulcers that the body cannot get rid of and therefore allows them to insidiously spread over ever wider areas.
When suppuration or ulceration occurs in Mercurius, Mercurius has insufficient strength to fight it, and so progressive decay occurs. This is best seen by the decay of the gums. The gums are destroyed, which leads to loosening of the teeth, the formation of sinuses with pus and the appearance of a very disgusting odor. The disgusting odors characteristic of Mercurius are the result of decomposition, which is inevitable in a system that does not have the strength to react.
Just as we see sweating due to the hypersensitivity of the system to any burden, we can also see a similar process leading to excessive salivation in Mercurius. The stomach is torn by almost any influence, and then even the slightest upset in the stomach causes excessive salivation. Drooling can be observed at any time of the day, but is most pronounced at night, which is a typical time of aggravation of Mercurius. With such low reactivity, the patient is constantly weakened during the day by all influences, until finally the weakness becomes most obvious at night: bone pain, inflammatory symptoms, complaints about the nervous system, fear of madness and drooling increase at night.
As an intermediate stage on the way from the surface of the body to the brain, Mercurius pathology affects the spine and peripheral nervous system, causing tremors, especially common in the arms. Such tremor is often diagnosed as a consequence of Parkinson's disease or arteriosclerosis, but in the case of Mercurius its more fundamental cause is a weakness of the defense and the resulting instability of function. The patient finds that he cannot hold a glass of water in his hands without spilling it unless he leans on his elbow or forearm. This tremor is symbolic of the Mercurius essence. Insufficient reactivity - weakness in the face of all the stimuli so easily absorbed by the system - ultimately leads to instability of normal functions. Just as the temperature control mechanism oscillates back and forth between mild extremes of heat and cold, constantly and ineffectively attempting to compensate, so the hand oscillates back and forth in an ineffective attempt to perform its normal function, causing tremors.
Having understood the essence of the Mercurius image, one can re-read the various Materia Medica and find that the ocean of data now fits into a single coherent picture.
Merkur (according to Berwick)
Mercurius - Hydrargyrum Mercury (metal)
Any organ or tissue of the body, to one degree or another, experiences the effect of this powerful remedy: it turns healthy cells into decrepit, inflamed and necrotizing “fragments of their former greatness”, destroys the blood, causing deep anemia.
This malignant medical influence can be turned to benefit and salvation, to the protection of lives, provided that Mercurius is used homeopathically, if clear symptoms are used.
The lymphatic system and all membranes and glands are especially affected; all internal organs, bones, etc. Damages caused by mercury are similar to those caused by syphilis.
Mercurius is very often indicated in the secondary stage of syphilis, in the presence of febrile chloranemia, rheumatoid chest pain, pain in the joints, etc.; ulcerations of the mouth and pharynx; hair loss; rashes and ulcerations on the mucous membranes of the mouth and throat, etc.
One can name special states and conditions in which Mercurius is homeopathically suitable and in which the D 2 dilution has a striking effect.
Manifestations of hereditary syphilis are also included in the range of action of this remedy: blisters, abscesses, nasality, insanity, stomatitis, or some kind of destructive inflammation. Trembling throughout the body. Weakness, along with frantic excitement and trembling from the slightest effort. All Mercurius symptoms are worse at night, from warmth of bed, from dampness, from cold, from rainy weather; worse during sweating.
Symptoms are worse from sweat and rest; are associated with severe fatigue, prostration and trembling. "Human thermometer"! Sensitivity to heat and cold.
Parts of the body become very swollen, raw and painful; and profuse, greasy sweat does not bring relief. Unpleasant, putrid odor of breath, secretions and the whole body.
Tendency to form pus: liquid, greenish, putrid, streaked with liquid blood.
Psyche. Answers questions slowly. Weak memory, reduced willpower. Tired of life. Mistrust. Thinks he's losing his mind.
Head. Vertigo when lying on back. Sensation of a tight band around the head. Unilateral tearing pain. Tension of the scalp, as if from a tight bandage.
Catarrhal headaches; intense heat in the head. Stinging, offensive eruptions on the scalp. Hair loss. Exostoses with painful sensation.
Tension of the skull; greasy sweat on the head.
Eyes. Redness of the eyelids; thickening and swelling. Copious, burning, acrid discharge.
Floating dark spots. Condition after exposure to the glare of a flame or molten metal. Parenchymal keratitis of syphilitic origin with burning pain. Iritis with hypopyon.
Ears. Thick yellow discharge; foul and bloody. Otalgia, worse from warmth of bed; stitching pain at night. Boils of the external auditory canal (Calc. pic.).
Nose. Sneezes frequently and heavily. Sneezes in the sun. Nostrils raw, ulcerated; nasal bones are swollen. Yellow-green, foul-smelling, pus-like discharge. Runny nose: the discharge is acrid, but too thick to run down the lip; worse in warm room. Pain and swelling of the nasal bones, their caries with greenish, foul-smelling discharge and ulceration. Night nosebleeds. Copious discharge of corrosive mucus. Runny nose with sneezing; feeling of soreness, rawness, burning pain; worse in damp weather; runny nose, profuse, flowing.
Face. Pale, earthy in color, as if dirty, puffy. Pain in the facial bones of the skull. Syphilitic pustules on the face.
Mouth. Sweetish metallic taste. The secretion of the salivary glands is significantly increased; saliva is bloody and viscous. Saliva foul-smelling, with a coppery taste. Speech is difficult due to trembling of the tongue. The gums are loose, lag behind the teeth, and bleed easily.
Soreness when touched and chewed. The whole mouth is wet. Destruction of tooth crowns.
Teeth are loose, sensitive and appear elongated. A groove along the upper surface of the tongue. The tongue is heavy, dense, covered with a damp coating; yellow plaque on the flabby tongue, which stores teeth marks; sensation as if the tongue was burned; ulcerations on it.
Bad breath; one that can be felt throughout the room. Alveolar abscess, worse at night. Intense thirst with wet mouth.
Throat. Bluish-purple swelling. Constant desire to swallow. Putridly painful pharynx; worse on the right. Ulcers and inflammations with every change of weather. Tingling in the ear when swallowing; Swallowed liquid returns through the nose. Sore throat with difficulty swallowing after the formation of an abscess. Soreness, rawness, burning in the throat. Complete loss of voice. Burning in the throat, as if hot steam were rising there.
Stomach. Putrid eructations. Intense thirst, desire for cold drinks. Weakness of digestion with constant feeling of hunger. The abdomen is sensitive to touch.
Stomach. Daggering pains with chills. Boring pain in right groin. Flatulence with pain. The liver is enlarged, painful to the touch, hardened. Jaundice. Insufficient secretion of bile.
Chair. Greenish, bloody and slimy, worse at night; with pain and tenesmus. Constant feeling of incomplete emptying. Defecation is accompanied by chills, stomach pain, cutting colic and tenesmus. Whitish-gray stool.
Urinary system. Frequent and persistent urge. Greenish discharge from the urethra; burning in the urethra at the beginning of urination. Urine dark, scanty, bloody, containing protein.
Male genital organs. Blisters and sores; chancroid. Genitals are cold.
Irritation and itching of the foreskin. Night emissions of semen, stained with blood.
Female genital organs. Menses profuse, with abdominal pain. Leukorrhea, causing excoriation, greenish and bloody; feeling of rawness in the genitals.
Stinging pains in ovaries (Apis). Itching and burning; worse after urination; relief when washing with cold water. Morning sickness with profuse salivation.
The mammary glands are sore and full of milk during menses.
Respiratory organs. Soreness extending from throat to sternum. Cannot lie on the right side (on the left side - Lycop.). Cough with yellow mucopurulent expectoration. Attacks of coughing and expectoration are worse at night and from the warmth of the bed. Catarrh with chills; fear of fresh air. Tingling from lower lobe of right lung to back. Whooping cough with nosebleeds (Arnica). Cough worsened by tobacco smoke.
Back. Pain in the lower back as if bruised, especially when sitting. Tearing pain in coccyx; relief from pressure on the abdomen.
Limbs. Weakness of the limbs. Bone pain, worse at night. Increased sensitivity to cold. Oily sweat. Trembling of the limbs, especially the hands; shaking paralysis Tearing pain in joints. Cold sticky sweat on legs at night. Swelling and swelling of the feet and legs.
Leather. Almost always wet. Constant dry skin is a contraindication for Mercurius! Profuse fetid sweat; stronger at night. General tendency to profuse sweating, which does not bring relief. Vesicular and pustular eruptions. Ulcers are irregular in shape with jagged edges. Pimples around the main area of the rash. Itching, worse from warmth of bed. Milk scab; yellow-brown crusts, significant suppuration. The glands swell after a cold. Buboes. Orchitis (Clemat.; Hamam.; Puls.).
Fever. General gastric or bilious fever with profuse night sweats; weakness, slowness. Alternating fever and chills. Sweat yellow in color. Profuse sweat without relief. Chills with a crawling sensation; worse in evening and at night. Alternating hot flashes in individual limbs.
MODALITIES. Worse at night; in damp, humid weather; when lying on the right side; from sweating; in a warm room and a warm bed.
RELATIONSHIPS. Antidotes: Hep.; Aur.; Mez.
Similar: Mez.; Phosph.; Syph.; Kali mur.; Aethiops.
Compare: Capparis coriaccea. Polyuria, glandular lesions, mucous diarrhea, influenza. Epilobium. Chronic diarrhea with tenesmus and mucous discharge. Drooling, dysphagia. Exhaustion of the body and severe weakness. Infantile cholera. Kali hyd. Chancre.
Mercur. acet. Congestion with stiffness, dryness and heat in the affected limbs. The eyes are inflamed - burning and itching. Dry - lack of moisture. The pharynx is dry, difficulty speaking. Pressure in the lower sternum. Chancre in the urethra. Favus of the scalp with painful edges of ulcers.
Mercurius auratus. Psoriasis and syphilitic catarrh. Brain tumors. Syphilitic lesions of the nose and bones. Ozena. Swelling of the testicles.
Mercurius bromatus. Secondary syphilitic skin lesions.
Mercurius nitrosus. Especially indicated for pustular conjunctivitis and keratitis. Gonorrhea and spotted syphilides on the mucous membrane, with stitching pains; syphilides.
Mercurius phosphoricus. Nervous diseases due to syphilis. Exostoses.
Mercurius praecipitatus ruber. Attacks of suffocation at night, when he lays down and begins to fall asleep - at this moment he is forced to jump up, which brings relief. Gonorrhea - the urethra feels like a tightly stretched string; chancroid. Phagedenic ulcer and bubo.
Pemphigus, spotted syphilides on the mucous membrane, eczema with ragadas and fissures. Barber itch. Blepharitis, internal and external. Leaden heaviness in the back of the head with otorrhea.
Mercurius tannicus. Syphilides in patients with gastrointestinal diseases or those who are hypersensitive to conventional mercury preparations.
Erythrinus. Exfoliative dermatitis (pythyriasis red) and syphilis. Red rash on the chest. Pitiriasis.
Lolium temulentum. With trembling hands and legs. Mercurius cum kali. Old colds. Acute paralysis of the facial muscles.
Henchera. Gastroenteritis, vomiting with bile and foamy mucus; stool watery, profuse, like mud, with tenesmus; a constant feeling of “not being completely freed.”
BREEDING. From second to thirty.
Mercur (according to Kent)
Mercurius vivus/Mercurius vivus is the elemental metallic mercury.
The pathogenesis of mercury is being tested by Mercurius vivus and Mercurius solubilis, two slightly different drugs, but not so different as to differentiate them in practice.
The ordinary thermometer is filled with mercury, and to the same extent the constitution of Mercurius vivus is changeable and sensitive to heat and cold. The patient is worse from both too low and too high temperatures. Both the patient’s condition as a whole and individual symptoms worsen in warmth, fresh air, and cold. The complaints of Mercurius vivus are acute enough to put the patient to bed, but they are aggravated by the warmth of the bed, which causes him to open up; but after opening and cooling it again becomes worse, so that the patient cannot achieve a comfortable state. This applies to pain, fever, ulcers, rashes and the patient in general.
The patient exudes a stench. This is the so-called mercury smell. The breath is especially foul, the stench is felt already upon entering the room; the stench fills the entire room. Fetid sweat; with a strong, sweetish, pungent odor. Everything smells: urine, stool and sweat; the nose and mouth smell unpleasant. When mercury is used in significant doses, the patient's salivation increases, and the saliva acquires a characteristic odor. Anyone who has ever smelled a patient with drooling will remember the mercury smell forever. I remember how, as a student, I felt this mercury smell in almost every ward. At that time, mercury was used to treat everything, including gum damage and hypersalivation. This odor is often an indication for the prescription of Mercurius vivus.
The patient gets worse at night. Bone pain, joint damage and inflammation intensify at night and decrease somewhat during the day. Pain in bones throughout the body, but is most pronounced where the bones are directly under the skin. Pain in the periosteum, boring, worse at night and in the warmth of the bed.
The glands and lymph nodes are inflamed and swollen; damage to the parotid, sublingual glands, cervical, inguinal and axillary lymph nodes; swelling of the mammary glands, inflammation and enlargement of the liver. This is a clear remedy for lesions of glandular tissue. A common symptom is also compaction - the inflamed parts of the body become denser. If the skin becomes inflamed, it becomes dense. Inflamed glands and lymph nodes also become denser. The compaction is combined with ulceration.
The tendency to ulcerate runs through the entire remedy. Ulcers are found everywhere: in the throat, nose, mouth, and lower extremities. The ulcers burn and sting, they are located on a greasy base, have an ashen-white color, as if smeared with lard. The ulcers are covered with an exudate resembling diphtheria, and in the pathogenesis of Mercurius vivus there is a diphtheria discharge on the inflamed areas. In particular, ulcers in the throat have this appearance. The mucous membrane can sometimes become inflamed without ulceration, with only exudation, which is why Mercurius vivus is effective in diphtheria. Ulcers look exactly the same: when the body's strength to heal becomes less and less, the ulcers become covered with a greasy gray or ashy coating. This is the appearance of chancre, with whitish cheesy deposits at the base. If you remember that the complaints of Mercurius vivus are worse at night, remember the bone pain, inflammation of the periosteum, etc., you will not be surprised to hear that sometimes Mercurius vivus cures syphilis. In this regard, it is significant that allopaths have had some success in using mercury in the treatment of this disease, since due to the similarity of Mercurius vivus it cures or suppresses syphilis in a sufficient number of cases - which is why it has been used for so long. When properly prescribed, Mercurius vivus cures the disease.
Another striking sign of the drug is the tendency to form pus. Inflammation causes burning and stinging pain, rapid suppuration, and the local condition of the tissues worsens from both heat and cold. Burning and stinging pain in abscesses; inflammation of the joints is accompanied by suppuration; inflammation of the pleural cavity - filling it with pus. Yellow-green purulent discharge. The discharge of Mercurius vivus in gonorrhea is thick, greenish-yellow, and is accompanied by stinging and burning pain in the urethra.
Symptoms such as rheumatic inflammation of the joints and catarrhal inflammation of the mucous membranes, which is combined with sweating, run through the entire medicine, while the surprising feature is that sweat does not bring relief, and even worsening of the condition occurs during sweating. Rheumatism in patients with chronic syphilis, gonorrhea and gout. In many cases Mercurius vivus is similar enough to affect psora, syphilis and sycosis. The medicine combines the nature of all three miasms.
When subjects took Mercurius vivus, they lost weight. The same emaciation was noted in those who were treated with mercury for syphilis for a long time. This is an excellent remedy for this condition: constant emaciation with trembling, worse at night and from the warmth of the bed, great restlessness, inability to find a comfortable position and calm down. These are unfortunate people with a broken body, burdened with psora, syphilis or sycosis.
An unusual symptom is recurrent swelling or abscess formation without fever. Whether an abscess is brewing or the joint is swelling, the patient is sweating from head to toe, he feels worse at night, he loses weight, he has trembling and weakness, but against the background of the forming abscess there is no fever. Abscesses form against a background of such weak vital force that there is no ability to heal; pus forms slowly and over a long period of time, the abscess irritates the surrounding tissues, granulations do not form, the abscess opens, but the discharge continues, as if all the tissues had long since died. Mercurius vivus will return the missing warmth, eliminate sweating, and speed up healing.
Superficial ulcers tend to spread, become phagedenic, they do not spread deeper, but expand. Such open ulcers are especially typical for persons with chronic syphilis; they have a fatty base; the process is sluggish, even numbness is noted, greenish-yellow pus is released; false granulations appear. An even more powerful remedy for superficial, corroding, phagedenic ulcers is Mercurius corrosivus. Sometimes Mercurius vivus corresponds to a gangrenous condition. Gangrene can develop anywhere, but especially on the lips, cheeks and gums. Chancre on the oral mucosa. Gangrenous chancre, offensive and black; areas of gangrene appear on the chancre, which are then rejected. All these conditions are aggravated by heat. A patient with the characteristic abscess of Mercurius vivus often refuses poultices, which increase his suffering.
Trembling runs through the entire medicine, the patient trembles like a leaf. Mercurius vivus has been used successfully in parkinsonism. Hand tremors are so severe that they prevent you from picking up anything, eating or writing. Mercurius vivus is good for epileptiform seizures in children, twitching and movement disorders. It helps children get rid of uncoordinated angular movements in the hands and feet. Twitching, shaking and trembling. Lack of coordination of tongue movements prevents the child from starting to speak. Cramps. Involuntary movements that can be restrained for a while by an effort of will. Extreme anxiety.
Trembling, weakness, sweating, stench, suppuration and ulceration, worsening at night, from heat and cold - these are the main things that catch the eye in Mercurius vivus patients.
Mercurius vivus has many mental symptoms indicating the deeper nature of the remedy. A striking symptom running through the entire medicine is haste; constant haste, restlessness, anxiety, impulsiveness. In cold, cloudy or humid weather, slowness and sluggishness of thinking and forgetfulness occur paroxysmally. This is typical for patients who gradually decline into dementia. The patient cannot immediately answer the question; he looks at you and, after much thought, finally understands the meaning of the question. Dementia and softening of the brain are characteristic features of Mercurius vivus. The patient becomes stupid. Delirium against the background of acute complaints. The patient feels as if he is losing his mind. The patient has a desire to kill those who object to her. Homicidal or suicidal impulse; sudden anger with urge to behave violently. The patient is afraid that she will lose her mind and will no longer be able to control these impulses. Paroxysmal insanity is typical of this remedy, but imbecility is more typical than insanity. These impulses are the leading features of Mercurius vivus. The patient will not tell you about his impulses, but they are connected with the evil will in the depths of his consciousness, they simply force the person to do something. If the patient has any impulses that he is trying to control, Mercurius vivus should definitely help him. Great anxiety, sadness during menstruation. Anxiety and restlessness, as if something bad is coming; worse at night, with sweating.
All the symptoms described are characteristic of patients with chronic syphilis, whose health was undermined after treatment with mercury and the use of sulfur baths, suffering from pain in the bones, with glandular lesions, sweating, catarrhal inflammation and ulcers throughout the body.
Mercurius vivus is indicated for rheumatic lesions of the scalp, neuralgia and brain lesions when burning, stinging pains are bothersome; when pain is closely related to the weather; for ailments of the head, if they arose as a result of suppressed discharge, for example suppressed discharge from the ear after scarlet fever, and also when ailments related to the head arose during scarlet fever. Think of Mercurius vivus if you see a child with sweating of the head, dilated pupils, whose head rolls on the pillow, who is worse at night and who has recently had scarlet fever or suppressed discharge from the ears. Mercurius vivus is effective in prolonged febrile conditions, similar to typhoid, but caused by suppression of discharge from the ears. I have cured cases in which the ears were treated with boric acid, iodoform, etc., after which the patient developed first a remitting and then a constant fever. It may continue for five or six weeks, and is only relieved by the return of the discharge after a dose of Mercurius vivus. I remember one such incident. The patient had cerebrospinal meningitis; the head was thrown back and turned to one side. It all started with inflammation of the middle ear, while the discharge was suppressed. Two or three doctors called before me could not do anything. Already at night they sent for me, and from the anamnesis and symptoms I saw that it was Mercurius vivus. Within 24 hours, Mercurius vivus resumed the discharge, eliminated the torticollis, the fever subsided, and the child completely recovered. And there were many such cases.
Tension in the scalp, as if from a tight bandage. Headache above the bridge of the nose and around the eyes in nervous girls, as if the head were tightly bandaged or a tight hat was pressing on the head. Pressing, tearing pain in the eyes. Burning pain in the temples, relieved by sitting and while walking back and forth, worse at night. Pain in the periosteum is worse in cold, damp weather in patients with a rheumatic and gouty constitution, with sore eyes and ears, sore throat and swollen lymph nodes. Headaches in patients with chronic syphilis overloaded with mercury; These people resemble a barometer - they react so keenly to the weather. Extremely annoying headaches associated with catarrhal discharge; headache in patients suffering from chronic catarrh with thick discharge. The thick discharge gives way to watery discharge, and unpleasant pain occurs in the forehead, face and eyes. These headaches are very severe. Headache of rheumatic origin and chronic nature from suppression of discharge from any part of the body or from suppression of sweat of the feet; alternating sweaty feet and headache. When the feet stop sweating, pain and stiffness in the joints occur. This symptom is found in Silicea. Silicea and Mercurius vivus are unlikely to be prescribed one after the other if chosen correctly; but the effects of long-term use of material doses of mercury are well eliminated by such drugs as Silicea and Nitricum acidum, if the symptoms coincide.
All headaches are accompanied by intense heat in the head. Bursting headaches, feeling of fullness in the brain, squeezing like a hoop. Feeling of pressure in the head, as if in a vice. Sensitivity to air flow with headache. This applies to all symptoms of Mercurius vivus. The patient is better indoors, but worsens if the room is hot or too cold, and is terribly ill from a draft. Desire to cover head, but heat worsens condition. The feeling of a hoop squeezing the head intensifies at night. Mercurius vivus is an excellent remedy for eliminating the symptoms of acute hydrocephalus following measles and scarlet fever; the child throws his head on the pillow and moans, his head is covered with sweat. In this respect the remedy is similar to Apis mellifica, since it is equally effective in preventing or curing hydrocephalus following scarlet fever.
Exostoses in patients with chronic syphilis. Cutting, tearing pain in the periosteum of the skull. The entire scalp is painful to the touch. Soreness and tension of the scalp. Fetid, oily sweat on head. Wet eczema in children, irritation, foul rash.
Mercurius vivus is an amazing eye remedy, especially for “cold” eyes. In gouty and rheumatic patients the eyes are affected with every cold. Catarrhal inflammation of the eyes is aggravated by looking at a fire, or, still more, by sitting close to a fire; radiant heat causes burning pain. The eyelids seem to fill with lead, as if the person has not slept for a long time. Fog or haze before the eyes. Mercurius vivus cures syphilitic iritis. Currently, in case of iritis, it is customary to use drugs that cause mydriasis to prevent adhesions. I have treated many such cases and have never had the need to dilate the pupil. I don't think there's much need for this. The homeopathic medicine will quickly cure the iritis so that adhesions do not appear, and if they do appear, the medicine will eliminate them. Tearing and burning pains around the eyes, in the temples, etc. Tension of the scalp, as if the head were being squeezed by a tight cap or bandage. Ulceration and inflammation of the cornea. Dilatation of corneal vessels; inflammation, especially within the cornea, sometimes pustular, sometimes diffuse. Profuse lacrimation accompanies all eye symptoms, irritating tears causing red streaks on the cheeks. Greenish-yellow or green discharge. Compression of the joint becomes spastic. Severe photophobia. Inflammation of all eye tissues: eyelids, conjunctiva and deeper structures. Cold settles on the eyes, like Dulcamara.
Sometimes you may see a small growth on the iris that grows across the pupil and has a stalk. This is a real syphilitic condyloma. Mercurius vivus will cure her in a few days. Inflammation of the retina, choroid and optic nerve. All types of visual impairment. Mercurius vivus helps with purulent ophthalmia, with swelling of the eyelids. This drug is necessary for two types of constitution: syphilitic and rheumatic-gouty. The patient cannot open his eyes; the eyelids are spastically compressed, there is severe swelling.
Ear diseases. Foul-smelling greenish discharge. The ears, as well as the nose and other parts of the body, discharge green, thick, acrid pus. Fetid otorrhea. For inflammation of the middle ear with perforation of the eardrum, Mercurius vivus is often necessary. Many cases of otorrhea occur in cold, damp weather in the spring, after a long, cold winter; this condition occurs almost exclusively in large cities. If the medicine restores the patient's health, the eardrum will heal just like any other formation. If a healthy state is not restored due to improper treatment, a hole will remain in the membrane. Inflammation of the ears, with cramping pains. Mercurius vivus has a stinging pain like Apis. Those who think according to a pattern always prescribe Apis mellifica for stinging pains, although such a patient often needs Mercurius vivus. Purulent, offensive otorrhea. Enlargement of the parotid gland and cervical lymph nodes with inflammation of the ears. The parotid glands are painful and swollen, there is stiffness in the neck, and sometimes the head is thrown back. Boils in the external auditory canal. Fungal growths and polyps.
Describing nasal diseases can take a long time. Damage to the nasal bones in patients with chronic syphilis, with thick, greenish, yellow, acrid, foul-smelling discharge. Nosebleeds and bloody discharge from the nose. Acrid, watery coryza, with a sensation of pressure in the bones of the face, worse from heat or cold, at night; the patient is sensitive to any draft; he is forced to get out of bed and walk around the room. A runny nose with severe sneezing may, on the contrary, decrease when lying down, but not at night in bed, but only during the day. Inhaling warm air improves the condition of the nose, but heat leads to a deterioration in the condition of the body as a whole. Continuous sneezing, bleeding, scaly, red nostrils. Old smell of catarrh in the nose. Rawness, burning and swelling. Burning, irritating pain inside the nose. Aching, tearing and pressing pain in the bones. Pain in the bones of the face, a sensation as if pressed from the inside out; the patient wants to press on the painful areas, but this causes pain.
Mercurius vivus is not a strong enough remedy to completely correct the psoric constitution in cases of persistent colds. It cures a cold once, but adds part of its nature, and the patient catches colds even more often. Mercurius vivus should not be given frequently, no more than twice during the winter. For the same burning sensation in the face, runny nose, aggravation from fever and the warmth of the bed, it is better to prescribe Kali iodatum, which will cure the runny nose during the night, despite the fact that Mercurius vivus is formally more suitable. Kali iodatum also serves as an antidote for Mercurius vivus. Do not give Mercurius vivus frequently in psoric cases; look for a deeper remedy.
Syphilitic eruptions and facial neuralgia, with or without catarrh. It is a good remedy for treating mumps; the routine remedy for this condition, which itself indicates that in this condition Mercurius vivus must be given frequently, naturally according to the symptoms.
Scorbutic gums in patients with drooling. Riggs disease; purulent discharge along the edges of the teeth. Toothache; All teeth ache, especially in patients with chronic gout or patients treated for a long time with material doses of mercury. Teeth are loose. Red, soft gums. Black, dirty-looking teeth. Blackening and early decay of teeth in children with congenital syphilis, as in Staphisagria. Profuse drooling. Soreness of gums when touched. Pulsation in the gums and roots of the teeth. The gums are cyanotic-red or purple along the edges of the teeth, loose, and bleed easily. The teeth lag behind the gums, it seems that the teeth have become longer. The teeth are so painful that it is impossible to chew. Abscesses of gums and tooth roots.
Characteristic symptoms include taste, tongue and oral cavity. When the tongue protrudes, it is visible that it is flabby, has a whitish surface and is often pale. Tooth marks are visible along the edges of the tongue. The tongue is swollen, resembles a sponge, adheres tightly to the teeth, and their imprints remain on it. Inflammation, ulceration and swelling of the tongue are prominent signs of Mercurius vivus. In patients with an old gouty constitution, the tongue is swollen. It swells at night, and the patient wakes up with the feeling that the entire oral cavity is filled with it. Perversion of taste. The tongue is covered with a yellow or white coating, like a layer of chalk. Halitosis; putrid odor from the mouth, mercury odor in a patient with drooling. The tongue becomes clumsy; articulation is difficult; the patient is difficult to understand. Speech like a drunk. Flat ulcers; corrosive ulcers; Fistulas form in the cheeks. Destruction of the soft palate, often extending to the bones of the hard palate. Accumulation of pus in the maxillary sinus, fistulas between the sinus and the oral cavity. For such fistulas, Fluoricum acidum and Silicea are most often indicated, especially when the bones are affected. Copious secretion of foul-smelling saliva. Stomatitis in children and nursing mothers; small aphthous spots combined with a mercury odor, the oral mucosa and tongue are flabby and spongy. General diffuse inflammation of the oral cavity. The entire mucous membrane is sensitive and painful; burning, stinging pain; dryness, with and without aphthous spots. Candidal stomatitis in children. Scorbutic gums.
A sore throat. Mercurius vivus helps well with inflammation of the throat with a spongy surface of the mucous membrane, with general diffuse swelling, swelling of the parotid glands, with swelling and stiffness in the neck. Ulcers on a greasy base; flat, spreading ulcers. Severe dryness in the throat. Swelling disrupts the movement of all muscles involved in the act of swallowing. Difficulty swallowing: with pain and paralytic weakness, when trying to take a sip, the food bolus is pushed into the nose, the liquid flows out of the nose. A mercurial odor is characteristic, although Mercurius vivus often helps even in its absence, since it has a pronounced affinity for the throat. Mercurius vivus has chronic diseases of the pharynx, syphilitic ulcers and spots. The inflammation spreads both up and down, red and pale spots and redness appear, as if suppuration begins or an ulcer forms. The red spots become purple, but the more purple they become, the more consistent with Lachesis. Dark red tonsils with stinging pains in them. Purulent tonsillitis after pus has formed. Mercurius vivus is effective in diphtheria, when in most cases there are diffuse, wide spots in different places, a spongy appearance of the mucosa, but there is no ulceration. Swelling; exudate is located on an edematous base. Neck stiffness. Erysipelas in the throat. Dark, sloughing, corroding, destructive ulcers in the throat.
Aversion to meat, wine, brandy, coffee, fatty foods, butter. Milk is poorly digested, causing sour belching. Sweets are also difficult to digest. Disgust for your favorite beer. Chronic indigestion; belching, regurgitation, heartburn, etc. Food in the stomach turns sour or goes rotten. Nausea with vomiting and regurgitation of food. Food lies in the stomach as a heavy burden. Unpleasant taste; bitterness in the mouth; food seems sour. All this is accompanied by constant drooling. The condition does not improve as food is digested. Vomiting of semi-digested food. This is similar to the condition of those who upset their stomachs by pouring immoderate liquors, beer, wine and whiskey into it.
Lots of liver problems. Our ancestors took “blue mixtures” year after year, every spring, supposedly to normalize liver function. Every spring they “cleansed” the liver in this way; As a result, the condition of the liver became worse, and it would be better if the doctors giving such advice never left the house. Constipation, biliousness, indigestion. The feeling of fullness in the stomach, which occurs in the form of attacks, becomes worse in cold, damp weather and in hot, damp weather, worse in the spring; icteric discoloration of the skin, indigestion, worse at night and from the warmth of the bed, night fever and bad breath - all this gives us a picture of the condition of Mercurius vivus. Tingling in the liver. The liver symptoms are worse when lying on the right side. Many complaints of Mercurius vivus are worse when lying on the right side. On the right side, pulmonary symptoms, cough, liver, stomach and intestinal symptoms worsen.
In the stomach we find colic, rumbling, flatulence, discomfort, pain, burning. This remedy has many stool variations, including diarrhea and constipation. Clearly distinguishable dysenteric condition. Slimy, bloody stools with strong straining, feeling that bowel movements will never end; even if nothing else comes out, the patient feels as if he “will never be able to get off the toilet.” The symptoms of dysentery in this remedy are very different from those of Nux vomica and Rhus. These two remedies improve when a small amount of stool is passed, while Mercurius vivus and Sulfur continue to sit and strain, the same condition being characteristic of all mercuric salts. In Mercurius corrosivus, the attack is more pronounced, with a frantic urge to defecate and urinate, causing severe suffering in the patient, with burning and the release of pure blood. Mercurius vivus, Ipecacuanha and Aconitum are often indicated for epidemic dysentery occurring in hot weather, while Ipecacuanha, Dulcamara and the same Mercurius vivus are often indicated for dysentery occurring in cold weather. You should go to the bedside of a dysentery patient with the repertory in your hands or pick up the medicine at home and send it to the patient. In epidemic dysentery, your very first prescription should cure the patient, and if you work carefully, you will cure every case. This is a mild enough condition for treatment to show its effect, but if you confuse the picture of the case, you will greatly complicate your life. Do not give Arsenicum just because it is “prescribed for dysentery,” as it will not cure, but will only confuse the picture. Doubt the use of Arsenicum album for dysentery until you are absolutely sure of its necessity. A few days ago I saw a patient who could not lie down because of pain in the hypochondrium; he had continuous vomiting, inflammatory rheumatism of the ankles, hands and shoulder joints, purple spots on the arms and legs, gastritis - a whole bunch of diseases. He had already taken Phosphorus and Arsenicum album, and many other remedies in very high potencies, all the remedies seemed well chosen, but it was only after taking Cadmium sulphuratum that the patient fell asleep within fifteen minutes. The fact was that the patient sought absolute peace, and this ruled out Arsenicum album, although all the other symptoms resembled Arsenicum album. A striking feature of Cadmium sulphuratum is the desire for rest, as in Colchicum and Bryonia alba. I have used this remedy for many years in similar cases. I observed another case of a woman with cancer vomiting coffee grounds; when Cadmium sulphuratum stopped the vomiting, the patient was able to eat until she died, six weeks later. Her doctor gave her Arsenicum album and Phosphorus, and then morphine, after which she no longer knew what to do.
Urine causes burning and tingling. Frequent urge to urinate, dripping urine; hematuria, severe burning sensation. Bleeding from the urethra. Itching, worse from contact with urine. Gonorrhea present for a long time; The discharge is thick, greenish-yellow, and foul-smelling. Pinching and burning in the urethra when urinating. Loss of sexual power. Voluptuous excitement with painful erections. Ulcers on the foreskin and glans penis, making Mercurius vivus a valuable remedy for chancroid and chancroid. Flat ulcers; ulcers on a fatty base. Inflammation of the inner surface of the foreskin. Balanitis, foul-smelling pus. For chronic balanitis, where pus accumulates behind the glans penis and under the foreskin, in patients with gonorrheal or psoric aggravation, consider Jacaranda caroba.
Serious ailments in women. Burning, stinging pain in the ovaries. The patient screams in pain. Stinging, tearing, cutting pains in the ovaries; the patient begins to sweat. Copious, irritating leucorrhoea, causing rawness, soreness, inflammation and itching in the perineum. Stinging pain, itching, boring pain in the uterus. Pain in the uterus and ovaries during menstruation. The secretion of milk in non-pregnant women during menstruation. Passage of milk instead of menstrual flow. I once observed a sixteen-year-old boy who began to secrete milk. I cured him with Mercurius vivus.
Menstrual discharge is light red, pale, acrid, clotted, abundant or scanty. Menstruation is sometimes suppressed. Women who have the habit of taking mercury for “spill of bile” remain infertile. (Infertility is also common among coffee drinkers; you should insist on stopping drinking this drink.) Amenorrhea with hot flashes. Chancres on the female genital organs. Elderly women experience sores on the genitals with rawness, soreness, false granulations, and these places constantly bleed. Burning, throbbing and itching in the vagina. Itching in the genitals upon contact with urine; they need to be washed all the time. In children, urine causes a burning sensation after urination; the child constantly holds his genitals with his hands. Acrid leucorrhoea in little girls, with burning and itching, causing great discomfort. Phlegmonous inflammation of the genital organs. The appearance of boils and abscesses during menstruation; small abscesses, extended along the edges of the mucous membrane and skin, painful, worsening when walking; they form during menstruation and open after it ends. In addition to itching, this causes severe discomfort.
Nausea in the morning. Edema of the genital organs during pregnancy. Diffuse inflammation, pain and a feeling of fullness in the genitals and pelvis, causing difficulty in walking, the patient is forced to lie down. This is a valuable medicine for inflammation of the parametrium in the first months of pregnancy. Repeated miscarriages caused by weakness of the pelvic muscles can be perfectly cured with the help of Mercurius vivus, provided that it is prescribed correctly. Long-lasting lochia. There is not enough milk, it is bad.
Mercurius vivus is one of the best palliatives for cancer of the uterus and mammary glands. It retards growth and sometimes cures epithelioma. I know of one case that was cured with the help of Mercurius iodatus flavus - it was a dense ulcerated node in the mammary gland, the size of a goose egg, with enlargement of the axillary lymph nodes, cyanosis of the affected parts, when there was no longer any hope. The hundredth dilution, which the patient took every time severe pain appeared, eliminated the node, and the patient recovered.
The Mercurius vivus cold is not limited to the nasal symptoms that we have already discussed. Most cases of Mercurius vivus begin in the nose and then descend into the pharynx, causing rawness and tickling in the larynx, rawness and soreness in the chest; laryngitis, tracheitis and bronchitis. Loss of voice, complete aphonia. The Mercurius vivus cold spreads downwards, even causing pneumonia, with sweating, restlessness and aggravation from the warmth of the bed. Of course, in many cases a cold is limited to a runny nose.
Various painful conditions in the chest. Cough; colds that settle in the chest, insufficient resistance and slow recovery. Eventually the cold settles in the bronchi; there is a feeling in the chest as if it is bursting, the cough intensifies when lying on the right side. I have seen many patients who caught a cold from hypothermia and had a sickly, yellowish appearance, they had a terrible cough and wheezing in the chest; every change in weather led to a new cold, patients could not lie on their right side; they had a tendency to develop mucous tuberculosis or fulminant consumption. Cough worse from night air. The medicine has a variety of chest pains. Patients with a rheumatic constitution, constantly sweating, and aggravated by sweating, extreme heat or cold. Stitching, piercing, rheumatic pains in the chest, with night sweats. Bloody, thick, green sputum. Suppuration of the lung, with the formation of a large amount of pus. Severe cardiovascular paroxysms, a feeling of fullness and hot flashes in the chest. Sore throat, rheumatism and neck stiffness accompany many complaints; stiffness in the neck, swollen glands and lymph nodes, goiter. Stiffness occurs in the neck with every cold; More often it is expressed on one side and on the back of the neck. Induration and tenderness of the cervical lymph nodes in combination with other complaints.
Mercurius vivus is characterized by joint damage; Inflammatory rheumatism with great swelling, worse from warmth of bed and opening. It is difficult for the patient to choose clothes according to the weather. Rheumatism with sweating, worse at night, from warmth of bed and sweating, with painful expression. It is more common to affect the upper extremities, but the lower extremities can also be affected.
Trembling in the limbs, as in Parkinsonism. Trembling of the hands with marked weakness in them. Paralysis of the lower limbs with spasms, twitching and trembling in the paralyzed areas. Argentum nitricum, Phosphorus, Stramonium, Secale and Mercurius vivus also have twitching of the muscles of the paralyzed limb.
Soreness between the thighs and in the genitals. Leg ulcers; abscesses. Swelling of the feet. Cold sweat. Profuse sweat during sleep. As soon as the patient gets comfortable in bed, he begins to feel pain and sweating; bone pain. The patient wraps himself up because he is cold, but as soon as he warms up, the pain intensifies.
Mercurius vivus is full of feverish symptoms. However, this fever is actually rarely idiopathic, permanent in nature. It is not a very valuable remedy for persistent fever, but it is especially indicated for fever in surgical patients which begins as remitting, but later becomes constant, like that arising from suppressed secretions. The Mercurius vivus patient begins to shake with chills even before the temperature rises, he begins to feel cold even before the chills appear; it is sensitive to air movement in a warm room; very sensitive to drafts. Cold hands and feet. Copious and offensive sweat. In general, the complaints are aggravated by sweating, and the more the patient sweats, the worse he becomes. Sweating profusely, the patient's greatest suffering is combined with sweating. Mercurius vivus does not have significant intermittent fever. Between attacks he experiences liver disorders, diarrhea, and fever. With fever in surgical patients, biliary fever, helminthic fevers in children, relapsing fever, severe dull pain in the bones, severe sensitivity to air are noted, with aggravation of the condition at night in bed, when the temperature reaches its maximum; mercury odor and yellowness of the skin. The fever is not so intense and the skin is not so hot as in Belladonna. Coated tongue and bilious fever disappear after taking Mercurius vivus. It is a valuable remedy for hectic fever in the last stages of consumption, for debilitating diseases with hectic fever, for cancer with pain, offensive sweat, etc. Mercurius vivus has a wonderful effect in fever associated with colds, flu, etc., and also when a cold sinks into the chest, accompanied by copious secretions throughout the body. Mercurius vivus is suitable for quasi-typhoid fever, occurring after remitting, for symptomatic typhoid fever, with jaundice, lethargy, prostration, trembling, muscle twitching, severe exhaustion and fever of a constant nature.
There are numerous skin symptoms: scaly rashes, vesicles, rash with pus discharge. Burning and stinging pain in the vesicles, irritating discharge, especially on the head. Violent, violent itching of the skin in all parts of the body, as from flea bites, especially at night in the warmth of the bed. Copper-colored rashes and spots on the mucous membranes, as with syphilis. Scaly rashes are especially characteristic. Ulcers in places where the bone is covered only by skin. Fetid forms of eczema. Most rashes are weeping, with copious discharge. The medicine cures herpes zoster. Yellowness of the skin. Irritation in places where two parts of the body are in close contact. Rawness between thighs, between scrotum and thighs. Rashes in these places. Cracks along the edges of parts of the body, in the corners of the mouth and eyes; rawness and bleeding in the perineum, making it difficult to walk.
Everything we have just discussed underlies the symptoms of all mercury salts.
Mercurius vivus solubilis (according to Grangeorge)
Mercurius solubilis (thief)
In ancient mythology, Mercury is the messenger of the Gods. He must spread the heavenly message among the people. But he is tempted to use this message to his advantage. , which makes him the God of merchants and pores! In our modern society, the very type of “Mercury crime” could be represented by the crime of a stockbroker. But in fact, this medicine is suitable for many people. Who hasn't ever felt the temptation to snatch a good piece?
Mercury is found primarily among precocious, gifted children who are skipping grades, or among the leaders of a group of teenagers who are on the verge of crime. This is a child whose acquaintances parents need to closely monitor. He is lively, touching everything he sees, a joker, brave, flexible, but he can also be self-centered, indifferent to loved ones, and even have an urge to kill.
Physically, Mercurius tonsillitis is known, with foul breath, profuse salivation, white membranes, a coated tongue with teeth marks, sweating and a feverish state with trembling. As for the skin, it is not healthy (boils, suppuration.).
Finally, it's interesting to note that Mercurius loves bread and butter... and money!
Roger, 9 years old, touches everything in my office, while his parents, clearly tired, explain to me that he often has sore throats, otitis media, and boils. At birth he had a cephalohematoma (Calcarea, Fluoricum acidum, Mercurius, Silicea). He loves butter, which he eats by the teaspoon, and has discipline problems at school. In addition, the examination reveals bad breath. Mercurius 15 and then 30CH. Three months later, my secretary reminds me of his past excitement. Now he is as obedient as a lamb and has no health problems.
The article uses combined material from the books of great homeopaths of the past and present (George Vithoulkas, William Boericke, James Tyler Kent, etc.) According to my teacher, the differences in the descriptions of the drugs by different authors are due to the fact that the patients taking the drug were at different stages. And of course, each author brings something of himself into the description of the medicine. If anyone's copyrights have been violated, please write via the feedback form.