BARYTA CARBONICA
Barium Carbonate |
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BaCO3
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Especially adapted to complaints of first and
second childhood; the psoric or tubercular.
Memory
deficient; forgetful,
inattentive; child cannot be taught for it cannot remember; threatened idiocy.
Scrofulous, dwarfish children who do not grow
(children who grow too rapidly, Cal.); scrofulous ophthalmia, cornea opaque;
abdomen swollen; frequent attacks of colic; face bloated; general emaciation.
Children both
physically and mentally weak.
Dwarfish, hysterical women and old maids with
scanty menses; deficient heat, always cold and chilly.
Old, cachetic people; scrofulous, especially when fat;
or those who suffer from gouty complaints (Fluor. ac.).
Diseases of old
men; hypertrophy or induration
of prostrate and testes; mental and physical weakness.
Apoplectic tendency in old people; complaints of
old drunkards; headache of aged people, who are childish.
Persons subject to quinsy, take cold easily, or
with every, even the least, cold have an attack of tonsillitis prone to
suppuration (Hep., Psor.).
Inability to swallow anything but liquids (Bap.,
Sil.).
Haemorrhoids protrude every time he urinates
(Mur. ac.).
Chronic cough in psoric children; enlarged
tonsils or elongated uvula; < after slight cold (Alum.).
Swelling and
indurations, or incipient
suppuration of glands, especially cervical and inguinal.
Offensive foot sweat; toes and soles get sore; of
the heels; throat affections after checked foot
sweat (compare, Graph., Psor., Sanic., Sil.).
Great sensitiveness to cold (Cal., Kali c.,
Psor.).
Relation.
- Frequently useful before or after Psor., Sulph., and Tub.
After Bar. c., Psor will often eradicate the
constitutional tendency to quinsy. Similar: to, Alum, Cal. iod., Dul., Fluor.
ac., Iod., Sil. Icompatible: after Calc. in scrofulous
affections.
Aggravation. - When
thinking of his disease (Oxal. ac.); lying on painful side; after meals; washing
affected parts.
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