Ferrum Metallicum
Iron: We will take up
the study of Ferrum metallicum. The Old School has been giving Iron for anaemia
throughout all tradition. They have given it in great quantities in the form of the tincture
of chloride, and the carbonate.
Whenever the patient became anemic, pallid, waxy and weak, Iron
was the tonic. It is true that Iron produces anemia, and it would be astonishing to any
one who ever read the provings of Ferrum of the allopaths did not create additional
bloodlessness with the doses of Iron they administer.
It is true that under the provings, and under those circumstances where
Iron has been given in excess, the patient becomes greenish, waxy, yellow and pallid, with a
sickly and anemic countenance. The lips become pale; the ears lose their pink color; the
skin of the body becomes waxy, and there comes a tendency to hemorrhage, at times with
clots, but commonly with copious, thin, liquid blood, very dark.
The clots will separate and the fluid parts look brown, dirty and watery.
The patient gradually emaciates. He is pallid and waxy; his muscles become flabby and
relaxed; he is incapable of endurance. All the muscular fibers become tired from any
exertion. Rapid exercise, or, any unusual exertion. is impossible. Any rapid exertion or
motion brings on weakness, dyspnea, sinking and fainting.
A strange thing running through all the constitutional conditions of Ferrum is that the pains and
sufferings come on during rest. The palpitation sometimes comes on during rest, the dyspnoea comes on
during rest, and even the weakness. The patient is ameliorated by moving gently about, but
any exertion tires and causes faintness.
Any rapid motion aggravates the complaints. The pains are ameliorated by moving about
the house slowly, so that the exertion does not excite or fatigue. In many cases the patient
is dropsical. The skin pits upon pressure and is pale, yet the face shows an appearance of
plethora. From every little excitement the face becomes flushed.
During the chill the face becomes red. From taking wine or stimulant the
face becomes flushed, and the patient, though flabby, relaxed and tired, does not get credit
for being sick.
She fails to get the sympathy of her friends. She is feeble, she suffers
from palpitation and dyspnoea, she has great weakness with inability to do anything like
work, she feels that she must lie down-yet the face is flushed. This is called a
pseudo-plethora.
The blood-vessels are distended, the veins varicose, and their coatings
relaxed. On this account bleed ing takes place easily; capillary oozing; hemorrhage from all
pass of the body, haemorrhage from the nose, the lungs, the uterus.
Women suffer much from haemorrhage from the uterus, especially during and
after the climacteric period. Ferrum will be found of great value when the symptoms agree in
that wonderful anemic state called "green
sickness," that comes on with girls
at the time of puberty and in the years that follow it.
There will be almost no menstrual flow, but a cough will develop, with
great pallor. So common is this sickness among girls that all mothers are acquainted with
and dread it. In a large practice you will have a number of cases of chlorosis.
Sometimes the early menstrual period is attended with a copious, and then
occurs, and this goes on for a number of years before anything like menstrual regularity is
established.
In these cases the Old School always used to feed their patients Iron
in great quantities, but the more Iron the patient took the worse she grew.
Congestion, tending upwards, with red face, hot head and coldness of the
extremities. But the heat of the head and face is not at all in proportion to the red
appearance. It will be found that this congestion upward in Ferrum will take place during a
chill, in septic fevers or in other forms of fever, and the head is not always hot, but
sometimes cool. The face may be red and cool.
Face: Another grand
feature of Ferrum is that, like China, it has complaints from loss of animal fluids; from
prolonged haemorrhage, with weakness remaining a long time. There is no repair, no
assimilation. The bones are soft and easily bent; they take on crooks. Emaciated and feeble
children. Dryness of the joints, causing cracking on motion. Sudden emaciation, with false
plethora.
Redness of face - a healthy looking bloom - in one who is unable to walk
fast on the street, or to stand any exertion. Yet some of the complaints of Ferrum are
better from occupation, from doing something, from taking a little exercise, because the
complaints come on during rest.
Over-excitability and sensivity of the nerves; oversensitiveness to pain.
The sensitive woman who needs Ferrum has a flushed face and is often complaining because
she gets no sympathy. She does not look sick, yet she puffs on going up stairs; she feels
weak and wants to lie down.
Restless when keeping still; must keep the limbs moving. Rending pains in
the limbs; dull aching in the limbs. These pass off when moving about quietly and gently,
like Pulsatilla. But Ferrum is a very cold remedy, and is ameliorated by warmth,
except the pains about the neck, face and teeth, which are ameliorated by cold. But most of
the pains are ameliorated by heat; the patient wants to keep warm and dreads anything like
fresh air or a draught.
Weakness and prostration; weakness even from talking. Prostration with
irregular pulse and rapid pulse, or with too slow pulse; palpitation. And then comes
paralytic weakness; the limbs give out. Paralytic conditions from anaemia or haemorrhage.
Fainting spells from haemorrhage. Jerking and twitching of the muscles; chorea; catalepsy.
Mind: You may easily
imagine something of the character of the mental symptoms, for they are like the physical.
The mind is confused and the patient tearful. Depression of spirits; mental weariness and
depression. The highest degree of depression and despondency. Anxiety from the slightest
cause; irritability.
The least noise, like the crackling of paper, sets the patient wild. It
brings on nervous excitement and restlessness; she must get up and move.
Excitement from the slightest opposition. Any sudden or rapid motion, or
the least hurry, causes blackness before the eyes; dizziness; things turn in a circle; she
must sit down. And with all this the face is red. When alone and at rest, the face becomes
pale and cold, but the least excitement brings a flush to the cheeks.
Headaches: The
headaches are congestive in character, with mounting of blood upwards. There is a sense of
fullness and distension, with red face.
Fullness and distension of the eyes; fullness of the neck. Palpitation of
the heart. Exophthalmic goitre. The headaches are ameliorated by pressure. Ferrum wants to
be pressed to support the veins. Throbbing like hammers in the head.
Every quick motion aggravates the headache. Coughing aggravates the
headache; pain in the head and occiput
from coughing. These pains are sometimes ameliorated by walking
gently. Going up stairs, sitting down, rising from a seat unless it is done very
deliberately - will arouse all the pains of Ferrum.
Any sudden motion will bring on hammering and a feeling of great
expansion in the head. And then will come more or less shooting, tearing pains. Beating in
the back of the head from rising or from coughing, because coughing is a sudden motion.
Confusion of mind with hammering headache. Rush of blood to the head. Congestive headaches
from excitement; from taking cold; from exposure; lasting three or four days or a week. The
face is gushed and perhaps cold, the head somewhat hot, but not as hot as would be expected.
Redness of the eye; engorged vessels. Great weakness, dyspnoea and
palpitation. Writing - a mental operation - causes the headache to reappear. Great
sensitiveness of the scalp. The patient must let the hair hang down. Mental disorders and
headaches accompanying or following haemorrhages, and in lying in women.
Bloated appearance about the eyes. All sorts of disturbance of vision
from congestion. Venous stasis; swelling of the eyelids; pus-like discharge.
Over-sensitiveness to sound; ringing in the ears.
The symptoms of the nose are numerous. Colds and catarrhal troubles,
ending in nosebleed. Nosebleed on slight provocation, with headaches at the menstrual nisus.
Scabs form in the nose. Extreme paleness of the face; face becomes red
and flushed on the least emotion. Flushed face with dropsy of the lower limbs; flushed face
with chill. Thirst during the chill is a striking feature of Ferrum. During
the menstrual period there are violent pains, and as soon as the pain starts the face
becomes flushed.
Nothing taken into the stomach digests, and yet there is no special
nausea. It is the exception to find nausea in Ferrum. Food goes into the stomach and is
vomited without nausea-simply emptied out. Sometimes there are eructations of food by the
mouthful, like Phosphorus. Food: Phosphorus was the remedy with all the old masters for spitting up of food by
the mouthful until. the stomach was empty.
Canine hunger. It says in the next:
"Double the amount of an ordinary meal in the evening was hardly
sufficient."
All food tastes bitter; solid food is dry and insipid. After eating there
are eructations. Heat in the stomach; regurgitation
of food. Spasmodic pressure in the stomach after the least food or drink,
especially after meat. Aversion to meat, to eggs, to sour fruit. Aversion to milk, and to
his accustomed tobacco and beer. Sweet wines agree, but sour wines and all sour things
disagree. The tongue feels as if burnt. As soon as the stomach is empty vomiting ceases
until he eats again. Vomiting of food, immediately after midnight, Vomitus tastes sour.
Pregnancy: Ferrum is occasionally indicated during pregnancy. A few
weeks after becoming pregnant the woman commences to throw up her food by the mouthful.
There is no nausea, but the face is flushed and the woman is flabby and
weak. She vomits without becoming sick. Fullness and pressure in the stomach; pressure in
the stomach after eating. Ferrum is an unusually interesting remedy because of this
peculiar stomach. It is like a leather bag; it will not digest anything. Fill it up and it
empties itself just as easily as it was filled.
Ferrum has a
troublesome diarrhoea, with acrid watery excoriating stool. Morning diarrhoea. Many of these
patients are old sinners with broken-down constitutions, who have suffered long from
constipation. Chronic constipation with ineffectual urging and hard, difficult Stools.
Relaxation runs through the remedy. From this relaxation there is
prolapsus of the rectum, vagina and uterus. Dragging down in the lower part of the body, as
if the organs would come out-and sometimes they do come out.
Bladder: The bladder
is also relaxed. Its sphincter is weak, and there is no regularity of its muscular action.
Hence, we have involuntary urination from sudden motion, from walking, or from coughing. In
little children the urine dribbles all day just as long as the child plays the urine
dribbles and keeps the clothing wet, but this better while keeping perfectly quiet.
The bladder is so relaxed and tired that it cannot hold the urine, and as
soon as it is partially filled it allows its contents to escape. This relaxation runs
through the remedy and gives it character, just like a human being. You know what each one
of your friends is likely to do on every occasion. So it is with a remedy. You ought to know
what it is most likely to do, in order to know what it will accomplish in curing the sick.
Genital: Weakness and
relaxation of the genital organs is common to Ferrum. The menstrual flow comes in for its
share. Copious, watery flow; haemorrhage or suppression - amenorrhoea - no flow at all, only
a leucorrhoea. Suppression of the menses with great nervous excitement; with flushed face;
with weakness and palpitation. Prolapsus of the vagina. Insensibility of the vagina during
coition. Metrorrhagia. Menses too soon too profuse and lasting too long.
Respiration: Difficult
respiration; pains and disturbances in the chest. Difficult breathing, with a sense of a
great load on the chest. Suffocating fits at night; catarrhal conditions of the respiratory
tract; congestion of the chest; dyspnoea.
Spasmodic cough, such as we find in whooping cough, coming on in violent
paroxysms. Cough after every meal, with gagging, emptying the stomach of its contents. Cough
felt in the head. Cough worse from the abuse of brandy, tobacco or tea. Cough coming on
after the loss of fluids, as after haemorrhages.
Chest troubles following uterine hemorrhage, and after other hemorrhages.
Coughing up blood; bleeding from the lungs. Persons debilitated by secret vices, with a
tendency to go into tuberculosis.
Palpitation of the heart from fear, excitement, or exertion. Rapid action
of the heart, or sometimes slow action. Fatty degeneration of the heart. Pulse accelerated toward evening. Pulsations
throughout the body, feeling like little hammers.
Rheumatic pains: in
the extremities, ameliorated by heat and by gentle motion; aggravated by cold, by exertion,
or by rapid motion. Pains through the deltoid muscles are spoken of more prominently than
pains in other parts, but these pains are no more striking than the pains anywhere in
Ferrum.
Tearing pains through the limbs. Inability to raise the arm; paralytic pains, - that is, pains that are benumbing. Pains that make him feel as
if he were going to lose the power to move the part. Violent pains in the hip-joint are just
as common as the pains in the shoulder.
Lippe says,
"Rheumatism in the left shoulder," but it is just as common in the right. Rheumatic pains in the deltoid muscle of either side. Violent pain in the muscles and along the nerves. Pinching in the right
deltoid; boring in the right shoulder; aggravated by motion and by the weight of the
bedclothes; ameliorated by heat.
Tearing and stinging pains. The Ferrum pains come on in the night,
because the patient attempts to keep still in bed. Rest brings on the Ferrum pains. When moving gently
about in the daytime be will not have so much pain. Coldness of the limbs; and again, heat
of the soles and palms, they change about. With all this weakness and prostration dropsical
conditions come on, so that the feet and hands become bloated.
Evening chill or chilliness with fever, cold hands and feet and red face.
Icy cold feet with the chill. Chill ameliorated after eating. Thirst with the chill. Copious
sweat which stains yellow. All symptoms worse while sweating. Strong-smelling night sweats.
All the febrile symptoms are better by slowly moving about. In intermittent fever after the
abuse of quinine.
We read in the text that Ferrum is a remedy for diarrhea in the last
stages of consumption. Well, sometimes it is, if the patient is prepared to die.
Ferrum will stop the
diarrhea, but after it is stopped the patient will not live long. The diarrhea is not
usually painful. It is annoying, but it is painless, and the night sweats are painless. Do
not suppress them; they had better be let alone. Let the patient go on to a peaceful
termination.
The best remedy for diarrhoea in the last stages of consumption is
Saccharum lactis in the crude form, given in very small quantities
and repeated as often as is required by the patient and the bystanders.
Lectures on Materia Medica - James
Tyler Kent
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