Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 4 – page 791

It has been said that Bacillinum acts less well in cases of acute tuberculosis than in chronic cases. This is not true; the remedy will always act when indicated, in both acute and chronic conditions. One of the main indications for this remedy is active tuberculosis of the lungs where there is excessive purulent expectoration with rapid emaciation, no appetite and copious night sweats.
Bacillinum is indicated during active exudative tuberculosis where the lungs are primarily affected. These cases require Bacillinum rather than Tuberculinum, although Bacillinum and Tuberculinum have a number of parallel characteristics.
Perhaps the most important of these is an eczematous condition of the margins of the eyelids that becomes worse at night, in the early morning and from cold air. I have found this redness, with small follicles of the margins of the lids, to be an important indication for both remedies and it seems to point to a strong tubercular predisposition.
Other common characteristics are grinding of the teeth during sleep, which is less prominent in Bacillinum, and fear or disgust of cats, which in Bacillinum appears as fear of dogs.
Bacillinum is indicated in the pre-tubercular state characterised by constant loss of flesh, night sweats, lack of appetite, glandular swellings, clammy hands, cold and sweaty feet, a feeling as though one were wearing wet stockings and a sensation as of a damp cloth on the spine.