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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1257

With regard to Cadmium sulphuratum the typical constitutional case is as follows: there, in your consulting room, sits an individual suffering from chronic stomach problems, who has also had a history of chronic eye troubles. He has had recurrent inflammation of his eyes and has had to struggle with eye-drops practically all his life, especially with every change of weather and with every cold spell. He developed conjunctivitis and inflammation of the lids, and since then the conjunctiva have remained thickened. The inflammation corresponds to the picture that has been called ‘scrofulous sore eyes. ’ One day such a patient finds himself free from his eye troubles or these problems are much better, but then in the course of a few months his stomach breaks down. For years after he has digestive troubles that are not manageable regardless of the remedy given. Such a case may eventually turn towards malignancy.
It is this kind of history — chronic eye problems that end up in irritation of the mucous membranes of the stomach —that hint at Cadmium sulphuratum.
The Mental Picture
The main mental picture of this remedy is that of a person who has no energy, no vitality and, therefore, takes no initiative, does not communicate, nor do anything demanding. This explains the above mentioned trait that any demands put on him are unbearable. He cannot bear anyone asking him for anything, however small it may be.
At the same time the Cadmium sulphuratum person wants company and does not like to be alone, especially during the fever stage. However, as mentioned above, the one who is with him should not burden him with anything. This is the meaning of the symptoms from the proving: ‘Horror of work’; ‘Apprehension at the approach of anybody’, and Kent’s statement: ‘There is a dread of work;
indolence; aversion to doing anything, mental and physical. ’