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The Celle Seminars_Page 44

George Vithoulkas

carbonica. Yet you might be faced with a case in which there is a total absence of fear and, nevertheless, the remedy is Calcarea carbonica. We have to remain flexible in order to be able to discern the important elements in a case, because only then do we have a basis upon which we can reach an adequate prescription.

NEXT DAY

(G.V.): We’ve yet to complete the analysis of the epilepsy case which we saw yesterday. Today I would like to talk about the diagnosis and prognosis of the case as well as the remedy—the potency and manner of administration. We do not really know what sort of reaction the patient might show if she were given the correct remedy. We have often witnessed quite miraculous results. If we consider the fact that the patient has been suffering for many years and that she has been under medical treatment the entire time, then we have to say that this is an incurable case and we shouldn’t expect much of a result. If we had a clearer picture of the actual nature of her illness, then we would be better equipped with information upon which we could base our prescription. Ideally what should happen in this case is that the patient be admitted to a hospital for a period of time and her medication slowly reduced, then her original symptomatology might have a chance to present itself. But since we do not have hospital facilities at our disposal, I would not advise this course of treatment. If her anti-epileptic drugs were suddenly discontinued, she might suffer several seizures a day, or even worse, she might go into a state of status epilepticus. It’s simply impossible to predict the outcome of such a radical move. It is always possible that cutting back her medication would lead to little or no aggravation of her condition. In one case of epilepsy in which we discontinued medication, we found that the frequency of seizures was reduced. In that case, we came to the conclusion that the pa¬tient was sensitive to her medication, and that precisely these drugs caused an aggravation of her epilepsy.

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