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The Celle Seminars_Page 343

Celle Seminar I, Case 13: Chorioretinitis

(G.V.): Why do you think you had this inflammation? Was anything happening at that time in 1977? Did you go through a period of stress?
(F.P.): No. At that time I quit work, and I thought that I might like to continue my studies. Maybe this decision was something that stressed me, but I don’t remember it as stress. (G. V.): Were you sick with anything like bronchitis, or did you take antibiotics?
(F.P.): Sometimes I had cystitis, for which I often received antibiotics from my doctor.
(G.V.): How old were you when you started having cystitis? (F.P.): About twenty; and even now I still get it easily if it’s cold outside.
(G. V.): How old were you when you had your first boyfriend? (F.P.): About sixteen or seventeen. (G. V.): Did you have sex then? (F.P.): No.
(G. V.): When did you first have sexual intercourse? (F.P.): I was nineteen.
(G. V.): Had you already had a few boyfriends by the time you were twenty?

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(G.V.): Why do I ask these questions? What remedy am I thinking of?
(A.l): Medorrhinum.
(G.V.): Medorrhinum, because she had cystitis for the first time early on. We know that cystitis can appear in a young woman after having sexual intercourse with someone who may have had gonorrhea. Her partner may not necessarily have had active gonorrhea, but even if he had gonorrhea three years ago, an encounter might result in cystitis or salpingitis or vaginitis. We have seen this again and again, most often but not exclusively, with women who are constitutionally Medorrhinum. If a woman, who by her constitutional predisposition, needs Medorrhinum,

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