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The Celle Seminars_Page 379

Celle Seminar I, Case 14: Chronic Vomiting

I do not understand. Let us consider the child from the moment she was born. First of all, we see a child who is born with a very strong skin eruption, and on top of the head she has thick crusts. What remedy does this make you think of? Oleander. And then she mentions an infection in the umbilicus, a granuloma, which brings to mind…
(A.9): Calcarea.
(G.V.): Calcarea was given later after this was gone. Which remedy got rid of this?
(Mother): Cina, and then she became constipated.
(G.V.): And then she had some more eruptions in the face as I understood. When that was gone she developed colic.
(Mother): She had already suffered with colic while the eruptions were still there.
(G.V.): What remedy has colic and the patients have to distort themselves to find relief?
(A. 10): Dioscorea.
(G.V.): Dioscorea} Whenever activity takes place in the navel and becomes a tumor or an inflammation or whatever, even in a small child, then one remedy is especially indicated: Abrotanum.
Let’s look at her present condition: The two main points now are waking up frequently during the night and vomiting very easily from solids, not liquids. There is really only one remedy that has that symptom—vomiting of solids, not liquids—although in the repertory it lists three remedies, Bryonia, Cuprum and Vera-trum. The problem is that it is not clear in the repertory.
(A.l 1): There are more than three in the repertory under Swallowing difficult: Crotalus, Plumbum and Silicea.
(G.V.): You are reading the wrong rubric.
(A.ll):Why?
(G.V.): It is not a difficulty in swallowing. She can swallow, but she has a reaction to food. The problem is that she vomits in reaction to solid food.
(A. 12): Coccus cacti.
(G.V.): Well, the remedy was Bryonia, so you can try Bryonia. Now, if you try to analyze the child’s symptomatology, you will

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