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Materia Medica Viva Volume 12 – page 2794

Headache
On the 22d of September, 1888, I was invited to dine with a family residing in a villa in the southern portion of this state, and while there, one of the ladies propounded this very interesting and entertaining question : “Can you, or any doctor with whom you are acquainted, cure this abominable, distressing trouble known as sick headache?” It being in a wealthy allopathic family, I was very considerate in making my reply, but soon had her symptoms as clearly and definitely as possible, and will here use some of her own words. “The way I know an attack is coming on is, I feel so tired and drowsy that I can go to sleep at any time or place, and my sight becomes dim, but not one bit of pain yet.” These premonitory symptoms last for 12 or 24 hours, and then vomiting begins, always from 3 to 4 a.m. The stage of vomiting lasts about 12 hours, followed with a most excruciating headache, or by severe pain and great distress in stomach and abdomen. If one is present the other is absent. At about the end of the third day she is able to sit up some. The attacks come on at irregular periods; sometimes once, then twice per week, then omit for three weeks. After studying my Materia Medica as best I could, and finding no remedy that covered the case better, and thinking her trouble resulted from gastro – hepatic derangement, I gave Iris versicolor 3x, 20 drops in a half glass of water, a teaspoonful to be taken every hour as soon as she noticed the approach of an attack, and to cease taking medicine as soon as she noticed any relief. She resorted to the medicine three different times, as directed, and it saved her that many attacks, and since the 12th of October, 1888, she has had no occasion to take her “sick headache medicine.”
L.L. Helt