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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 25

I had come thus far in my investigations and observations with such patients, when I discovered, even in the beginning, that the obstacle to the cure of many cases… seemed very often to lie in a former eruption of itch, which was not infrequently confessed; and the beginning of all the subsequent sufferings usually dated from that time.
In patients who at first could not recall any such itchy skin erup- tion, Hahnemann persistently inquired in even further detail into every stage in the life of the patient:
After careful inquiry it usually turned out that little traces of it (small pustules of itch, herpes, etc.) had showed themselves with them from time to time, even if but rarely, as an indubitable sign of a former infection of this kind.1
This initial clue as to the basis of miasmatic predisposition to chronic disease was further confirmed by a second type of ob- servation made by many physicians at that time. The following are a few of the case histories Hahnemann quotes in his Chron- ic Diseases, which he gathered from many different physicians:
A boy of 13 years having suffered from his child-hood with Tinea Capitis [now called ‘ringworm of the scalp’] had his mother remove it for him, but he became very sick within eight or ten days, suffering with asthma, violent pains in the limbs, back and knee, which were not relieved until an eruption of Itch broke out over his whole body a month later (Pelargus, Obs. Clin. Jahrg. 1722, p.435).
Tinea Capitis in a little girl was driven away by purgatives and other medicines, but the child was attacked with oppression of the chest, cough, and great lassitude. It was not until she stopped taking the medi-cines and the Tinea broke out again, that she recovered her cheerfulness and this, indeed quickly (Pelargus, Breslauer Sammlung v. Jahre, p.293).
A 3-year-old girl had the Itch, for several weeks; when this was driven out by an ointment, she was seized the next day by suffocating catarrh with snoring, and with numbness and coldness of the whole body, from which she did not recover until the Itch reappeared. (Suffocating Catarrh, Ehrenfr. Hagendorn, hist. med. phys. Cent. P. hist. 8, 9).
A boy of 5 years suffered for a long time from Itch, and when this was driven away by a salve it left behind a severe