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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 26

melancholy with a cough (Riedlin, the father, Obs. Cent. II, obs. 90, Augsburg, 1691).
A girl of twelve years had the Itch with which she had frequently suffered, driven away from the skin by an ointment, when she was seized with an acute fever with suffocative catarrh, asthma, and swelling, and afterward with pleurisy. Six days afterward, having taken an internal medicine containing sulphur, the Itch again appeared and all the ailments, excepting the swelling, disappeared; but after twenty-four days the Itch again dried up, which was followed by a new inflammation in the chest with pleurisy and vomiting (Pelargus, Obs. clin, Jahrg., 1723, p.15).
A girl of 9 years with the Tinea Capitis had it driven away, when she was seized with a lingering fever, a general swelling and dyspnoea; when the Tinea broke out again, she recovered (Hagendorn, Recueil d’observ. deMed. Tom. Ill, p.308).
From Itch expelled by external application there arose amaurosis, which passed away when the eruption reappeared on the skin (Amaurosis, Northof, Diss. de scabie, Gotting., 1792, p.10).
A man who had driven off a frequently occurring eruption of Itch with an ointment fell into epileptic convulsions, which disappeared again when the eruption reappeared on the skin (Epilepsy, J. C. Carl in Act. Nat. Cur. V, obs. 16).
Two children were freed from epilepsy by the breaking out of humid Tinea, but the epilepsy returned when the Tinea was incautiously driven off (Tulpius, obs. lib. I., Cap. 8).
From these cases two facts emerge. First, in a person with a deep chronic tendency, when a skin eruption is merely suppressed in- stead of being properly cured, it brings about serious disturbanc- es in inner organs; and second, all the organs of the body are the interrelated parts of but one organism and therefore influence each other mutually.
There is no such thing then as a ‘local disease’; one may use this expression only to mean that a particular part of the body is more especially affected, but not that one organ suffers independent- ly of the others. Modern orthodox medicine subscribes more and more to this view, that there are no diseases but only indi
For instance, in the case of a patient suffering from asthma, con- stipation, and rheumatic pains, today’s allopathic physician will