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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 57

Those who test Homeopathy and make the experiment, do not escape. Over and over again doctors have studied Homeopathy, or have been commissioned to look into it, in order to expose it – only to become its most enthusiastic ad- herents and exponents.
I suppose not one of us has approached Homeopathy otherwise than with doubt and mistrust: but facts have been too strong for scepticism.2
Here we shall describe some dramatic cases cured by good clas- sical homeopathy but the reader should not get the idea that ho- meopathy, since it can cure such deep pathological cases, can cure everything. As we have stressed so far, the treatment for each case is different, requires an investigation that is complete- ly akin to the individual organism under consideration, and the therapeutic result depends on the capacity of the defense system to respond to the highly energized remedy.

A case of a patient in a coma for three months after an aorta transplant and a rejection process.
The first case refers to a 74-year-old man, Mr. Stathopoulos, a Greek civil engineer, who was operated on for an aorta transplant by the famous Greek cardiologist Dr. Boulafentis in the cardio- logical department of a hospital in Houston, USA, in 1979. A re- jection process started shortly after the operation and the man soon fell into a comatose state. After being unconscious for two months he was transferred to the Athens hospital, Hygia, where he remained in a coma for another month. At this stage he was taking strong allopathic medication including the antifungal drug Amphoterisine D. His vascular system was in a terrible state, his kidneys were breaking down and his blood pressure high. He was being attended by two cardiologists, an intern and a nephrologist.
All his extremities were swollen and bluish from the repeated in- travenous saline with the medication. After this long lapse of time and taking into consideration his serious condition, the doctors be- came desperate and called the daughter, an architect, and her hus- band, an assistant professor in the Athens University, to tell them that this was all they could do, there was nothing more to be done in his case. By their estimate the man had only a few days to live.