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Materia Medica Viva – Volume 2 page 454

differentiates Apocynum from Arsenicum album, which is very similar to Apocynum in edematous cases. Another point of differentiation from Arsenicum is the anxiety of Arsenicum and its desire for company, which Apocynum does not share. These symptoms, being general, assume tremendous importance in the differential diagnosis.
I remember being called in for a consultation on one of the early cases of one of my students in Greece. It was the case of a young woman who, after an acute disease, had developed renal insufficiency with swelling of both legs and the face. The doctor was happy to give in haste Apis as the appearance of the edema was "reddish and shiny," according to his observation, and fitted very well with the description of Apis, only to find out the next day that the urine was further suppressed and there was severe pain in the region of the kidneys, causing the patient to scream. There had been no urine at all for the last 14 hours. The patient had a low grade fever, was shivering and covered with three blankets, was not sweating, suffered nausea, looked pale and bloated in the face, and was in great pain. I looked at the legs, and their edema did not seem to me "red or shiny." I advised Apocynum, which acted promptly.
The doctor had ignored the fact that the patient was cold and wanted warm coverings; it was this substantial oversight which afforded him the certainty that this was a typical case of Apis "as is described in the books." If this case had been one of Arsenicum, it would have presented a different picture emotionally, the thirst would have been for small quantities of cold drinks, there would have been much more anxiety, and the head most probably would have been hot causing the patient to fan air onto her face.
The fact of the matter is that through our biases we can make a case look like any remedy we choose, and then, for lack of knowlege of a better prescription,we try to excuse ourselves for the treatment’s failure.
Witness how Kent’s description of Apocynum fits the above case: "This is a great remedy for the low forms of disease, such as typhoid and scarlet fever, and is useful after lingering sicknesses. Patients become greatly prostrated, very chilly, very anaemic, have great thirst, the urine becomes scanty, the skin becomes dry. It is a bad convalescence; he has not recovered." (emphasis mine)
The experienced student should immediately be able to see the likeness between these two descriptions; because of such prompt