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Materia Medica Viva Volume 4 – page 790

muco¬purulent bronchial secretion threatening to occlude the lungs. [Ant-t]
3. A history of ringworm infection.
4. Any condition accompanied by pityriasis versicolor may point to this remedy.
Dr. Burnett has maintained that ringworm of the scalp and pityriasis versicolor on the body are indications of tubercular diathesis, and that they respond to this remedy. This is correct, but not a rule.
It is interesting to note here that it has been reported that Bacillinum has cured insanity with pityriasis. I believe this to have been only an acute psychotic episode, and not a real form of schizophrenia. The heavy forms of schizophrenia, such as process schizophrenia, catatonic schizophrenia, disorganised schizophrenia or hebephrenia, paranoid schizophrenia, etc., always need more than one remedy to cure them, and indeed most of the time cannot be cured at all. A homeopath should excercise caution in reporting such cases, as they tend to give the wrong impression, and therefore discredit our science. In these diseases in particular, there are so many degrees of severity in each individual case that we cannot safely report on curing insanity.

5. Personal or family histories of tuberculosis or frequent chest infections.

6. Glandular swelling in general with exhaustion.

The history of a case is of greater relevance to the prescription of Bacillinum than its presenting symptomatology. Whenever a history of tuberculosis is to be found in a case, independent of the concomitant symptomatology, suspect tuberculosis and think of