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Materia Medica Viva Volume 4 – page 866

have some symptoms pointing to, for instance, Bar-c., and the patient mentions during the interview that he has a fatty tumor in his neck then this physical local symptom can become a confirmatory symptom for your prescription. Any local keynote can become a major point in the analysis of a case, yet local symptoms by themselves are of very little value.
I do not think that Dr.Kent would have had any objections to these clarifying remarks of mine. To evaluate correctly all the information you have about your patient is an art needing more than just knowledge of the materia medica. 1 would say that it also needs ‘the advice of experience’.
Extremities
A peculiar symptom belonging to Bar-c. is a numb feeling creeping up from the knees to scrotum and penis, disappearing as soon as he sits down. The most peculiar symptom affecting the extremities is that the hands are so dry they feel as if they have a dry membrane on them.
Foetid foot-sweat, with callosities on the soles which are painful on walking.
Soles feel bruised at night, keeping one awake, after rising and walking.
Scleroderma.
Warts on hands and fingers.
Perspiration of feet acrid, cold, offensive, causing rawness between the toes.
Itching of thigh [Calc., Sulph.].
Swollen axillary glands with pain in upper limbs.
Trembling of the feet on standing and of hands while writing.
Drawing pain in lower limbs.
Tearing pain while extending lower limbs downward, tearing pain in knee.
Contraction of muscles and tendons.
Painful corns.
Formication, numbness of fingers and limbs.