Citiraj:
These are listed in order of the frequency with which I've prescribed them
for patients with chickenpox, from most frequent to least frequent. The
pictures below are fragmentary pictures of how kids needing these remedies
will look in a bout of chickenpox - don't rely just on them, but use them as
a jumping-off point in working with your reading resources.
(2) Pulsatilla nigrans (perhaps 60% of the cases I've treated)
When the child has developed the disharmony calling for this remedy, it is
usually the mental/emotional and general symptoms of the person that
identify the match to this remedy. The classical symptoms of "Chickenpox"
are not that remarkable - modest rash, modest fever. However, the child is
weepy, clingy, wants to be held & to sleep with the parent. The itching is
worse from heat, such as a hot bath or heat of the bed, so they are likely
to uncover, sleep poorly in a warm room, prever a tepid bath, etc. Bedtime
is especially hard, because of separation from the parents & warmth of the
bed, but it's just a hard time of the day for them anyway. Despite fever
they may not be very thirsty. There may be some cough, worse on lying down
at night & from the heat of the bed, better with cooler & moving air & on
sitting up.
(3) Rhus toxicodendron (perhaps 15% of the cases I've treated)
The striking symptoms indicating that the child is in a state calling for
this remedy are generally tremendous itching and a physical and emotional
restlessness. Bedtime may be hard again, but this time because restlessness
makes it difficult physically to lie in bed & fall asleep. They may wake
exhausted with busy dreams & have to get up - they may come into the
parents' room, but not so much for the snuggle as out of restlessness
driving them out of their own bed. Itching is awful, especially at night,
but not because of the heat of the bed; itching is worse with cold, and
relieved by an extremely hot bath, worse when at rest, and they feel they
have to scratch & will excoriate their rash by scratching. The pox may be
expecially large & filled with thin or thick pus-like fluid which may run
when the blisters break. I have never seen the red-tipped tongue keynote
reported in the literature in this acute presentation of a Rhus-tox picture.
(4) Antimonium tartaricum (<10%)
Here it is the cough that will most often alert you to the need for this
remedy. the cough may be very moist-sounding and rattly, raising the
concern about bronchitis or pneumonia (both of which may complicate
Chickenpox - this will often be the remedy when that is the case, but do not
ignore conventional medical supportive care [I'm refering to supportive
care, not to allopathic treatment] if this is a concern). The rash may be
large, and may weep a yellow fluid crusting like dried honey - sometimes it
is only the appearance of an extensive eruption of this character that
alerts to the need for this remedy, even in the absence of problematic
cough. The child will often be mildly ill-tempered, not wanting to be
looked at or touched. A white coating is often seen on the tongue.
(5) Antimonium crudum (pretty unusual)
Very much like Antimonium tartaricum, above, but when the ill-temper is much
more evident.
(6) Mercurius vivus (or Mercurius solubilis) (<5%)
High fevers, at night, with profuse sweat. Large eruptions with pus-filled
blisters and pus-like discharge that may be irritating, with soreness of the
affected skin. Much redness about the eruptions. Narrow range of
temperature comfort - worse with cool and with heat. These kids are
normally pretty sick.
(7) Aconite
Usually a phase very early in the illness, folks in this state generally are
well past it & onto another phase of the illness by the time they get into
my office, so when I've given this it's usually an 11pm phone prescription.
Very sudden onset of high fever, most often around 11pm to midnight, with
fear, night-terrors or nightmares, & tho apparently awake they don't respond
as if they were, being inconsolable in their fear. The illnes often begins
following exposure to cold wind. At this point, you probably wouldn't know
it's chickenpox yet, they probably won't break out until the next day; if
the rash has already come out, the symptoms above eclipse the concerns that
the rash might raise directly.
(8 ) Belladonna
Very hot, dry fever, without thirst, usually of rapid onset, worse in the
mid-afternoon & on into evening (3pm, fever on waking from the afternoon
nap). Dry, flushed red skin, burning up tho the hands & feet may be cool.
Headache. Twitchings & startings in feverish sleep. Usually early in the
illness, & tho the rash has often come out at this point, the rash itself
doesn't seem as significant as the feverish symptoms above.
(9) Sulphur
Usually recognized as the remedy when the illness has dragged on with slow
recovery, the eruption crusty & weeping after scratching. Warm, uncovering
at night, worse from heat (itching & generally), itching with redness about
the eruption which is worse with heat of bed or bath.