ARSENICUM SULPHURATUM FLAVUM



Deep sleep, even comatose. Dreams; amorous; anxious; of death; of the dead; frightful, of misfortune; nightmare; vexatious; vivid. Falling asleep late. Restless sleep. SLEEPLESSNESS afternoon and evening. Sleeplessness before midnight; after midnight; after 3 a. m. If he wakens cannot get to sleep again. Unrefreshing sleep. Waking easily and frequently.

Morning on waking; FORENOON, noon, afternoon, evening in bed; night, midnight. Chill in open air; in cold air; walking in cold air. Chill alternating with sweat. Chill ascending the body; the back. Chilliness with sweat. Creeping chills in the evening. Chill after drinking cold water; after eating; worse from motion. External and internal coldness. Congestive chill. Chill followed by sweat. Quartan, quotidian and tertian chill. SHAKING chill afternoon and evening. Trembling with the chill. Warm room does not relieve the coldness nor the chill, but is grateful. Specific times of chill – 1 a.m., 10 a.m., 1 p.m., 2p.m., 4 p. m., 5 p. m., 6 p. m., 7 p. m., 8 p. m., 12 p. m.

Morning, afternoon and evening heat. Evening fever with chilliness. Fever during night with chilliness. Fever after midnight. Fever alternates with chill and with perspiration. Burning fever afternoon, evening and night. Fever without chill at night. Fever and chill intermingled. Continued fever worse during the night. Long lasting dry heat. External heat with chilliness. Flushes of heat. It has done excellent service in hectic fever. It should become one of the best remedies in intermittent fever. It has fever with sweat and without sweat. It is suitable in remittent fevers as its fevers are afternoon, evening and night and there is a remission in the morning and forenoon. During the fever he wants to be uncovered. It is a strong remedy in zymotic fevers.

It has morning sweat and again during the night Sweat from the least excitement or anxiety; from the warmth of the bed; on coughing; while eating; from least exertion; on motion; during sleep and after waking. The sweat is cold, clammy, debilitating, offensive, sour. Profuse night sweat. Sweat of single parts. His symptoms are not relieved while sweating. If he becomes cooled while perspiring he suffers much. Burning of the skin after scratching.

Burning in spots. Marked coldness of skin of body and limbs. Discoloration of skin; blotches; blue spots; liver spots; pale, red spots; white spots; periodical dry burning skin. Eruptions; blisters; bloody after scratching; boils; burning; carbuncles; desquamating; dry; ECZEMA; fetid; herpes itching; moist with corrosive yellow discharge; painful petechia; painful pimples; psoriasis; PUSTULES; rash; SCABBY after scratching; brain-like scales; stinging; suppurating; URTICARIA that is nodular and worse after scratching; vascular, worse after scratching, with yellow fluid. All eruptions worse after scratching and the itching without eruption is also worse after scratching. Inflammation of the skin like erysipelas. Excoriation of the skin. Formication, inactivity and marked induration. Itching, burning, crawling and stinging, worse after scratching. Moisture after scratching. Pain in the skin after scratching. Purpura hemorrhagica. The skin is very sensitive to touch. Sticking, stinging and swelling of skin in places and spots. Ulcers bleeding; burning; CANCEROUS; crusty; DEEP; indolent; inflamed; painful; phagedenic; pulsating; RED; STINGING; singing margins; SUPPURATING. Ulcers discharging corrosive, offensive, thin, watery, yellow pus.

James Tyler Kent
James Tyler Kent (1849–1916) was an American physician. Prior to his involvement with homeopathy, Kent had practiced conventional medicine in St. Louis, Missouri. He discovered and "converted" to homeopathy as a result of his wife's recovery from a serious ailment using homeopathic methods.
In 1881, Kent accepted a position as professor of anatomy at the Homeopathic College of Missouri, an institution with which he remained affiliated until 1888. In 1890, Kent moved to Pennsylvania to take a position as Dean of Professors at the Post-Graduate Homeopathic Medical School of Philadelphia. In 1897 Kent published his magnum opus, Repertory of the Homœopathic Materia Medica. Kent moved to Chicago in 1903, where he taught at Hahnemann Medical College.