ALLIUM SATIVUM



BACK.

Stitches in the back; red spots on the back, apparently little tetter; tearing pains in the sacrum.

UPPER EXTREMITIES.

Painful senses of contraction in the arms; tearing pain in the finger; heat, followed by moisture, in the hollow of the hands.

LOWER EXTREMITIES.

Tearing pain in the hip-joint; intolerable pain in the unite tendon of the iliac and psoas muscles, worse on motion. Painful lameness in the thighs; boils on the thighs; digging pain at the tibio-tarsal articulation; stiffness of the feet; burning at the soles of he feet.

GENERAL SYMPTOMS.

General lassitude, especially in the lower limbs, so that one dreads the fatigue of ascending a few steps only; lassitude, especially in the morning. The pains caused by Allium are mostly pressive pains from within outwards, or tearing pains.

Charles Julius Hempel
Charles Julius Hempel (5 September 1811 Solingen, Prussia - 25 September 1879 Grand Rapids, Michigan) was a German-born translator and homeopathic physician who worked in the United States. While attending medical lectures at the University of New York, where he graduated in 1845, he became associated with several eminent homeopathic practitioners, and soon after his graduation he began to translate some of the more important works relating to homeopathy. He was appointed professor of materia medica and therapeutics in the Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia in 1857.