MERCURIUS PRECIPITATUS RUBER


MERCURIUS PRECIPITATUS RUBER symptoms from Manual of the Homeopathic Practice by Charles Julius Hempel. What are the uses of the homeopathy remedy MERCURIUS PRECIPITATUS RUBER…


INTRODUCTION

MERC. PRECIP. RUB Red Oxide of Mercury. Noack and Trinks.

Pains, trembling convulsions.

Ptyalism.

Nausea, vomiting, oppression of the chest, pains in the stomach and whole abdomen; afterward violent vomiting of blood, with subsequent fainting; after this copious diarrhoea and intolerable pains in the abdomen, with burning in the mouth and throat, and unquenchable thirst. On the third day, trembling of the whole body, excessive redness of the whole face and eyes, staring and wild looks, and ptyalism, with a specific and intolerable smell. Vomits a quantity of blackish blood; the gums were swollen and inflamed, the tongue was so big that it filled the whole cavity of the mouth and seemed perforated in several places. The larynx was as much swollen as the mouth, and was even inflamed externally; the pulse was quick, small, and rather hard. The abdomen was swollen unto bursting, and sensitive. Stomacace of the highest degree of intensity. The teeth were scarcely visible, on account of the swelling of the gums and sordes Horrid colic, violent vomiting, excessive diarrhoea, oppressive anxiety, spasms of the inner parts. Vomiting, violent colic, trembling, cold sweats. Violent vomiting and diarrhoea. Inflammation of the stomach and intestines.

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.