ULCERS - Homeopathic Guide

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Monday 25 September 2017

ULCERS

Silicea: Ulcers which do not heal quickly. Promotes healing of indolent ulcers. Better by hot dressing. Granulations difficult, proud flesh.

Acid Flour: Ulcers received by cold dressing.

Hepar Sulph: An excellent remedy for curing ulcers.

Gunpowder: Ulcers commencing around the ankles and extending to the knees, exuding foul pus; less swollen, red and shiny.

Aranea Diad: Gangrenous ulcers. When Calcarea and Silicea aggravated, Ars. Alb. only partially relieved, Aranea Diad. completely cured; patient being chilly and worst on alternate days.

Hydrastis Can: Deep eating spreading ulcers upon the skin or mucus membranes with burning and thick, viscid, yellow pus.

Comocladia Dentata: Ulcers with hard edges, erysipelas of malignant nature, great swelling; intense itching.

Carbo Veg: Ulcers in folds of skin. Indolent ulcers which continue bleeding passively. Ichorus, acrid and thin discharge.


Sulphur: Ulcers with violent scratching.

Staphisagria: Skin readily ulcerates in rickety children.

Nux Mosch: Ulceration in hysterical patients.

Nat Carb: For ulcers on heels, after walking.


Cistus can: Indolent and gangrenous ulcers. Deep seated, eating ulcers about ankle and shin with copious acrid discharges, worse from bathing, sensitive to open air, better by warmth.


Kali Sulph: Multiple ulcers. Patient feels better in open air. Crocus. Old cicatrized wounds which open again and again and suppurate.

Phosphorus: Wounds which appear to have been healed, break out again and again and bleed. Desquamation of skin. Burning in the skin.

Paeonia: For ulcers caused by biting of shoes.

Tarentula Cub: Malignant gangrenous ulcers. Also for carbuncles and boils. It stops recurrence of suppuration when Silicea fails.

Condurango: Ulcers with foul smell, ichorus, obstinate and old ulcers. Proud flesh.

Opium: Ulcers which are perfectly painless, which do not granulate and do not heal or spread. Insensibility of parts which are in a high grade of inflammation.

Sanicula: Ulceration between toes.