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NATRUM MUTIATICUM

Palavras Chaves Natrum muriaticum Todos os Natrums so hipersensveis e fechados. Em Natrum muriaticum predominam a atitude defensiva e o ressentimento. No ferir para no ser ferido ou Ferir para no ser ferido.

Ficha Matria Medica 2

Destaque os Sintomas Caractersticos. Mind Symptoms of Pure Materia Medica Hahnemann


- Sad and dejected (after an eruption of nettle-rash). - Very melancholy. - Subdued spirit. - Melancholy mood; he cannot remove from his thoughts injuries he has inflicted on others, or which have been inflicted on him, which depressed him so much that he had no pleasure in anything (2d d.). [Sr.]. - Melancholy dejection and sorrowful anxious despondency all day, without any known cause, with unceasing palpitation, without bodily ailment (9th d.). - Sudden but short attacks of melancholy. - Sad and sorrowful. - He sorrowfully torments himself, by continually looking for disagreeable ideas, which weakens him. - For hours, immersed in thoughts, as to what would become of him. - In his thought he constantly recalls former disagreeable occurrences, so as to worry himself by thinking about them. - She takes everything in bad part, and weeps and cries. - When alone, she calls up disagreeable thoughts and has to weep. - If she merely thinks of troubles past, tears come into her eyes. - From the looks of everyone, he concludes that people pity him for his misfortune, and he weeps. - He had to weep as soon as anyone merely looked at him. - She has to weep involuntarily. - Anxious disposition to weep. - Much inclined to weeping and excited. - Very much disposed to weep, with dislike of working. - He was only the more agitated, when any one tried to console him. - Attacks of entire hopelessness and internal despondency, which take away all her strength. - Hypochondriac, even to being tired of life (2d d.). - Anxiously solicitous about the future. - Anxious about becoming insane. - He is afraid he will have to die. - She often looks into the looking-glass, and thinks she looks wretched. - Sudden anxiety and palpitation, for three forenoons. - Anxiety, as if she had done something wicked, with heat and night-sweat. - Anxiety and restlessness, alternating with indifference. - His gladness is very transient. - Joyless. - He is not cheerful at all, and yet readily moved to laughter. - Indifferent and sad. - Indifferent and anxious. - Unnatural indifference. - Dryness of manner. - Too lazy to talk. - Taciturn, he hates to answer. [Sr.]. - Very lazy, and indisposed to work. - Dislike of work. - In the midst of his work, he suddenly loses all pleasure in it. [Sr.]. - He only dallies, and cannot be induced to do any serious work. [Sr.]. - Not disposed to anything; he would like to only fold his hands or to go to sleep, in the afternoon (2d d.). [Sr.]. - Dislike to work, although inclined to acute thought. - Impatient scratching of the head. - Hastiness. - Anxious hastiness. - Great excitement, and then falling asleep and dying off of the limbs. - Great irritability (at once). - Lack of discretion. - Lack of independence. - His mind is much affected by a conversation. - Very much inclined to be startled. - In the evening, he was, as it were, paralyzed by a fright, then he became horrified and apprehensive. - Extremely cross, peevish and taciturn. - Peevish, irritable, quarrelsome, ill-humored. - Offended at a joke. - Apt to be peevish and abrupt; he does not endure opposition (for several evenings). - He feels peevish and avoids company, because he foresees that he might easily annoy others. [Sr.]. - Vehemence, without any particular cause. - Vehemence about trifles, toward evening; in the forenoon, taciturn and lazy. [Sr.]. - He is easily carried away to anger. - Every trifle excites him to anger. - Injuries which he had inflicted on others, or which others had done to him, always dwelled in his thoughts; he could not get rid of them, and this annoyed him, so that he had no pleasure in anything. [Sr.]. - She can get thoroughly vexed and excited about trifles. - Passionate vehemence (1st d.). [Sr.]. - Angry, passionate, vehement. - Hatred against persons, who had formerly offended him. [Sr.]. - Very passionate 52 d d.). - The spirit is more tranquil, and free from care, than at other times (curative effect). - Internal contentment, hopefulness, mildness (curative effect) (5th d.). [Fc.]. - Cheerful, merry and in good humor (2d d.). - Very cheerful, toward evening; she would have liked to dance and sing. - She laughs so violently, about things in no wise ludicrous, that she cannot check herself at all; tears come into her eyes, so that she looks afterwards as if she had been weeping (18th d.). - Striking inclination to laugh, in the evening. - Striking alternation of peevishness, crossness and extreme weariness, with alternate cheerfulness and lightness of the limbs. - Weakness of thoughts, dullness, discouragement. - Dullness and lack of thought, with drowsiness, worst in the afternoon from 3 to 7 o'clock. - Absentminded, introverted. - Absentmindedness; she makes slips of the tongue. - He cannot keep his thoughts together, to reflect about anything, as his thoughts keep roving to other matters. [Sr.]. - Difficulty in thinking, she had to think a while, before she could hit on the right thing. - He did not have his thoughts under his control in the evening (14th d.).

Ficha Matria Medica 3

- * Whenever alone she wished to cry, she did not know why (seventeenth day), [a25]. - Anxious impulse to weep, [_a1]. - * She was involuntarily obliged to weep, [_a1]. - * If one only looked at him, he was obliged to weep, [_a1]. - She weeps all night, after a slight vexation, and coughs very much, with ineffectual efforts to vomit, [_a1]. - * Very much inclined to weep, with disinclination to work, [_a1]. - Mood more quiet and less solicitous than usual (curative effect), [_a1]. - Good-humored all day (twenty-first day), [a25]. - Joyful mood (twenty-eighth day), [a24]. - Joyous, good-humored (fourth day), [a5a]. - Internal contentment, hope, gentleness (curative effect), (fifth day), [_a2]. - He rejoiced over something, but his joy very speedily passed off (fifth day), [a5]. - He is happy, though only very transiently, [_a1]. - * Sad and depressed, [_a1]. (Following the eruption of urticaria. -HAHNEMANN.) - * Depressed mood, [_a1]. - * Depression of spirits, [a40]. Allen Enciclopedia - Depressed mind, with the hunger, [a47]. Emotional - Depressed and full of grief, [_a1]. - Lively, good-humored, cheerful (second day), - * Sad mood (eighteenth day), [a25]. [_a1]. - * Sad and weeping mood, without cause, [a27]. - Unusually lively; a consciousness of physical and mental power, in the afternoon (eighth day), - Sad, as if sick, in the afternoon (twenty-third day), [a25]. [a31a]. - Very lively towards evening; she wished only to - Great sadness, during the menses, [a4]. - * Joylessness, [_a1]. dance and sing (fifth day), [a5a]. - * Melancholy mood (second day), [a5]. - Overexcited, in the morning, after waking - * Melancholy mood, she has preferred to be unusually early (after 20th dil.), [a22]. alone for several days past (twelfth day), [a25]. - Great excitement, followed by falling asleep - * Very melancholy, [_a1]. and deadness of the limbs, [_a1]. - Sudden, though very short, attacks of - She talked more than usual, but did not like so melancholy, [_a1]. much to be talked to; when she had nothing to - * Melancholic depression, and sad say, she became depressed and melancholy apprehension, and disheartened, all day, without (fourteenth day), [a25]. definite cause, with constant palpitation, without - Averse to talking, and fretful when questioned physical infirmity (ninth day), [_a1]. (fourteenth day), [a5]. - His mind is very much affected by a - Taciturn, [_a1]. conversation, [_a1]. - Not at all lively, yet is easily made to laugh, - * The more he was consoled, the more he was [_a1]. affected, [_a1]. - Remarkable inclination to laugh, in the - If she only thinks of a want long since past, evening, [_a1]. tears come into her eyes, [_a1]. - Constant laughing; everything in the room - Always in his thoughts he seemed to seek for looked so ridiculous (sixteenth night), [a49]. past unpleasant occurrences, in order to think - * She laughed so immoderately at something not ludicrous, that she could not be quieted, and them over, making himself morbid, [_a1]. - Full of grief; he tormented himself; he seemed tears came into her eyes, so that she looked as to prefer disagreeable thoughts, which though she had been weeping (twenty-third prostrated him very much, [_a1]. day), [a5a]. - * He concluded, from the look of every one, - Though out of humor all day, she was that he was pitied on account of his misfortune, constantly obliged to sing and hum to herself; she had scarcely stopped, when she had to begin and he wept, [_a1]. again (usually she never sings), (thirteenth day), - Lack of independence, [_a1]. - * Despondent (sixteenth day), [a25]. [a25]. - * Very much inclined to weep and to be excited, [_a1].
- Absentmindedness; he does not know really what he ought to say. - Absentmindedness; he twice went to the place, where he wished to look for something. - Readily makes slips of the tongue. - He makes slips in writing. - Lost in thought; he went out at the door, without desiring to do so, and being asked, Where ? he first became conscious of it. - Tardy, slow in considering and resolving. - Irresolution in doing mental work; he cannot easily find his way. [Sr.]. - Awkward; a small object, which he holds in his hand, drops down, and he knocks against things. [Sr.]. - Memory very weak; he retains everything only as if in a dream. - Loss of memory; he could not recall anything about yesterday and was afraid he had lost his mind (5th d.). - Forgetful; it is hard for him to recollect, when he wishes to reflect about anything. [Sr.]. - He cannot recall, what he wanted to write just before (2d d.). [Sr.]. - In following out a thought, he suddenly forgets what he thought of, and has nothing but fragments of ideas remaining. - Lack of memory, so that he thought his mother (present continually) had died, because he did not remember to have seen her.

Ficha Matria Medica 4

- * Attacks of complete hopelessness and internal despair, that deprived him of all power, [_a1]. - Hypochondriac, even to loathing life (second day), [_a1]. - Anxiety before the menses, [_a1]. - Before the appearance of the delayed menses, she is anxious and qualmish for some hours in the morning; something sweetish comes into the mouth, after which some blood is expectorated with the saliva, [_a1]. - Anxious and faint during the menses, with cold cheeks and internal heat, [_a1]. (Original, backen, not becken.-HERING.) - She was much more anxious than usual during a storm at night; anxious sweat at last compelled her to rise from bed (second day), [a5a]. - Anxiety, with heat, at night; she was obliged to uncover herself; vivid dreams on falling asleep (with profuse flow of menses), (fifth day), [_a1]. - Feeling on anxiety, with heat over the whole body and perspiration, lasting an hour and a half (eighteenth day), [a28c]. - Anxiety, as if she had done something wrong, with heat and nightsweat, [_a1]. - Sudden anxiety and palpitation, three forenoons, [_a1]. - Very anxious, as if he would fall, while walking, [_a1]. - Woke at 2 A. M. in perspiration, and with a distressing anxiety, as though he were shut up in a dark cellar; this sensation only disappeared on perceiving light through a window (sixth day), [a31a]. - When alone, she becomes uneasyabout herself, and must weep, [_a1]. - She often looks into the mirror, and imagines that she looks wretched, [_a1]. - Extremely solicitous about the future, [_a1]. - Lost for hours in thought as to what would become of him, [_a1]. - Feeling of apprehension in the chest (second day), [a5]. - Apprehensiveness, anxiety in the chest, with pressure in the pit of the stomach; worse after deep expiration (seventh day), [a5]. - * Very easily startled, [_a1]. - In the evening, it seemed as though he became paralyzed from a fright; afterwards he seemed horrified, and apprehended some misfortune, [_a1]. - Fear of insanity, [_a1]. - Anxious fear of dying, [_a1]. - * Anthropophobia, [a24a]. - Irritable mood, [a26]. - Temper irritable and peevish, not preventing her, however, from occasionally taking a part in the games and occupations belonging to her age, [a48]. - Irritable, peevish, ill-humored, and quarrelsome, [_a1]. - * Great irritability (immediately), [_a1]. - Impatient scratching of his head, [_a1].

- Extremely sensitive and peevish all day (twenty-eighth day), [a25]. - Easily vexed, pettish; he will not bear opposition, for several evenings, [_a1]. - Fretful mood (first and following days), [a9]. - Fretful humor, [a31]. - Whatever she sees frets her (sixteenth day), [a25]. - Fretful all day, especially in the evening; taciturn, sensitive, and sleepy (seventeenth day), [a25]. - Fretful and morose, especially if spoken to (sixteenth day), [a25]. - Fretful, despondent (twenty-third day), [a25]. - Fretful, restless, and uncomfortable; could not stay long in any - Very fretful, and inclined to weep, [a21]. - * Ill-humor, [a9]; (twenty-fifth day), [a25]. - Woke in the morning in a very bad humor, which gave place to a quarrelsome irritability, lasting till he began his visits (third day), [a31a]. - Ill-humor in the forenoon (twenty-second day), [a25]. - * Ill-humor and crying from the slightest cause, [a21]. - Unusual ill-humor, [a30c]. - Ill-humored; does not want to go into society for fear of vexing others; feels that he could easily give offense (second day), [a5]. - * Very ill-humored in the morning, usually, [a37]. - Extremely ill-humored, peevish, and taciturn, [_a1]. - Out of humor all day, and unwilling to work (eighth day), [a5]. - She takes everything in bad part, and weeps and cries much, [_a1]. - Affronts that he had given and received were constantly in his mind, and he could not free himself from them; this put him still more out of humor, and he had no real interest in anything (second day), [a5]. - Passionate temper (first day); towards evening (second day), [a5]. - Very passionate mood (second day), [_a1]. - Becomes vehement, without special cause, [_a1]. - When with any one, she was inclined to quarrel (seventeenth day), [a25]. - Hatred of people who had insulted him (second day), [a5]. - * He was very easily made angry, [_a1]. - (Soon after taking a dose, he became exceedingly angry, but suppressed his wrath; after this he had no symptoms during the whole forenoon, though after a former and also after a subsequent dose symptoms appeared within a short time), (fourth day), [a5]. - * Every trifle provokes him to anger, [_a1]. - Became violent and passionate at every trifle (eleventh day), [a5]. - He became thoroughly aroused and angry from a slight occurrence, [_a1]. - Offended by a joke, [_a1].

Ficha Matria Medica 5

- Scornful, ill-natured, excited, [_a1]. - Frigidity of manner, [_a1]. - * Indifferent and sad, [_a1]. - * Indifferent or sad mood, [a28]. - Indifferent and anxious, [_a1]. - * Unnatural indifference, [_a1]. - Immediately after coition she felt very light and happy, but soon became irritable and peevish, [_a1]. - Anxiety and restlessness, alternating with indifference, [_a1]. - Remarkable alternation of fretfulness, peevishness, and extreme exhaustion, with cheerfulness and a feeling of lightness in the limbs, [_a1]. - The patient's mind was much weakened by disease and poison; her moral perceptions, her once keen sense of honor, and of right and wrong, seemed blunted; she was in turns vehement and passionate, and moody and silent, [a56]. Intellectual - Disinclined to work, though disposed to think acutely, [_a1]. - Disinclined to work, especially study (after the crude), [a17]. - * Disinclination for mental work, [a33]; (second day), [a31b]. in evening, [a9]. - Mental indolence in the evening (first day), [a30b]. - * No desire to work (ninth day), [a5]. - No desire to work; he only dawdles over everything, and can scarcely apply himself in earnest (tenth day), [a5]. - No disposed to do anything; he only wanted to fold his hands in his lap, or to sleep, in the afternoon (second day), [a5]. - * Dread of work, [_a1]. - He began work eagerly, and with great desire, but this soon passed off; his work vexed him (fifth day), [a5]. - Inability to perform mental labor (fifth day), [a22c]. - Lack of circumspection, [_a1]. - Hastiness, [_a1]. - Irresolute at work; he could not see his way clearly (fifth day), [a5]. - He could not fix his thoughts; however much he attempted to reflect upon anything, his thoughts wandered to many other subjects (first day), [a5]. - Thought is difficult (sixteenth day), [a25]. - Thought difficult; she was obliged to think a long time before clearly comprehending anything (second day), [a5a]. - Sluggish; slow in collecting his ideas and making up his mind, [_a1]. - Weakness of thought, dulness of mind, discouragement, [_a1]. - Mind confused, with pressive pain in the forehead, all day (after 20th dil.), [a12]. - Although evidently a well-educated and intelligent woman, her mind seemed hopeless and confused, [a56].

- * Distraction of mind, [a26]. - Distraction of mind, dull, loss of ideas, in the evening (first day), [a22b]. - * Distraction of mind while talking, [a24a]. - * Distraction of mind; he does not know what he ought to say, [_a1]. - Distraction of mind; he goes twice to a place to find something, [_a1]. - Great distraction of mind (after 1st trit.), [a22]. - Absence of thought, [_a1]. - * Absence of thought; she says what she does not intend, [_a1]. - * Easily makes mistakes in talking, [_a1]. - Thoughtlessness; he went out of a door without intending it, and only recollected himself when asked where he was going, [_a1]. - He had no control over his thoughts, in the evening (fourteenth day), [_a1]. - Easily makes mistakes in writing, [_a1]. - Loss of ideas, stupid (fifth day), [a22c]. - Loss of ideas, with mental dulness (sixth day), [a22c]. - Dulness and loss of thought, with sleepiness; worse from 3 to 7 P.M. , [_a1]. - If he follows an ideas, thought suddenly leaves him, and only fragments of ideas remains, [_a1]. - Immediately inability to think after physical exertion, with apathy, [_a1]. - She felt almost, as if losing her reason (tenth night), [a49]. - Anxious sensation in the head, in the evening, after lying down, as if it were all over with him, and he should lose his reason, [_a1]. - Forgetfulness all day, [a33]. - Forgetfulness; it was difficult to think of anything, in the evening (second day), [a5]. - Remarkable forgetfulness during the last part of the proving (thirty-sixth day), [a25]. - Very forgetful, so that he did not recall what he was just about to write (second day), [a5]. - * Weakness of memory (after 1st trit.), [a22]. - Very weak memory; everything remains in his mind like a dream, [_a1]. - Want of memory, so that he thought his mother (who was present every hour) had died, because he did not remember seeing her, [_a1]. - * Loss of memory; he remembers nothing of yesterday; thinks he has lost his reason (fifth day), [_a1]. Hering Guiding Symptoms Mind - Weakness or loss of memory; remembers nothing of yesterday. - Absent minded or distracted while talking; does not know what he ought to say; awkward in talking; easily makes mistakes. - Awkward; hasty; drops things from nervous weakness. - Dulness; difficulty of thinking. - Haunted with thoughts that something unpleasant will happen. - Tries to recollect past disagreeable occurrences for the purpose of thinking on them and indulging the grief which it causes.

Ficha Matria Medica 6

- He concluded from the look of everyone, that he was pitied on account of his misfortune, and he wept. - Delirium, with starting of body, picking at bedclothes, wandering and muttering. - Delirium tremens. - Mania, especially when accompanied by paralytic debility. - || After becoming thoroughly wet, severe headache with maniacal paroxysms, during which he uttered the most atrocious blasphemies, swore against God and the elements, and after raging for awhile became exhausted, and had to keep his bed from great debility; dryness of tongue; unquenchable thirst; pulse irregular and intermittent. - No desire to work, mental or physical. - Taciturnity; offended at every word; avoids company; hates persons because they have offended him; spleen. - Likes to be alone. - Whenever alone she wished to cry, she did not know why. - Very much inclined to weep and to be excited. - Laughed so immoderately at something not ludicrous that she could not be quieted, and tears came into her eyes, so that she looked as though she had been weeping. - Hurriedness, with anxiety and fluttering at heart. - || Hastiness and impatience. Chlorosis. - || Attacks of great cheerfulness and merry disposition, with great inclination to laugh, sing and dance. - Gloomy thoughts, recalls insults long since suffered; likes to dwell upon past unpleasant occurrences. - Depression of spirits. - || Prevailing depression of mind, with spells of irritableness and crossness. Addison's disease. - Lachrymose depression, agg from being spoken to; concern about the future. - Sad and weeping mood without cause. - Sad and weeping; consolation aggravates, a fluttering of heart follows; intermittent pulse. - Very sad, gloomy and foreboding. Dysmenorrhoea. - Excessive sadness during menses, with palpitation and morning headache. - Alternately sad and excessively merry; hysteria. - Melancholic depression and sad apprehension, disheartened all day without definite cause; palpitation. - Hypochondriacal mood, with constipation. - Apprehension, feels as if something was going to happen. - Brain fag, with sleeplessness, gloomy forebodings, exhaustion after talking, embarrassment of brain. - A pregnant woman saw a man who had a disfiguring nasal cancer; this haunted her, and she was sure her child would be marked; she

was melancholy, avoided society, wept continually. - Fear of loss of reason. - Despairing, hopeless feeling about the future. - Hypochondriacal; tired of life. - Joyless, indifferent, taciturn. - Weak will. - Great irritability; child irritable and cross when spoken to; crying from slightest cause. - Very ill humored in morning. - Quarrelsome fretfulness, gets into a passion about trifles; passionate vehemence. - Hateful and vindictive natures. - When trying to comfort him he gets into a violent rage. - Anthropophobia. - Fearfulness; very easily startled. - Bad effects from anger. - Consequences of fright, anger, vexation, mortification, or reserved displeasure. - || After a fright, chorea. - || After violent fits of passion, paralysis. Nerves - Restlessness with chilliness; limbs have to be moved constantly. - Twitching in muscles and limbs; frequent starts of upper part of body. - Muscles of back and extremities stretched, whilst wrists and joints of feet are flexed, every morning at 8 o'clock, lasting until 11; loss of appetite; palpitation of heart and loss of breath from least exertion; hydraemic constitution. Intermitting tonic spasms. - Hysterical spasms which in course of time developed into severe convulsions and finally into cataleptic attacks, which often lasted for hours; attacks begin with headache and painful tension in spine, followed by loss of consciousness; usually once a week. - || Spasms : with full consciousness; chronic and hysterical; come on at full moon; from water on brain; in feverish diseases. - Lethargic state, jerking or starting of limbs, excessive drowsiness, stupor, eyes half open. - During attacks almost inconceivable motions of arms, head and legs, often distorting whole body, and jumping about room regardless of furniture, so that he often injures himself; often jumps as high as a foot and a half from floor; all these movements are extremely rapid, and are accompanied by most curious distortions of face; attacks last from four to fifteen minutes and are followed by prostration and sleep; occur from four to six times a day, and at times are absent for several days; agg during full moon and when vexed. Chorea. - Chorea for two years, caused by fright; pale, delicate, anaemic; drinks much water; feverish; white tongue; sore mouth. - Jerkings of right side and head. - Epileptic attacks between 9 and 10 A.M. for three years; usually preceded for a few days by twitching of arms and legs; aversion to bread.

Ficha Matria Medica 7

- Epilepsy with consciousness. - Trembling : of whole body; in nerves at night. - Tobacco smoking causes sweat and trembling. - Pains make tears come into eyes. - Neuralgic pains recurring at certain times, with flow of saliva or tears. - Easily fatigued; lassitude after rising; disinclination to move and walk, with great heaviness and indolence; limbs feel weak and as if bruised. - Weakness of whole body; feet heavy, weary while standing; painful sensitiveness of skin to slightest touch, mostly on loins. - Awkward; hasty; drops things from nervous weakness. - || Great prostration from carrying of heavy child and losing sleep. - Great debility; excessive thirst; great inclination to weep. Hysteria. - Feels so weak that he declines to move, feels weak when at rest (Arsen., feels weak on attempting to move). - Great weakness and relaxation of all physical and mental powers, from exertion or after long talking. - Prostration, knows that he is weak and does not want to move. - Hysterical debility; weakest in morning in bed. - Debility resulting from loss of fluids, particularly after onanism. - || Sensation of numbness in suffering parts. - Paralysis : from intermittents; from sexual excesses or other nervous exhaustion; from diphtheria; from anger or emotions; from pains; of flexors. - Threatened collapse with intermitting pulse and great thirst. Shock of injury. - Useful for congenital malformation caused by contractions of muscles (externally with friction). - Takes cold easily.

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