Great affinity for serous membranes, and its symptoms are all worse for movement. These two points are a good basic guide to its use in cattle. Suitable cases of dry hard cough, dry rubbing sounds from the chest on auscultation, dry mouth, copious thirst, painful swollen joints, mastitis, etc, all show the modality of being worse for movement. The pneumonia calf will stand while the others run past it, or it may lie on its more painful lung to restrict movement. The mastitis cow will stand while she is examined, despite her painful, swollen hard udder, or she may lie firmly on the affected quarter to limit movements. Her milk is usually diminished. Arthritic animals show hot, painful, swollen joints. All types of Bryonia illness see the animal lying down a great deal of the day in order to relieve the pain from movement. Symptoms may be worse in warmer surroundings.
Bone Knit Remedy
One of the great injury remedies, its primarily thought of in connection with its beneficial effects on bone injury. Its use as a routine in fracture treatments is always beneficial. Think of it also in connection with blows to the eye area and the eyeball itself. Great as a general injury remedy.
Grief Remedy
This is a convulsive remedy, although the conditions requiring its use have strong roots in mental responses to grief and bereavement. These may sound purely human in nature but they can strongly affect animals too. The animal has a tendency to hysteria. Post-weaning disease where mental trauma is considered to be a factor especially if the patient is excitable.
Bonding Remedy
Again another female remedy. The animal is usually loose limbed, slack appearance, because all ligaments and connective tissue lose their tone and function. The pelvis, the pelvic organs and perineum all sag. The legs take on an aged worn-out appearance, being weak and sagging under the weight of the cow. The cow is prone to fertility and uterine problems, and can become totally indifferent to her calf at calving time. There are venous congestions, especially in the pelvic area; per rectum, the womb feels large, thickened and flaccid, and drops away into the abdomen. There is a tendency to prolapse. The udder is large and sages, and there is a tendency to blood in the milk. Symptoms are better for warmth and worse for cold. There are similarities in its action to the Retained Placenta remedy and animals tend to ‘age’ into this remedy.
Retained Placenta remedy
This remedy is mainly for the females of the herd. She is shy but friendly, gentle in actions, has a dainty, trusting facial expression with obviously feminine features. She is prone to bland, catarrhal inflammation of all mucous membranes, which produce cloudy mucus or greenish-yellow mucopurulent material. Difficult though it is to observe in a cow, especially one in milk, her thirst is markedly less than that of her fellows. Symptoms are always better in open air and worse in a warm ‘close’ humid atmosphere. Apart from the catarrhal symptoms which can affect respiratory system, eyes, womb or udder (suppressed milk flow of a watery nature), Pulsatilla also shows symptoms of venous congestion, especially in the hind legs and pelvic organs. Infertility can arise from ovarian inactivity, and parturition may become delayed due to venous congestive condition of the womb.
Travel Sickness Remedy
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Homeopathic disinfectant
This is usually used topically as a lotion to aid healing, for which it is quite startlingly effective. Use it on grazes, open wounds and indolent ulcers. It can be combines with Hypericum when paid is a feature. Use it as a lotion for internal calving injury or for uterine irrigations. It may also be locally helpful as an infusion into the udder in cases of mastitis and as an aid to the treatment of cracked teats.
Sudden Illness
This remedy is suited to cases of sudden physical or mental shock, sudden or early fever, usually with anxiety, or conditions arising from chilling. It is also of use in cases of sudden, profuse, bright haemorrhage. Symptoms are usually permutations of any of the following: red, inflamed eyes with lacrimation; fluid, watery nasal discharge; tense, rapid pulse; urine retention and thirst. The animal often displays shuddering or shivering in response to shock or fear. The remedy especially suits the animal which is robust in appearance and dynamic in action. Symptoms usually centre on the chest and are worse after cold wind exposure and worse at night, especially before midnight. Use this remedy in dramatic conditions, especially if the symptoms tend to create panic in the patient, yourself or other observers.
Stings
Swelling is the keynote of this remedy. When swellings or urine retention occur, then this remedy is indicated. (Even more strongly indicated is urine retention on account of oedematous swelling, such as may occur after a bad calving.) The remedy induces a type of diuresis, helping to clear pulmonary oedema, ascites, cystic ovaries and mastitis whenever the symptoms suit and are accompanied by a lack of thirst and a desire for fresh air. Patients respond favourably to cold bathing of oedematous areas.
This remedy is perfect for stings that result in large swellings eg. Bee and wasp stings.
Overindulgence Remedy
This remedy is clearly indicated by any condition arising from over-feeding with rich food. This fits the underlying state of intensively managed cattle very well. The rumen becomes sluggish and perhaps bloated, the liver becomes overloaded and its action deficient. As a result the blood becomes loaded with abnormal by-products of rumen metabolism. The animal is torpid but highly reactive and bad-tempered. Dung can be hard and dry and expelled with difficulty in discrete clumps, and even some unproductive efforts can be made. Alternatively, it may be acid, fermentative and very loose. In extreme cases, overt toxicity can occur with incoordination. Acetonemia is another possible sign of this great disturbance. The remedy can therefore be used as a great constitutional remedy or as a more superficial detoxifying treatment. It is one of the ‘drainage’ remedies of homeopathy. Symptoms are often worse in the morning, worse for stimulation and for chilling. Complaints often follow a feed of concentrates.