26 APIS meIjLIFica; ok, 



carefully attending to my patients in previous 

 diseases. 



Sometimes in typhus, the affection of the spleen 

 shows itself again, even after recovery has fairly set 

 in; the intermittent type again breaks forth, and 

 recovery finally takes place, as the intermissions 

 become more and more distinct and lengthened. 

 As long as the intermittent type continues. Apis 

 has to be given ; the action of the spleen becomes 

 more and more normal, the fever paroxysms become 

 shorter and less marked, and the restoration of 

 health is effected without any more treatment than 

 a single dose of Apis 30, one globule, which is per- 

 mitted to act until the patient is well. 



Observations of this kind, which I have made 

 under the most diversified circumstances, have 

 taught me that Apis is the most sovereign remedy 

 for all those morbid processes which we designate as 



INTEEMITTENT FEVEE. 



The following symptoms indicate the homceo- 

 pathicity of Apis to intermittent fever : 



" 1081 : every afternoon about three or four 

 o'clock she feels chilly, shivering, worse in warmth ; 

 a chilly creeping along the back, the hands seem 

 dead ; in about an hour she feels feverish and hot, 

 with rough cough, hot hands and cheeks, without 

 thirst; these symptoms pass off gradually, after 

 which she feels heavy and prostrate. 1088 : chilli- 

 ness all over, recurring periodically, with an undu- 

 lating sensation. 1089 : chill after a heat of thirty- 

 six hours. 1090 : sudden chilliness, followed by 

 heat and sweat. 499 : loathing, with chilliness and 



