The name Lapis Albus, or white stone, was given by Grauvogl to a species of gneiss which he found in the mineral springs of Gastein, which flow over formations of gneiss into the valley of the Achen, where goitre and cretinism abound.
- Goitre (ten cases), Bellows, Am. Hom. Obs., 1867, vol. 411 (Grauvogl's reports did not appear until 1874); Carcinoma, Grauvogl, Hah. Mo., vol. 10, p. 182.
Affections of glands and lymphatics.
Scrofulous affections, abscesses and sores; enlargement and induration of glands, especially cervical; glandular tumors, where no glands are usually found; goitre, cretinism.
Lipoma, sarcoma, glandular and fibrous tumors; carcinoma, as long as ulceration has not set in, based on scrofulosis.
Scirrhus.
Tuberculosis scrofulosa.
Compare: Arsen., Arsen iod., Badiaga, Calc., Calc. iod., Conium, Condur., Iodium, Kali carb., Kali iod., Silica, Spongia.
Source: | The Guiding Symptoms of Our Materia Medica Vol. 07, 1888 |
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Description: | Clinical materia medica of Lapis Albus |
Remedies: | Lapis Albus |
Author: | Hering, C.; Raue, C.G.; Knerr, C.B.; Mohr, C. |
Year: | 1888 |
Editing: | errors only; interlinks; formatting |
Attribution: | Legatum Homeopathicum |