Sign Up

Browse
Browse

Have an account? Sign In Now

Sign In

Forgot Password?

Don't have account, Sign Up Here

Forgot Password

Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.

Have an account? Sign In Now

You must login to ask a question.

Forgot Password?

Need An Account, Sign Up Here

You must login to ask a question.

Forgot Password?

Need An Account, Sign Up Here

Sorry, you do not have permission to add post.

Forgot Password?

Need An Account, Sign Up Here

Please briefly explain why you feel this question should be reported.

Please briefly explain why you feel this answer should be reported.

Please briefly explain why you feel this user should be reported.

mdpathyqa
Sign InSign Up

mdpathyqa

mdpathyqa Navigation

  • About Us
  • Contact Us
Search
Ask A Question

Mobile menu

Close
Ask A Question
  • Questions
  • Complaint
  • Groups
  • Blog
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Jannatun Nisha - Followers Questions

Home/ Jannatun Nisha/Followers Questions
  • Polls
  • Questions
  • Answers
  • Best Answers
  • Asked
  • Followed
  • Favorites
  • Groups
  • Comments
  • Followers Questions
  • Posts
  • Followers Posts
  • Followers Answers
  • Followers Comments
  • Joined Groups
  • Managed Groups

mdpathyqa Latest Questions

Asked: 12 months agoIn: Physiology

Describe in short about the fate Of RBC.

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherBegginer

Read less
faterbc
  • 0
  • 1
  • 24
  • 0
  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Begginer dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 12 months ago

    The fate of red blood cells (RBCs) refers to what happens to them at the end of their life cycle. Here's a short summary: 🩸 Fate of RBCs - Lifespan: RBCs live for about 120 days in circulation. - Senescence: As they age, RBCs lose flexibility and surface proteins change, marking them for removal. -Read more

    The fate of red blood cells (RBCs) refers to what happens to them at the end of their life cycle. Here’s a short summary:

    🩸 Fate of RBCs

    – Lifespan: RBCs live for about 120 days in circulation.
    – Senescence: As they age, RBCs lose flexibility and surface proteins change, marking them for removal.
    – Destruction:
    – Most are phagocytosed by macrophages in the spleen, liver, and bone marrow.
    – A small percentage undergo spontaneous hemolysis in circulation.
    – Breakdown:
    – Hemoglobin is split into heme and globin.
    – Globin is broken down into amino acids.
    – Heme is converted into biliverdin, then bilirubin, which is excreted via bile.
    – Iron from heme is recycled and stored or reused.

    This process is essential for maintaining healthy blood composition and preventing the accumulation of damaged cells.

    See less
      • 0
    • Share
      Share
      • Share on Facebook
      • Share on Twitter
      • Share on LinkedIn
      • Share on WhatsApp
Asked: 12 months agoIn: Homoeopathic pharmacy

What is homoeopathic pharmacy?

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherPundit

Read less
homoeopathic pharmacy
  • 0
  • 1
  • 23
  • 0
  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Enlightened dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 12 months ago

    Homoeopathic pharmacy is a specialized branch of pharmaceutical science that focuses on the preparation and dispensing of medicines according to homoeopathic principles. Here's a detailed breakdown: 🧪 What Is Homoeopathic Pharmacy? Homoeopathic pharmacy is the art and science of: - Identifying and cRead more

    Homoeopathic pharmacy is a specialized branch of pharmaceutical science that focuses on the preparation and dispensing of medicines according to homoeopathic principles. Here’s a detailed breakdown:

    🧪 What Is Homoeopathic Pharmacy?

    Homoeopathic pharmacy is the art and science of:
    – Identifying and collecting raw materials (often from plant, mineral, or animal sources)
    – Preparing remedies using specific dilution and potentization techniques
    – Preserving and standardizing medicines to ensure quality and efficacy
    – Dispensing remedies according to prescriptions from homoeopathic practitioners

    It follows the guidelines laid out in official homoeopathic pharmacopoeias and is deeply rooted in the teachings of Dr. Samuel Hahnemann, the founder of homoeopathy.

    🧬 Key Processes in Homoeopathic Pharmacy

    – Mother Tincture Preparation: Extracting active ingredients from raw materials
    – Dilution & Potentization: Serially diluting and shaking the solution to enhance its therapeutic effect
    – Trituration: Grinding insoluble substances with lactose to create a fine powder
    – Quality Control: Ensuring remedies meet standards of purity and potency
    – Dispensing: Providing remedies in appropriate forms (liquid, globules, tablets) as per physician’s direction

    🏥 Branches of Homoeopathic Pharmacy

    1. Official Pharmacy- Prepares drugs as per official pharmacopoeia
    2. Extemporaneous Pharmacy- Dispenses medicines directly from physician’s prescription
    3. Galenical Pharmacy- Deals with crude drug preparation (based on Galen’s methods)
    4. Theoretical Pharmacy- Covers academic and scientific principles
    5. Practical Pharmacy- Involves manufacturing, retail, and hospital pharmacy operations

    📚 Sources of Homoeopathic Pharmacy Knowledge

    – Materia Medica Pura
    – Organon of Medicine
    – Homoeopathic Pharmacopoeia
    – Clinical experience and case studies

    See less
      • 0
    • Share
      Share
      • Share on Facebook
      • Share on Twitter
      • Share on LinkedIn
      • Share on WhatsApp
Asked: 12 months agoIn: Physiology

Write down the composition of blood.

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherBegginer

Read less
bloodcomposition
  • 0
  • 1
  • 16
  • 0
  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Begginer dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 12 months ago

    🩸 Here's a detailed breakdown of the composition of human blood—a remarkable fluid that keeps everything in motion: 🔬 Main Components of Blood Blood is made up of two major parts: 1. Plasma (≈ 55%) The straw-colored liquid portion that acts as the transport medium. - 💧 Water (90–92%): Serves as a soRead more

    🩸 Here’s a detailed breakdown of the composition of human blood—a remarkable fluid that keeps everything in motion:

    🔬 Main Components of Blood

    Blood is made up of two major parts:

    1. Plasma (≈ 55%)
    The straw-colored liquid portion that acts as the transport medium.

    – 💧 Water (90–92%): Serves as a solvent and carrier for nutrients and waste.
    – 🧪 Proteins (7–8%):
    – Albumin – Maintains osmotic pressure.
    – Globulins – Aid immunity.
    – Fibrinogen – Helps with blood clotting.
    – ⚡ Electrolytes: Sodium, potassium, calcium, chloride, bicarbonate.
    – 🍬 Nutrients: Glucose, amino acids, lipids.
    – 🧼 Waste Products: Urea, creatinine, bilirubin.
    – 🧬 Hormones & Enzymes: For signaling and regulation.

    2. Formed Elements (≈ 45%)
    These are the cells suspended in plasma.

    1. Red Blood Cells (Erythrocytes) ~99% of cells; Carry oxygen using hemoglobin
    2. White Blood Cells (Leukocytes) <1% ; Fight infection and disease
    3. Platelets (Thrombocytes) <1%; Help blood clotting and repair vessel damage

    See less
      • 0
    • Share
      Share
      • Share on Facebook
      • Share on Twitter
      • Share on LinkedIn
      • Share on WhatsApp
Asked: 1 year agoIn: Case taking, Homoeopathic philosophy, Homoeopathy, Organon

What dose it mean by a true healing artist?

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherPundit

Read less
true healing artist
  • 0
  • 1
  • 14
  • 0
  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Enlightened dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 1 year ago

    What “True Healing Artist” Means in Homeopathy In Homeopathy, the term “true healing artist” describes the practitioner who embodies the pure, experiential art of cure as laid out by Hahnemann—applying remedies with precision, minimal force, and in strict accordance with homoeopathic principles. CorRead more

    What “True Healing Artist” Means in Homeopathy

    In Homeopathy, the term “true healing artist” describes the practitioner who embodies the pure, experiential art of cure as laid out by Hahnemann—applying remedies with precision, minimal force, and in strict accordance with homoeopathic principles.

    Core Definition

    A true healing artist is one who:

    – Understands the dynamic vital force and its derangements.
    – Recognizes the totality of a patient’s symptoms—mental, emotional, and physical—and removes both exciting and maintaining causes.
    – Selects a remedy solely by similarity of symptom picture, not by conjecture or theory.
    – Administers it in the smallest conceivable dose that will still effect a curative response.

    Hahnemann’s Description (Aphorism 283 & 249, 6th Edition)

    “In order to work wholly according to nature, the true healing artist will prescribe the accurately chosen homoeopathic medicine most suitable in all respects in so small a dose on account of this alone. For should he be misled by human weakness to employ an unsuitable medicine, the disadvantage of its wrong relation to the disease would be so small that the patient could through his own vital powers and by means of early opposition (§ 249) of the correctly chosen remedy according to symptom similarly (and this also in the smallest dose) rapidly extinguish and repair it.”

    Key points from this aphorism:

    – Remedies must be accurate in their picture of the disease.
    – Dosage must be minimal, so that if a mistake occurs, the organism can self-correct.
    – Treatment must adhere to natural law, avoiding suppression or palliation of symptoms.

    Aphorism 249
    Every medicine prescribed for a case of disease which, in the course of its action, produces new and troublesome symptoms not appertaining to the disease to be cured, is not capable of effecting real improvement, and cannot be considered as homoeopathically selected; it must, therefore, either, if the aggravation be considerable, be first partially neutralized as soon as possible by an antidote before giving the next remedy chosen more accurately according to similarity of action; or if the troublesome symptoms be not very violent, the next remedy must be given immediately, in order to take the place of the improperly selected one.

    Attributes of the True Healing Artist

    1. Pure Experience Over Speculation
    Relies on well-observed provings and clinical feedback rather than philosophical or metaphysical theories.
    2. Symptom Totality as the Sole Guide
    Treats the summed ensemble of sensations and modalities, not isolated or local symptoms alone.
    3. Gentle, Rapid, Permanent Cures
    Seeks remedies that restore health in the shortest, least harmful way, according to comprehensible principles.
    4. Respect for the Patient’s Vitality
    Uses potency and repetition tailored to each individual’s sensitivity, ensuring the vital force drives the cure, not the medicine.

    Next, you might explore practical steps to cultivate these qualities in your daily practice or case-taking techniques that unveil the totality of symptoms.

    See less
      • 0
    • Share
      Share
      • Share on Facebook
      • Share on Twitter
      • Share on LinkedIn
      • Share on WhatsApp
Asked: 1 year agoIn: Case taking, Homoeopathic philosophy, Miasma, Organon

What do you know about the Apo- 94?

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherPundit

Read less
aphonrism-94
  • 0
  • 1
  • 22
  • 0
  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Enlightened dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 1 year ago

    While inquiring into the state of chronic disease, the particular circumstances of the patient with regard to his ordinary occupations: 1. His usual mode of living and diet, 2. His domestic situation, and so forth, must be well considered and scrutinized, to ascertain what there is in them that mayRead more

    While inquiring into the state of chronic disease, the particular circumstances of the patient with regard to his ordinary occupations:
    1. His usual mode of living and diet,
    2. His domestic situation, and so forth, must be well considered and scrutinized, to ascertain what there is in them that may tend to produce or to maintain disease, in order that by their removal the recovery may by prompted.

    See less
      • 0
    • Share
      Share
      • Share on Facebook
      • Share on Twitter
      • Share on LinkedIn
      • Share on WhatsApp
Asked: 1 year agoIn: Case taking, Disease, Organon, Psychology, Repertory

Discuss the management of Schizophrenia.

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherPundit

Read less
managementschizophreniatreatment
  • 0
  • 1
  • 14
  • 0
  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Enlightened dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 1 year ago

    Management of Schizophrenia The management of schizophrenia is lifelong and multifaceted, aiming to reduce symptoms, prevent relapse, and maximize social and vocational functioning. It combines pharmacological treatment, psychosocial interventions, and coordinated care from a multidisciplinary team.Read more

    Management of Schizophrenia

    The management of schizophrenia is lifelong and multifaceted, aiming to reduce symptoms, prevent relapse, and maximize social and vocational functioning. It combines pharmacological treatment, psychosocial interventions, and coordinated care from a multidisciplinary team.

    Goals of Treatment

    – Control acute psychotic symptoms (hallucinations, delusions).
    – Reduce risk of relapse and rehospitalization.
    – Improve social skills, occupational functioning, and quality of life.
    – Minimize medication side effects and comorbid medical risks.

    Multidisciplinary Team Approach

    A comprehensive treatment team often includes:
    – Psychiatrist (leads medication management)
    – Psychologist or therapist (provides psychotherapy)
    – Social worker or case manager (coordinates services)
    – Psychiatric nurse (monitors health status)
    – Vocational counselor (supports employment and education)
    – Peer support specialists (offer lived‐experience guidance)

    Pharmacological Interventions

    The cornerstone of treatment is antipsychotic medication. Selection and dosing depend on symptom profile, side‐effect risk, and patient preference.

    1. First-Generation (Typical):
    -Haloperidol, Chlorpromazine- Strong dopamine D₂ blockade Higher risk of extrapyramidal symptoms (EPS)
    2. Second-Generation (Atypical)- (Risperidone, Olanzapine, Clozapine, Quetiapine Dopamine & serotonin modulation, Lower EPS risk; metabolic side effects (weight, diabetes)
    3. Long-Acting Injectables (LAIs): (Fluphenazine decanoate, Paliperidone monthly, Ensures steady plasma levels, improves adherence, Useful for patients with poor oral compliance)
    4. Novel Agents: Lumateperone, Xanomeline/trospium chloride, (Targets multiple neurotransmitters or cholinergic, May improve negative symptoms and tolerate metabolic effects)

    Medication must often be continued for at least 1–2 years after the first psychotic episode, and longer in recurrent cases to prevent relapse.

    Psychosocial Interventions

    Complementing medication, psychosocial treatments address functional recovery and resilience:

    – Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy (CBT): Reduces distress from persistent symptoms.
    – Social Skills Training: Enhances communication and daily living abilities.
    – Family Therapy: Educates relatives, improves support, lowers relapse risk.
    – Supported Employment/Vocational Rehabilitation: Facilitates job placement and retention.
    – Assertive Community Treatment (ACT): Intensive outreach by a community team to reduce hospital admissions.

    Inpatient, Early Intervention, and Community Care

    – Early Psychosis Intervention Teams provide specialized support during the first episode, improving long‐term outcomes.
    – Crisis Resolution/Home Treatment Teams manage acute exacerbations outside hospital when safe.
    – Care Programme Approach (CPA) in the UK ensures regular assessment, personalized care plans, and review cycles.
    – Hospitalization (voluntary or under mental health legislation) is reserved for severe or self‐harm risk cases and is as brief as clinically feasible.

    Novel and Adjunctive Treatments

    – Clozapine remains the gold standard for treatment-resistant schizophrenia, reducing suicidality but requiring blood monitoring for agranulocytosis.
    – Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) may benefit those unresponsive to medication or with catatonic features.
    – Emerging modalities include repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation (rTMS) and anti-inflammatory or glutamate-targeting adjuncts, although evidence varies.

    Monitoring and Long-Term Care

    – Regular physical exams and laboratory monitoring (glucose, lipids, ECG) mitigate cardiometabolic risk.
    – Side-effect management: dose adjustments, switching agents, or adding medications for EPS, weight gain, or prolactin elevation.
    – Smoking cessation is critical, as tobacco induces hepatic enzymes that alter antipsychotic metabolism.

    Self-Management and Support

    – Psychoeducation empowers patients to recognize early warning signs of relapse.
    – Stress management techniques (mindfulness, exercise) improve coping.
    – Peer support groups and community resources reduce isolation and reinforce adherence.
    – Involving family in treatment planning enhances safety and outcome.

    Homeopathic Management of Schizophrenia

    Homeopathic treatment of schizophrenia is individualized, addressing the totality of mental, emotional, and physical symptoms. It involves deep case-taking, constitutional and miasmatic assessment, careful remedy selection, appropriate potency prescribing, and long-term follow-up to prevent relapse.

    1. Comprehensive Case-Taking

    1. Elicit detailed mental‐emotional symptomatology: type of delusions, hallucinations (auditory/visual), thought disorders, mood changes, sleep patterns.
    2. Assess constitutions and miasms: identify psoric, sycotic, or syphilitic tendencies and any mixed patterns.
    3. Record modalities: factors that aggravate or ameliorate symptoms (time, temperature, motion, company).
    4. Repertorize carefully to derive the individualizing rubric totality.

    2. Key Remedies and Indications

    Studies and clinical reports converge on a core group of medicines useful in schizophrenia (Table 1).

    1. Sulphur- Irritability, incoherent speech, burning sensations, oversensitivity, vanity
    2. Lycopodium clavatum- Suspicion, fixed delusions of harm, right-sided complaints, digestive upsets
    3. Natrum muriaticum- Social withdrawal, persecutory ideas, weeping when reproached, head‐cover aversion
    4. Pulsatilla nigricans- Weeping, changeable moods, delusions of abandonment, clinginess
    5. Phosphorus- Auditory hallucinations, frightfulness, thirst for cold drinks, burning pains
    6. Arsenicum album- Anxiety, restlessness, perfectionism, hypochondriacal delusions
    7. Stramonium- Paranoid delusions (voices, shadows), fear of dark, sudden rage, disorganized speech
    8. Hyoscyamus niger- Jealousy, erotic or obscene delusions, scolding voices, violent impulses
    9. Lachesis mutus- Delusions of persecution/poisoning, loquacity, jealousy, aversion to tight collars
    10. Anacardium orientale- Voices commanding, double personality, delusion of being controlled by angels/devils
    11. Platina- Grandiose delusions, superiority, indifference to others, rigid will

    3. Potency and Dosage

    – Acute exacerbations: single dose of 200C or 1M potency; observe for improvement before repeating.
    – Chronic management: 30C potency given sparingly, e.g., once weekly or biweekly, depending on response.
    – Case example: Stramonium 200 led to marked reduction of BPRS score from 86 to 24 in one month; 1M potency given on day 9 sustained improvement.

    4. Monitoring and Preventing Relapse

    1. Use the Brief Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) or similar to quantify symptom changes.
    2. Watch for early warning signs (sleep disturbance, emerging delusions) and repeat remedy or change to relapse-specific medicines (e.g., Arsenicum album, Belladonna).
    3. Reinforce constitutional treatment with intercurrent antipsorics (Sulphur, Pulsatilla) to strengthen the vital force.
    4. Schedule regular follow-ups (initially weekly, then monthly) for at least one year to consolidate gains.

    5. Integrative and Supportive Measures

    – Encourage a stable daily routine, adequate sleep, balanced nutrition, and gentle exercise.
    – Provide family education on homeopathic principles, realistic expectations, and non-confrontational handling of delusions.
    – Coordinate with psychiatric services when antipsychotic medications are already in use; homeopathy can often allow dose reduction under medical supervision.
    – Consider adjunctive psychotherapy (CBT-based coping strategies) to enhance treatment adherence and social functioning.

    6. Evidence Summary

    – A 5-year observational study on 171 patients showed significant BPRS score reduction (P = 0.0001) with homeopathic intervention; Sulphur, Lycopodium, Natrum muriaticum, Pulsatilla, and Phosphorus were most useful.
    – A single-case report of paranoid schizophrenia achieved near-normal BPRS scores within one month on Stramonium alone, with sustained remission at one-year follow-up.

    See less
      • 0
    • Share
      Share
      • Share on Facebook
      • Share on Twitter
      • Share on LinkedIn
      • Share on WhatsApp
Asked: 1 year agoIn: Case taking, Homoeopathic philosophy, Miasma, Organon, Repertory

When and how second prescription may given?

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherPundit

Read less
second prescription
  • 0
  • 1
  • 34
  • 0
  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Enlightened dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 1 year ago

    Definition of the Second Prescription In homeopathy the “second prescription” is the remedy given after the first remedy has fully acted and its effects have plateaued or worn off. It arises when the initial similimum has produced change—be it improvement, aggravation or symptom return—and a fresh dRead more

    Definition of the Second Prescription
    In homeopathy the “second prescription” is the remedy given after the first remedy has fully acted and its effects have plateaued or worn off. It arises when the initial similimum has produced change—be it improvement, aggravation or symptom return—and a fresh decision is needed on how to proceed.

    When to Give the Second Prescription
    1. Wait-and-Watch Stage
    – After the first dose, allow enough time for the remedy to work out its action—days to weeks in chronic cases, hours to days in acute ones.
    – If at follow-up the patient reports no change or equivocal shifts, restudy the case but do not rush into repeating or changing the remedy.
    2. Sign of Action Exhaustion
    – You’ll see a clear pattern: old symptoms return (often in diminished intensity) or new symptoms emerge following Hering’s Law of Cure.
    – When improvement stalls (“stand-still” stage) despite earlier progress, the remedy’s dynamism is spent and a second prescription is indicated.

    How to Give the Second Prescription
    1. Placebo or Place-Holding Dose
    – In the interim, you may prescribe Saccharum lactis (placebo) to occupy the patient without disturbing the remedy’s ongoing action.
    2. Repetition of the First Remedy
    – If the original symptom-picture returns in a recognizably similar form, repeat the same remedy in the same potency (or consider a step-up in potency if depth of action needs boosting).
    3. Change of Remedy
    – If the totality of symptoms has shifted—new modalities, concomitants or characteristic traits dominate—select a different remedy that now best fits the updated picture.
    4. Case Re-evaluation
    – Before any repeat or change, re-take the case: confirm which symptoms have improved, which have reappeared, and whether any novel symptoms demand a new similimum.

    > “A hurried second prescription… will prevent anything like an opportunity for… cure and finally spoil the case.”

    See less
      • 0
    • Share
      Share
      • Share on Facebook
      • Share on Twitter
      • Share on LinkedIn
      • Share on WhatsApp
Asked: 1 year agoIn: Homoeopathic pharmacy, Homoeopathic philosophy, Organon

What is potentization? explain the importance of potentization in Homoeopathic Medicine.

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherPundit

Read less
potentization
  • 0
  • 1
  • 23
  • 0
  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Enlightened dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 1 year ago

    Definition of Potentization Potentization (or dynamization) is the homeopathic process by which a crude substance is transformed into a remedy of increasing therapeutic “dynamis” through two alternating steps: 1. Serial Dilution – a measured portion of the mother tincture or triturate is systematicaRead more

    Definition of Potentization
    Potentization (or dynamization) is the homeopathic process by which a crude substance is transformed into a remedy of increasing therapeutic “dynamis” through two alternating steps:
    1. Serial Dilution – a measured portion of the mother tincture or triturate is systematically diluted in a solvent (water, alcohol or lactose) according to a fixed ratio.
    2. Succussion or Trituration – after each dilution the mixture is vigorously shaken (succussed) against a firm surface—or, in the case of solid substances, ground with lactose (triturated)—to release and amplify its vital energy.

    Potency Scales
    Homeopathy employs three principal scales of potentization, each defining the dilution ratio at each step:
    – Centesimal (C): 1 part substance + 99 parts diluent (e.g. 30C means 30 such steps).
    – Decimal (X or D): 1 part + 9 parts diluent (e.g. 6X).
    – Millesimal (LM or Q): 1 part + 49,999 parts diluent per step, often used in chronic cases for gentle, frequent dosing.

    Historical Evolution
    Although Hahnemann formulated the law of similars by 1796, the first systematic description of potentization appeared in 1801 and was refined over the next decade. By making remedies ever more dilute yet succussed, Hahnemann found he could preserve—and even heighten—their curative power while eliminating crude-toxicity, thus marrying safety with deep dynamism. Within years, potentization became inseparable from homeopathic pharmacy itself.

    Importance in Homeopathic Medicine
    1. Safety through Dilution
    Potentization removes or minimizes the material toxicity of raw drugs, making even originally poisonous substances safe for clinical use.
    2. Amplification of Dynamis
    Succussion is believed to imprint each dilution with the “vital force” signature of the substance, enabling minute doses to stimulate the patient’s self-healing mechanisms more effectively than undiluted extracts.
    3. Precision of Action
    By varying potency (C, X, LM) and dosing frequency, practitioners tailor the remedy’s depth and duration of action to each patient’s sensitivity and disease intensity.
    4. Philosophical Consistency
    Potentization embodies the homeopathic principle of “minimum dose, maximum effect,” ensuring only the most refined, energetic imprint touches the vital force—with no inert bulk, no residual crude matter.

    Without potentization, homeopathy would lack its defining pharmacological tool for delivering dynamic, individualized, and non-toxic remedies.

    See less
      • 0
    • Share
      Share
      • Share on Facebook
      • Share on Twitter
      • Share on LinkedIn
      • Share on WhatsApp
Asked: 1 year agoIn: Case taking, Homoeopathic pharmacy, Homoeopathic philosophy, Homoeopathy, Organon, Repertory

What is dose ? explain the logical view of use of changing dose in treatment.

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherPundit

Read less
changing dosedose
  • 0
  • 1
  • 23
  • 0
  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Enlightened dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 1 year ago

    In homœopathy, the “dose” isn’t simply how much medicine one swallows—it’s the entire combination of: - The single remedy selected - Its potency (dilution level and dynamization) - The quantity given (number of pellets or drops) - The method of preparation (succussion or trituration) - The repetitioRead more

    In homœopathy, the “dose” isn’t simply how much medicine one swallows—it’s the entire combination of:
    – The single remedy selected
    – Its potency (dilution level and dynamization)
    – The quantity given (number of pellets or drops)
    – The method of preparation (succussion or trituration)
    – The repetition schedule (when and how often)
    Together these elements form the **posology**, or science of doses.

    The Logic Behind Changing the Dose
    Homeopathic dose adjustment isn’t arbitrary; it follows a dynamic, feedback-driven logic:

    1. Minimum Dose, Maximum Action
    • Start with the smallest dose likely to stimulate the vital force—this avoids unnecessary aggravation and respects the law of least action.
    • Doses are always sub-pathogenetic: large enough to heal, not to produce new symptoms.

    2. Observe the Response Curve
    • After one dose you watch for:
    – A mild, temporary homeopathic aggravation (proof that the remedy “took”).
    – A clear amelioration of symptoms.
    – A “stagnation” or return of old complaints.
    • Only when the remedy’s action plateaus or symptoms relapse do you consider a repeat or potency change.

    3. Repetition Rules
    • Law of Minimum Repetition: repeat only when the last dose’s effect has truly waned.
    • In acute, rapidly evolving conditions you may repeat every few minutes to hours.
    • In chronic cases allow days to weeks between doses, letting the organism fully integrate each stimulus.

    4. Potency Adjustment
    • Lower potencies (6X–30C) act more superficially and may be repeated more often.
    • Higher potencies (200C–1M and above) penetrate deeper; are given more sparingly, often as a single dose, then watched for weeks.
    • Raise potency when:
    – Symptoms reappear in a more intense or altered form.
    – The patient shows marked improvement on one level but residual deeper symptoms persist.

    5. Individual Sensitivity Guides Dose Strength
    • Highly sensitive patients or children often need smaller potencies and longer gaps.
    • Stubborn, dampened vital forces may require higher potencies to reawaken the healing response.

    6. Dynamic Equilibrium
    • Each dose is a “nudge” to the vital force. Too frequent or too strong a nudge overwhelms; too weak or too rare a nudge fails to shift.
    • By changing dose—either repetition interval or potency—you calibrate exactly to the patient’s healing momentum.

    Every adjustment answers one question:
    “How has the organism reacted to the last stimulus?”
    That single feedback loop—dose → response → dose change—is the heartbeat of homœopathic therapeutics.

    See less
      • 0
    • Share
      Share
      • Share on Facebook
      • Share on Twitter
      • Share on LinkedIn
      • Share on WhatsApp
Asked: 1 year agoIn: Case taking, Disease, Homoeopathic philosophy, Homoeopathy, Miasma, Organon, Pathology, Repertory

What type of symptoms are more important to select medicine ?

Dr Beauty Akther
Dr Beauty AktherPundit

Read less
symptoms
  • 0
  • 1
  • 38
  • 0
  1. Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH Enlightened dr.basuriwala
    Added an answer about 1 year ago

    In homeopathy not all symptoms carry equal weight when choosing the simillimum. The classic hierarchy is: 1. Mental & Emotional Symptoms • Changes in thought, mood, behavior, fears or delusions. • Highest‐grade data—“the mind is the highest form of cellular activity” so shifts here most reliablyRead more

    In homeopathy not all symptoms carry equal weight when choosing the simillimum. The classic hierarchy is:

    1. Mental & Emotional Symptoms
    • Changes in thought, mood, behavior, fears or delusions.
    • Highest‐grade data—“the mind is the highest form of cellular activity” so shifts here most reliably individualize a case.

    2. Strange, Rare & Peculiar (Characteristic) Symptoms
    • Uncommon modalities or sensations (e.g. “must lie on right side,” “desires eggs crushed”) that set the patient apart from every textbook picture.
    • “The more striking, singular, uncommon and peculiar … are chiefly and most solely to be kept in view” when selecting a remedy.

    3. Modalities
    • What makes symptoms better or worse—temperature, position, time of day, motion vs. rest.
    • These general reactions to environment narrow the field to remedies with matching sensitivity patterns.

    4. Concomitants & Associated Features
    • Other symptoms that always accompany the chief complaint—e.g. sweating with headache, nausea with rash.
    • Their presence in the remedy picture reinforces your choice.

    5. Location & Sensation (Ubi & Quid)
    • Exact anatomical seat (“behind right eye”), plus the quality of discomfort (“stabbing,” “burning,” “constricting”).

    6. General Symptoms
    • Constitutional features such as cravings/aversions, thirst, sleep patterns, sweat, appetite.
    • Valuable once the more individualizing layers have been matched.

    7. Common or Clinical (‘Pathological’) Symptoms
    • Fever, cough, inflammation, lab findings.
    • Lowest weight—too general and shared by many remedies to be decisive.

    By prioritizing in this order you ensure the remedy you pick resonates with the patient’s unique “totality” rather than a generic disease label.

    See less
      • 0
    • Share
      Share
      • Share on Facebook
      • Share on Twitter
      • Share on LinkedIn
      • Share on WhatsApp

Sidebar

Subscriber
Jannatun Nisha

Jannatun Nisha

Dhaka, Bangladesh

Ask Jannatun Nisha

User Information

  • Dhaka, Bangladesh
  • 01867379186
  • Female
  • years old

User Statistics

  • 67

    Visits

  • 3

    Questions

  • 3

    Answers

  • 0

    Best Answers

  • 29

    Points

  • 0

    Groups

  • 0

    Group Posts

  • 0

    Posts

  • 0

    Comments

  • 1

    Follower

  • 3

    Members

  • Jannatun Nisha has been qualified at the following categories
    • Obstetrics (8 points)
    • Repertory (8 points)
    • Gynecology (6 points)
    • Analytics (5 points)
    • Psychology (5 points)
    • Case taking (2 points)
    • Education (1 point)

Social Profiles

  • Email
Ask A Question

Stats

  • Questions 2k
  • Answers 2k
  • Posts 26
  • Comments 4
  • Best Answers 11
  • Users 6k
  • Groups 13
  • Group Posts 4
  • Popular
  • Answers
  • Esrat

    Explanation Hahnemann's work from materialistic, spiritualistic, idealistic or vitalistic ...

    • 4 Answers
  • Dr Beauty Akther

    What are the aims of philosophy?

    • 2 Answers
  • Dr Beauty Akther

    Write down the different method of dynamisation.

    • 3 Answers
  • Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH added an answer Selection of Dose and Potency in Acute vs. Chronic Disease:… July 13, 2026 at 2:04 pm
  • Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH added an answer Case Taking in Homoeopathy: The Holistic Lens In homoeopathy, case… July 13, 2026 at 1:40 pm
  • Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH
    Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH added an answer Primary Manifestation of Psora — Homoeopathic View The Core Idea… July 13, 2026 at 1:19 pm

Top Members

Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH

Dr Md shahriar kabir B H M S; MPH

  • 0 Questions
  • 4k Points
Enlightened
Dr Beauty Akther

Dr Beauty Akther

  • 367 Questions
  • 437 Points
Enlightened
Nasim

Nasim

  • 0 Questions
  • 134 Points
Pundit

Questions Categories

Disease
33Followers
Repertory
26Followers
Materia Medica
33Followers
Pathology
32Followers
Case taking
27Followers
Miasma
27Followers
Homoeopathic philosophy
25Followers
Organon
26Followers
Gynecology
31Followers
Microbiology
31Followers
Psychology
23Followers
Surgery
31Followers
Public Health
24Followers
Homoeopathic pharmacy
23Followers
Language
17Followers
Homoeopathy
19Followers
Obstetrics
24Followers
Human Behavior
27Followers
Research Methodology
19Followers
Analytics
21Followers
Physiology
16Followers
Forensic Medicine
21Followers
Technology
29Followers
Education
32Followers
Health
31Followers
Management
20Followers
Food & health
22Followers
Human Progress
25Followers
Hypothetical Personal Situations
21Followers
Dreams and Dreaming
33Followers
History
7Followers
Programmers
17Followers
The Holly Quran
13Followers
The Noble Quran
13Followers
Tissue remedies
21Followers
Anatomy
15Followers
Company
18Followers
Visiting and Travel
28Followers
University
17Followers
Reading
21Followers
Grammar
24Followers
Programs
17Followers
Communication
18Followers
Contents
Last update: 13/05/26

Explore

  • Questions
  • Complaint
  • Groups
  • Blog

Footer

mdpathyqa

mdpathyqa is a social & Answers Engine which will help you establis your community and connect with other people.

Help

  • Knowledge Base
  • Knowledge Base
  • Support
  • Support

Follow

Footer 1

2024 microdoshomoeo. All Rights Reserved
With Love by microdoshomoeo

Latest Activity: discuss about selection of dose and potency in case of acute and chronic disease.