Aversion to being washed – how we can compare sulphur and antim crude?
Lost your password? Please enter your email address. You will receive a link and will create a new password via email.
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.
Comparing Sulphur and Antimonium Crudum on “Aversion to Being Washed” When a patient—or especially a child—refuses washing or bath, both Sulphur and Antimonium Crudum can come into consideration. Below is a side-by-side comparison of this peculiar symptom: Keynote Features - Sulphur - Marked “aversiRead more
Comparing Sulphur and Antimonium Crudum on “Aversion to Being Washed”
When a patient—or especially a child—refuses washing or bath, both Sulphur and Antimonium Crudum can come into consideration. Below is a side-by-side comparison of this peculiar symptom:
Keynote Features
– Sulphur
– Marked “aversion to being washed,” with symptoms invariably _worse after a bath_.
– Typical patient: scrofulous, psoric diathesis; dirty or “filthy” habitus; heat and burning sensations that drive them away from water.
– Antimonium Crudum
– Especially in children: cannot bear to be looked at, touched, or washed.
– Aggravation chiefly from _cold_ bathing or washing; child becomes fretful, irritable, and may scream if one attempts to wash them.
Modalities Comparison
| Aspect
1. Nature of Aversion- General dislike of water contact (Sulphur); Specific fear or loathing of touch and washing (Antimonium Crudum)
2. Bath Temperature- Any bath exacerbates symptoms (Sulphur); Cold_ water markedly aggravates, warmth relieves (Antimonium Crudum)
3. Typical Accompaniment- Burning heat, itching < warmth of bed, standing < (Sulphur); Gastric and skin complaints; sour cravings; coated tongue (Antimonium Crudum)
4. Constitutive Diathesis- Psoric, scrofulous; plethoric, stoop-shouldered (Sulphur); Psoric-rheumatic; children with gastric and skin eruptions (Antimonium Crudum)
Clinical Tip
– If the patient’s chief complaint is a filthy, unkempt appearance with relief from rubbing and scratching, Sulphur is top of the list.
– If the refusal to wash is accompanied by temper tantrums in a child, marked gastric or skin symptoms, and a craving for sour things, Antimonium Crudum aligns more closely.
This comparison helps refine remedy choice when “aversion to washing” is a prominent or troublesome symptom.
See less