Guest guest Posted March 26, 2010 Report Share Posted March 26, 2010 , When a patient "reacts" to an Unda number, what exactly does that mean? She had an increased outbreak of herpes? Is that a reaction? What are the Unda numbers attempting to do? If we think of them as drainage, then I would interpret an outbreak as the Vis' attempt to quickly and efficiently push the virus "out" to the surface (the closest exit route). As such, I often see a patient react with an outbreak when treating. And very often if the reaction is strong enough, it may well be the last time the patient experiences that reaction. I would interpret a "reaction" to a remedy when they patient reports a symptom that they never had before. A return of an old symptom is quite common in my experience. The brain protocol is famous for eliciting severe and dramatic reactions in patients. I would not say the patient is "reacting" to the remedy. It is doing exactly what I hoped it would do. Hope that helps. Dick Thom Bambu clinic Portland, ORIf a patient reacts to a given remedy at low potency, like Lycopodium in these remedies, how do you approach it classically?Do you use a 30 c by itself?At the same time, I know that Dr Thom and Dr Guenoit spoke of the unda's as single remedies themselves, so perhaps patient is not reacting to lycopodium but the complex Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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