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What are the Lycopodium Sid effects as a homeopathic remedy?

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  1. Physical indications are hunger with sudden fullness, urine with a red sandy color, gas, fatigue, numbness of fingers or toes, and a trembling of the limbs. Liver ailments such as cirrhosis, hepatitis, fatty degeneration of the liver, and liver cancer warrant the use of this remedy.

    Periodic headaches occur as a result of digestive disturbances. If lycopodium patients miss a meal they may get a headache, which is relieved upon eating.

    The sore throat typical of this remedy is sore on the right side, with swollen tonsils. The throat feels dusty and is better after swallowing warm drinks.

    The cold indicative of lycopodium is accompanied by a headache, yellow mucous, and a stuffed, dry nose. The patient often has to breathe out of his mouth. The lycopodium cough is constant, deep and hollow. The chest is tight and the mucus that is expelled is salty, thick, and gray. The cough is worse in the evening.

    Eye conditions may develop in which the eyes are inflamed and red and the eyelids are grainy.

    When abdominal pains are present they are of a cutting, griping, clutching, or squeezing nature. Gas is accompanied by a bloated abdomen that feels better after passing gas and wearing loose clothing. The gas is worse after eating.

    Joint pains are typically tearing pains that start on the right side and move to the left side. The knee and finger joints are especially stiff. Pains are better from continued movement or warmth and worsened during fever, sitting still, and initial movement.

    The typical lycopodium patient has a pale, sickly face that is often covered with skin eruptions. Eczema, psoriasis, rashes, herpetic eruptions, and brown and yellow spots on the skin are common.

    Men may be impotent. Women often suffer from inflammation and pain of the ovaries and uterus. The pain generally affects the right ovary more than the left.

    http://www.answers.com/topic/lycopodium?...


  2. Since nobody has answered yet, I'll toss in my 2 cents.

    Wiki lists it as a clubmoss, but no medicinal benefits are listed for it and no side effects are listed. More info is at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lycopodium

    The closest thing WebMD lists is a drug by the name "Lycopodium Poten-C-Cord Oral" and the only side effects listed are to check with a pharmacist (which is just to make sure it won't interact with any other drugs you're taking). It's listed at http://www.webmd.com/drugs/drug-87739-Ly...

    With all that being said, if you found it as a homeopathic product, you probably won't have any interactions and homeopathic products basically don't have any side effects at all. It's still safest to chech with a pharmacist if you are taking any prescriptions, just to be on the safe side because some drugs will interact with all sorts of things that are good for you. Good luck!

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