Text Book of Materia Medica.
By Adolph Lippe, M. D.
Professor of Materia Medica at the Homœopathic
College of Pennsylvania.
Presented by Médi-T.
Æthusa cynapium.
Mind and Disposition.
Bad humor, irritability, especially in the afternoon, and in the open
air.
Anxiety.
Delirium.
Head.
Giddiness, with sleepiness.
[5] Stitches and pulsations in the
head.
Heaviness in the forehead.
Heat rises to the head ; the body becomes warmer ; the face
becomes red and the giddiness ceases.
Sensation, as if both sides of the head were in a vice.
Eyes.
Eyes brilliant and protruding.
[10] Pupils dilated and insensible.
Ears.
Stitches in the ears, especially in the right ear, as if something hot
were streaming from it.
Face.
Tearing in the face, in the malar bones.
Throat.
Sensation of constriction, preventing deglutition.
Stinging in the throat, between the acts of deglutition.
Taste.
[15] Taste sweetish, especially in the
morning, when awaking.
Stomach.
Violent vomiting (in children) of curdled milk ; of green mucus.
Violent vomiting, with diarrhœa-green mucus, or (in children) bloody
substances.
Abdomen.
Sensation of coldness in the abdomen.
Black bluish swelling of the abdomen.
Stool.
[20] Loose stools, preceded by cutting
in the abdomen, with tenesmus in the morass, after rising.
Diarrhœa-discharges green, thin, bilious, with violent tenesmus.
Bloody stools.
Back.
Sensation, as if the small of the back were in a vice.
Generalities.
Epileptic spasms, with clenched thumb, red face, eyes turned downwards,
pupils fixed, dilated, foam at the mouth, jaws locked, small, hard and
quick pulse.
[25] Spasms, with stupor and delirium.
Sleep.
Sleepiness all day ; sometimes better in the open air.
Conditions.
Coldness, stiffness and rigor of the limbs.
Sensation of parts, as if they were in a vice (head, small of back).
Copyright
© Médi-T 2006