Valeriana


Valeriana signs and symptoms of the homeopathy medicine from the Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica by J.H. Clarke. Find out for which conditions and symptoms Valeriana is used…


      Valeriana officinalis. N.O. Valerianaceae. Tincture of the fresh root.

Clinical

Asthma, spasmodic, nervous. Bed-sores. *Change of life. *Clairvoyance. Coxalgia. Headache. Heart, palpitation of. *Heels, *pain in. *Hypochondriasis. *Hysteria. Levitation. *Neuralgia. Sciatica. Sleeplessness. Toothache.

Characteristics

*V. officinalis is usually found in moist hedge rows or on the banks of ditches and streams. The peculiar fetid odor of Valerians is probably due to the presence of Valerianic acid. It is especially agreeable to cats, who become, as it were, intoxicated with it. “Volatile oil of Valerian seems not to exist naturally in the plant, but to be developed by the agency of water” (*Treas. of Bot.). *Val. first appeared in homoeopathic medicine in Stapf’s *Additions, the article on it was written by Franz, and Hahnemann and Stapf were among the provers. When Franz wrote, it was the custom among ladies in Germany to take *Valerian almost as frequently as coffee, and to this practice he attributed no little of the nervous suffering than prevalent. “There is scarcely a drug,” he says, “which communicates its primary as well as secondary action to the organism with more intensity than *Val.” He instanced his own eye symptoms, which were both severe and remarkable, and of them he says that, though he had never had any tendency to anything of the kind before, they were excited at intervals for four months afterwards, the cause being frequently unknown, showing the deep action on the organism. “The many inveterate spasms of the stomach and abdomen, the incurable cases of hysteria and hypochondriasis, moral disturbances, passing from one extreme of emotion to another, from the highest joy to the deepest grief, from leniency, kindness, and mildness to grumbling impatience, obstinacy, and quarrelsomeness, from *a sinking of the vital forces accompanied by a painful craving for stimulants, to the greatest liveliness and extravagance, and *vice versa,” tedious convalescence after nervous fevers, paralysis, and contractions of the limbs, &c. these, in Franz’s opinion, were much less owing to the original intensity of the disease than to the *Val. with which the patients had been dosed, and they were only saved from worse effects by the fact that *Val. was so frequently given in combination with one or more of its antidotes. Some notes by Franz are important: (1) The first and most rapid effect of *Val., which precedes any after symptoms, is an acceleration of the pulse and congestion of the head. (2) The symptoms of the upper and lower limbs alternate frequently. (3) The principal times of day when *Val. produces its symptoms are noon and early afternoon and the hours before midnight. The abdominal symptoms especially are felt in the evening. (4) *”Val. causes several kinds of darting, tearing pains *which come and go. Similar to these pains are those which appear suddenly. If we compare with these two kinds of pains the jerking pains which are scarcely felt in any other than muscular tissues and the cramping pains we have a very easy and natural indication of the grounds on which Tissot’s recommendation of *Val. for epilepsy might be considered valid. The eye symptoms of Franz were burning, smarting, and pressure in the margins of the lids, which seemed sore and swollen. But in addition was this, which shows the exalted state of sensorium *Val. can produce: “Shine before the eyes in the dark, the closed, dark room seemed to be filled with the shine of twilight, so that he imagined he distinguished the objects in the same, this was accompanied with a sensation as if he felt that things were near him even when not looking at them, on looking he perceived that the things were really there” (at 10 p.m., thirteen hours after the dose). There were also hallucinations of hearing and of sense. “Imagines she is some one else and moves to the edge of the bed to make room” was removed in one case. “Anxious, hypochondriac feeling, as if the objects around him had been taken from him, the room appears to him desolate, he does not feel at home in the room, he is compelled to leave it.” “As if in a dream.” The restlessness of *Val. is a very prominent feature: Nervous irritation, cannot keep still, tearings, cramps, better morning. Constant heat and uneasiness. The digestion is disturbed. The taste caused by *Val. is as disgusting as its odor. Before dinner a taste of fetid tallow, early in the morning on waking the taste is flat, slimy. Nausea begins in umbilical region, rising into pharynx. In the preface to his *Pocket Book Boenninghausen gives a case which brings out many of the *Val. characteristics: “E. N., 50, of blooming, almost florid complexion, usually cheerful, but during his most violent paroxysms inclined to outbreaks of anger with decided nervous excitement, had suffered for four months with a peculiar violent kind of pain in the right leg after the previous dispersion, allopathically, of a so-called rheumatic pain in the right orbit by external remedies which could not be found out, this last pain attacked the muscle of the posterior part of the leg, especially from calf to heel, but did not involve the knee or ankle- joint.The pain itself he described as extremely acute, cramping, jerking, tearing, frequently interrupted by stitches extending from within outward, but in the morning hours, when the pain was generally more endurable, it was a dull, burrowing with a bruised feeling. The pain became worse towards evening and during rest, especially after previous motion, while sitting and standing,

particularly if he did it during a walk in the open air. While walking the pain often jumped from the right calf to the left upper arm if he put his hand into his coat pocket or his breast and kept the arm quiet, but it was better while using the arm, and then the pain suddenly jumped back again into the right calf. The greatest relief was experienced while walking up and down the room and rubbing the affected part. The concomitant symptoms were sleeplessness before midnight, frequently recurring attacks during the evening of sudden flushes of heat with thirst, without previous chill, a disgusting, fatty taste in the mouth with nausea in the throat, and an almost constant pressing pain in the lower part of the chest and pit of the stomach as if something were there forcing itself outward.” Of course *Val. was the remedy. *Val. has a strong affinity for the tendo Achillis, and I have cured with it many cases of painful affection of this tendon and heel when the *Val. conditions were present. Nash cured with it a severe case of sciatica in a pregnant woman on the symptoms, “pain worse standing and letting the foot rest on the floor.” She could stand with the foot resting on a chair or lie down in comfort. *Val. is a leading member of the group of remedies which meet lack of reaction. It is *Suited to: (1) Hysterical women who have taken too much chamomile tea. (2) Nervous, irritable, hysterical subjects in whom the intellectual faculties predominate and who suffer from hysteria and neuralgia. It meets “nervous affections occurring in excitable temperaments, in hypochondriasis it calms the nervousness, abates the excitement of the circulation, removes the wakefulness, promotes sleep, and induces *sensation of quietude and comfort, sadness is removed, in globus, in all asthmatical and hysterical coughs, nervous palpitation of the heart, profuse flow of limpid urine” (quoted by Hering). “Red parts become white” is another indication of Hering’s. Among Sensations are: As if flying in air. As if eyes would be pierced from within outward. As if smoke in eyes. As if a thread were hanging down throat. As if something forcing a passage through pit of stomach. As if something warm were rising from stomach. As if something pressed out in lower chest. As from cold or over-lifting, pain in loins. As if he had strained left lumbar region. As if an electric shock through humerus. As if thigh would break. As if strained in right ankle. As if bruised in outer malleolus of right foot. Lightness in leg. Like lead in limbs. The symptoms are: worse By touch (blisters on cheek and lip). Rubbing better cramp in calf. Pressure of hand or covering with hat causes icy coldness on vertex. Early decubitus in typhoid. Slight injury causes spasms. Rest, sitting, standing aggravates. Motion improves. Moving eyes worse headache. Bending head back worse pain in occiput. Straightening out limb worse sciatica. Worse noon. Worse before midnight (cannot sleep before midnight). Profuse sweat at night. Worse open air, draft of air. Better after sleep. Worse fasting. Better after a meal.

Relations

Antidoted by: Belladonna, Camph., Cin., Coffea, Pulsatilla Antidote to: Mercurius, abuse of Chamomile tea. Compare: Hysteria. Mosch. (Mosch. has more unconsciousness), Ignatia, Asafoetida Alternating mental states, Croc. Defective reaction, Ambra., Pso. (despair of recovery), Chi., Lauro. (chest affections), Caps., Opium, Carb. v. Periodical neuralgia, Arsenicum (Val. hysterical patients). Pain causes fainting, Chamomilla, Hepar, Verbascum Rheumatism better motion, Rhus. Pains come and go suddenly, Belladonna, Lycopodium Infant vomits curdled milk, Aethusa Over- sensitiveness, Nux. Averse to darkness, Stramonium, Stro., Ammonium muriaticum, Arsenicum, Baryta carb., Berberis, Cactus grandiflorus, Carb-a., Carb-v., Causticum, Lycopodium, Phosphorus, Pul., Rhus. As if in a dream, Ambra., Anacardium, Calcarea, Cann-i., Conium, Cuprum, Medorrhinum, Rhe., Verbascum, Ziz. Levitation, Nux moschata, Stic. p., Ph-ac.

John Henry Clarke
John Henry Clarke MD (1853 – November 24, 1931 was a prominent English classical homeopath. Dr. Clarke was a busy practitioner. As a physician he not only had his own clinic in Piccadilly, London, but he also was a consultant at the London Homeopathic Hospital and researched into new remedies — nosodes. For many years, he was the editor of The Homeopathic World. He wrote many books, his best known were Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica and Repertory of Materia Medica