Eupatorium Perfoliatum


Eupatorium Perfoliatum symptoms of the homeopathy remedy from Keynotes and Red Line Symptoms by Adolph von Lippe. What are the symptoms of Eupatorium Perfoliatum? Keynote indications and uses of Eupatorium Perfoliatum…


COMMON NAME:

      BONE-SET.

Symptoms

      Cachexia, from prolonged or frequent attacks of bilious or intermittent fevers (Arsenicum, China, Ferrum, Lachesis, Lycopodium, Natrum muriaticum, Pulsatilla, Sepia) (A).

Painful soreness of eyeballs (Arnica, Bell) (N)

ACHING PAINS AS IF IN THE BONES, WITH MOANING (N).

Intense backache, as if beaten (Rhus toxicodendron) (B).

BONE-PAINS AFFECTING BACK, HEAD, CHEST, LIMBS, ESPECIALLY THE WRISTS (A).

Calves of the leg feel as if they had been beaten (N.).

Soreness and aching of the arms and forearms (N.).

Excruciating headache, with soreness of the scalp and eye-balls, redness of the face, nausea, etc. (Bl.).

BRUISED FEELING, AS IF BROKEN, ALL OVER THE BODY (Arnica, Baptisia, Bellis, Nux vomica, Pyrog.) (A).

Thirst a long time before the chill, continues during he chill a and heat, absent during sweat (N).

Intense thirst, but drinking cold water causes shuddering and vomiting of bile (N).

INTERMITTENT FEVER; THE CHILL COMMENCES ABOUT 7 OR 9 IN THE MORNING IN THE BACK, ACCOMPANIED BY THIRST, AND THERE IS INTENSE ACHING IN ALL THE BONES, AS IF THEY WERE BROKEN; THIS IS FOLLOWED BY HEAT AND AN INCREASED OF THE ACHING, AND THIS BY A SCANTY OR PROFUSE SWEAT (D.)

Canine hunger (after quinine) (A.).

VOMITS WATER OR FOOD THAT HAS BEEN TAKEN, OR BILE AS THE CHILL PASSES OFF (D).

Chill at 7 to 9 A.M. one day, and at noon the next day (A).

Insatiable thirst before and during chill and fever; knows the chill is coming, because the cannot drink enough.

Desire for ice-cream (Calcarea, Phosphorus, Tuberculinum, Verat) (A).

Influenza (or La Grippe): Great soreness and aching of the entire body; hoarseness and cough, with great soreness of the larynx and chest; a great coryza and thirst, and drinking causes vomiting; the cough hurts the head and chest and the patient holds the chest with the hands (Bryonia) (B).

Prostration in epidemic influenza (La Grippe) (Arsenicum, Phosphorus) (N).

Cough decreased by getting on hands and knees (N).

Cough; chronic; loose with hectic; chest sore, must support it with hands (Bryonia, Natrum carbonicum, Phos); worse at night; following measles or suppressed intermittents (A.)

VERY RESTLESS, CAN’T KEEP STILL, ALTHOUGH THERE IS A GREAT DESIRE TO DO SO, AND IS NOT RELIEVED BY MOTION (Dr. Kl).

Bilious effects: Yellow eyes, face, vomit, etc. (Bryonia, Chelidonium, China, Nat-S.) (B).

Soreness and swelling of the feet (Dn.).

Tongue coated thickly yellow (Ant-C., Chelidonium, Mercurius, Nux-M., Rhus toxicodendron, Spigelia, Sulphur) (Bt).

Vertigo; sways to the left (Calcarea, Lachesis, Nat-N., Stramonium, Sulphur, Zincum met.) (B).

Urine scanty, dark Mahogany colour (Ha).,

Great weakness during the fever (Ant-T., Arsenicum, Baptisia, Bryonia, Carb-v., Ignatia, Mur- Ac., Natrum muriaticum, Acid phosphoricum., Phosphorus, Pulsatilla, Rob., Rhus toxicodendron, Sulphur) (Dg).

Yellow, jaundiced skin (Chelidonium, China, Mercurius, Natrum muriaticum, Nat-S., Sep) (R).

Soreness in the region of the liver on moving or cough (R.).

Scanty urine, depositing a whitish, clay-like deposit (R.).

RELATIONSHIP:

      Compare: Chelidonium, Lycopodium, Nat-S., Podophyllum, and Sepia, in jaundiced conditions.

Is followed well by: Natrum muriaticum and Sepia

Bryonia is the nearest analogue, having free sweat, but pains keep the patient quiet; while Eup-P, has scanty sweat and pains make the patient restless.

Adolph Lippe
Adolph Lippe (born near Goerlitz, Prussia, 11 May 1812; died in Philadelphia, 23 January 1888) was a homeopathic physician who worked in the United States. Adolph got a legal education at Berlin. After completing his legal studies, Lippe became interested in homeopathy, and emigrated to the United States in 1837 to further his study. In 1838, he enrolled in the North American Academy of Homeopathy at Allentown, Pennsylvania, from where he graduated in 1841. He settled in Philadelphia, where from 1863 until 1868 he was professor of materia medica in the Homeopathic College of Pennsylvania. Besides some essays and treatises from the French, German, and Italian which became standards, Lippe was the author of:
Comparative Materia Medica (Philadelphia, 1854)
Text-Book of Materia Medica (1866)