PSORINUM


Therapeutic symptoms of homeopathic remedy Psorinum, described by E.B. Nash in his book, Leaders in Homeopathic Therapeutics, published in 1898….


Very sad, hopeless, despondent; “bluest of the blue.”

Great debility; sweats on the slightest movement; wants to give up and lie down.

Eruptions on th skin, dry, or moist; or skin scaly and dry as parchment; dirty, the great unwashed, unwashable.

Intense itching of the skin worse in warmth of bed.

DISCHARGES and EXHALATIONS exceedingly offensive.

Very sensitive to cold air; wears a fur cap in summer.

Modalities: worse in cold air, worse in warmth of bed (itching); sitting up or motion; better bringing arms down close to the body, better lying down (even the dyspnoea); wrapping up warm; psoric manifestations.

Great weakness and debility; from loss of fluids; remaining after acute diseases; without any organic lesion or apparent cause.

Cough and dry, scaly eruptions return every winter.

Quinsy; to eradicate the tendency.

The disease products are powerful remedies, and when used in the potentised form have made many wonderful cures. It is believed by some that in the potentised form they are so changed that they become HOM., to the disease which produced them, especially in whom the original disease existed.

I have experimented more or less with these so called nosodes, since they were so widely proclaimed by Dr. Swan. I never found them markedly efficacious in such cases, but I have seen remarkable results from them in cases resembling, for instance, gonorrheal, syphilitic or psoric troubles, without any history of pre-existing trouble of the kind. I have cured eruptions on the skin resembling itch with PSOR., rheumatic troubles that were very obstinate under our usual remedies with MED., and a long standing case of caries of the spine with SYPH., but in not one of these cases had the patient, that I could trace, itch, gonorrhea or syphilis. This experience of many others seems to be different. That each nosode seems capable producing the same or similar symptoms when given by mouth in proving as when inoculated the usual way seems well proven in the case of PSOR., I do not see why the constitutional symptoms appearing after inoculations should not be considered a proving as well as those following a bee sting, CANTH., blistering, or the local external poisoning of the varieties of RHUS., If RHUS., very high, will cure rhus poisoning, why should not SYPH., etc, cure syphilis? who will answer?

All nosodes are as capable of curing as they are of poisoning. If not, why not? We must not let prejudice hinder honest investigation. As if in corroboration of the theory that the potentised disease product will cure the disease producing it, the provings of PSOR., indicate that the chief action and curative power of the poison is upon the skin. And is it not remarkable that PSOR., should so strongly resemble SULPH., the old time remedy for itch, and again that they follow or complement each other in curing skin troubles? Notice some of the leading skin symptoms.

” Itching when the body becomes warm.”

” Itching, intolerable in warmth of bed.” (MERC.,)

” Itching, scratches until it bleeds.”

” Itching between fingers and in bends of joints.”(SEP.,)

” Dry, scaly eruptions which disappear summers and return winters.”

” Repeated outbreaks of eruptions.”

” SKIN HAS A DIRTY LOOK, as if the patient NEVER WASHED, and the body has a FILTHY SMELL even after a bath.”

These and many other symptoms, too numerous to mention here, show what an invaluable remedy this should be in skin troubles, and abundant experience and observation corroborate the truth of our law of cure in the curative power of disease poisons, as it also does in vegetable, and mineral, and insect or animal.

PSOR., is also found useful in the consequences of suppressed eruptions, and in such cases should never be forgotten when other anti psorics fail. Dr. Wm. A. Hawley, of syracuse, N.Y., once made a brilliant cure of a very bad case of dropsy in an old woman, being led to prescribe this remedy by the appearance of the skin. One dose of fincke’s 42m. pot, dry on the tongue, cured the whole case in a very short time. It was a case of long standing. Now, if we examine we will also find that this remedy resembles GRAPH., in many points. A close comparison will pay the earnest student of M.M. PSOR., is VERY DEPRESS in mind. ” Greatest despondency, making his own life and that of others around him intolerable.” This state of mind, following acute diseases, like typhus, is especially benefited by this remedy. When writing of GRAPH., we mentioned the resemblance of the two remedies in “STOOLS, DARK BROWN, WATERY, and of INTOLERABLY offensive odor.” This is found in bad cases of cholera infantum or chronic diarrhoea. There is one valuable diagnostic difference between them, although the remedies are so much alike, and that is that the GRAPH., moisture from the eruption is GLUTINOUS or STICKY and not markedly so with PSOR.,

Again, PSOR., is very useful for weakness or debility during convalescence from severe acute diseases. The patient sweats PROFUSELY when taking the least exercise. Not withstanding, as a rule, the skin is generally dry, inactive, and rarely sweats. Here, again, as in the stool symptom, choice may have to be made between PSOR., and CHINA., Loss of fluids, blood, suppuration, etc would decide in favor of the latter and itching eruptions or tendency thereto, before or during the sickness, the former. One thing I forgot to mention in connection with the offensive stool. “All excretions, diarrhoea, leucorrhoea, menstrual flow and perspiration, have a carrion- like smell, even the body has filthy smell, notwithstanding frequent bathing. “The PSOR., subject is VERY SENSITIVE TO COLD AIR, or change of weather (HEP.,) wants to wear a fur cap, overcoat or shawl, even in the hottest weather.

Chronic complaints following or dating back for yrs to some imperfectly cured or suppressed acute disease.(CARB- V.,) I advised everyone to buy a copy of Allen’s “Key-notes”, which has a very good rendering of the nosodes. So we see in PSOR., when PROVEN a great remedy for very grave conditions. I have no doubt that all nosodes are equally valuable when as well understood.

E.B.Nash
Dr. E.B. Nash 1838- 1917, was considered one of our finest homeopaths and teachers. He was Prof. of Materia Medica at the N.Y. Homoeopathic Medical College and President of International Hahnemannian Assoc. His book Leaders in Homoeopathic Therapeutics is a classic. This article is from: :The Medical Advance - A monthly magazine of homoeopathic medicine - edited and published by H.C. Allen, M. D.