Materia Medica

Stramonium – Nash

Stramonium
stram

Wildly delirious, with red face and great LOQUACITY. Loquacity.

 

Pupils widely dilated; wants light and company; fears to be alone; wants hand held.

 

One side paralyzed, the other convulsed.

 

Awakens with a shrinking look; frightened; afraid of the first object seen.

 

Painlessness with most complaints (OPIUM). Jerks the head suddenly from pillow in spasms.

 

The last of the trio is pre-eminently the high-grade delirium remedy, differs from the other two chiefly in the degree of INTENSITY.

 

The raving is something awful. Singing, laughing, grinning; whistling, screaming, praying piteously or swearing hideously, and above all remedies loquacious. Again the patient throws himself into all shapes corresponding to his changeable delirium, crosswise, lengthwise, rolled up like a ball, or stiffened out by turns, or, especially, repeatedly JERKS UP SUDDENLY HIS HEAD FROM THE PILLOW. Things look crooked or oblique to him.

 

The whole inner mouth as if raw; the tongue after a while may become stiff or paralyzed. Stools loose, blackish, smelling like carrion, or NO STOOL OR URINE. Later there may be complete loss of sight, hearing, and speech with dilated, immovable pupils and drenching sweat which brings no relief, and death must soon close the scene unless STRAMONIUM helps them out.

 

By way of still further comparison STRAMONIUM is the most widely loquacious.

 

HYOSCYAMUS is the most insensibly stupid.

 

BELLADONNA in this respect stands half way between.

 

STRAMONIUM, throws himself about, jerking head from pillow.

 

HYOSCYAMUS, twitches, picks and reaches, otherwise lying pretty still.

 

BELLADONNA, starts or jumps when falling into or awaking from sleep.

 

All have times of wanting to escape.

 

The same state of mind and sensorium is found in chronic and acute manias. I have cured several such cases. One was a lady about thirty years of age, who was overheated in the sun, on an excursion. She was a member in good standing in the Presbyterian church, but imagined herself lost and called me in six mornings in succession to see her die. Lost, lost, lost, eternally lost, was her theme, begging minister, doctor and everybody to pray for, and with her. Talked night and day about it. I had to shut her up in her room alone for she would not sleep a wink or let anyone else.

 

She imagined her head was as big as a bushel and had me examine her legs, which she insisted were as large as a church. After treating her several weeks with GLONOINE, LACK, NATRUM CARB. and other remedies on the cause as the basis of the prescription, without the least amelioration of her condition, I gave her STRAMONIUM, which covered her SYMPTOMS, and in twenty-four hours every vestige of that mania was gone. But for the encouragement I gave the husband that I could cure her she would have been sent to the Utica Asylum, where her friends had been advised to send her by the allopaths. I gave her the sixth dilution or potency.

 

I cured a case just as bad since then with the c. M. potency. I could relate other experiences, just as remarkable, cured with this remedy, but why do so ?

 

Aside from the uses of the remedy, which are the main ones, I will mention now a few symptoms that have been found very reliable guides:

 

Staggers in the dark or with eyes closed.

 

Eyes wide open; prominent, brilliant pupils widely dilated.

 

Desires light and company.

 

Face hot and red, cheeks circumscribed.

 

Convulsions, aggravated in bright light.

 

Mouth and throat dry. (BELL.)

 

Fear of water and aversion to all fluids.

 

Metrorrhagia, with characteristic mind symptoms.

 

Great pain in hip disease, or abscesses.

 

One side paralyzed, the other convulsed. (BELL.)

 

 

 

 

Entire absence of pain. (OPIUM).