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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2220

Drosera is also indicated in cough with bleeding from the nose or mouth; epistaxis, haemoptysis, and haematemesis. The blood may be either bright red and foaming or black and clotted. The cough is aggravated while lying down, also immediately after lying down in the evening. But the most striking modality is an aggravation after midnight, towards morning. If the first part of the night is relatively free from complaints, but after midnight a violent cough begins that wakes the patient from sleep, this is a pointer to Drosera.
Moreover, Drosera may be helpful in chronic diseases that affect the joints and bones, especially the long bones of the arms and legs. In rheumatoid arthritis, Paget’s syndrome and other diseases that are usually very difficult to treat, Drosera should be considered. The most characteristic symptom is severe nocturnal pain in the tibia or humerus, and Hahnemann emphasises, inter alia, this symptom: ‘A pain composed from gnawing and stinging in the long bones of the arms, thighs, and legs, most violent in the region of the joints, with severe stitches in the joints, less felt during motion that when at rest’.
The wrists and finger joints may be spasmodically contracted and greatly restricted in their mobility; and similar symptoms may occur in the joints of the lower limbs, with a limp when walking.
Generalities
‘Feels weak in the whole body, with sunken eyes and cheeks’. ‘Aching of all limbs upon which he lies, as though the bed was too hard and there were not enough blankets underneath’ (compare Arnica).
A great characteristic is convulsions, followed by haemoptysis and