Note: Homeopathic Treatment requires strict individualization. Please do not take any medicine without consulting your physician/homeopath.
MENTAL PROBLEMS, Psychological Disorders, Psychosomatic Diseases
Homeopathic Medicines & Treatment for MENTAL
PROBLEMS, Psychological Disorders, PSYCHOSOMATIC DISEASES
#Belladonna. [Bell]
The three great remedies of the Solanacae family have an important
action on the mental state, and are possibly more often thought
of and indicated in mental affections than other remedies. Belladonna
is a remedy for delirious states, and must be given where there
is wildness, restlessness, and a desire to cut or tear the clothing.
The patient springs out of bed and strikes those around him. He
appears frightened and sees objects when he closes his eyes. Speech
and actions are hasty. It thus becomes a valuable remedy in acute
mania, in fact, the highest form of mania , with great determination
of blood to the head, hyperaesthesia of the senses, wild eyes and
dilated pupils. Such patients may even bark like dogs and are most
violent and pugnacious. No other remedy is more frequently indicated
and a frequent mistake here is to give it too low; the higher potencies
act better and more promptly. Violence is characteristic, great
noisiness, the patient sings, screams and curses. Delusions of every
conceivable variety may be present, in fact , it suits well a bowfins
instantly with ridiculous actions. Butler says the Belladonna melancholic
is exceedingly depressed, fearful and subject to violent attacks
of weeping. Opium has also a fantastical insanity. Cocaine has a
sensation as if foreign bodies were under the skin; this is in reality
a hallucination. It has also hallucinations of hearing.
#Hyoscyamus. [Hyos]
This is also a remedy in acute mania with extreme excitation of
the sensorium and abnormal impulses. Talcott says that Hyoscyamus
"paints the mental town of its victim a brilliant and luminous
red and stimulates him to sing in merriest and most vociferous tones
the songs of Venus and Bacchus combined." The Hyoscyamus patient
will perhaps imagine he is pursued by some demon or that some one
is trying to take his life; and he runs away from an imaginary foe.
He is talkative and, like Lachesis, constantly jumping from one
subject to another. The face is only slightly flushed, not the violent
congestion of Belladonna. He may see ghosts and demons, but the
mania of Hyoscyamus is rather an acute non-inflammatory mania. Kali
bromatum suits the acute mania of children where patient thinks
he will be murdered or that people intend to strike him. Camphor
has maniacal excitement, suicidal impulse. It is a splendid remedy
in exhaustion psychoses with maniacal outbursts and vital powers
at a low ebb. The Hyoscyamus patient acts silly and idiotic; is
lascivious and lewd; throws the bed-clothes off and makes lewd and
ridiculous gestures. Persists in stripping herself and uncovering
the genitals. Nymphomania. It is a good remedy for the bad effects
of extreme jealousy, fright, disappointed love, etc. moschata has
occasional outbreaks of silly laughter and a delusion of having
two heads. There is also a condition of depression found under Hyoscyamus
with debility and prostration where questions are answered slowly
or irrelevantly; there is a quick pulse, accumulation of sordes
on the teeth, snoring breathing and dropping of the lower jaw. There
is a great characteristic of the remedy usually present in these
cases, namely, a constant picking at the bedclothes or objects in
the air. There is also the great and characteristic symptoms of
constant fear of being poisoned by the attendants, which Rhus also
has. Cantharis. Here we have terrific outbursts of rage, the patient
barks, and bites those around him. It is exceedingly destructive.
Patient are filled with hallucinations and converse with people
long dead. Such conditions are curable by Cantharis when reflex
from sexual or bladder troubles. There is an overpowering sexual
excitement with this remedy and the patients are desperate and excessive
masturbators and manias with this symptom corresponds to it.
#Stramonium. [Stram]
This remedy. like the two preceding members of the same family,
has mania, and it is wild and most terrifying , filled with hallucinations:
he sees rats, mice, snakes and other animals approaching him and
he retires in terror. He is also loquacious; he becomes religious,
prays, laughs, talks foolishly and tries to escape; again he becomes
Satanic, and has outbursts of violence with ideas of persecution.
It corresponds well to many phases of erotic mania, nymphomania,
and the mania of masturbation. The keynote of its symptomatology
is terror. There is also a mania for light and company. Hallucinations
of hearings, hears music and men talking in foreign languages. The
symptoms are changeable, full of joy, and then full of range. Proud
and then dull. Veratrum album might properly be compared with Stramonium.
Here the patient may be restless and wild looking, and be violent
; but with this remedy there is much physical prostration indicated
by the cold surface of body , cold sweat, blue rings under eyes,
etc. Veratrum may also be well indicated in melancholia; the patient
sits brooding all the time, distrusts every one. In religious melancholia,
where the patient prays a great deal, is anxious about recovery,
and despairs of salvation, it also has a curative action. Lilienthal
says the Veratrum patient combines the wildest vagaries of the religious
enthusiast, the amorous frenzies of the nymphomaniac and the execrative
passions of the infuriated demon, each struggling for the ascendancy,
and causing him to writhe and struggle with his mental and physical
agonies. The following is a practical resume: Aconite, fear. Stramonium,
terror. Belladonna, violence. Cantharides, madness. To this also
add Veratrum, frenzy.
#Aurum metallicum. [Aur]
Our great remedy for melancholia where there is an actual disgust
for life, a longing for death and a tendency to suicide; this tendency
is only mental, the patient rarely, yet sometimes, attempting it.
Dr. Talcott believes that Arsenicum oftener relieves suicidal tendencies
than Aurum. Arsenicum also relieves tendency to self mutilation
found in such patients. There is feeling of worthlessness and despair;
she thinks she has lost the affection of friends and that she is
doomed to complete damnation. The memory is weak; anger or dispute
makes the patient furious ; there is a tendency to rush of blood
to the head with these melancholic states. Argentum nitricum. Impulsive,
always busy, errors in perception, dreads to pass a certain corner,
makes mistakes as to distances. Glonoine. Well known streets seem
strange.
#Sulphur. [Sulph]
The typical Sulphur patient is irritable, a chronic, constitutional
grumbler or else a "ragged philosopher," life having been
a failure. Its usefulness in mental conditions is extensive and
it corresponds closely to religious mania or melancholia; he becomes
most anxious about his own salvation, but different to that of others,
an egotistic condition often seen in our asylums and sometime out
of them. These patients will dress themselves up in rags and imagine
that they are clad in gorgeous attire; they will wear paper crowns
with the majesty of a king, prince or potentate. Sulphur also has
a forgetfulness and patients will stop a long time to think how
words are spelled Aconite being an acute Sulphur is most useful
in mania and melancholia where there is a nervous excitement, fear
of death, predicting the day thereof., and restlessness due to mental
anxiety. It is particularly useful in sudden, and acute cases, which
are worse in the evening. The patients are tortured by fears; afraid
of darkness, ghosts. Convulsions of paresis may suggest Aconite.
Pulsatilla. Religious melancholia, despair of salvation, constant
prayer, folds the hands sits like a statue; sleepless, restless
and changeable mania.
-- Next -->
|