Note: Homeopathic Treatment requires strict individualization. Please do not take any medicine without consulting your physician/homeopath.
Urinary Tract Infection, Eneuresis, Pylonephritis, Nephritis, Renal Stones
HOMEOPATHIC Treatment & Medicines for URINARY
TRACT INFECTION, ENEURESIS, PYLONEPHRITIS, NEPHRITIS, RENAL STONES
#Cantharis. [Canth]
Cantharis symptoms are usually the first ones inquired after when
a case of urinary difficulty presents itself. Its symptoms are clear
cut, and should not be confounded with those of any other remedy.
There is a persistent and violent urging to urinate, with great
tenesmus; the urine is passed only in drops and seems like molten
lead passing through the urethra, so intense is the burning.
There is with this, usually an aching in the small of the back.
It is often indicated in acute cystitis, gravel and urethritis,
the great keynotes being the burning and the tenesmus of the bladder;
haematuria also calls for Cantharis under certain conditions.
Baehr doubts that Cantharis is ever suitable to the chronic form
of cystitis.
#Mercurius corrosivus [Merc-c]
Has tenesmus of the bladder with intense burning. The burning is
less, but the tenesmus is greater, than in Cantharis. The passing
of the urine drop by drop reminds of Aconite, which has the same
symptoms. Aconite, however, is adapted to sudden retention of urine,
for as soon as the disease becomes fully localized as an inflammation
Aconite ceases to be the remedy. Cantharis and Nux vomica have also
a similarity in the frequent fruitless efforts to urinate. In the
region of the kidneys there is cutting pain which extends into the
abdomen, the bladder and urethra. The most distressing symptom is
the constant urging to urinate, even a few spoonfuls of urine in
the bladder bringing on this urging, which is accompanied by the
terrible distress at the neck of the bladder. This pain is aggravated
immediately following micturition, showing that with this drug the
trouble is more urethral. The urine itself under Cantharis is of
a deep red color, deposits a sediment of mucus and often contain
fibrinous casts.
Belladonna, too, is a remedy for painful urination. Hughes says
that it is a rarely failing remedy for nervous dysuria.
#Apis mellifica. [Apis]
The symptoms of scanty urine always leads one to consider whether
Apis is or is not the remedy, for although Apis produces scanty
urine there are number of other drugs that will do the same thing.
The keynotes for Apis in urinary affections are scanty or suppressed
urine, drowsiness, oedema in in various parts, thirstlessness and
suffocation on lying down. The urine is dark, highly albuminous,
and contains casts, so it is readily seen how Apis may correspond
to any form of Bright's disease. In difficult micturition of children
Apis is often a useful remedy. It has frequent desire, with the
passage of a few drops at a time. Among other symptoms are great
irritation at the neck of the bladder and incontinence of urine.
It is also the remedy to be thought of in retained urine or inflamed
bladder after abuse of Cantharis.
#Apocynum cannabinum. [Apoc]
Apocynum seems to act some what on the kidneys and give rise to
various dropsical conditions. It produces a scanty urine, which
is light in color, or, as it is given, sherry-colored. Its first
effect is to produce a copious diuresis; this is followed by the
scantiness of urine which results in dropsy. It also produces an
incontinence and may be useful in enuresis. A sinking bruised feeling
at the stomach is an indication for its use. it differs from Arsenic
and Apis in the fact that it has unquenchable thirst. Arsenic wants
little and often, Apis is thirstless.
#Berberis vulgaris. [Berb]
Outside of its action on the genito urinary system Berberis is seldom
thought of,land it is one of our principal remedies for troubles
of this system. It seems to correspond to many symptoms which occur
in cases of renal calculi. It has severe tearing pains in the kidneys,
not merely backache, but pains deep in the kidneys themselves; these
pains extend down the back in the kidneys themselves; these pains
extend down the back and down the ureters into the bladder;nor do
stop here,for we find cutting pains in the bladder extending into
the urethra. These pains in the back and along the ureters are very
severe; they are worse stooping, lying or sitting, and relieved
by standing. In the bladder they cause a desire to urinate, and
the patient is constantly urinating, for the bladder seems imperfectly
emptied. The bladder aches. The urine itself is reddish, has a reddish
deposit consisting of mucus, epithelium and lithates. It differs
from the Pareira brava urine in being more slimy. Another characteristic
symptoms of Berberis is pain in the hips while urinating. Coccus
cacti has some similar symptoms to Berberis, especially the tearing
pains extending from the region of the kidneys, the frequent urging
to urinate, the deposits of uric acid and the urine of Coccus cacti
is dark. These remedies must be distinguished very carefully as
they present many symptoms in common. Berberis has rather more back
pains, and seems to act deeper. It is especially indicated in genitourinary
troubles, which are due to conditions of atony, or faiblesse.
#Pareira brava. [Pareir]
This is another drug very similar to Berberis vulgaris-as to pains
in the back it is quite similar; yet they do not stop in the hips
with Pareira as they do under mostly clinical. It has been found
useful in cystitis where there is violent straining to urinate,
where the patient has to kneel to urinate, where the urine scalds
terribly and where these violent pains in the thighs are present.
The urine has a strong ammoniacal odor. Contains thick viscid white
mucus or deposits or red sand. The three-legged stool of the drug
seems to be: the pain in the thighs, the getting down on all fours
to urinate, and the ammoniacal odor of the urine. It is also a useful
remedy in the condition known as irritable bladder, dull aching
in bladder, feeling as if the bladder were distended, with pain.
#Equisetum hyemale. [Equis]
Equisetum acts similarly to Cantharis, but it has less tenesmus
and haematuria, and the urine is less scalding. There is pain in
the bladder as if too full, not relieved by micturition; the constant
desire to urinate is not even relieved by copious urination. The
urine is scanty,high colored and contains much mucus. Much mucus
in the urine is more indicative of Equisetum than of Cantharis.
Chimaphila also has much mucus, is especially useful in prostatic
troubles, and has made some cures when there were great quantities
of ropy mucus in the urine, which was quite offensive. This is a
wonderful remedy in the cystic irritation of old men, characterizesd
by a constant teasing desire to urinate with little or no relief
following micturition; the patient being frequently compelled to
rise at night. The state is one of irritation rather than inflammation.
Dr. Hughes considered it a favorite remedy in chronic cystitis.
The general aggravation of Equisetum seems to be after urinating.
Difficulty in beginning to urinate, strains a great deal, scanty
urine. It has proved useful in enuresis with marked vesical irritation,being
similar here to Eupatorium purpureum, which is a useful remedy in
the vesical irritation of women,with much burning in the urethra
during urination. With the foregoing symptoms, Equisetum becomes
an important remedy in the treatment of cystitis. It has been suggested
in the dysuria of children; the pain being worse after urinating
will distinguish it from Petroselinum, which has the symptom that
the child dances up and down with pain when the urging to urinate
comes on.
#Digitalis purpurea. [Dig]
The urinary symptoms of Digitalis consist of a dragging and pressure
in the bladder which micturition does not relieve. It has been found
useful in inflammation in the neck of the bladder with intense desire
to urinate, which is increased even by the passage of a few drops.
The patient walks about in great distress; at the same time there
is tenesmus of the rectum. The patient is relieved somewhat of these
symptoms by lying on the back. The pain at neck of the bladder is
throbbing. The urine is scanty, thick and turbid, and contains a
sediment of brick-dust, like Lycopodium. The urging to urinate in
cases calling for Digitalis is often due to the enlargement of the
prostate gland, for which it is a remedy.
#Terebinth. [Tereb]
The urine of Terebinth is one of its most characteristic features.
It is smoky, turbid, depositing a sediment like coffee grounds,
which indicates the presence of disintegrated blood cells. Haematuria
from venous congestion of the kidneys calls often for Terebinth.
It has burning during micturition and most painful strangury; the
urine, too, may contain albumen and has the odor of violets. Peculiar
odors to urine may be fond under the Viola tricolor, where it smells
like that of the cat, and Benzoic acid, where it smells strong and
ammoniacal,like that of a horse. Terebinth is a useful remedy in
cystitis, with much tenesmus of the bladder and the scanty, bloody
urine; there is also pressure in the bladder, which extends to the
kidneys. In acute and chronic nephritis it is often indicated. The
urine, oedema and the bronchial catarrh may all point to the remedy.
#Nux vomica. [Nux-v]
Nux vomica affects powerfully the urinary organs, yet it is seldom
thought of as having anything specially characteristic about these
organs. It affects the lower part of the spine, and we have as a
consequence, in the first place, incontinence of urine; there is
irritability at the neck of the bladder, and the same symptoms is
found here as with the rectum. There are frequent ineffectual efforts
to urinate, and these are accompanied by burning and tearing pains;
the urine passes in drops. Again, it is indicated in vesical torpor
or paralysis; here we have dribbling of urine or retention. Haematuria
from abuse of drugs calls of Nux vomica. Cystitis, with this painful
urging and scanty urine indicates the remedy. The straining is violent
at times, and the urine is dark with a red brick-dust sediment,
or bloody, or mixed with a tenacious mucus.
Opium is similar to Nux in having a partial paralysis of the bladder
with spasmodic condition of the sphincter, but with Opium the patient
is unconscious that the bladder is full, and there is no desire
to pass water. The Stramonium patient passes no water because the
urine has been suppressed; it is not secreted.
Camphor gives prompt relief in spasmodic retention of urine.
Nux is useful in the irritable bladder of gout and alcoholism, and
to relieve pain and spasm in the passage of urinary calculi.
#Causticum. [Caust]
In paralytic conditions about the bladder Causticum deserves first
place. It is one of our great remedies in enuresis, and its characteristics
are involuntary micturition at night in sleep, when coughing, sneezing
or blowing the nose, showing a weakness of the sphincter. Another
indication of this is the difficulty the patient has in passing
the last few drops of urine; the fact that he has to wait a long
time before it starts, and that during the act it is expelled very
slowly, showing not only a weakness of the sphincter but a weakness
of the whole muscular system of the bladder. Nocturnal wetting of
the bed in children, occurring during the first sleep at night,calls
for Causticum. Paralysis of the bladder after labor also calls for
this remedy. Zincum is another excellent remedy in these bladder
troubles, and it has some symptoms similar to Causticum, such as
involuntary spurting of urine when coughing or sneezing; there is
apt to be more pain in Zincum cases, however; Scilla and Natrum
muriaticum also have involuntary micturition when coughing. Another
symptom of Causticum is an excessive deposit of urates in the urine.
Another remedy which clinically has proved very useful in enuresis
from weakened muscular action is Ferrum phosphoricum. Rhus aromatica
has enuresis of nervous origin, and has been used successfully in
senile cases.
#Sepia. [Sep]
One of the prominent remedies for lithaemic conditions is Sepia,
and the condition of the urine becomes an indication for its use.
It has a reddish clay-colored sediment adhering to the vessel, a
sediment of red sand so-called. The Sepia urine differs from others
in being offensive. Sepia is also a remedy for wetting the bed at
night during the first sleep. Lycopodium is a prominent remedy for
the indication of red sand in the urine. It is a sort of gravel
and is passed in quantities, so that often the child will scream
with pain on passing the water. Lycopodium will then help. Sarsaparilla
and Benzoic acid have similar symptoms, the latter having as a characteristic
a strong horse-like urine. Natrum muriaticum also has their red
sand or brick-dust sediment. Another remedy having this symptom
very marked in Ocimum canum. This is a very useful remedy in renal
colic and gravel. The patient has to micturate every few minutes,
during which he wrings his hands and groans with pain. Nausea is
often present. The quantity of sand deposited is very large. In
cystitis, with a constant desire to urinate and dragging in the
bladder, Sepia may prove useful; here it will be indicated by its
general Symptoms.
Vesicaria is recommended to favor expulsion of gravel and sand
in urine, also Thalspi bursa Pastoris.
#Mercurius corrosivus. [Merc-c]
A remedy affecting the genitourinary tract profoundly is Mercurius
corrosivus. It has the most violent tenesmus of the bladder of an
remedy, resembling most closely Cantharis; it has also extreme burning,
and hence is indicated in cystitis with these symptoms, or in kidney
troubles associated with this pain in the neck of the bladder. The
patient has frequent calls but passes little urine, and the urine
is bloody and albuminous. It is one of the comparatively few remedies
producing albumen in the urine. Phosphorous is another, and Plumbum
yet another, and all three have proved serviceable in Bright's disease.
The great vesical tenesmus, burning, and bloody urine will indicate
this remedy at once, whether it be in cystitis, albuminuria after
diphtheria or kidney disease.
|