ARANEARUM TELA
Cobweb – that of the "black spider found in bams, cellars, and dark places."
This remedy has been very imperfectly proved, but since it appears to have some potential, we will include some existing information and comment on it.
Cobwebs have been used as a remedy since ancient times. Dr. S. A. Jones reports, "The accounts of the action of cobweb being incorrect and various, I determined to ascertain (if possible) its correct operation by giving it to healthy persons. I found from these experiments that the operation of the web appeared to be principally on the arterial system; and perhaps in less time than any article previously known. The force and frequency of the pulse being uniformely reduced in some cases 10, in others fifteen strokes in a minute, and in one case the pulse, from being strong and full, became soft, small, and very compressible…" He states he has not noticed any other effect.
But with regard to the quieting of the pulse rate, it is interesting to read the observation of Dr. Webster who gave 20 gr. to an old and infirm asthmatic. "Slight but pleasant delirium was produced, and from the report of persons who slept in the same room with him, the effect, though of longer duration, was very similar to that of a dose of nitrous oxide gas; the muscular energy having been exceedingly increased, the patient could not be confined to bed, but danced and jumped about the room all night. In the morning I found him quietly asleep."
This incident would not be of much importance unless we have another similar observation. Eberle says: "I have taken it very often, and have uniformly found it produce a calm and delightful state of feeling, succeeded by a disposition to sleep."
Dr. Oliver also found it to produce in him "the most delicious tranquility, resembling the operation of opium, and followed by no bad effects."
(Broughton, quoted by Dr. S. A. Jones, Amer. Observer, Jan, 1876.)
From these provings it is difficult to assume the exact curative – homeopathic – action of the remedy. In the first proving by Dr. Jones we see the primary effect of the drug (a proving); consequently, it is logical to assume that most probably the remedy would be useful homeopathically in cases of bradycardia. In the other three cases we see, in my opinion, a kind of temporary (due to very low dilutions) curative action of the remedy.