DROSERA ROTUNDIFOLIA
The round-leaved Sundew, an insectivorous marsh plant.
N.O. Droseraceae.
Tincture of the fresh plant.
THE ESSENTIAL FEATURES
This remedy has a reputation for curing diseases that are effects or after-effects of tuberculosis, or those belonging to the so-called tubercular miasm. It has reputation for curing chronic coughs, asthma and diseases of the respiratory tract in general; lungs, bronchi, and larynx. It is indicated where there is vomiting of food from coughing, with gastric irritation and profuse expectoration.
Margaret Tyler has shown the particular value of Drosera in a great number of tubercular manifestations, especially in tuberculo- sis of the joints and bones, tubercular glands, and goitre. Drosera is also said to have been very successful in stiffness, pain and deformation of the spine. She also relates some cases of this kind, for instance, a spondylitis tuberculosa in a four-year-old boy and a scoliosis in a young woman, which were ameliorated so well under Drosera that the patients were permanently free of complaints.
In addition, Drosera is one of the most important remedies in the treatment of cicatrices, especially tubercular scars. Tyler relates that she has observed again and again that the scar tissue detached from its ground after Drosera and became freely movable, simultaneous with considerable amelioration of the patient’s general state. In many cases, after some time there was nothing more to be seen of the old cicatrice.
Finally, Drosera may be indicated in hypertrophy of the lymphatic and glandular tissues. Most of all, the submandibular glands, the