Materia Medica

EUPATORIUM PERFOLIATUM – Allen TF

Periodical headaches, especially in occiput, throbbing, sensation of great soreness of eyeballs, soreness of scalp, etc.

Violent coryza or influenza, with thirst, heaviness over head, bone-pains, soreness of eyeballs, etc.

Inflammation of larynx, with soreness and hoarseness, soreness extending into the bronchi and trachea, usually with bone-pain and soreness of the chest generally.

The cough is generally < lying on back, > lying on face; cough hurts the head and chest, the patient holds the chest with the hands (Dros.); generally there is no expectoration, or at least very little.

The characteristic fever, intermittent fever, for which this drug should be prescribed, has thirst beginning before th chilland continuing during both chill and heat; it is extremely important to observe that vomiting is particularly apt to result from drinking or taking any nourishment, either before or after the chill and fever; this vomiting from taking water is much more characteristic of the drug than the bone-pains, especially the vomitingof bile as the chill passes off; the violent bone-pains, the violent headache, pain and soreness of the muscles, are the universal accompaniments of the intermittent fever; the patient feels as if all the bones were breaking; it is very frequently observed that these.

Eupatorium cases present in incomplete paroxysms, for the chill and fever are well marked, and perhaps violent, and yet the sweat is entirely wanting; while this is usually the case, it is true that the drug cures cases in which there is a decided sweating stage.

Valuable for catarrhal fevers, especially if there is bilious vomiting, with soreness of the chest and muscles and bone-pains, running from eyes and nose, soreness of the eyeballs, soreness of head, etc.