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Materia Medica Viva Volume 1 – Page 25

ABSINTHIUM

Artemisia Absinthium, Absinthium vulgare, Absinthium vulgare majus, Absinthium ponticum, Romanum officinarum.
Other synonyms: Wormwood N. O. Compositae
Mode of preparation: We use the tincture from the fresh young leaves and flowers.
THE ESSENTIAL FEATURES
An interesting feature of our remedies is the preference shown by each individual one to attack and affect a specific area, organ, or system of the body. With Absinthium we have a clear effect upon both the central and peripheral nervous systems. This remedy has an almost exclusive preference to upset the nervous system in all its degrees and depths. It is a very vivacious remedy, producing an intense homeopathic picture, which has unfortunately been neglected as it has not been understood so far.
Absinthium is indicated in cases where the nervous system is the patients’s weak point, manifested in four different steps: giddiness, convulsions, delirium and finally unconsciousness and stupor.
Each step has peculiarities of its own; in order to remember their most prominent characteristics a guide to these peculiarities is given below.
Giddiness comes on suddenly, on rising from a chair, and the patient has the tendency to fall backwards. Here the emphasis is on the direction of falling: backwards.
The peculiarity of the next step, the convulsive state, is not so much convulsions per se as the fact that convulsions are preceded by muscular quiverings, and by trembling felt in the tongue and in the heart as palpitations. The convulsions begin in the face with distortions, grimaces, tongue biting, foam in the mouth, and then spread to the body and limbs.
A large number of epileptiform seizures come in rapid succession, one after the other, without total loss of consciousness, within a short period of time, for instance three or four hours, after which they stop for some time and are then repeated again in the same fashion. The