not have so much pain in the muscles. Eupatorium is the strongest remedy for muscular pain in the materia medica; the joints feel broken and the pain goes right through to the bone, whereas Bry. is not so sore in the skeletal muscular structure.
We find in the Repertory: ‘delusion that he had walked a long distance’; but it is not entirely a delusion. When patients describe their pain, they will describe it as if they have exerted themselves to the extent that their muscles have become very painful. Also
‘delusions that he will go out of his mind’; it is a state when the individual says, “I think I am going out of my mind”. This is the same as ‘fear of insanity’. The texts are written like this, but sometimes you see someone saying this, and it is not a delusion. You see the pain in the eyes; it can affect even the muscular structure of the eyeball; when they turn their eyes they feel painful.
You must try to understand the feeling of malaise, the bone pain that goes on inside, and the muscular pain, which affects all the muscles, even the eye muscles. The pain of this remedy is ameliorated quite strongly by perspiration. The symptom ‘vomiting of bile before and after chill’ is of no real importance, but it appears as a keynote that I have never seen in practice.
The main idea of Eupatorium is a bruised feeling as of broken bones all over the body. Arnica has a totally different picture; the pain is located on the surface of the skin, which is why you get the idea of “Don’t touch me”. The pain of Eupatorium may be very strong, but it is a different sort of pain altogether; you can touch or hold an Eupatorium case. One could say it is a ‘thin’ pain rather than a ‘thick’ pain, a pain going deep inside. For example, to prescribe Arn., in influenza, you would have to see the pain on the surface.
This remedy will mainly be indicated in different kinds of colds and fevers. It has proved curative in common colds (grippal infections), but also in epidemic influenza; and in intermittent