Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2273

and remittent fevers. Eupatorium acted in febris recurrens, in malaria and even in yellow fever. Kent extensively describes how it was applied as a domestic remedy (in the form of a tea) for common colds in the rural districts of the Eastern United States. He states that the curative action of this tea has its cause in the Law of Similars, even though the farmers applying it did not consciously consider homeopathic principles.
However, like all of our remedies, Eupatorium has to be prescribed according to the similarity of symptoms. The great keynote of the remedy in cases of colds and fevers is: extremely violent pain in the bones, as though they would break. A symptom from William- son’s proving reads: ‘Aching pain and soreness, as from having been beaten in the calves of the legs, small of the back, and in the arms, above and below the elbows’. And another: ‘Aching in the bones of the extremities, with soreness of the flesh’.
Again and again the expressions ‘sore’, ‘as if bruised and beaten’, ‘as if broken’ occur in the provings and cured cases. In addition, during the feverish states of Eupatorium there is very often nausea and vomiting. The nausea is in certain respects similar to that of Cocculus or Colchicum as it is frequently triggered by odours of cooking and food, even from the sight or thought of food.
The patients also easily get sick from eating and especially drinking. This is a remarkable feature since there is at the same time very much thirst for cold water, also in all stages of the fever.
‘Vomiting preceded bythirst’. ‘After drinking cold water: shuddering and vomiting of bile’. ‘Unquenchable thirst, but drinking causes nausea and vomiting and hastens the appearance of the chill’. ‘Very violent pains after eating; no rest until all is vomited up again’.
But even when the whole contents of the stomach are evacuated,