Materia Medica

GELSEMIUM SEMPERVIRENS – Allen TF

General prostration and loss of muscular power, fear of making any effort, desire to be alone.

Paralysis of various groups of muscles about the eye, throat, larynx, chest, sphincters, extremities, etc.

Paralysis following diphtheria.

Locomotor ataxia.

Paraplegia.

In general; hysterical spasms, a kind of hystero-epilepsy.

Puerperal convulsions.

Convulsions from suppression of menses.

Catarrhal affections of various mucous membranes with a relaxed and debilitated condition of the syste, especially in women.

Neuralgias of various nerves, with loss of controlover the part, pain in the muscles of the back, hips and lower extremities; the pains are mostly deep-seated.

The patient has lost control of his mental faculties, his ideas flow on in a disconnected fashion, the attempt to think connectedly causes a painful feeling in the head, dizziness, heat of the face, cold feet,etc; on falling asleep the patient is apt to be delirious.

In low types of fever the patient is generally stupid, desiringto be let alone; the mental faculties are either dull or there is great depression, with fear of death.

This drug is frequently indicated in bodily ailments, especially diarrhoea, uterine symptoms, etc., resulting from emotional excitement, such as sudden bad news, fright, grief, etc.

It has rarely been indicated in acute mania during the progress of melancholia; if so there is wild talking or singing.

A large proportion of the condition indicating Gel. have more or less vertigo, which is sometimes intense and associated with loss of sight and lack of muscular steadiness, so that the patient staggers when walking (Con.).

Headache as from a band around head.

The pain is mostly seated in the posterior part of the head, associated with muscular soreness of the neck, pain extending to the shoulders and spine, with dizziness.

Blind headaches, the head feels large, confused and dizzy.

Headaches at the base of the brain extending through the head to the eyes, < heat.

General nervous headache, with soreness and pain extending into face and teeth or to shoulders, with attacks of blindness and dizziness.

In cerebro-spinal meningitis, with extreme tenderness of the occipital region, intolerance of slightest motion, etc.

Headaches generally > discharge of profuse watery urine (Ign., Nux v.).

Menstrual headaches, with blurred vision, nausea and vomiting which relieved the headache.

Headaches at the climacteric period, with drowsiness, vertigo, blurred vision, > profuse menstruation.

Serous inflammations within the eyeball.

Iritis, with serous exudation (descemetitis); choroiditis; detachment of the retina; retinitis, with hazy vitreous or extravasations of blood; retinitis in Bright’s disease; in all these interocular inflammations there are generally dull aching pain in the eyeball and neuralgia about the eye.

Paralysis of the muscles of the eye; of the upper lid and of the proper muscles of the eyeball.

Asthenopia from muscular weakness.

Double vision from paralysis of muscles of the eye.

Deafness, the result of catarrh of the middle ear and Eustachian tube; several brilliant cures have been made by it.

Deafness resulting from quinine has been cured.

Nasal catarrh, with excoriating discharge, sore throat, associated with physical weakness.

Acute nasal catarrhs, especially in the summer, with inflammation of throat and pain extending into the ear, and deafness.

Disposition to take cold at the slightest change in the weather.

Hay fever, with the peculiar head symptoms of the drug.

Neuralgia of the face, pains generally sharp, the face usually congested, of a dusk hue, associated with vertigo occipital headche and dimness of vision.

Disorders of dentition in children, with fever, frightened feeling, apparent vertigo, or with drowsiness and confusion, sometimes dilated pupils, dim vision, etc.

Paralysis of the tongue, it feels numb and heavy (Acon.).

Various forms of sore throat, mostly catarrhal, rarely ulcerative, sometimes with difficulty in swallowing from the soreness, when the pain extends to the ears, or at other times the difficulty in swallowing may be due to paralysis of the pharyngeal muscles.

A very valuable remedy for paralysis of the throat following diphtheria, a feeling as if there were a lump in the throat which could not be swallowed.

As a rule the Gel. cases have no thirst, and there is generally a sensation of emptiness and weakness in the stomach, or of oppression, a feeling of a heavy load.

Numerous cases of hiccough, some chronic cases, < evening.

Gastro-intestinal catarrh, with jaundiced hue, persistent nausea, dizziness and diarrhoea.

Passive congestions of the liver, with vertigo, blurred vision, etc.

Diarrhoea, both acute and chronic, resulting from depressing emotions, such as fright or grief; stools generally painless or even involuntary, without much thirst (compare with Arg. nit., which is also indicated in diarrhoea from emotion excitement).

Paralysis, more or less complete, of sphincter ani, and in some cases partial prolapsus of the rectum.

Loss of power of the bladder, especially in old people, or following diphtheria.

Fundus of bladder paralyzed and the bladder enormously distended.

In incomplete paralysis of the bladder the flow is intermittent and the patient seems not to empty the bladder (Nux.v.).

Dysuria from stricture.

Great weakness of the sexual organs, so that men have emissions without erections.

It has been prescribed for inflammation of the urethra.

Inflammation of ovaries.

Congestion of uterus and inflammation of ovaries, heaviness in uterine region, with melancholia.

Dysmenorrhoea, with sick headache, vertigo, faintness, pains shooting up back and into legs.

Suppression of menses, congestion of the head, pain extending upward and downward from the uterine region.

It is sometimes valuable during labor when the os is rigid, with cutting pain in back extending upward.

Inefficient labor pains, which do not force downward, but shoot upward.

Threatening puerperal convulsions with stupidity, twitching of muscles, albuminuria, sharp cutting pain from the neck of the uterus upward.

Paralytic aphonia, with dryness and burning in throat, < during menstruation.

It has been used for spasm of the glottis in children.

Occasionally in laryngitis.

Catarrhal affections of the air-passages, with relaxed, debilitated condition of the system.

Dyspnoea, with distressing fulness in the chest, cold extremities, threatening suffocation, desire for fresh air, etc.

Threatening paralysis of the lungs, especially in old people.

Palpitation and oppression about the heart, the effects of grief.

Heart’s action feeble, the pulse soft and weak, extremities cold.

Loss of power in the extremities; the hands are very tired from playing on the piano; writers’ cramp; loss of power in the lower extremities; gait staggering; the lower limbs feel as heavy as lead.

Rheumatic symptoms in the lower extremities, the flesh feels sore.

Trembling of all limbs; loss of muscular control; numbness and lack of sensibility of the extremities.

Eruptive fevers, especially measles, with catarrhal symptoms of eyes, nose and throat, and cough, but with great prostration, stupor, livid eruption and lack of thirst.

In malarial fevers, especially of the South, so called bilious-remittent, it is an extremely valuable remedy; the fever is periodic, generally coming on towards evening, with stupor, dizziness, blindness, faintness, no thirst, great prostration, slight perspiration, which relieves.

In pure intermittents there may be chill in the back, a prolonged low type of fever, possibly with delirium, but with soft pulse and other Gel. symptoms.

Nervous chills, the effects of emotional excitement or depression.

Early stage of typhoid fever, with vertigo, tired feeling in all limbs, great weakness, soft pulse, tremulousness of the extremities.

Catarrhal fevers, chilliness in the back, desire to be over the fire, hot head, suffused eyes, stuffed nose, etc.

Fever of erythema, or in low types of scarlet fever and mild forms of erysipelas.