The blood is dark-colored and does not coagulate.
It is often indicated in persons of aphlegmatic constitution, with disposition to melancholia and indolence.
It is probably most frequently indicated for persons with dark eyes and dark complexions.
Phlebitis following pregnancy.
Cures of epilepsy have been reported.
General dropsy, with blackish offensive urine and dark purplish or bluish skin; especially valuable in the ascites of drunkards.
Very valuable in suppurating wounds or in abscesses which threaten to become gangrenous.
Valuable in all typhoid types of disease when the indications of the drug permit, especially when there is tendencyto loquacity, to offensive discharges or exhalations, and a dry, red tongue.
Valuable for the effects of sunstroke, especially if the person is in the habit of using alcoholic stimulants, particularly if the face is dark red and limbs cold.
Extreme prostration, with tendency to disorganization of the blood.
The complaints of the Lach. are mostly on l. side, nearly always < sleep, so that the patient is awakened by distress.
Mental alienation; thinks that she is not at home, or thinks that there are robbers in the house and tries to escape, great aggravation from alcoholic drinks.
Dementia, with extraordinary loquacity.
Religious melancholia.
Delirium tremens, loquacity.
Religious melancholia.
Delirium tremens, loquacity, suffocative feeling about the throat.
Muttering delirium.
Insane jealousy.
Headache always < rising in morning.
Neuralgic headaches which concentrateat the root of the nose or extend into the face and eyes, or even to shoulders.
Meningitis, pain in vertex, spreading over the whole head.
Terrible neuralgic headaches, with tearing, < l. side, > warm applications.
Headaches from exposure to cold (Glon.).
Chronic neuralgic headaches, always < r. side , pulsating, extending into neck, which became stiff and swollen.
Neuralgic headaches starting in vertex and spreading over the head.
Threatening apoplexy, especially in drunkards.
Neuralgic of the orbit, < l., the eye feels as if it had been squeezed.
It is particularly useful for affections of the optic nerve and retina, rarely indicated in external inflammatory diseases.
Particularly valuable for haemorrhages of the optic nerve and retina, with consequent dimness of vision; this apoplexy may occur in persons who have no albuminuria.
Retinitis haemorrhagica (idiopathic).
Cellulitis of orbit (compare with Rhus t.)>
Asthenopia following diphtheria, a paralysis of accommodation, necessity to wear far-sighted glasses (Gels.).
Pain in ears, generally extending from the throat and zygoma into the ear; it has been found useful for inspissated cerumen, in deafness with great sensitivenes; these symptoms are usually associated with diseases of the throat or of other parts of the body.
Coryza and ozaena, when the general symptoms indicate the drug.
Sometimes in low forms of typhoid indicating Lach. there may be dark haemorrhage, also dark haemorrhage in amenorrhoea.
With the sore throat there may be obstruction of the posterior nares and discharge of bloody matter from the nostrils, and often soreness of the nostrils and lips.
Facial erysipelas, with great swelling and purplish appearance.
Neuralgia of the face.
Flushes of heat, especially at the climacteric.
Toothache, with swollen bleeding gums; gums sometimes dark purplish.
The tongue is usually red, dry and tremulous, or the tip is red and the centre brown, sometimes there is a red stripe through the centre (Verat.v.).
It is often indicated in canker sores on the tongue and in aphthae of the mouth.
Gangrene of the mouth.
Paralysis of tongue, it cannot be protruded, it catches in the teeth.
Swelling of submaxillary and salivary glands.
One of the most frequent uses of Lach is for sore throat; in all the ulcers and diseases of the throat requiring this remedy there is extreme sensitiveness externally to the slightest touch, which causes a feeling of suffocation, all bands around the throat must be loosened; internally the throat is swollen and suffocation threatens.
A feeling of a lump in the throat wakens out of sleep.
There is great difficulty in swallowing, especially when not swallowing food; liquids are apt to regurgitate through the nose.
The l. side of the throat is chiefly affected, or the trouble has extended from l. to r.
It is called for in various phases of disease from simple tonsillitis and pharyngitis to the most terrible and destructive diphtheritic process; in the latter disease, and indeed in nearly all cases requiring the drug, the throat is purple (not bright red and oedematous like Apis).
It is not only indicated in diphtheritic and ulcerative diseases, but in certain phases of scarlet fever, with gangrenous throat; it has also proved useful in syphilitic ulceration of the throat.
In all the diseases of the throat indicating Lach. there is usually pain, sometimes sharp, which is apt to extend from throat into the ear, on l. side.
Elongation of uvula, with constant efforts to clear the throat.
Cardialgia and indigestion, great soreness of the pit of the stomach to touch, and intolerance of the clothes.
It has been found useful at the period of black vomit in yellow fever, and sometimes in the vomiting of pregnancy.
It is a valuable remedy for the gastric of drunkards, and for weakened digestion after Mercury.
Valuable in inflammation of the liver, threatening to develop an abscess.
Sometimes in the distress from gallstones; the liver swollen and very painful, with dirty yellow color of the face and numerous other symptoms.
Note particularly the intolerance of clothing over the hypochondriac and epigastric regions.
It is extremely valuable in typhlitis and in the late stage of peritonitis, with aggravation from sleep and intolerance of clothing.
It may be noted here that the r. side of the abdomen presents numerous symptoms of this drug, while in the throat most symptoms are on the l. side.
The abdominal symptoms have pointed to its use in metritis and peritonitis, in dysentery, in dysmenorrhoea, in inflammation of the ovaries, in short, in a great variety of diseases of the abdominal and pelvic viscera, usually of an adynamic type, with the characteristic symptoms of the remedy.
Haemorrhage from the bowels in typhoid fever, sometimes with nosebleed, the haemorrhages consisting of decomposed blood.
Fistula in the anus, with sensation of beating as of little hammers.
Haemorrhoids which are painful and strangulated with sticking or feeling of a plug in the anus or throbbing.
Strangulated piles, with great constriction of the anus, which makes straining extremely painful.
The stools of Lach. are generally very offensive or putrid, and sometimes, in low types of disease, involuntary.
Diarrhoea, especially in hot weather or in the relaxing weather of spring; D. in drunkards; during the climacteric, symptoms always < sleep; there is generally sensitiveness of the abdomen and desire to loosen the clothing, with more or less tenderness inl. side.
Subacute inflammation of the bladder, with very offensive dark brown urine and frequent urging.
After diphtheria or scarlet fever the urine is very dark or blackish, with a sediment like coffee-grounds (of decomposed blood), albuminous.
It has been found useful in venereal ulcers (chancroid), when the sore tends to become gangrenous, with the general peculiarities of the drug.
Membranous dysmenorrhoea < alcoholic stimulants, with great pain in l. ovary darting upward.
A valuable remedy for inflammation of the ovaries, < l., with violent pain and sensitiveness to weight of clothes, especially if the menstrual flow is offensive, sometimes general relief on the free appearance of the menses.
Puerperal metritis, metro-peritonitis and fetid lochia.
Valuable for a great variety of troubles at the climacteric, especially for metrorrhagia, fainting turns, hot flushes, hot vertex, flatulent distention, pain in ovaries, exhaustion from sleep, etc.
The most frequent indications for Lach. in all diseases of the uterus and ovaries are the intolerance of the weight of the clothing and the tendency of the disease to extend from l. to r., with these conditions it has cured almost every pathological condition of the female organs, tumors, inflammations, displacements, indurations, neuralgias, etc.
Various forms of laryngitis, aphonia, catarrhal or paralytic; laryngitis, catarrhal, croupous or diphtheritic; in all these forms of disease there is extreme sensitiveness of the larynx to external touch, and especially a feeling of suffocation and constriction, so that the patient cannot bear anything tight about the throat; the cough is spasmodic, suffocative and wakens from sleep, the pain extending from l. side of larynx into ear.
In diphtheritic croup there is a purplish hue of the face, with suffocation, extreme fetor of the exhalations, albuminuria, great prostration, etc.
Whooping cough, the fits repeatedly awaken the child out of sleep.
Asthmatic attacks preventing sleep, intolerance of the least pressure about the neck or chest, > expectoration.
The chest symptoms point to the use of the drugin bronchial catarrh and pneumonia of the subacute or chronic form; in these diseases the cough is suffocative and wakens from sleep.
In pneumonia when there is threatening abscess, with muttering delirium.
In threatening paralysis of the lungs, with albuminuria, the patient is unable to sleep on account of great distress for breath, or if he falls asleep he is immediately awakened by the necessity to breathe.
Dyspnoea so great that the patient has to sit up, cannot lie down on account of suffocative fulness in chest, and cannot bear anything tight about neck or chest.
Frequently indicated in coughs of nervous or reflex origin, for instance, from inflammation of ovaries or of pelvic viscera, or nervous cough at the climacteric without symptoms of local inflammation.
Emphysema.
Hydrothorax.
Inflammation of breasts, with suppuration and bluish appearance, extreme sensitiveness of the nipples.
It is not infrequently indicated in all the inflammatory diseases of the heart, with the symptoms of palpitation, suffocation, intolerance of pressure about the heart, with pain and numbness in l. arm, and a feeling as if the heart were growing up and suffocating him; it is extremely useful in atheromatous arteries and in chronic aortitis, with terrible dyspnoea.
Nervous affections of the heart, palpitations; feeling as if the heart turned over, and very irregular action of the heart.
Hypertrophy of the heart.
Angina pectoris.
The pains in the neck are most severe in the cervical region.
Neuralgic affections of the spine and spinal nerves.
Myelitis and neuritis.
Neuralgia of the coccyx, < rising up, must sit perfectly still.
It has cured sciatica of r. side, with the characteristic indications of the drug.
Purpura haemorrhagica, the whole body is swollen and extremely sore, intolerant of clothing.
Tendency to ecchymoses, to bed-sores.
Indolent ulcers, with bluish-purple color.
Carbuncles.
Varicose ulcers.
Various forms of pustular eruptions, which suppurate and become bluish-black.
Pemphigus, the bullae containing decomposed serum, with bubbles of gas.
Erysipelas; of infants.
It is not infrequently called for in scarlatina.
Fungus haematodes.
A valuable palliative in congenital cyanosis.
Chronic intermittents, a tendency to recur in the spring when the weather becomes debilitating, with the general characteristics of the drug.