Materia Medica

SPONGIA TOSTA – Allen TF

Goitre; hard, with suffocative spells at night, sometimes with hoarse cough or staring eyes.

Laryngitis, harsh, croupy cough, with suffocative spells rousing from sleep, larynx sensitive to touch, < turning the head; (in croup Spongia is always indicated by the suffocative attacks, resembling Brom.); it is not useful in the acute febrile stage, but it follows Aconite; it is possible, however, now to prescribe Iodine or Bromine, as occasion demands, with great accuracy, and thus avoid the necessity of giving Spongia (which combines in a feeble way some properties of both these drugs).

It has been used for phthisis of the larynx and for diphtheritic croup.

Chronic hoarseness, especially if the voice gives out in talkingor singing (Phos.).

Oppression of breathing, > eating a little.

Bronchial catarrh, with wheezing asthmatic cough, > eating or drinking, < cold air; sometimes in bronchitis, with profuse expectoration and suffocative attacks, < lying with the head low and in a hot room, > eating .

It has been prescribed with success in the dry suffocative cough associated with aneurism or with enlarged bronchial glands.

Occasionally useful in whooping cough, < midnight and cold air.

Occasionally prescribed in pneumonia (see Iodine); in pneumonia, when the patient cannot lie down.

It has also been prescribed in pulmonary consumption, particularly the form following pneumonia,characterized by the suffocative spells of coughing, < dry, cold air.

Rheumatic endorcaditis, inability to lie down, wakes with suffocation, etc.