Materia Medica

STRAMONIUM – Allen TF

Chorea, with the peculiar fright of the drug, with constantly changing spasms; chorea, particularly of the muscles of the face, which assume all kinds of expressions (rarely useful for chorea, which persistently attacks certain muscles).

Hysterical convulsions, with frothing, distorted features.

Convulsions resulting from fright, especially from being frightened by animals.

Raving, with attempts to escape; talking, laughing or singing; especially with symptoms of terror, thinks he will be killed or that wild beasts are chasing him.

Mania, wild delirium, with terrifying hallucinations.

The child screams in fright or an adult is horrified or loquacious, is particularly afraid of the dark.

Hallucinations; he particularly imagines that he is surrounded by black insects or by small animals of a dark color.

The loquacity of this drug may be compared with that of Hyos. and Lach.; Stram. is persistent in being confined to one subject; he imagines he is talking with spirits or absent people.

Very frequently useful in delirium tremens, with visions of animals from which he attempts to escape.

In delirium of fever, characterized by an abnormal sense of the proportions of his body, it is similar to Bapt.; the Stram. patient is apt to imagine that certain parts are of unnatural size, or that they are double.

Hydrophobia; of all drugs known to us this seems most nearly a specific for this dreadful disease, and some cases supposed to be genuine have been cured.

Vertigo when walking in the dark.

It has been prescribed for congestive headache, with fear of going mad from the violent pain.

Boring frontal headache, preceded by obscure vision; it has been noticed that when the slight of one eye is blurred the pain is on the opposite side of the head; hydrocephalus.

Cerebro-spinal meningitis.

Strabismus.

Neuralgia of the face, with twitches, delirium, etc.

Diarrhoea during typhoid, black, putrid, with loquacious delirium, desire for light, fright, etc.

Suppression of urine, especially in typhoid.

Dysmenorrhoea.

Puerperal convulsions.

Puerperal mania.

Nymphomania, either puerperal or menstrual, with great violence.

Spasmodic suffocative cough, with jerking of the extremities.

Asthma, desire for open air.

Spasmodic asthma (very important), < talking, hardly able to inspire.

Most violent paroxysms of whooping cough, with suffocation almost convulsive, the child starts up in fright.

Occasionally useful in pneumonia, with (the peculiar) delirium.

Sometimes useful in early stages of locomotor ataxia.

Erysipelas of the head and face.

Occasionally called for during the cure of abscesses, especially of l. hip; in this disease there may be most violent pain, which we do not often find in the Stram. patient.

Scarlet fever, quite frequently indicated before the eruption appears, sometimes afterwards, particularly in the malignant type.

Suppressed eruptions, with delirium, etc.