Materia Medica

Tuberculinum bovinum – Allen

Tuberculinum bovinum
tub

PUS (WITH BACILLI) FROM TUBERCULAR ABSCESS A NOSODE

 

Adapted to persons of light complexion; blue eyes, blonde in preference to brunette ;.tall, slim, flat, narrow chest; active and precocious mentally, weak physically; the tubercular diathesis.

 

When with a family history of tubercular affections THE BEST SELECTED REMEDY FAILS TO RELIEVE OR PERMANENTLY IMPROVE, without reference to name of disease.

 

Symptoms ever changing; ailments affecting one organ, then another—the lungs, brain, kidneys, liver, stomach, nervous system—beginning suddenly, ceasing suddenly.

 

Takes cold easily without knowing how or where; seems to take cold “every time he takes a breath of fresh air” (Hep.).

 

Emaciation rapid and pronounced; losing flesh while eating well (Abrot., Calc, Con., Iod., Nat.).

 

Melancholy, despondent; morose, irritable, fretful, peevish; taciturn, sulky; naturally of a sweet disposition, now on the borderland of insanity.

 

Everything in the room seemed strange as though in a strange place.

 

Headache: chronic, tubercular; pain intense, sharp, cutting, from above r. eye to occiput; as of an iron hoop around head (Anac, Sulph.) ; when the best selected remedy only palliates.

 

School-girl’s headache: < by study or even slight mental exertion; when using eyes in close work and glasses fail to >; with a tubercular history.

 

Acute cerebral or basilar meningitis, with threatened effusion; nocturnal hallucinations; wakes from sleep frightened, screaming; when Apis, Hell., or Sulph., though well selected, fail to improve.

 

Crops of small boils, intensely painful, successively appear in the nose; GREEN, FOETID PUS (Sec).

 

Plica polonica; several bad cases permanently cured after Bor. and Psor. failed.

 

Diarrhoea: early morning, sudden, imperative (Sulph.); emaciating though eating well (Iod., Nat.) ; stool dark, brown, watery, offensive; discharged with great force; great weakness and profuse night sweats.

 

Menses: too early; too profuse; too long-lasting; tardy in starting; with frightful dysmenorrhoea; in patients with a tuberculous history.

 

Tubercular deposit begins in apex of lungs, usually the left (Phos., Sulph., Ther.).

 

Eczema: tubercular over entire body; itching intense, < at night when undressing, from bathing; immense quantities of white bran-like scales; oozing behind the ears, in the hair, in folds of skin with rawness and soreness; fiery red skin. Ringworm.

 

 

Relations

Complementary: Psor., Sulph.

 

When Psor., Sulph., or the best selected remedy fails to relieve or permanently improve; follows Psor. as a constitutional remedy in hay fever, asthma.

 

Belladonna, for acute attacks, congestive or inflammatory, occurring in tubercular diseases.

 

Hydrastis to fatten patients cured with Tuber.