Belladonna - General symptoms - Nash
Deadly Nightshade, Bellad, Belladona, Bell.Have you ever used Belladonna? Yes No
Below are the main rubriks (i.e strongest indications or symptoms) of Belladonna in traditional homeopathic usage, not approved by the FDA.
GENERAL
General
All acute inflammatory diseases present prominent head symptoms, pain, red puffed face, throbbing carotids and delirium, and spasms, or jerks and twitchings.
Eyes staring, red, blood-shot and pupils first contracted, then greatly dilated.
Mouth and throat very dry, red, sometimes greatly swollen; all mucous surfaces correspondingly dry and hot.
Pains appear suddenly, and after a while disappear as suddenly as they came.
Skin very red and hot, fairly radiates heat; burns the hand touching it, but sweats on covered parts.
Several inflammations which streak out in radii from a center.
Modalities worse after 3 P. M. or after midnight from uncovering, or draft of air, and lying down; better from covering and head high.
Great liability to take cold; sensitive to draft of air, especially when uncovering the head; from having the hair cut (Hep.); tonsils swell after riding in a cold wind (Aconite Acon.).
Imagines he sees ghosts, hideous faces, and various insects (Stramonium Stram.); black animals, dogs and wolves.
Abdomen tender, distended worse by least jar, even the bed; obliged to walk with great care for fear of a jar.
Pain in right ileo-caecal region, worse by slightest touch, even the bed covers.
Pressing downwards, as if the contents of abdomen would issue from the vulva; worse standing and sitting erect; worse mornings (compare Lit. mur., Sep.).
Tongue Red and dry, with red edges and white coating in the middle; Papillae bright and prominent, like scarlatina (Aconite Acon., Antimonium Tartaricum Ant. t.), offensive, putrid taste in throat when eating or drinking, although food tastes natural.
We now come to consider what I call the trio of delirium remedies -Belladonna, Hyoscyamus Niger Hyoscyamus and Stramonium Stramonium. Many other remedies have delirium, but these three deserve to head the list. Belladonna may also be called pre-eminently a head remedy. In most complaints where Belladonna is indicated head symptoms preponderate. The blood all seems to be rushing to the head. (Amyl Nitrosum Amyl nitrite, Glonoin Glonoine, Melilotus Officinalis Melilotus). The head is hot while the extremities are cool. The eyes are red and blood-shot. The face is also red, almost purple red. The carotid arteries throb so as to be plainly visible. There is either great pain, pressure or sense of fullness, or an almost stupid condition. The wild, terrible delirium, if present, may be found with pain, or even with no complaint of pain. In delirium the patient "imagines he sees ghosts, hideous faces and animals and insects." Fears all sorts of imaginary things and wants to run away from them; breaks out into fits of laughter or screams and gnashes his teeth.
In inflammations, which localize, Belladonna is in the first stage as often the leading remedy as any other. It does not make much difference where they localize, whether in head, throat, mammae or elsewhere, if they come on suddenly, pursue a rapid course, are red, painful and especially throbbing. It is astonishing how many local inflammations, even a carbuncle or boil, will so disturb the general system and circulation, as to produce the general inflammatory fever, with the characteristic head symptoms calling for Belladonna, and no less astonishing how Belladonna controls the whole condition, both local and general, when indicated. What! exclaims the believer in local applications, give Belladonna internally for a boil on the hand or foot? Yes, indeed, not only Belladonna, but Merc Viv Mercurius, Hepar Sulphuris, Tarentula Hispanica Tarantula Cubensis, and many others, and you will not have any need for local medication at all. It is only in the first or congestive or active inflammatory stage that Belladonna is in place; but, if properly administered then, it will often abort the whole thing and never leave it to finish all its stages, or if not, so modify as to make it comparatively insignificant.
Belladonna is one of our best remedies in the diseases of children, even vieing with Chamomilla Chamomilla. They come suddenly, almost without warning. This sudden and intense onset of fever is sometimes duplicated in Cina Cina cases, but there is helminthiasis in connection with it. Child is well one minute and sick the next, and one very characteristic symptom in these cases is, the child is very hot, with red face and semi-stupor, but every little while starts or jumps in sleep as if it might go into spasms. This condition is often found in children and then Belladonna is like "oil upon troubled waters." Remember Belladonna inflammations localize more than they do in Aconite Aconite. I drew the difference between these two remedies in inflammations and inflammatory fevers when writing upon Aconite Aconite. There is no use of confounding them. Some do so; but, in so doing, only exhibit their ignorance.
There are, in every remedy, symptoms of sensation, circumstance, constitution or modality which are peculiar both to diseases and remedies. These symptoms are not always easily accounted for. The attempt to explain them from a pathological standpoint is not always possible or even necessary were it possible. A simple acceptance of them as facts is often more sensible than to wait long to find the often unfindable. To act as a prescriber upon what we know is better than waiting, because we cannot explain or account for it. For instance, it is not easy to tell why "the pains of Belladonna appear suddenly and after a time disappear as suddenly as they come," while those of Stannum Iodatum Stannum "gradually increase to a great height and as gradually decline," or Sulphuricum Acidum Sulphuric acid "begin slowly and decline suddenly," or "gradually increase and suddenly cease" but so it is, and the acceptance of these facts enables the homoeopathic prescriber to cure his patient, whether he can explain them or not. Guernsey says -"This medicine is particularly applicable, and in fact takes the lead over all others in cases in which quickness or suddenness of either sensation or motion is predominant." To be sure all these symptoms have their pathological explanation if we could give it; but, acting on our law of Similia, we can cure our patients and are not left at sea, without chart or compass, because we cannot explain. We know that these symptoms are the natural outcry of the pathological state, and that the administration of a poison which is capable of setting up a similar outcry cures the patient. What else is necessary? Either this is true, or Homoeopathy is a humbug.
The simple fact, abundantly proven, that the remedy having the symptoms corresponding to the symptoms of the patient, cures him, no matter what the pathology, where a cure is at all possible, is one of the greatest discoveries of scientific investigation. Long live the name of Hahnemann the discoverer.
No remedy has greater affinity for the throat. The burning, dryness (Sabadilla Sabadilla), sense of constriction (constant desire to swallow to relieve the sense of dryness, Lyssin (Hydrophobinum) Lyssin), with or without swelling of the palate and tonsils, is sometimes intense. I once witnessed a case of poisoning in which these symptoms were terribly distressing.
There are two very characteristic symptoms in the abdominal region, viz. "Tenderness of the abdomen, aggravated by the least jar, in walking, or stepping, or even the bed or chair, upon which she sits or lies"; and "pressure downward as if the contents of the abdomen would issue through the vulva, worse mornings." This last symptom is found under other remedies, notably Lilium tigrinum and Sepia Sepia. With Belladonna there is often associated with this pressure downward a pain in the back "as if it would break." "Starting and jumping," or "twitching in sleep," or on going to sleep is characteristic.
So also is "sleepy, but cannot sleep," and "moaning during sleep."
With Belladonna the head likes wrapping up or covering, takes cold when it is uncovered or from cutting the hair (Silicea Silicea). (Glonoin Glonoine; can't bear hat on).
Uniform, smooth, shining, scarlet redness of the skin, so hot that it imparts a burning sensation to the hand of one who feels of it, is very characteristic (H. N. Guernsey).
Convulsions with other symptoms of Belladonna are very frequently found under Belladonna.
I have here endeavoured to give an outline of this great remedy. A volume might be profitably written upon its virtues. No one remedy would be more greatly missed than this, if it were to be expunged from our great Materia Medica, but we must leave it here and proceed to notice.