Coffea cruda


Coffea cruda signs and symptoms of the homeopathy medicine from the Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica by J.H. Clarke. Find out for which conditions and symptoms Coffea cruda is used…


      Coffee. *N. O. Rubiaceae. Tincture of raw berries.

Clinical

Apoplexy. Asthma. Aural neuralgia. Colic. Convulsions. Diarrhoea. Ecstasy. *Excitement. Headache. Heart, hyperaesthesia of. Hernia.Hyperaesthesia. Hysteria. Intermittents. *Joy, *ill- effects of. Labour pains. Metrorrhagia. Neuralgia. Over- sensitiveness. Sciatica. Shock. Sleeplessness. Toothache.

Characteristics

The effects of *Coffea cruda have to be considered separately from those of *Coffea tosta, since the roasting converts much of the Caffeine into Caffeone or Methylamine, which gives to coffee its aroma. But the effects are scarcely distinguishable, and I have not attempted to keep them strictly apart. The provings of *Coffea *c. were made with the raw berries. *Coffea belongs to the same family as *China, *Ipecacuanha, and like these remedies has many symptoms of intermittent fever. It has been noticed that coffee-drinkers who do get ague are more difficult to cure than those who do not drink coffee. The great characteristics of *Coffea is exaltation of the senses and sensibility in general. Sight is improved, fine print can be read easily, hearing is more acute, and noises are intolerable. The sense of smell is heightened. All kinds of pains are intolerable; and are accompanied with fear of death. The mental activities are exalted. Sudden emotions, especially joy, produce dangerous symptoms. Great sensitiveness to touch or contact. These symptoms will recall *Aconite Guernsey places it in the front rank of remedies for irritability. He compares four others with it, all of which have irritability in high degree, but have different concomitants: *Aconite, “fearful and anxious, dreads things,” *Aurum, “suicidal, will thrash around in bed (as females in confinement) as if wishing to injure or kill themselves,” *Chamomilla, “spiteful, uncivil,” *Coffea, “wakeful, on the constant move,” *Nux v., “sullen, keeps the eyes shut, doesn’t wish to speak or have anything to do with any one.” *Staphysagria and *Coloc. deserve mention also. Teste groups *Coffea with *Causticum. He remarks that dynamised *Coffea *crud. prevents or neutralizes, in many persons, the effects of roasted coffee. This quasi-isopathic action, as Teste truly remarks, is by no means confined to *Coffea, dynamisations of many other drugs being antidotal to secondary effects of the crude substances. Hahnemann describes the migraine of coffee-drinkers thus: “It comes in the morning after waking, increasing little by little. The pain becomes intolerable, and sometimes burning, integument of head very sensitive and painful on slightest touch. Body and mind excessively sensitive. Patients look exhausted, retire to dark places, close their eyes to avoid light of day, remain seated in an armchair or stretched on a bed. The least noise or motion excites the pain. They avoid talking, being talked to, or hearing others talk. The body is colder than usual though no chills are experienced, the hands and feet are especially cold. They loath everything, especially food and drink, on account of a continual sickness at the stomach. If the attack is very violent a vomiting of mucus takes place, which, however, does not relieve the headache. There are no alvine discharges. This kind of megrim scarcely ever leaves before evening. If the paroxysm is less violent, a little strong coffee which was the first cause of such

a headache will produce a temporary palliation of the pain, but the disposition to relapse becomes so much greater. The attacks come irregularly, every fortnight, or every few weeks, without any apparent cause, and quite suddenly, so much so that the patient often does not feel a single unpleasant symptom the evening preceding the attack. Such a headache has never been seen by me except in real coffee-drinkers.” It is well to inquire carefully into the dietary of patients who come complaining of headaches of this kind. More recently Dr. Gilles de la Tourette (*Lancet, July 20, 1895) has described the effects of coffee. In his opinion they are very frequently mistaken for the effects of alcohol: “morning vomiting of glairy mucus, pain in the pit of the stomach, thickly-coated tongue, loss of appetite. The disgust excited by even the idea of solid food is such that these patients eat nothing else but bread soaked in their poison_coffee. There supervene then nausea, vomiting, and painful acid eructations.” The pulse is slowed.Insomnia is common, and if there sleep it is disturbed by dreams of a terrifying nature, like those met with in alcoholism.The effects of coffee are less deep than those of alcohol, and quickly disappear when the habit is discontinued. Peculiar symptoms are: as if head too small, as if something hard pressing on surface of brain, as if head would burst and fly to pieces if she moved, as if intestines were being cut, as if body would burst, “tight” pain, sensation of warmth. *Coffea is suited to tall, lean, stooping persons, with dark complexions.Sanguine choleric temperament, complaints during infancy and dentition. Diarrhoea in housewives who have much care and trouble in managing their households. The symptoms are better by warmth, and worse in open air (though in toothache warm drinks worse, cold drinks better ). Touch worse, would like to rub the part but it is too sensitive. Slight passive movements are perceived as enormous, children at times cannot bear to be carried about. Most symptoms are worse at night: sleeps till 3 a.m., after which he only dozes.

Relations.

*Antidoted by: Aconite, Chamomilla, Ignatia, Nux-v., Mercurius, Pulsatilla, Sulphur, and especially Tabacum (Teste). *Antidote to: Belladonna, Chamomilla, Cicuta, Coloc., Lycopodium, Nux-v., Stry., Valer. It is *incompatible with: Cantharis, Causticum, Cocc., Ignatia *Followed well by: Aurum, Belladonna, Opium, Nux-v., Lycopodium *Compare: Cypr. (ecstasy), Bryonia And Chamomilla (toothache better by cold), Aconite (predicts hour of death), Coca, Codein, Coff-t.

Causation

Effects of sudden emotion, especially pleasurable ones. Fear or fright. Wine (wine-drinkers should take coffee, beer-drinkers should take tea). Over-fatigue and long journeys.

SYMPTOMS.

Mind

Over-sensitiveness, weeping mood. Great anguish, cannot be composed, is not able to hold the pen, trembles. Sentimental ecstasy, excited imagination, increased power to think. Excessive weeping and lamentations over trifles. The pains seem insupportable, driving to despair. Fright from sudden pleasant surprises.

Head

Pains in the head, as if the brain were bruised (as if the brain were torn or dashed to pieces). Semi-lateral cephalalgia, as if a nail were driven into the parietal bone. In the vertex he feels and hears a cracking, when sitting quietly. Heaviness of the head. Congestion in the head, especially when speaking (or after a pleasant surprise).

Eyes

Eyes lively and red, with unusually clear sight, can read small writing more distinctly.

Ears

Excessive sensibility of hearing. Musical sounds seem to be too loud, and too sharp. Hardness of hearing, with buzzing in the ears.

Nose

Epistaxis, with heaviness of the head. The sense of smell is more acute.

Face

Heat of the face, with redness of the cheeks.

Teeth

Successive pullings, and sharp pains in the teeth, with inquietude, anxiety and tears, especially at night and after a meal. Toothache, better by cold water.

Throat

Sore throat, with great and painful sensibility, and swelling of the velum palati, worse when swallowing.

Stomach

Taste of hazel nuts, or sweet almonds, in the mouth. Tobacco- smoke appears particularly agreeable. Sensation of immoderate hunger, with rapid, hurried eating. Thirst increased, especially at night, it wakens him. Bilious vomiting. Cramps in the stomach, with pressive, shooting pains.

Abdomen

Anxiety and oppression in the region of the epigastrium. The clothes are oppressive. Colic, as if the stomach had been overloaded, as if the abdomen would burst, cannot suffer the clothes to be tight on the abdomen. Pressure in the abdomen as from incarcerated flatulence. Abdominal pains which induce despair, especially in women.

Stool

Faeces soft, with frequent evacuation. Diarrhoea, also during dentition.

Urinary Organs

Abundant emission of urine, especially towards midnight.

Male Sexual Organs.

Great excitement of sexual desire, with flaccidity or strong irritation of the genital parts, without emission of semen, and with dry heat of the body.

Female Sexual Organs.

Immoderate irritation of the sexual parts of females, with voluptuous itching, great secretion of mucus, and frequent flow of blood. Metrorrhagia. labour and after-pains insupportably painful.

Respiratory Organs and Chest

Short, jerking, dry cough, with great irritation in the larynx, and anxious tossings. Oppression of the chest, obliged to take short inspirations, the breathing heaves the chest visibly. Night cough (cough with measles). Fits of suffocation.

Heart

Palpitation of heart, violent, irregular, with trembling of limbs. Nervous palpitation. Palpitation after excessive joy, surprise.

John Henry Clarke
John Henry Clarke MD (1853 – November 24, 1931 was a prominent English classical homeopath. Dr. Clarke was a busy practitioner. As a physician he not only had his own clinic in Piccadilly, London, but he also was a consultant at the London Homeopathic Hospital and researched into new remedies — nosodes. For many years, he was the editor of The Homeopathic World. He wrote many books, his best known were Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica and Repertory of Materia Medica