Gentiana Quinquefolia


Gentiana Quinquefolia 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 Gentiana Quinquefolia is used…


      Five-flowered Gentian. Gall of the Earth. *N.O. Gentianacae. Decoction of the herb. Tincture of fresh plant in flower (September, October).

Clinical

Anorexia. Intermittent fever.

Characteristics

This unproved Gentian has a great popular reputation in Ohio and other parts of the United States as an antiperiodic and tonic. Hale quoted Yelvington of Susquehanna (who says he learned its value from a tribe of Indians) as saying “he has succeeded in obstinate intermittents where Quinine and other antiperiodics had failed. He used the decoction of the herb. A fluid extract or the saturated tincture is a better form for administration in fever. It is a valuable tonic for old cases of dyspepsia and torpid liver.” It is a pleasant bitter, and appears to be, like the other Gentians, a *positive tonic. Dr. Yelvington also used it in cases of infantile fever and cholera infantum. “As a tonic in enfeebled patients and in chronic diseases,” he says, “it is a remedy *par excellence, appearing to exert an action over the organs of nutrition and assimilation, as well as being a stimulant to the excretory organs.”.

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