Malaria Officinalis


Malaria Officinalis 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 Malaria Officinalis is used…


      (In the summer of 1862 G. W. Bowen, of Indiana, allowed vegetable matter to decompose in water in glass jars, for one week (No. I.), two weeks (No. II.), and three weeks (No. III.). At each stage provings were made by inhaling the gases given off. Later some drops were taken internally. For curative purposes a tincture was made by adding ten drops of the No. II. (in which the fibre was not altogether decomposed) to ninety drops of alcohol. Bowen’s cases were all treated with this. Boericke and Tafel made a 30th tincture of this and Yingling inhaled it. This resulted in his proving. Later Yingling obtained from B. and T. the 30th attenuation of No III. (in which decomposition of the fibre is complete), and had this run up into the higher attenuations. These were used in his clinical experiences.).

Clinical

Ague. Bilious fever. Camp fever. Constipation. Consumption. Diarrhoea. Fever. Gout. Hay-fever. Liver, affections of. Malaria. Malaria cachexia. Neuralgia. Rheumatism. Spleen, affections of.

Characteristics

Living in a malarial region, Bowen hit upon the idea of finding remedies for the prevalent malarial complaints he had to deal with by producing experimental malaria and finding antidotes thereto. He hired persons to inhale the gases from jars containing vegetable matter in various stages of decomposition. In the first stage the odour was not very offensive. The effects were:”Headache, nausea, distress in stomach, tongue coated white.” These developed in from one to two hours after inhaling, and lasted two or three days. In the second stage the effects do not come on until from twelve to twenty-four hours. Then there were: “Fearful headache, nausea, aversion to food, distress through hypochondriac region, first in the spleen, then liver and stomach, and on the third day the chills.” Then antidotes had to be resorted to. No. III., which was “fetid to a fearful degree,” produced no result except nausea within three or four days. Then came, first, extreme lassitude, continued fever, pains and aches impeding locomotion. When taken internally the results were more severe. No. I. caused: Bilious colic, nausea, cramps, diarrhoea, and headache. No. II.: Liver, spleen, kidney and stomach involvement, daily or tertian intermittents with rigors. No. III. set up a typhoid state or semi-paralytic state, and compelled the provers to take to their beds (*New, *Old, and *Forgotten Remedies, in which the chief papers on this remedy will be found collected. I have added later experience from recent numbers of H. R.). George Herring has recalled an observation by Casanova that malaria antidotes phthisis, and Herring relates an experience of his own in a converse sense. On board a Liverpool steamer he put into A spin wall on the swampy isthmus of Panama for nine days. On the ship’s return several of the sailors were prostrated with Panama fever, while Herring, who had formerly suffered from tubercular disease of the lungs, remained unaffected. From which it would seem that a consumptive habit may be antidotal to malaria. Bowen gave to a lady, apparently in the last stage of consumption, herself the last survivor of five, all the rest having died of the same disease as well as several in the preceding generation, a dose from the watery solution of No. II. On the fifth day she had a fairly perceptible chill, and a harder one the sixth and seventh days. Antidotes were here called into requisition, but when cured of her malaria she was also cured of her consumption. Bowen relates these cases: (1) Mrs. R., 45, weighing 245 pounds, could scarcely walk for two years from rheumatism in back and limbs. *Malar. Ix, ten pilules three or four times a day. In one week all rheumatism and lameness gone. (2) Mr. S., foreman in a large saw mills, his work involving frequent wetting, had rheumatism of malarial nature, worse by *Quinine and external applications. *Malar. Ix. In three days he was better, and soon got quite well of his pain and improved greatly in general health. (3) I.S., 55, veteran and pensioner. Bronzed in color. Unable to walk for years. There were heart, chest, and haemorrhoidal troubles, which were remedied, but still he could not walk or get out of a chair. He said his back had been injured when in the army. *Ruta and *Rhus enabled him to get up one or two steps, but Bowen finally concluded that the complaint was really rheumatism of malarial origin. He gave *Malar. Ix, ten pilules three or four times a day. In a week he rode to Bowen’s house and walked up and down the flight of steps alone. In five more days he walked three miles in one morning. He put on flesh and seemed ten years younger. (4) Miss R., 20. Dull headaches, dizzy and drowsy at all times, worse mornings. Eyes weak, blurring, reading difficult. Laryngeal irritation with cough and secretion of bloody mucus. Slow pulse. Right arm gets numb and has to be rubbed. Cold extremities, poor appetite but food does not distress her. Urine red, scanty. Bowels sluggish but stools natural. Menses regular, rather scanty.Very forgetful. *Malar. Ix, ten pilules every three hours. Better in three days, in a week nearly well. A month later there was a slight defect of vision in left eye, inclined to be drowsy, somewhat forgetful, singing causes some irritation in the throat. *Malar. was again given night and morning, and she became quite well (H. R., xv. 449.) With *Malar. 2 Bowen cured a stout lady, 60, of very severe gout in both feet, preventing her standing without aid and keeping her awake at night (H. R., xv.296). Yingling’s cases cured with the potencies of *Malar. III. are reported H. R., xiii. 442. (1) A Kansas volunteer, 28, after a week in camp in rainy, chilly weather had chill and fever, continuous nausea, vomiting bile, retching. Tongue white, thick coat. Mouth *feels dry but is moist. Thirst for large quantities. Symptoms were moderated by Ip., and later Bryonia, but not removed. Skin, eyes, and face very yellow. *Malar. 1m. Improvement set in and in a week was in better health than usual. (2) Mrs. S. A. H., 63, shooting pains all over muscles, bones ache. Diarrhoea in morning, stools thin, yellow, foul. Bitter taste, parched mouth, tongue white. Stretching and gaping. *Malar. 1m. cured quickly. In other cases the following symptoms were removed (each letter refers to a separate case): (a) Chilly with flushes of heat. Great desire for fresh air. Cannot breathe on account of pain in liver, worse lying down, must jump up, better by hard pressure on liver. During day no trouble and no tenderness, raves, sings, and talks all night. (b) Ague every other day begins about noon. Weak and drowsy between attacks (has taken much *Quinine). (c) Drawing or pricking feeling in region of liver (left after the second dose). (d) Dumb chills. (e) When in open air seems cold and shakes inside till she fairly cramps. Aching under right scapula. Cramping in liver. (f) Dryness at root of tongue. (g) A constant hacking cough, half minute guns, when talking and when turning over in bed. (h) Steady dull ache in liver region better after urinating. In the proving the symptoms were better by eating, and there was a great desire to stretch.

Relations

Malar. belongs to the same order of remedies as Pyrogen (product of decaying *animal tissues). Bowen found the best antidotes to Malar.: Nux and Bryonia for the effects of No. I., Bryonia and Arsenicum for No. II., Rhus and Bryonia for No. III. Eupat. perf. and Chi. gave negative results. *Compare: Spleen, Cean. Liver, Bryonia, Lycopodium, Cholest., Chelidonium Pain under right scapula, Chelidonium Effect of damp and wetting, Lemn., Dulcamara Half minute-gun cough, Coral, Cocc. c. better After urinating, Lithium carb., Jamb. Intermittents, Ip., Cedr., Natrum mur., Menyanth, etc.

Causation

Wetting. Camp life.

Mind

Feels stupid and sleepy. (Very forgetful.).

Head

Feeling as though he would become dizzy. Waving dizziness on falling asleep. Dizziness on rising from reclining position. Dull aching through forehead. (Dull headache, dizzy and drowsy.).

Eyes

Aching above inner angle of right eye. Eyes feel heavy and sleepy. (Eyes weak, blurring, reading difficult.).

Ears

Drawing pain in right external ear.

Nose

A kind of concentration of feeling at root of nose and just above, as though I should have a severe cold like hay-fever.

Face

Itching on right cheek over malar bone (and various parts of face and limbs), better by slight rubbing or scratching. Face becomes warm as if flushed, and spreads over body.

Mouth

Pain in upper left teeth. Sensation on point of tongue as if a few specks of pepper were there. Saliva more profuse than usual, keeps him swallowing often. Had a good night’s rest and felt better and brighter from that time (curative). (Better taste, parched mouth, tongue white.).

Stomach

Unusually hearty appetite (for supper). Odour from cooking is pleasing, but no desire for dinner, on sitting down eats a good dinner with relish. Feels better after eating dinner. Easy belching, several times, no taste. Qualmish. Nausea.

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