Stramonium



AMELIORATION:

      From bright light; from company: from warmth; and from cold water.

RELATIONSHIP:

      Stramonium, often follows Belladonna, Cuprum, Hyoscyamus, and Lyss.

Antidotes: Belladonna, Coffea, Hyoscyamus, Nux vomica, and Tabacum

Stram antidotes: Mercurius and Plb.

Compare especially with Belladonna and Hyoscyamus It has less fever than Belladonna, but more than Hyoscyamus It causes more functional excitement of the brain, but never approaches the true inflammatory condition of Belladonna

Adolph Lippe
Adolph Lippe (born near Goerlitz, Prussia, 11 May 1812; died in Philadelphia, 23 January 1888) was a homeopathic physician who worked in the United States. Adolph got a legal education at Berlin. After completing his legal studies, Lippe became interested in homeopathy, and emigrated to the United States in 1837 to further his study. In 1838, he enrolled in the North American Academy of Homeopathy at Allentown, Pennsylvania, from where he graduated in 1841. He settled in Philadelphia, where from 1863 until 1868 he was professor of materia medica in the Homeopathic College of Pennsylvania. Besides some essays and treatises from the French, German, and Italian which became standards, Lippe was the author of:
Comparative Materia Medica (Philadelphia, 1854)
Text-Book of Materia Medica (1866)