ARSENICUM-ALBUM


Therapeutic symptoms of homeopathic remedy Arsenicum Album, described by E.B. Nash in his book, Leaders in Homeopathic Therapeutics, published in 1898….


Great anguish and restlessness, driving from place to place.

Great and sudden prostration, sinking of vital force.

Intense burning pains.

Intense thirst; drinks often, but little, as cold water disagrees.

Dyspnoea worse on motion, especially ascending.

Vomiting and stools simultaneous; worse after eating or drinking.

Modalities: worse in cold air, from cold things, cold applications; and 1 to 3 a.m. Movement.

Better by warm air or room and hot applications; relieved by sweat.

No remedy is more restlessness than this one. The ACONITE restlessness comes in the earlier stages of inflammatory diseases, with fever of a high grade. ARSENICUM in the later stages, after the patient has become greatly reduced in strength, or in low grades of fever like typhoids. The ACONITE patient tosses to and fro in agony and fear. The ARSENIC patient is too weak to toss as the anguish and restlessness would incline him to. He cannot move himself around as he desires, but wants to be moved from place to place, or bed to bed, while the least exertion on his own part exhausts terribly. He has fear of death, but not like the ACONITE fear, but rather an anxiety and a feeling that it is useless to take medicine for he is going to die; he is incurable.

The mental restlessness is as great as the bodily. He has attacks of anxiety that drive him out of bed at night. Even when there is no pain at all he wants to be continually changing place, walking about if strong enough, without any other reason then that he can’t keep still. Often the first beneficial effect to be observed in cases calling for this remedy is that the anxiety grows less, the patient lies still, his pain is not so much less, but it does not make him so restless; he can bear it better. This is a good sign and is generally followed by better of all the symptoms. It makes little difference what the disease, if this persistent restlessness and especially if great weakness is also present, don’t forget ARSENIC.

ARSENICUM leads all the remedies for BURNING sensation, especially in acute diseases. It is not by any means confined to acute diseases, but is often found in chronic affections, especially of a malignant character or tending to malignancy. I think perhaps SULPHUR outranks it generally for burning in chronic affections. There is hardly an organ or tissue in the human system where these burnings of ARSENIC are not found. This burning, strange as it may seem, is greatly better BY HEAT. Hot applications if they can be gotten into contact with the other part, also heat of a warm stove or warm room. This is the exact opposite of SECALE CORNUTUM., for while the part is objectively cold, it still BURNS, but hot applications are intolerable; they cannot bear to have it covered; with ARSENICUM, in throat complaints, in connection with acute catarrh, the burnings in throat and from the excoriating nasal discharge are better by hot application. The burning in throat is better from eating or drinking hot things. This is the chief modality which enables us to choose between this remedy and CEPA and MERCURIUS, for all three have fluent coryza. I once had a case of very severe gastralgia caused by suppression of eczema on the hands. I knew nothing of the suppression, but prescribed ARSENICUM because the pains came on at midnight, lasting until 3 a. m. during which time the patient had to walk the floor in agony, and there was GREAT BURNING in the stomach. She had but one slight attack after taking ARSENICUM, but, said she, when I visited her, “Doctor would that remedy send out salt rheum? “Then I found out about the suppression which had been caused by the application of an ointment, and told her that she could have back the pain in stomach any time she wanted it, by suppressing the eruption again. She did not want it.

ARSENICUM is one of our best remedies for fevers of typhoid character. So useful is it that Baehr says “since ARSENIC is, more then any other remedy, adapted to the worst forms of infectious disease it seems wrong to delay its administration until the symptoms indicating it are developed in their most malignant intensity, “and further, “our advice, therefore is that ARSENIC should be given more frequently then has been customary from the very beginning of the attack, and that we should not wait until the disease has fully developed its pernicious character. “I do not think this is sound reasoning or good advice, for I have never found any rule by which I could decide from the beginning that a case would later on develop into a case of the pernicious or malignant character which would ever call for the exhibition of ARSENIC. While we need not wait for a case to develop to that “most malignant”intensity which calls for ARSENIC, we would not on the other hand be justified in giving ARSENIC or any other remedy in anticipation of a condition which might never come. ARSENICUM is not the only remedy capable of curing these malignant cases, and how do we know after all that it may not be MURIATIC -ACID, or CARBO-VEG., that will be the remedy after the case is developed. There is no safe or scientific role but to treat the case with the INDICATED remedy at any and all stages of the disease, without trying to treat expected conditions or future possibilities. It would be out of place here to give all the indications for ARSENIC in typhoids, as it would take too much space, and they can be found in Raue, Lilienthal or any good work on practice. ARSENIC is also one of our best remedies in intermittents, especially after the abuse of QUININE. Close individualization is necessary here as elsewhere.

ARSENIC profoundly affects the alimentary canal from lips to anus. The lips are so dry and parched and cracked that the patient often licks them to moisten them. The tongue is affected in various ways. It may be dry and red with raised papillae; or red, with indented edges; or white as chalk or white paint; or lead colored; or dry, brown or black, especially in typhoids. The mouth is dry or aphthous, ulcerated or gangrenous. The throat the same. The thirst is indescribably intense and peculiar, in that notwithstanding its intensity the patient can TAKE ONLY A LITTLE WATER AT A TIME. The stomach is so irritable that the least food or drink causes distress and pain, or immediately excites vomiting or stool, or both together. Cold drinks, ice water or ice cream particularly, disagree and create distress. Vomits all kinds and grades of substances from water or mucus to bile, blood, and coffee ground substances.

The pains in the stomach are aggravated by the least food or drink, especially, if COLD. The abdominal pains also are intense, causing the patient to turn and twist in all possible shapes and directions. Diarrhoea of all kinds of stools, from simple watery to black, bloody and horribly offensive, and finally the end of the tract is reached and we have haemorrhoids. Now in every one of these affections, ranging along the whole length of the canal, and from the lightest grade of irritation to the most intense inflammatory and malignant forms of disease, we will be apt to find every where present the characteristic BURNING of this remedy, in greater or lesser degree; and the not less characteristic better FROM HEAT, and also, though not quite so invariably, the MID-NIGHT worse.

ARSENICUM also has its sphere of usefulness in diseases of the respiratory organs. First, for acute coryza it stands in the front rank, the choice often having to made between this remedy, CEPA and MERCURIUS. ARSENICUM has the fluent discharge which corrodes the lips and wings of the nose and more BURNING than the other two remedies. It often follows well after MERCURIUS, if that remedy only partially relieves.

ARSENICUM is particularly efficacious in many affections of the lungs, where the breathing is very much oppressed. Respiration is wheezing, with cough and frothy expectoration. Patient cannot lie down; must sit up to breathe, and is unable to move without being greatly put out of breath. The air passages seem constricted. It is especially useful in asthmatic affections caused or worse by suppressed eruptions, like pneumonia from retrocedent measles, or even chronic lung troubles from suppressed eczema. I remember a case of asthma of years’ standing to which I was called at mid- night, because they were afraid the patient would die before morning. found that her attacks always came on at 1 A.M. Gave ARSENICUM ALB. 30th, and she was completely cured by it.

The symptom by Rollin R. Gregg, “Acute, sharp, fixed or darting pain in apex and through upper third of right lung,” is a gem, and has enabled me to cure a number of cases of obstinate lung troubles. In the last stage of pneumonia of old people, with gangrenous expectoration, if the other symptoms correspond, this remedy has often saved life. The burning is often found here as elsewhere. ARSENICUM is also one of our best remedies in pleuritic effusions.

ARSENICUM also affects profoundly the nervous system. To the characteristic restlessness, of which we have said so much, is added GREAT PROSTRATION. This prostration is present in most diseases, both acute and chronic, where ARSENIC is indicated. For instance, in typhoid there is no remedy that prostrates more. CARBO VEG. and MURIATIC ACID equal it, the difference being that the ARSENIC patient wants to move or be moved constantly, while with the other two remedies there is almost utter absence of any such show of life. Even if not confined to the bed, in acute or chronic diseases the patient is so weak that he is “exhausted from the slightest exertion”; must lie down. Sometimes this extreme degree of prostration comes on very rapidly.

E.B.Nash
Dr. E.B. Nash 1838- 1917, was considered one of our finest homeopaths and teachers. He was Prof. of Materia Medica at the N.Y. Homoeopathic Medical College and President of International Hahnemannian Assoc. His book Leaders in Homoeopathic Therapeutics is a classic. This article is from: :The Medical Advance - A monthly magazine of homoeopathic medicine - edited and published by H.C. Allen, M. D.