CUBEBAE


CUBEBAE symptoms from Manual of the Homeopathic Practice by Charles Julius Hempel. What are the uses of the homeopathy remedy CUBEBAE…


INTRODUCTION

CUB. Noack and Trinks.

CLINICAL REMARK.

Gonorrhoea.

MORAL SYMPTOMS.

Exhalation of temper and of the mental faculties.

HEAD.

Vertigo. Headache. Dilatation of the pupils.

DIGESTIVE APPARATUS.

Heat in the mouth. Coated tongue. Thirst and burning in the fauces. Nausea. Loathing. Sour eructations. Heartburn. Disposition to vomit and vomiting. Gastric derangement, with symptoms of a chronic inflammation of the mucous membrane of the stomach. Burning pressure in the region of the stomach, and around the umbilicus. Gastritis. Warmth in the pit of the stomach. Burning in the abdomen. Violent colic. Inflammatory symptoms in the abdomen and on the genital organs. Copious diarrhoeic stools. Diarrhoea, with rumbling and cutting in the abdomen and burning in the rectum. Constipation. Suppuration of the rectum. Burning and itching of the anus.

URINE AND GENITAL ORGANS.

Increased secretion of urine. Foaming urine. Dark, reddish color of the discharge from the urethra. Aversion to an embrace and weakness of the sexual organs. Considerable excitation of the sexual powers in the male. Aggravation of the local inflammatory symptoms on the penis. Orchitis. Sensation of pressure and heaviness in the pelvis.

BACK.

Pains in the back.

LIMBS.

Feeling of heat in the palms of the hands and soles of the feet.

Charles Julius Hempel
Charles Julius Hempel (5 September 1811 Solingen, Prussia - 25 September 1879 Grand Rapids, Michigan) was a German-born translator and homeopathic physician who worked in the United States. While attending medical lectures at the University of New York, where he graduated in 1845, he became associated with several eminent homeopathic practitioners, and soon after his graduation he began to translate some of the more important works relating to homeopathy. He was appointed professor of materia medica and therapeutics in the Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia in 1857.