Allium sativum [All-s.]
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Natural History.
Garlic
General.
Acts directly on intestinal mucous membrane increasing peristalsis. Colitis,
with pathological flora. Has vaso-dilatory properties. Arterial hypotension
begins usually in 30 to 45 minutes after twenty to forty drops of the tincture.
Adapted to fleshy subjects with dyspepsia and catarrhal affections. High
livers. Patients who eat a great deal more, ESPECIALLY MEAT, than they drink.
PAIN IN HIP, PAIN IN PSOAS AND ILIAC MUSCLES. PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS.
Cough and expectoration diminishes, temperature becomes normal, weight is
gained, and sleep becomes regular. HEMOPTYSIS.
Head.
Heavy; pulsation in temples; catarrhal deafness.
Mouth.
Much sweetish saliva after meals and at night. Sensation of a hair on tongue
or throat.
Stomach.
Voracious appetite. Burning eructations. Lest change in diet causes trouble.
Constipation, with constant dull pains in bowels. TONGUE PALE RED PAPILLAE.
Respiratory.
Constant rattling of mucus in bronchi. Cough in the morning after leaving
bedroom, with mucous expectoration, which is tenacious and difficult to raise.
Sensitive to cold air. Dilated bronchi, with fetid expectoration. Darting pain
in chest.
Female.
Pain in swelling of breasts. Eruption in vagina and on breasts and vulva
during menses.
Relationship.
ALLIUM SAT., according to Dr. Teste, belongs to the Bryonia group, including
Lyc. Nux-v. Coloc., Digital, and Ignatia which affect deeply all flesh eating
animals and hardly at all vegetarians. Hence their special applicability to meat
eaters rather than to exclusive vegetarians.
Compare: Capsicum; Arsenic; Senega; Kali-n.
Complementary: Arsenic.
Antidote: Lycopod.
Dose.
Third to sixth potency. In tuberculosis, dose, four to six grammes in
moderate state of desiccation daily, in divided doses.
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