Professional Documents
Culture Documents
Introduction
This "Textbook of Repertory Language" is the successor of the "Blueprint for a new
Repertory". The Blueprint, as the name indicated, was a plan of action explaining the development
of Synthesis. Successive versions accompanied all editions of Synthesis until version 8.
In each of those Blueprint versions, the first line read: "This concept is a proposal". Over the years
and in the course of many different versions, Synthesis has evolved into an accepted proposal. In
many schools all over the world Synthesis is the preferred Repertory. It has been translated into
many languages and has been reprinted more often than any other contemporary repertory.
As a result, Synthesis is probably the most widely used repertory nowadays. A lot of
feedback has been integrated; a lot of brilliant thinking by many homeopaths has led Synthesis to
where it stands now. Even though the development of Synthesis will continue, the time is ripe to
present to the homeopathic community , which thought processes went into its creation.
This is the goal of the Textbook.
Here is some specific information about different parts of this Textbook, as adapted for the
Essential Synthesis.
One important goal of the Essential Synthesis is to offer only the very practical information in a
very manageable size and weight. We have followed that concept for the Textbook as well. As a
result we have not printed any section unless it was relevant for daily practice.
.
The main part of the Textbook for Repertory Language, which presented the "Rules of
Repertory Language" was not reprinted. It can be found on the CD. Also, it has not changed in
comparison to version 9.1.
The same situation for the "Explanation of Key Symptoms", the "Families of remedies", "
Relationships of remedies "Information about new remedies": they are not printed, but can be found
on the CD.
A "Veterinary chapter" is an important innovation. There are two lists.
The first one is a list of all symptoms most often relevant for veterinary practice. If the
symptom contains remedies, these are specifically based on veterinary practice. If the symptom is
followed by a number, this refers to a page number in the Repertory and leads you to the human
rubric to be used.
The second one is a list of veterinary concepts. These express symptoms and behavior
typical for certain animals and are followed by the human symptoms which may apply in those
cases. A goldmine for the beginning vet homeopath!
A limited "Catalogue of remedies" has been printed with only those remedies present in the
Essential Synthesis. The abbreviations are followed by the Synthesis name of the remedy. Synonyms
follow between brackets, if applicable. The full catalogue of remedies can be found on the CD.
The "Catalogue of authors" can only be found on the CD as the author references can only
be found on the CD as well..
An "Index of words" follows with page numbers referring to the main Repertory.
Then we have a list of "Localizations" which is offered in two ways.
First a list of each localization per chapter. This order corresponds to the way that the
localizations are sorted in the repertory and will help you to find certain localizations more easily.
Second, a list of all single localizations with reference to the abbreviated chapter(s) where
they can be found.
At last we have included the full article reporting about the "History of Kent's Repertory and
Treasure", written by Dr. Ahmed Currim (USA). This article will be most interesting to understand
the value of the current Essential Synthesis.
It is our wish that our work will assist you in finding a treasure for all your patients, the best fitting
remedy.
Peter Vint
History of Synthesis
The growth of Synthesis
Synthesis is the Repertory linked to the Radar-project.
It is based on the Sixth American Edition of Kent's Repertory, and contains all its rubrics and
remedies.
Since 1987, Synthesis has been used as a database for the Radar program in the daily practice of
leading homeopaths. It has been commented upon and thereby improved over and over again, which
gives it an outstanding label of quality. Indeed, not only additions of an increasing number of
authors have been added to all chapters, but also corrections of the existing data, including of
Kent's work, have been integrated.
Version 2 was released in April 1988 and occupied 10.5 MB2(2) of a hard disk space.
Synthesis 3 followed in September 1990 with 11.5 MB: it contained mostly corrections on the
previous version and offered 136.000 additions from about 130 authors compared to Kent's
original Repertory.
2000000
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1600000
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1200000
1000000
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400000
200000
.1
Sy
9
Sy
8
Sy
7
Sy
6
Sy
5
Sy
4
Sy
3
Sy
2
Sy
1
en
t
Chart 1: Author reference additions: This chart shows the addition of information in successive
versions of Synthesis. The lower (dark) part of each column indicates the number of new
additions compared to the previous version.
In December 1992 the fourth software version of Synthesis was released. It contained 178.000
additions from about 200 authors.
At each step the quality has been improved, but especially in the creation of version 5. Compared
to version 4, only a few thousand additions have been added, because we focused on increasing the
quality. The reason is that we decided that Synthesis 5 was going to be the first printed version.
Although errors had been corrected in each subsequent version of Synthesis, the decision to print
Synthesis caused some extra reflections. If this Repertory was to be printed, it should be done only
if we could offer a dramatic increase in the quality of the Repertory, its structure, its language and
the consistency of its information. In July 1992 the homeopathic part of the job for Synthesis 4 was
finished3(3) and we focused exclusively on increasing the quality for version 5.
A worldwide project
All aspects of Synthesis will be discussed under the different headings following this introduction.
One aspect, however, still needs special attention: our wish that this Repertory stands for
worldwide collaboration between homeopaths. Since the beginning, non-Radar users have been
collaborating with us. The printed versions have increased this input. Our computer technology was
only the means to create this unique totality of information. With the printing of the book, it is
available to even more colleagues.
The other feature that is making Synthesis a unique meeting point is the existence of editions in
national languages. Homeopathy, despite its German origins, has become very dependent upon the
English language. For the level of communication and understanding needed in our profession, it
appears that still very many homeopaths have major difficulties with this world language.
At this moment there are translations into Czech, Dutch, French, German, Italian, Portuguese and
Spanish, either as software, as a book or both. Translations in several other languages are ongoing.
The number of homeopaths who is able to use Synthesis is consequently multiplied several times.
We trust that the feedback will increase accordingly. We are ready to process all remarks made in
different languages centrally and all editions will be updated with the sum of all new corrections
and additions.
The leading word of the previous level can be repeated as such in the subrubric to avoid confusion.
No abbreviations are used, except "agg." and "amel.".
The last level of the symptom is the most important, even overruling previous ones. If there is still
some doubt possible with the above proposals, the symptom can be completed at the last level in
order to make the meaning as clear as needed for easy readability.
E.g.: - "excitement - heat - during" as opposed to "excitement - heat - from" therefore become:
- excitement - heat - during heat; excitement
- excitement - heat - from excitement; heat
Some more examples of a correct symptom format:
Kent: Mind - Delusion - scrotum, thinks his, is swollen
Kent has a lot of symptoms split in more than two parts. Often the correct order is {part 2} {part1}
{part3} which makes some of his symptoms difficult to read as in the example above.
Synthesis: Mind - Delusion - scrotum is swollen; his
Kent: Cough - Sulphur fumes or vapor, sensation of agg.
Synthesis: Cough - Sulphur fumes or vapor; cough agg. by sensation of
Kent: Mind - Delusion - inferior, on entering the house after a walk,
people seem mentally and physically (including two comma's)
Synthesis: Mind - Delusion - inferior, on entering the house after a walk;
people seem mentally and physically (";" indicates beginning of sentence)
Kent: Cough - Scraping - Trachea, in, from
Synthesis: Cough - Scraping - Trachea; from scraping in
Groups of symptoms
Symptoms are divided in groups and these groups are always following each other in this same
order. In Kent's Repertory and in all versions of Synthesis up to version 9.0, this order was: Sides,
Times, Modalities, Extensions, Localizations and Descriptions of pain (S-T-M-E-L-D).
Since Synthesis 9.1 is has become (S-T-MD-E-L):
SIDES
TIMES
MODALITIES + DESCRIPTIONS OF PAIN / Other descriptions
EXTENSIONS
LOCALIZATIONS
E.g.: symptoms present in the various groups of "Head - Pain":
sides: right; left; ...
times: daytime, day and night, morning; noon; ...
modalities: air; coughing; eating; ...
descriptions of pain: biting; boring; burning; ...
extensions: ear; teeth; ...
localizations: brain; forehead; ...
This order of groups is repeated at each level if needed. You can expect a hierarchical structure like
this at several levels (each symptom depends on the one tabbed on its left):
SIDE
time
modalities / descriptions of pain
extension
TIME
side
modality / description of pain
extension
MODALITY / DESCRIPTION OF PAIN
side
time
modality / description of pain
time
description of pain
extension
extension
EXTENSION
modality / description of pain
LOCALIZATION
SIDE
time
modality
extension
TIME
side
MODALITY / DESCRIPTION OF PAIN
side
time
modality / description of pain
time
modality
extension
EXTENSION
modality / description of pain
This scheme is different from the Kentian one and from the one used in previous versions of
Synthesis. In those previous schemes "description of pain" always was at level 3 of the symptom,
Specific Symptoms
Most of the symptoms in Kent's repertory are specific symptoms, they are concrete symptoms
consisting at least of one specific complaint5(5) (such as pain, swelling, pulsation etc.). In most
cases there are many subrubrics with "details" which are divided into the well-known sides, times,
modalities, descriptions, extensions and localizations. Just as a note: this should not be confused
with the discussion about complete symptoms, where a symptom should have a modality, a
sensation and a localization. A specific symptom can but does not have to be complete.
Generalized Symptoms
Generalized symptoms are all symptoms, where at least one part of the symptom (side, modality,
localization, etc.) has been generalized, i.e. is applicable to more than one specific symptom. A
generalized modality like motion is applicable to any complaint (e.g. stiffness, pain, numbness), a
generalized time like morning is applicable to any complaint in the morning, etc.
We are using the terms "generalizing" and "generalization" in order to avoid confusion with "general"
symptoms, a term that has been used a lot in discussions with Kent (amongst others) regarding
Bnninghausen, etc.
The generalization was introduced into repertories by Bnninghausen, who actually talked about
analogy as the leading principle to build up such "generalized" symptoms. Starting from the fact
that no repertory can ever be considered complete and that we have to cope with "gaps" in every
repertory, he considered it appropriate to "conclude" [schlieen] that if a remedy showed many
symptoms "worse from cold" in the stomach, it should be thought of in any case of such a modality
in the stomach.
Thus he collected such "generalizations" on all possible levels, from the well-known generalizations
that nowadays make up the chapter Generals to generalized times in a local chapters like stomach.
For a homeopath this now means that according to Bnninghausen in order to find the possible
remedies for a specific symptom (i.e. burning pain in the stomach in the morning, agg. from
motion) you could as well choose the generalizations: Burning, Morning, Motion - agg. and Stomach Complaints of and thus "synthesize" the symptom. Which (of many) generalized rubrics you should
take in such a case will depend very much on your conception and understanding of the method you
are going to use.
The different degrees of generalization for each of the possible groups of symptoms will be
explained both in meaning and in their special symptom format at the beginning of each specific
group.
up, etc.).
Therefore on close inspection, it is not (!) surprising, that you will find many generalized symptoms
in Kent (each symptom from chapter Skin is in itself such a generalization) and you also find many
specific symptoms in Bnninghausen's Alphabetic Repertory (b4, b7) and in Boger's main repertory
bg2 (like toothache in the upper left molars).
"Sides"
The block "sides" consists of these symptoms (in this order !):
one side
alternating sides
right
left
Each of these levels may have subrubrics, e.g.: "... - one side - afternoon"
Remarks
In some chapters, the "sides" are considered as localizations: head, external throat, chest and
abdomen. The result is that "head - sides" is positioned after the extensions and not as the first
block of head.
There also are generalized sides in the repertory. As generalized sides they refer to "any complaint"
on a certain side and therefore they are always subrubrics of a generalized localization. For the
rules about generalized localizations see II. 9. "LOCALIZATIONS".
E.g. FACE - COMPLAINTS of face - left side
Some special combinations are formatted as follows:
Extremities
- pain - shoulder - right - accompanied by - leg; pain in left
- right - followed by - shoulder; pain in left
[instead of:
"... - right - and left"
"... - right - then left"]
An extension at this level is sometimes indicated as "to left", but must get the format "extending
to".
E.g.: "... - left - extending to - right"
"Side lain on" and "side not lain on" are considered as a localization.
"Times"
Times in the repertory include more or less precise starting or ending points of complaints of any
kind, which is to say they do not include seasons such as winter or the type of reappearance of
symptoms, which figures under rubrics like periodically, suddenly, etc.
Beside the most obvious time as a concrete modality of a specific symptom as in Head - pain evening - 18 h where the time relates to a specific "situation", there are several types of
generalized times as well.
The most generalized type of time is to be found in chapter Generals and has been used by Kent
(e.g. Generals - Morning). It describes the general aggravation of the state of the patient and/or
the majority of symptoms at a certain time of day.
Another equally generalized type of time was introduced by Bnninghausen for chapter Mind, where
you find generalized times like Mind - morning, which stands for a general aggravation or
appearance of complaints in relation to the mental-emotional state of the patient.
Another three generalizations can be found at the level of chapters. Here times are also headrubrics
"Modalities"
General remarks
AGG. is often not mentioned! Check if the meaning of the rubric is clear if you and read the
modality the reverse way adding "... causes or aggravates x". E.g.: "Head - pain - lying": read: "lying
causes or aggravates: head - pain".
However, any rubric which can contain a subrubric "amel." and some other subrubrics MUST have
"agg." mentioned as a separate level (do not create a new symptom "breathing agg.", but "breathing
- agg."). The reason is that it must be possible to put together all rubrics indicating aggravation as
depending from "agg." and other rubrics as depending from "amel."
E.g.: Generals breathing deep agg.
Generals breathing deep amel.
Note: if agg. would be eliminated here as a separate level, "breathing deep" would mean "agg.".
AMEL. is most often the last level of a symptom, especially if ambiguity arises concerning the
subrubrics that depend on it.
E.g.: - "pain - stitching - walking, amel - open air": ambiguous presentation of the symptom: does
the amel apply to "walking" or also to "open air"? MM Hahnemann: Thuja: Prickling pain in the
muscles of the cheek, only when walking in the open air =} symptom changed as " ...- walking - air;
in open".
One exception: {any food} amel. {specification of that type of food}.
As in "Generals - food", any type of food has four subrubrics: "agg. / amel. / aversion / desire". If a
further specification is needed, it is included as a subrubric of these.
E.g.: do not write "Generals - food - olive - oil - agg", nor "... - olive - agg. - oil",
but - as a type of oil is concerned- write "... - oil - agg. - olive".
All the same, write "abdomen - pain - milk - amel. - warm".
The structure as described in the paragraph above, may be applied in other cases as well to
contrast the difference between all subrubrics indicating aggravation as opposed to all the ones
indicating amelioration.
Most of the times in Kent agg. and amel. refer to a specific symptom, but aggravation and
amelioration also exist as a generalized modalities. A generalized aggravation or amelioration is any
modality that does not just apply to a specific complaint (such as Head - Pain - Forehead - motion agg.) but to a larger group of symptoms.
The most general of this can be found in the Kentian rubrics of chapter Generals. Actually you could
state that almost the whole chapter consists of generalizations, because the modalities described
therein relate to the patient as a whole.
The second type of such generalized modalities can be found in chapter Mind and were introduced
into repertories by Bnninghausen, where remedies are listed where a certain modality has an
influence on the mental/emotional state in general. In a way Kent used a similar approach with his
mind rubric "Ailments from"
E.g. "MIND - WRITING - agg."
The most frequent generalized modality can be found as headrubric in other chapters where the
modality relates to "any complaint". This level of generalization has not been used by Kent and was
introduced by Bnninghausen.
E.g. "STOMACH - YAWNING - agg."
E.g. "VISION - RUBBING - amel."
Prepositions are often not mentioned when they do not add to the meaning of the symptom. This
applies especially to prepositions such as "when, during, from, on, while, ..." where the preposition
in fact only means "aggravates or causes".
E.g.: rising, on
=} rising
lying, while
=} lying
drinking, from =} drinking
dancing, when =} dancing
On the contrary: "rising - after" has to remain as such.
E.g.: "head - pain - stitching - morning - rising" means that the headache is caused or aggravated by
rising (you could say "rising; on").
"Head - pain - stitching - morning - rising - after" means that the headache only begins after he rose
from the bed.
Modalities are sorted alphabetically. In the former versions of Synthesis, exceptions were made for
the words " before during, when, after", but this has been revised in version 8 when the sorting was
done by computer.
Also "agg." and "amel." are sorted alphabetically between the modalities since version 8.
Depending upon the modality itself either "during" or "when" are used (E.g.: stool - during > < eating
- when), whatever is most appropriate in the language.
Negative modalities always depend from the opposite, hence positive modality:
E.g.: ... - amel. - not amel.
"Alternations"
Write "alternating with - {next level}".
The alternations are a modality, and are sorted alphabetically in between the modalities, e.g. after
"air".
Synonymous rubrics are to be avoided here as well: a referring rubric refers to the other symptom
which only one which contains the remedies. If possible, the choice for the rubric WITH the
remedies is defined by the vital importance of the affected organs: alternation between eruption
and asthma will be found under "CHEST - Respiration - asthmatic" and not under "SKIN - eruptions"
as asthma is the more vital complaint.
A second criterion for selecting the position of the remedies is: prefer the more active or more
aggressive expression.
E.g.: morose and cheerful are both "active", but morose is more aggressive
Otherwise make a decision at random.
E.g.: sadness alternating with tranquility
If the alternation is involving a sensation in a certain localization, then first write the localization
E.g.: alternating with - Heart; stitches in the
(also note that the localization is written with a capital first letter since version 8)
There are also generalized alternations, where "general" complaints are alternating with other
"general" complaints. Such generalization can be found often in Boger's Bnninghausen's Repertory
Bg2 and very often in Phatak's Repertory (Ptk1).
E.g. "SKIN - COMPLAINTS of skin - alternating with - other symptoms"
E.g. "HEAD - COMPLAINTS of head - alternating with - Stomach; complaints of"
Concomitants
Special attention is given to symptoms which typically accompany or follow a given symptom.
Although often stressed in Materia Medica, concomitant symptoms formerly did not get any special
attention, nor a special format in the repertory. They were "normal" modalities ending as follows:
...; with / ...; during / ...; from / etc. However, many other symptoms ending with these words
were not true concomitants. Consequently the concomitants were drowned in the mass of
symptoms.
This is one reason why we have decided in Synthesis to adapt a special format for a concomitant,
which is often a rare and peculiar symptom.
A true concomitant is a symptom which typically accompanies another symptom. The coincidence
itself becomes a symptom.
A concomitant is made of two parts, which means that there are two place where one can go and
find the concomitant.
E.g.: "asthma accompanied by hemorrhoids" could be searched in chapter respiration or in rectum.
In Synthesis this concomitant will be found (with its remedy) in only one place. In the other place
there will be a referring rubric to the former symptom. These referring rubrics make a lot of
concomitants, hidden until now, visible.
The general Synthesis structure of the concomitants is:
{symptom } - accompanied by - {symptom 2}
"Accompanied by" is sorted in between the modalities and considered as such.
Under "accompanied by" we find all subrubrics which are concomitant to the given symptom.
"Accompanied by" is only used
* to stress the concomitant appearance of two pathologies.
E.g.: "Vertigo - accompanied by - asthma"
* to indicate the peculiar coincidence of two pains or other symptoms
E.g.: "Extremities - pain - shoulder - right - accompanied by - leg; pain in left"
There are also "generalized" concomitants, which means to indicate that a given complaint usually
is accompanied by a second one (i.e. typically does not appear just on its own). This generalization
has been introduced into repertories by Bnninghausen and leaded in Boger Bg2 to very unclear
symptoms such as "Coryza - Concomitants". In Synthesis the phrase "accompanied by" is followed by
"complaints; other" for all such cases.
E.g. NOSE - CORYZA - accompanied by - complaints; other
We keep the known way for expressing concomitant symptoms:
* if a mental symptom is accompanied by a pathology (MIND - SADNESS - taste - bitter taste in
mouth; with a). The remedy is present in the chapter MIND, except when the physical complaint is
clearly caused by the indicated mental state.
E.g.: "Sighing - leukorrhea; with",
but: "Palpitation - grief; from", etc. (grief causes palpitations)
* if two concomitant mind symptoms are present:
E.g.: "laughing - anxiety - during"; "anger - laughing; with burst of", etc.
* if the modality is
"chill; during"
"fever; during"
"perspiration; during"
"apyrexia; during"
E.g.: Hot breath - chill; during
In some other cases of chill-, fever- or perspiration symptoms, the difference is made between
these two situations:
1/ a symptom may be occurring during and because of the chill, fever or perspiration stage of a
feverish disease:
E.g.: "Stomach - Vomiting - perspiration - during" (= the vomiting occurs typically during and
because of the stage of perspiration of a feverish disease; first the perspiration, then the vomiting
because of the perspiration)
2/ the symptom is not caused by the chill, fever or perspiration. When the complaint arises, then
some chill, fever or perspiration come up as well. In the last case, the format "accompanied by" is
followed.
E.g.: "Stomach - Vomiting - accompanied by - perspiration" (= perspiration accompanies the
vomiting in this particular patient; when he is vomiting, perspiration comes as well; first the
vomiting, then the perspiration because of the vomiting)
In the following case we explicitly confirm the use of the new syntax:
if one of the concomitants is: "nausea; with"
E.g.: "HEAD - Pain - accompanied by - nausea"
For each concomitant symptom, there is at least one referring rubric. The choice of the main rubric
as opposed to the referring rubric is defined according to the same rules as for the alternating
symptoms.
If the concomitant involves a sensation in a certain localization, then first write the localization:
E.g.: do not write "accompanied by - stitches in the heart", but write:
"accompanied by - Heart; stitches in the"
(also note that the localization is written with a capital letter since version 8)
Sometimes there have to be TWO referring rubrics , for example when the first referring rubric does
not follow the format of "accompanied by" and does refer to another section in the repertory. This
is especially the case if a well known rubric is converted into a referring rubric in order to apply the
rules set for referring rubrics.
E.g.: "Stomach - Nausea - headache; during" is a well known rubric, but according to our rules, the
remedies should be present in the more vital chapter HEAD. Two referring rubrics are created:
"Stomach - Nausea - accompanied by - headache (see ...)", but also "Stomach - Nausea - headache;
during (see ...)"
In some cases, the referring rubric to the chill, fever, perspiration rubrics may follow the new
format of "accompanied by":
E.g.: the referring rubric "CHILL - Accompanied by - hot breath" points to "RESPIRATION - Hot
breath - chill; during".
Concomitant colors of tongue are also indicated with "accompanied by". The remedy is written as a
subrubric of the most important color and a referring rubric is existing at the other color.
E.g.: Discoloration - tongue - white - accompanied by - sides - clean"
Sometimes more than two features are relevant concomitants. The expression "accompanied by"
should be used only once within one symptom. As usual the remedy is present only at one place to
which all other symptoms refer.
E.g.: a white tongue with a black streak in the centre accompanying liver diseases. The remedy is in
the main rubric "ABDOMEN - LIVER and region of liver; complaints of - accompanied by - Tongue
white, heavily coated and black streak down centre".
The referring rubric to this symptom is: 'MOUTH - DISCOLORATION - Tongue - white - heavily coated
- accompanied by - Centre and liver disease; black streak down'.
Another example of more than two relevant concomitants:
MM: dry, white tongue in endocarditis
Synthesis: the remedy is present in the most vital rubric (therefore in Chest): "CHEST INFLAMMATION - Heart - Endocardium - accompanied by - Tongue; dry and white"
Sequence of symptoms
Sequences of symptoms are indicated as follows:
Extremities - pain - shoulder - right - followed by - shoulder; pain in left
Perspiration - followed by - vomiting
All rules for "accompanied by" apply for "followed by".
In the majority of the cases "xxx - AILMENTS from" indicates the same as "xxx - agg.". To avoid
repetition, only the latter rubric has been maintained in these cases (E.g.: Generals - food - wine agg = generals - food - wine - ailments, from).
The difference of a shorter or a longer aggravation from wine for example is a nuance which does
not allow to differentiate the remedy in most cases. Agg. would be used if the symptoms stay for
some hours, maybe some days; ailments from when the symptoms stay for some days, weeks,
months ...
The energetic direction of the remedy in both cases is nevertheless exactly the same.
Illogical superrubrics
Kent's Repertory is filled with "illogical superrubrics", often caused by the simplicity of the lay-out.
This means that a certain superrubric does not make sense for the subrubrics that depend on it. In
Synthesis such illogical superrubrics have been modified so that you can clearly read all levels of
any subrubric after another and they still make sense.
E.g.: "extremities - drawing up limbs agg. - amel." is modified into "... - drawing up limbs - amel.";
"urine - color - yellow, light - dark" into "... - yellow - dark"; ...
When the symptom is aggravated or caused at the end of a modality, then this should be indicated
as a subrubric of "during".
E.g.: - eating - while - end of eating
- urination - during - end of
*** Children
The internationally accepted categories are:
newborn
0 - 4 weeks
nurslings
0 - 1 year
infants 1 - 6 years
children
6 years and above
puberty; during
Remarks: A child between 0 and 1 year of age, which is not nursing is still called a nursling.
"Baby" is a popular expression and may refer to several of the categories mentioned. Therefore it is
to be avoided as it is not precise.
"Children" indicates the general term of all human beings between 0 and 18 years of age and also
indicates a precise category of youngsters between 6 and 18 years of age.
Therefore these categories are correctly represented in the following hierarchical scheme:
children
newborns
(= newborn infant)
nurslings
(= nursing infant; suckling infant)
infants
So the accepted categories are:
babies } children - babies
infants } children - infants
newborns
} children - newborns
nursing infants } children - nursling
schoolgirls
} children - schoolgirls
*** Icy cold / Hot
The difference between warm and hot was maintained as it was considered relevant: itching
ameliorated from a hot bath is not necessarily improved from a warm bath. Nevertheless, the
temperature modalities were grouped in a global superrubric as follows:
icy cold } cold - icy cold
hot
} warm - hot
Until ambiguity is solved: the following can be used as well:
heat
} warmth - heat
The modalities which depend upon these should be written as follows (the modalities "agg." or
"amel." are repeated in order to avoid confusion ):
hot stove amel. } warm - stove - amel. - hot amel.
heat agg.
} warmth - agg. - heat agg.
*** Colors
Different colors are made subrubrics of the main colors:
chestnut
} brown - chestnut
maroon } red - maroon
mahogany
} red - mahogany
In some rubrics the colors are grouped under a global superrubric "colors":
Mind - Colors: indicates general influence of colors on the mental state
Mind - Anger - colors: symptoms with influence of colors on anger only (there are a few rubrics like
this)
Note: In all other rubrics the global superrubric refers only to the color itself: "STOOL - Brown - ...";
"EAR - Discoloration - red - ...", etc.
We understand that there is a difference between "yellowish green" and "greenish yellow". The noun
indicates the main shade of the color, so they will not be considered synonyms in Synthesis. On the
other hand "yellow-green" and "yellowish green" are considered synonyms, but the later is preferred
expression for clarity.
*** Discoloration (only at level 2)
EYE - Blueness } EYE - Discoloration - blueness
I found no other occurrences where this has to be changed except in eye.
*** Light
artificial light
bright light
color light
firelight
gaslight } light
sunlight } light
} light - artificial
} light - bright
} light - color
} light - firelight
- gaslight
- sun, of the
*** Offensive
All offensive odors will depend of "offensive".
spoiled egg; like
} offensive - spoiled eggs; like
This NEW RULE implies a lot of changes: we have not yet executed all these changes (E.g.:: mouth odor -offensive), but take it into consideration when adding new symptoms.
*** Seasons (only in generals - NOT so in the other chapters)
winter - agg
} GENERALS - Seasons - winter - agg
*** Weather (for all chapters)
cloudy } MIND - Weather - cloudy
wet weather
} GENERALS - Weather - wet
change of weather
} HEAD - pain - weather - change of
*** Wind (for all chapters)
Cold - wind
} EAR - PAIN - wind - cold - agg.
Cold - dry - wind
} FACE - PAIN - wind - cold - dry - agg.
If an expression is composed of two or more words and its meaning is only clearly understood when
these two words are combined, then this modality is inserted in the way that the expression is used
in common language.
E.g.: mental exertion can be found under "mental exertion" and under "exertion, mental". As
"mental exertion" is one expression with a specific meaning, Synthesis inserts all these symptoms as
"mental exertion".
These expressions are integrated in the list of "preferred words".
If you are in doubt whether two words have to be kept together as one expression, consider
whether they have to be translated by one word in any other language. If yes, it becomes
mandatory to add them as an expression. (E.g.: mental work = Geistesarbeit)
If such expressions occur at level 2, both words need to be written in capitals.
Combined modalities
Thousands of modalities refer to two or more modalities at the same time: cold air, warmth of bed,
open air, draft of air, warm drinks, cold bathing, warm applications amel, etc. About half of them
are written with the "temperature - component" as leading word (= cold bathing amel), and half of
them with the other component as leading word (= bathing - cold amel). (e.g.: extremities - pain upper limbs - washing - cold water, but: extremities - pain - tearing - fingers - cold washing).
Another example: "cold wet weather" refers to 14 symptoms in the original Kent. "Cold damp
weather" to 28. So far, additions have been made in both ways. In both cases, some symptoms are
not to be found under c(old) or d(amp) but under w for weather!
To solve this confusion, we have elaborated a format for "combined modalities" to which we
transcribe all new symptoms.
As much as possible we have already reformatted existing symptoms along the same lines.
For the list of combined modalities: see appendix
Synonymous rubrics
As a rule synonymous rubrics are merged into only one rubric, which is the only one to contain the
remedies. All other rubrics refer to the latter. The rubric with the remedies and with the subrubrics
is the one in the more vital chapter.
E.g.: "mind - excitement - alternating with - convulsions" is the same as "generals - convulsions alternating with - excitement". There will be a synonym in the chapter "generals" and the remedies
will be found in "mind", the more vital chapter.
See also "STANDARDIZING THE LANGUAGE OF THE REPERTORY- Combining too similar rubrics".
"Descriptions of pain"
A description of pain consists of at least one subrubric below the headrubric pain (level 2) that
explains the pain in more detail (e.g. burning, stitching, drawing, etc.). In spoken language as well
as in certain repertories - the word pain very often is omitted (e.g. "my eyes burn").
Descriptions of pain are (as from Synthesis version 9.1) positioned at the end of the symptom in the
pain sections of the repertory, i.e. they form the last level of the symptom and therefore after
times, sides, modalities, extensions or localizations.
The homeopathic reason for this position is the experience of both patients and homeopaths that
nothing is more difficult to define than the way a pain feels.
E.g.: "Eye - pain - morning - stitching pain": The description stitching is now at the end of the
symptom as the last rubric.
If yet another description of pain is added to explain the main one in more detail, the latter is
positioned as a direct subrubric of the first description. This way all "sub-descriptions" of a certain
description are always to be found in one single group because a description only has other
descriptions as subrubrics.
The directions of a pain, esp. as expressed in terms like inward, forward, outward, upward,
downward, etc. is also considered a description of pain because it doesn't modify (i.e. change) the
pain, it furthermore does not depict an extension (which needs both a beginning and an end), but it
explains (i.e. describes) it.
E.g.: "Eye - pain - stitching pain - burning": burning is sorted directly behind the chief description
stitching.
E.g.: "Eye - pain - stitching - pain - inward": inward is not - as it was in Kent - a subrubric of
extending to anymore.
To learn more about how this change of position of descriptions has been achieved, please read the
chapter "STREAMLINING AND RESTRUCTURING".
head - noises
vision - colors
ear - noises
nose - discharge
in all chapters - eruptions: modalities and descriptions are put mixed (they will be split again later
after some more streamlining for eruptions)
There is yet another exception within these other descriptions, where a complaint that does not
necessarily have to be painful is being described as "painful" or vice versa: an often painful
complaint like an ulcer is being described as "painless". The words painful and painful simply
describe the complaint as such (e.g. an ulcer, a swelling) without modifying it. In all occurrences of
these expressions, they are at the end of a symptom (i.e. at the last level of it) and are sorted
together with the modalities in one group.
E.g. constipation - painful
erections - painful
hemorrhage - painful
inflammation - painful
shocks - painful, etc.
tumors - painless
swelling - painless
induration - painless
pulsating - painless
One should be aware of the fact that still the word "pain" also occurs in modalities, most often in
the meaning: a complaint that is worse during or after certain or general pains.
E.g. Mind - Weeping - pains - with the (the pain causes the weeping)
E.g. CHEST - Palpitation of heart - pain; during (the pain modifies the palpitation)
urethra).
Since Synthesis 9.1, extensions into a certain direction are not any longer subrubrics of "extending
to", if they are a description of pain (such as "extending to - upwards").
The reason is that these "extensions" express the description of the pain, they make the description
of pain more precise. Therefore the level "extending to" has been removed and the level "upwards"
has been labeled with a D.
E.g.: "stitching - extending to - upwards" has been replaced by "stitching - upwards".
Another reason for doing so, is that Repertory language now is again closer to spoken language.
The same has been done for "downward, inward, outward, forward, backward, up and down" if
these levels were specifying a description of pain and subrubrics of "extending to".
"Localizations"
The first letter of a localization is always upper case.
If the localization is composed, only the first letter is upper case
E.g.: Upper limbs
In the previous Synthesis versions the sub-localizations were small case, but this has been changed
in version 8.
Beside the obvious "specific localization" which gives the part of body, region, organ, etc. where a
given complaint can be localized, there are several types of generalized localizations, none of
which were applied by Kent and all introduced by Bnninghausen.
The highest level of generalization (abstraction) are localizations at the level of chapter, for such
chapters which themselves are localizations. In Bg2 you therefore find rubrics like "Stomach stomach". In order to a) improve the readability and b) not to repeat the name of the chapter at
the level of the headrubric, those headrubrics start with a leading "Complaints of"
E.g. "STOMACH - COMPLAINTS of the stomach"
Similarly if the localization is not a name of a chapter but one of the main organs, regions, body
parts of a chapter, they are listed as headrubrics of their own right starting with the name of the
localization, followed by the expression "complaints of", thus again making clear that this rubric
does not stand for a specific complaint, but for a generalization.
E.g. "ABDOMEN - PANCREAS; complaints of"
E.g. "EYE - CONJUNCTIVA; complaints of"
In case of "smaller" localizations, e.g. parts of such bigger localizations, positions within them, etc.
the localizations are given below the respective "bigger" localizations
E.g. "EXTREMITIES - FINGERS; complaints of - Tips"
E.g. "EYE - LIDS; complaints of - Margins of lids"
E.g. "EAR - COMPLAINTS of ears - Behind the ear"
All these headrubrics are considered localizations and therefore logically sorted at the end of each
chapter.
Remarks:
Only in some chapters, the "sides" are considered as localizations: head, external throat, neck,
chest and abdomen. In all other chapters "sides" are part of the "group of the sides". The result is
that "head - sides" is positioned after the extensions and not as the first block of head. In all other
occasions "side" is part of the first block of symptoms "sides".
"Side (not) lain on" is considered as a localization.
* Punctuation
each comma or semi-colon has to be followed by a single space in a phrase
punctuation marks immediately follow a word (no space in front of them)
abbreviations are followed by a full stop (especially agg. and amel.)
no comma or full stop at the end of a level of a symptom
not "skin - cicatrices," but "skin - cicatrices"
* Use of high and low cast:
CHAPTER NAME: high cast
HEADRUBRIC: first word high cast, following words low cast (except if the first word is a composed
word, e.g.: GOOSE FLESH or part of an expression, e.g.: mental exertion)
rubrics: all letters low cast, except if required otherwise because of spelling rules and except for
(the first letter of) a localization in the Pain sections
Note:
do not write
but write
Lower Limbs
Throat Pit
Lower limbs
Throat pit
Upper Limbs
Upper Arm
Upper limbs
Upper arm
* Singular / Plural
prefer the plural if it can be used as well as the single:
foot
-}
feet
eruption
-}
eruptions
toe
-}
toes
membrane
-}
membranes
animal names: use plural
E.g.: use "geese" in stead of "goose"
* Tense of verbs
There are two preferred tenses of the verbs:
if the symptom is expressed by the subject of the action, prefer the present continuing tense
if the symptom is expressed by the object of the action, prefer the past principle
E.g.: Talking ><
Talked to; being
Looking ><
Looked at; being
In the subrubrics of these rubrics, an inclination of the verb can be used to clarify the meaning of a
symptom or to make the level of that symptom readable.
E.g.: Talking - learning to talk; slow
If there is a choice, which may be the case especially in the local chapters, then prefer the present
continuous tense:
E.g.: "Eyes - Swelling" in stead of "Eyes - Swollen"
However, if the meaning becomes different, this should not be done!
E.g.: Eyes - turning = the eyes are turning
Eyes - turned = they are not turning any more
If there is a noun expressing the same idea, this should be preferred as it is more easy to add
modalities to it (modalities are most often adjectives). To make sure, look in the list of preferred
words.
E.g.: the modality "moving" should be replaced by "motion"
Avoiding ambiguities
Every language has its ambiguous words and expressions. We want to draw your attention to a few
examples of particular interest for the Repertory. Wherever it has been possible, the ambiguity has
been solved. We suggest you take them into account especially when creating new symptoms.
alcoholics
alcoholic drinks
drunkards (as opposed to "drunkenness; during")
angina inflammation of throat
angina pectoris
bathing see explanation under washing
birth = concerns the infant being born, but use:
delivery if the mother is concerned
biting = modality (from the verb "to bite"): write "biting; when"
description of pain
voir courrir
voir renverser
Each level of a symptom is separated by "{space}-{space}" (as opposed to words with the same sign
"-", such as throat-pit).
Text of a symptom can be never put between round brackets. Text between brackets always
indicates a synonym.
If a word needs clarification, this may be done by using square brackets within the text of the
symptom.:
E.g.: MIND - DELUSIONS - light [= brightness] as opposed to
MIND - DELUSIONS - light [= low weight]
Making additions
When I started practicing homeopathy (1978), there was an important group of homeopaths who
believed no additions should be made to Kent's Repertory. The idea was that the Repertory
contained wisely selected information and that additions could only increase the bias of too much
information. One would be tempted to believe that this was Kent's vision as well, as he introduced
the third edition of his Repertory as follows: "You will find all remedies of any value contained
herein. The book is complete." But a conversation has been reported, shortly before his death,
where he contradicted his wife who was making the same statement. He confessed to Dr. Frederika
Gladwin that "his job was almost done. If it had to continue, his students had to take care of it."
Today there seems to be little doubt as to the necessity of additions. But another problem is
emerging: an increasing number of homeopaths is questioning the reliability of those colleagues
who suddenly report hundreds if not thousands of additions based on their clinical experience. I
believe we should take a resolute stand and treat each other's "fever for additions". Moreover, we
should balance it with "fastidiousness about correct additions".
The sources
Current additions
From which sources have the additions previously been made?
You will find the additions from the Repertories that are primarily used today: Boger's version of
Bnninghausen Repertory, Oscar Boericke's Repertory, Phatak's Repertory, etc.
Information from different Materia Medica books has been integrated, especially from the classical
authors such as:
- Hahnemann: surprisingly, many of Hahnemann's symptoms seem not to have been integrated into
Kent's Repertory
- Kent's Materia Medica (fully integrated on the basis of Dr. Linda Johnston's tremendous work (Los
Angeles, USA)
- Hering's Encyclopedia (this source was preferred over copying from the secondary source, Knerr's
Repertory, which contains the same material)
- Allen's Encyclopedia (the original book, not the index, which contains many mistakes and
omissions as we found with key-word searches using Radar. Whenever possible we have indicated if
the information came from Allen's full text or from the Index to his Encyclopedia)
- Roberts "Sensations as if". Although some consider it as a Repertory, it is a full text structured line
by line. It takes much time to transcribe it to a correct repertory structure, but the book is being
integrated into Kent's Repertory.
- other Materia Medicas have been integrated, although most of them partially, due to the amount
of work involved. Worth mentioning: Clarke's Dictionary, William Boericke's Materia Medica,
Phatak's Materia Medica, Borland's books, Tyler's Drug Pictures, etc.
Special thanks at this level goes to the European homeopaths collaborating under the coordination
of Thomas Lowes (Munich, Germany) and to the members of the American rhus-tox study group.
Many other homeopaths have done great jobs on particular remedies taken from different sources,
or from research according to their interest. Since Synthesis 5, for example, you will find much
more complete pictures of the nosodes: additions from Henry Allen's Nosodes, reviews of
carcinosinum, psorinum, different strains of tuberculinum and medorrhinum.
An important number of clinical observations from different "living" authorities has been added.
The largest number of additions in this category is derived from George Vithoulkas. We have taken
great care to make sure that Synthesis is the best reflection of his clinical experience, which is
probably the largest in homeopathy to date.
George Vithoulkas has gathered a great number of homeopaths in a Clinical Centre in Athens. All
consultations are supervised by more experienced homeopaths or by him. Today 34 medical doctors
are working in the Centre and Vithoulkas estimates to have seen more than 150.000 cases.
Vithoulkas himself has not published his additions and the best source so far is Dr. Bill Gray's
booklet of notes taken during his stay in Athens (1979).
For the first time, George Vithoulkas himself has been writing down his additions for the chapter
mind, and these are now integrated in Synthesis. The chapter MIND has now more than 1600
controlled additions from his hand. Many of these additions have been confirmed by other authors.
On his instructions, more additions to other chapters have been added in successive versions of
Synthesis. In this version we have also included his indications on changes of degrees (most often a
higher degree).
When a remedy has a higher (lower) degree according to Vithoulkas, it is followed by a sign:
"merc.3vh" means that for this rubric, "merc." should be in the third degree instead of the second
degree. There are more than 1.000 such instances and one is free to follow this advice or not.
Future additions
It is misleading to call any Repertory complete. More work will always be needed to further improve
the quality and increase the content of Synthesis and it is certain that this job will never be
completely finished. So, as a consequence, all current collaborators and, in fact, anyone is invited
to go on with this collaboration.
The most productive contributions are made when everyone does what interests him or her: the
remedy he needs, the author she likes, etc. Nevertheless a few suggestions:
If you plan to undertake a big job, check to see that the work has not been done or started already
by someone else.
In any event it is beneficial to check again encoded additions, as we have done for some earlier
additions.
The priority set by most of our collaborators is to encode all information of the so-called classical
authors (Hahnemann, Kent, Allen, Hering, Clarke and Boericke).
We should continue to give priority to the most reliable information. Written sources and
confirmation of existing material will remain the best choice for a long time. It is more valuable to
have a confirmation by someone not belonging to the same school as the one whose information is
to be confirmed.
And finally: the most reliable symptoms are found when you use the source in the original
language.
"Verba volant, scripta manent"7(7): it is common-sense that what is written has more scientific
value than what is told. Our first attention goes to the integration of written information.
Another point of attention has unfortunately proved to be the following. When homeopath X quotes
an addition from colleague Y, he should be sure that Y has been quoting from his own experience.
The most relevant question when additions are proposed is: "From whom?". If there is no reassuring
answer to this question, we are better off with no addition at all.
degree).
This is very important, because this will decide where in the repertory to check, whether or not this
symptom already exists. Both in Materia Medica and in the different repertories you might find both
types of symptoms as a few examples for generalized symptoms will illustrate. For the full
discussion on the meaning and importance of this distinction see "II. 2. Specific versus generalized
symptoms.
E.g. Bg2 Materia Medica: Characteristics: Aconitum napellus - Head: Worse: Stooping, talking;
motion; [...] which is a generalized modality and translates to
Synthesis: HEAD - STOOPING - agg.
E.g. Ptk1 Repertory: Head - stooping - agg.: as an example for a generalized modality in a
repertory.
Now you have to search in the existing Repertory to see if the symptom already exists. It is very
important to invest time in this procedure, otherwise many too similar rubrics are created. You
should also be aware that the Repertory is a summary of the homeopathic information and so is its
language. I refer you to the section on the language of the Repertory where you can find "Preferred
words, expressions and spelling".
If a rubric exists which comes close to the meaning of the symptom to be added, we should not
create a new symptom.
ADDITION OF A REMEDY
If the rubric exists, only the remedy must be added to it. The only problem is the degree.
These are the rules we used:
the remedy is not yet present in the rubric:
addition from a living author: add in first degree
addition from literature:
classical author9(9) or author respected by you: add in degree as he proposes
lesser known author: add in first degree
the remedy is already present in the rubric:
if there is difference of opinion about the degree, preference should be given to the proposal of the
"classical or respected author".
If classical authors contradict between them, either the majority is followed, or the highest degree
is taken.
The way we have transcribed the meaning of two, three, four or even five different degrees in the
Materia Medica to the four degrees as used in the Repertory is described in the Appendix (Degrees
in the Repertory for additions from the Materia Medica).
Synthesis uses four degrees according to Dr. Pierre Schmidt, and has a few more remedies in the
fourth degree if they met the criteria set for this degree.
Addition of a symptom
The symptom to be added should first be transcribed into Repertorial language as explained in
"Editing the symptoms". The following proposed rules for adding new symptoms are in part inspired
by the rules Dean Crothers (Seattle, USA) and his collaborators have used10(10).
- A new rubric is not added unless it expresses something characteristic of the remedy
- The most important rule is this: the addition is made to the most specific rubric, not to the more
general rubric(s).
Say the symptom to be added is: "eye - pain - stitching - coughing, on". The more different
modalities exist together, the more this symptom is specific. And we should maintain the specificity
of this information. This symptom does not allow us to add the same remedy to the rubrics "eye pain - stitching" neither to "eye - pain - coughing, on".
Bnninghausen did add the remedies to the more general rubrics on this basis and this is one of the
main differences with Kent's approach. As homeopathy is individualizing, we should not exchange
the more individualized information for general, more vague symptoms without reason.
If it appears clearly from the proving or from the case that specificity is important, we should not
hesitate to create a new rubric, even if a similar symptom or part of the symptom is already
reported. In our example: the coughing causes real stitching, not just any type of pain, so we add to
"pain - stitching- coughing".
- A remedy can be added to a more general rubric
1: if several more specific subrubrics, common to the same more general superrubric, indicate this.
In the previous example: there is stitching pain in the eye also from sneezing, while stooping, on
motion, etc.: we can add the remedy to "eye - pain - stitching" even if this last symptom was not
mentioned as such by any prover.
Another example: a case reports fear of thunder. No matter how strong this fear of thunder may be,
no matter how many cases with the same remedy report fear of thunder: the remedy cannot be
added to the main rubric "fear". Only when various fears are also reported, can the remedy be
added as well to "fear", even if no one said: "I am afraid".
2: if the symptom expresses the superrubric and there is no clear modality
E.g.: add remedy to fear, if there are no modalities of the fear known.
- If a modality itself is modified, then the modality closest to the core of the symptom will be
preferred, except when there is an indication that both modifications are important.
E.g.: if the symptom is "drawing stitching pain", we say that "drawing" modifies "stitching", and we
add the remedy to "stitching". If the symptom is "drawing, stitching pain" or even stronger "drawing
and stitching pain", we have to add the remedy to both rubrics (to "pain - drawing" and to "pain stitching").
- A number of modalities are taken into consideration only if they are really essential. "Backache in
the morning" is relevant only if there is little or no backache at other times, in the afternoon, etc.;
when the backache returns, it is again in the morning. If it is occurring at different times of the
day, the "time modality" is less relevant because the backache has to occur anyway at a certain
time of the day. The question is: "Is it noteworthy that the backache appears in the morning ?"
The same caution should be taken with modalities of "sides", "localizations", and maybe some other
modalities. When adding symptoms, the question we should put to ourselves most often is: "Is it
noteworthy that ...?"
- A longer symptom should be split into meaningful bits.
When Hering mentions that bromium has "a cough which is aggravated from exercise and on
entering a warm room", we should not try and squeeze this information into one rubric (which is
what Kent did: "cough - loose - exercise and warm room agg."). In the perspective of more
additions, we should build a consistent structure and, therefore, add bromium to "cough - loose exercise" and to "cough - loose - warm room - going to a warm room".
Only if there is a connection between the two modalities, should they remain together, one
modality being a subrubric of the other.
E.g.: ascending stairs was hidden behind a number of expressions like "going up stairs, when", "on
going up stairs", "stairs, when going up", "ascending stairs, on", "ascending steps", "ascending stairs, while", "going upstairs" etc.
All such terms were "streamlined" to become "ascending stairs" throughout the whole repertory to
make this modality more accessible.
The term "restructuring" refers to all changes to the order and position of rubrics and subrubrics
inside a given symptom. Also this is an ongoing task. One of the first areas of the repertory where
this work has been done systematically were the times which did not follow a very strict rule in very
early versions. Many of those inconsistencies came from Kent's repertory.
E.g.: The time 5 h could be found both as a subrubric of "morning" and as a subrubric of "midnight,
after" and all rubrics "5 h" had been moved to become a subrubric of "midnight - after" . Midnight
itself sometimes was a level of its own right and very often a subrubric of night. Now it always is a
subrubric of night.
restructuring of pain rubrics in Synthesis 9.1
With version 9.1 of Synthesis the restructuring was extended to a very essential part of the
repertory: the subrubrics of the headrubric pain, the pain sections in short.
This change addresses a problem well known even to deft repertory users: a lot of information is
hidden in the subrubrics of the pain descriptions. Let's clarify this with an example.
A patient tells you his pain in the eye is definitely better from rubbing the eye. Synthesis 9.0 offers
7 remedies with this modality in the rubric "EYE - PAIN - rubbing - amel.". The meaningful bit of
information here is "rubbing amel.".
The experienced repertory user knows that the "eye - pain" section contains other symptoms which
include this same modality. These are hidden as subrubrics of the pain descriptions, as follows:
"EYE - PAIN - burning - rubbing - amel."
"EYE - PAIN - foreign body; as from a - rubbing amel."
"EYE - PAIN - pressing, pressure, etc. - rubbing - amel."
"EYE - PAIN - sand, as from - rubbing - amel."
These four rubrics all contain remedies whose pain in the eye is improved by rubbing. The relevance
is that, if we combine these rubrics, we now look at 13 remedies instead of 7! Considering these
additional remedies will increase the likelihood of choosing the correct remedy.
So what was the solution to that problem?
To move the description of pain to the end of the symptom, which automatically gives a greater
emphasis to the modalities, times, etc. (The rules are described in detail in chapter II. 6.
"DESCRIPTIONS OF PAIN".)
In all the symptoms of the pain sections, the description of pain was always on level 3 ("eye - pain burning - morning") or in other words, a subrubric of the headrubric "PAIN". In Synthesis 9.1 this
description has been moved to the last level (i.e. the end) of the symptom. The above symptoms
therefore became:
"EYE - PAIN - rubbing - amel. - burning"
"EYE - PAIN - rubbing - amel. - foreign body; as from a"
"EYE - PAIN - rubbing - amel. - pressing pain"
"EYE - PAIN - rubbing - amel. - sand; as from"
As a consequence, these rubrics containing the same modality are now positioned next to each
other, on the same page or screen. In earlier versions they might have been pages apart, pages that
were seldom turned because of lack of time. This 'hidden' information is now easily visible and
usable.
For software users there is an additional aid to easily find any restructured and/or streamlined
symptom. At the end of Synthesis 9.1 there is an additional chapter "Old symptoms". It contains
all symptoms that have undergone a change, but in the "old format". Here you will find the rubric
that you are used to, e.g.: "OLD SYMPTOMS - EXTREMITIES - PAIN - stitching - Ankle - standing".
Hit enter and you will be at the restructured symptom: "EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Ankles - standing agg. - stitching pain".
Copying remedies from pain descriptions
Due to this restructuring all remedies expressing the same side, time, modality, extension or
localization are either to be found directly at this place or in any of the descriptions which follow as
subrubrics. As all descriptions of pain (like burning) are of course pains themselves, it is not only
possible to copy remedies from such a description to the next higher level (superrubric), but it will
complete the rubric.
This is exactly what has been done: all remedies that where "hidden" in a description of pain and
not yet in the rubric itself, were copies into that common superrubric.
Reverting to the example above, this means that "EYE - PAIN - rubbing - amel." now has 13 remedies
in Synthesis 9.1 (instead of 7 in Synthesis 9.0).
Of course for each remedy the source rubric has been indicated11(11).
Software users have the possibility to choose whether or not to use the remedies copied from
subrubrics. The view "Full Synthesis, rmd copied" contains all copied remedies. All other views
do not contain these additional remedies. These views are just a mouse click apart. In the
printed version the remedies of the subrubrics have been copied as described. Such remedies are
identified by a 'down arrow'.
Extensive Streamlining of symptoms
As mentioned above, the purpose of the restructuring of descriptions of pain results in "grouping"
together similar rubrics that only differ in the last level, the description of pain. In order to achieve
this drastic change, another step became necessary: a thorough streamlining of all symptoms, i.e.
a standardizing of the language of all symptoms. Here the explanation why:
The modality "cold air agg." was expressed in several ways at different places in the Repertory. For
example, in Synthesis 9.0:
HEAD - PAIN - cutting - cold - air agg.
HEAD - PAIN - tearing - air - cold; from
If we restructure this information, without first standardizing how this modality should be
expressed, these rubrics would become:
HEAD - PAIN - cold - air agg. - cutting
HEAD - PAIN - air - cold; from - tearing
This of course would have resulted in lots of rubrics with identical meanings, expressed in many
different ways. Therefore, we standardized (streamlined) the modality "cold air agg." throughout
the repertory into "cold - air - agg." before undertaking the restructuring.
Thus in Synthesis 9.1 the above rubrics became:
HEAD - PAIN - cold - air - agg. - cutting
HEAD - PAIN - cold - air - agg. - tearing
Therefore throughout the repertory, with emphasis on the pain sections this time, the expressions
of rubrics and subrubrics were standardized to an extend never achieved before.
To give just a few examples:
If a combined modality contains an element indicating temperature, then this latter part was put
first: "cold air agg"; "cold bathing amel."; "warm food"; "warm bed"; etc. The only important
exception to this rule is that we did not touch the existing groups under "weather" and "wind": they
remain as they were ("weather - warm - amel."; "wind - cold - agg."; etc.).
As much as possible and where applicable we have reduced modalities to either "agg." or "amel.".
"Walking - from"; "walking - when"; walking - while"; etc. have all been merged into "walking - agg.".
Where doubt existed we kept a difference that will need to be clarified from a study of the Materia
Medica. An example: you will find some remedies and subrubrics at "eating agg." and others at
"eating while" because this is the way the original rubrics were written. These rubrics have not been
merged as it could have induced errors.
All through Synthesis the difference between "after xxx agg." and "xxx agg." was maintained, even
if in some instances this difference appeared to be minimal: is there a difference between "turning
head agg." and "turning head agg.; after"? Further study of Materia Medica will answer in each
instance.
The difference between an aggravation from food and from eating that food has been maintained.
The reason being that "eating warm food" indicates that the aggravation takes places while eating or at least should indicate this. The modality "warm food" normally indicates that the aggravation
takes place because of warm food, but not only and not necessarily while eating it. The same has
been done for aggravation from drinking a drink and the aggravation from that drink (e.g. "tea" as
opposed to "drinking tea"). In all these instances the original symptom information was carefully
preserved.
At last, some modalities that were depending from common superrubrics were split. In Synthesis
9.0 you will find "air - open"; "air - draft of"; etc. These rubrics depend from the common
superrubric "air". In Synthesis 9.1 these modalities became "air agg."; "air agg.; in open" and "air
agg.; draft of". The reasons for this change are to have a more obvious structure, that is easily
perceived and groups expressions and to facilitate the translation of these modalities.
Improvements for Later Editions
The work of standardizing language and expressions (streamlining) and the order of rubrics and
subrubrics within a symptom (restructuring) is still going on. Just to name a few of the tasks: the
expressions in the chapters Mind and Dreams have not been touched systematically right now. In
local chapters the headrubrics discoloration and eruptions still can be improved and some
localizations need further checking (e.g. sacrum versus sacral region versus lumbar region which
often originated from partly incorrect translations of the German "Kreuz" and "Kreuzbeingegend".
-/
-/
BARTHEL
= aluminium metallicum
alumin.
The abbreviation alum. is already used for alumina (in Kent
and Synthesis), so aluminium should receive another
abbreviation.
aluminium aceticum
alumin-a.
ammonium aceticum
am-a.
SYNTHESIS
alumin.
alumin-act.
am-act.
-/
- amyl-n.
- ant-a.
- ant-chl.
- ant-ox.
- ant-s.
- anth-n.
- anthr.
- anthro.
- aran-s
- arg-c
- arg-m.
- arg-mur.
- ars-m.
- asc-s.
- atro.
- atro-s.
- aur-a.
-/
ammonium aceticum
am-a.
= amylenum nitrosum
aml-ns.
= antimonium arsenicosum
ant-ar.
= antimonium muriaticum
ant-m.
Antimonium chloridum is synonymous with antimonium
muriaticum, but as in other cases (nat-m., mag-m., ...) the
extension "-muriaticum" should be chosen.
= antimonium oxydatum
ant-o.
= antimonium sulph. auratum
ant-s-aur.
= anthemis nobilis
anth.
In his book (e.g.: "bladder - pain - distension, as from",
"bladder - urging - painful", "bladder - urination - frequent night", ...) Kent often uses anth-n. to abbreviate anthemis
nobilis (mostly abbreviated as anth. in other rubrics). In his
list of abbreviations only anth. is mentioned. Synthesis uses
only anth.
= anthracinum
anthraci.
= anthrokokali or anthracokali
anthraco.
anthracokali expresses more clearly the origin of the
substance, which is made by dissolving anthracite (=
anthra) in (= con) a potash (= kalium) solution.
.= aranea scinencia
aran-sc.
.= argentum cyanatum
arg-cy.
= argentum metallicum
arg-m.
In salts the extension "-m." indicates the muriate, which
exists for argentum.
= argentum muriaticum
arg-mur.
Normally this should be changed to "arg-m.", but as Kent has
erroneously used this abbreviation for "argentum
metallicum" this would lead to confusion.
= arsenicum metallicum
ars-met.
= asclepias syriaca (= cornuti)
asc-c.
Kent uses both abbreviations to indicate the same substance.
"Asc-s." does not appear in his list of abbreviations, but is
regularly used in the Repertory ("Stomach - Appetite increased - eating, after", "... - ravenous - eating - after,
soon", ...). Synthesis uses only "asc-c."
= atropinum purum and sulph.
atro.
Kent uses "atro." and "atro-s.", but the symptoms of both
substances are sometimes mixed and considered as one by
some authors. Barthel has put them together under one
abbreviation. The mixed situation still remains in this
version of Synthesis, but separate abbreviations are
available (atro-pur. and atro-s.).
= atropinum sulphuricum
atro.
Atro. in Barthel indicates two substances: atropinum purum
and atropinum sulphuricum as most authors, including
Clarke, consider symptoms of both together. In Synthesis
separate abbreviations are available.
= aurum arsenicosum
aur-ar.
bacillus Morgan pure (Paterson)
bach
am-act.
aml-ns.
ant-ar.
ant-m.
ant-o.
ant-s-aur.
anth.
anthraci.
anthraco.
aran-sc.
arg-cy.
arg-met.
arg-mur.
ars-met.
asc-c.
atro.
atro-s
aur-ar.
morg-p.
-/
- bals.
- bar-ac.
- benz.
- benz-n.
- bism.
- blat.
- blatta
- bol.
- bor.
- brass.
- buf-s.
- cadm.
- cahin.
- calc-ac.
-/
- calt.
- carb-h.
- carbo-o.
- carb-s.
- cast.
- cast-eq.
- cast-v.
- cer-s.
morg-p.
bals-p.
bar-act.
ben.
ben-n.
bism.
blatta-a.
blatta-o.
bol-la.
borx.
brass-n-o.
bufo-s.
cadm-s.
cain.
calc-act.
calc-st-s.
calth.
carbn-h.
carbn-o.
carbn-s.
castm.
castor-eq.
castn-v.
cere-s.
- cer-s.
- cet.
- chen.
- chin-a.
- chin-b.
- chin-s.
-/
- cinch.
- cinch-b.
-/
- chr-ox.
- cocaine.
- conv-d.
- cupr-ac.
- dub.
- eth.
- equis.
- ferr-ac.
-/
- frag-v.
- gall-ac.
- gland.
- hedeom.
- helo.
- hydrop.
-/
= cereus serpentaria
cere-s.
= cetraria islandica
cetr.
= aphis chenopodii glauci
aphis
Both abbreviations are used and mentioned by Kent for one
remedy. Synthesis uses only aphis.
= chininum arsenicosum
chin-ar.
= chininum bromatum
chin-br.
Chin-b. in Kent indicates chininum bromatum , in Barthel it
indicates china boliviana. This ambiguity is resolved by
giving a different root to china and its varieties (= chin.)
compared to chininum and its salts (= chinin.)
= chininum sulphuricum
chin-s.
chininum valerianicum
chin-val.
= cinchoninum sulphuricum
cinch.
As one knows china is synonymous to cinchona. However,
cinchoninum sulphuricum is a different alkaloid of china as
compared to chininum sulphuricum. Both have the same
atomic structure (C20H24N2O2SH20), but the molecular
structure is different (read the different provings in a1 and
more explanation in c1).
= cinchona / china boliviana
chin-b.
chininum muriaticum
chin-m.
= chromicum oxydatum
chr-o.
= cocainum muriaticum
cocain.
= convolvulus duartinus
convo-d.
= cuprum aceticum
cupr-a.
= duboisinum
dub.
Duboisinum is the (sulphate of) the alkaloid of dubosia
myoporoides. Several authors use "duboisinum" for the
tincture of the leaves as well as for the alkaloid. If the
distinction is not made, one can use the old abbreviation
"dub." as most symptoms known belong rather to the
alkaloid. However, there is some specific information is
available. In Synthesis both abbreviations "duboin." (for the
alkaloid and its sulphate) and "dubo-m." are available
should anyone wish to be more precise.
= aether
aether
= equisetum hyemale
equis
= ferrum aceticum
ferr-a.
ficus religiosa
fic.
= fragaria vesca
frag.
= gallicum acidum
gal-ac.
= gymnocladus canadensis
gymno.
= hedeoma pulegioides
hedeo.
= heloderma species
helo.
Heloderma suspectum and horridum have often been
confused. New abbreviations "helo-h." and "helo-s." are
available in Synthesis, should anyone wish to be more
precise.
= hydrophobinum
lyss.
Both abbreviations are used and mentioned by Kent as being
synonymous. Synthesis uses only lyss.
hyosciaminum salts
hyoscin.
cere-s.
cetr.
aphis
chinin-ar.
chinin-br.
chinin-s.
chinin-val.
cinch.
chin-b.
chinin-m.
chr-o.
cocain.
convo-d.
cupr-act.
duboin.
aether.
equis-h.
ferr-act.
fic-r.
frag.
gal-ac.
gymno.
hedeo.
helo.
lyss.
hyoscin.
-/
hyosciaminum salts
hyoscin.
The symptoms of hyosciaminum hydrobromate and
hyosciaminum sulphate have not been separated by all
authors. The mixed situation still remains in this version of
Synthesis, however the abbreviations "hyosin-hbr." and
"hyosin-s." have been added, should anyone wish to be
more precise.
- ill.
= illicium anisatum
anis.
Both abbreviations are used and mentioned by Kent for one
remedy. Synthesis uses only anis.
- irid.
= iridium metallicum
irid.
- ir-fl.
= iris florentina
iris-fl.
- ir-foe.
= iris foetida
iris-foe.
- ir-g.
= iris germanica
iris-g.
- ir-v.
= iris versicolor
iris
Both abbreviations are used and mentioned by Kent as being
synonymous. Synthesis uses only iris.
- jac.
= jacaranda gualandai
jac.
- jatr.
= jatropha curcas
jatr.
- junc.
= juncus effusus
junc-e.
- juni.
= juniperus virginiana
juni.
- kali-a.
= kalium aceticum
kali-a.
- kali-fer
= kalium ferrocyanatum
kali-fcy.
- kali-ma.
= kalium permanganicum
kali-perm.
- kaol.
= kaolin or alumina silicata
alum-sil.
Both abbreviations are used and mentioned by Kent for one
remedy. Synthesis uses only alum-sil.
- lact-v.
= lactuca virosa
lact.
Both abbreviations are used and mentioned by Kent as being
synonymous. Synthesis uses only lact.
- lappa-a. / lappa-m.= lappa arctium
lappa
Kent mentions lappa-a. for lappa arctium and lappa-m. for
lappa major. However Clarke and others consider lappa
major, lappa arctium and lappa officinalis as synonymous
(See in his Dictionary under arctium lappa). In Synthesis the
one remedy is abbreviated as "lappa".
- lith.
= lithium carbonicum
lith-c.
Kent uses only one lithium compound, whereas Synthesis
differentiates six substances.
- lycps.
= lycopus virginicus
lycps.
- lyssin
= hydrophobinum
lyss.
Both abbreviations are used and mentioned by Kent as being
synonymous. Synthesis uses only lyss.
- mag-arct.
= magnetis polis arcticus
m-arct.
- mag-aust.
= magnetis polis australis
m-aust.
- mag-p-a.
= magnetis polis australis
m-aust.
Kent used two abbreviations for the same substance.
- mang.
= manganum aceticum and carb.
mang.
The symptoms of manganum aceticum and carbonicum have
not been separated to date. The mixed situation still
remains in this version of Synthesis, however the
abbreviations "mang-act." and "mang-c." have been added,
should anyone wish to be more precise.
hyoscin.
anis.
irid-met.
iris-fl.
iris-foe.
iris-g.
iris
jac-g.
jatr-c.
junc-e.
juni-v.
kali-act.
kali-fcy.
kali-perm.
alum-sil.
lact.
lappa
lith-c.
lycps-v.
lyss.
m-arct.
m-aust.
m-aust.
mang.
- meli.
- ment.
- merc.
- merc-ac.
- merc-n.
- merc-p-r.
- morph.
- myos.
- naph.
- nat-ac.
- nat-a.
- nat-h.
- nicc.
- nit-ox.
- nux-j.
meli.
menth.
merc.
merc-act.
merc-ns.
merc-pr-r.
morph.
myos-a.
naphtin.
nat-act.
nat-ar.
nat-hchls.
nicc.
nitro-o.
jug-r.
- nux-j.
- nym.
- osm.
- per.
- pilo.
- plb.
-/
- polyg
- poth.
- pul-n.
- rad.
- sacc.
- sac-l.
- sang-n.
-/
- sant.
-/
-/
- sol-v.
- stront.
= nux juglans
jug-r.
This substance is synonymous with juglans regia (Kent's
abbreviation = jug-r.). Kent is using two abbreviations to
indicate one substance. Synthesis uses only jug-r.
= nymphea odorata
nymph.
= osmium metallicum and acidum
osm.
The symptoms of the metal and the acid have not always
been separated. The mixed situation still remains in this
version of Synthesis, however the abbreviations "osm-met."
and "osm-ac." have been added, should anyone wish to be
more precise.
= amygdala persica
amgd-p.
= pilocarpinum and salts
pilo.
The symptoms of pilocarpinum purum and the salts (pilo-m.
and pilo-n.) have not always been separated. The mixed
situation still remains in this version of Synthesis, however
the abbreviations "pilo-pur.", "pilo-m." and "pilo-n." have
been added, should anyone wish to be more precise.
= plumbum metallicum
plb.
The symptoms of the metal, the aceticum and the carbonate
have not always been separated. For some of these authors
"plb-old." has been used, when the distinction was not
made. The mixed situation still remains in this version of
Synthesis, however the abbreviations "plb-act." and "plb-c."
have been added, should anyone wish to be more precise.
The abbreviation "plb." has been kept for plumbum
metallicum as this is a too well known abbreviation.
plumbum aceticum
plb-a.
.= polygonum hydropiperoides
polyg-h.
= ictodes foetida
ictod.
Both abbreviations are used and mentioned by Kent for one
remedy. Synthesis uses only ictod.
= pulsatilla nutalliana
puls-n.
= radium metallicum
rad.
= saccharum albis
sacch.
= saccharum lactis
sacch-l.
= sanguinarinum nitricum
sang-n.
The root "sang." is already used for sanguinaria.
sanguinarinum tartaricum
sang-t.
= santoninum
santin.
solaninum and its acetate
solin.
No distinction has been made between solaninum and its
acetate. The mixed situation still remains in this version of
Synthesis, however the abbreviations "solin-pur." and
"solin-act." have been added, should anyone wish to be
more precise.
solaninum aceticum
solin.
= solidago virgaurea
solid.
The abbreviation "sol-" is used (by Kent and Synthesis) for the
different types of solanum and should therefore be
different from the abbreviation for solidago.
= strontium carbonicum
stront-c.
jug-r.
nymph.
osm.
amgd-p.
pilo.
plb.
plb-act.
polyg-h.
ictod.
puls-n.
rad-met.
sacch.
sacch-l.
sangin-n.
sangin-t.
santin.
solin.
solin-act.
solid.
stront-c.
- stront.
-/
- stroph.
- tann.
- thal.
- tereb.
- thlaspi.
- tril.
- trio.
- tus-f.
- uran.
-/
- vesp.
- wild.
- zinc-ac.
- zinc-c.
- zinc-ox.
= strontium carbonicum
stront-c.
Strontium carbonicum was the only strontium known at Kent's
time (See A1 and HR1). Synthesis mentions four salts of
strontium (bromatum, carbonicum, iodatum and nitricum),
besides the metal which corresponds with the abbreviation
stront-met. (in Synthesis).
strontium metallicum
stront.
As "stront." was used by Kent to indicate strontium
carbonicum, it is more clear to use "stront-met." in this
case.
= strophanthus hispidus
stroph-h.
= tannicum acidum
tann-ac.
= thallium metallicum and aceticum
thal.
Thallium metallicum and aceticum have not been separated
by all authors. The abbreviations "thal-act." and "thal-met."
have been added in Synthesis, should anyone wish to be
more precise.
= terebenthina
ter.
In his book (e.g.: "head - pulsating", "head - pulsating vertex", ...) Kent often uses tereb. to abbreviate
terebenthina (mostly abbreviated as ter. in other rubrics).
In his list of abbreviations only ter. is mentioned. Synthesis
uses only ter.
= thlaspi bursa pastoris
thlas.
= trillium pendulum
tril.
Some authors consider trillium pendulum identical to trillium
cernuum (C1), other make a difference.
= triosteum perfoliatum
trios.
= tussilago fragrans
tus-fr.
= uranium nitricum
uran-n.
Be aware that in Barthel: uran. = uranium metallicum.
uranium metallicum
uran.
= vespa crabro
vesp.
The symptoms of different species have not always been
separated. The mixed situation still remains in this version
of Synthesis, however the abbreviations "vesp-cr.",
"vesp-m." and vesp-vg." have been added, should anyone
wish to be more precise. If it is not clear which species was
used, "vesp-xyz." was used in some authors.
= wildbad
wildb.
= zincum aceticum
zinc-a.
= zincum cyanatum
zinc-cy.
= zincum oxydatum
zinc-o.
stront-c.
stront-met.
stroph-h.
tann-ac.
thal.
ter.
thlas.
tril-p.
trios.
tus-fr.
uran-n.
uran-met.
vesp.
wildb.
zinc-act.
zinc-cy.
zinc-o.
On symptoms
General remarks
All changes are annotated by the author suggesting the change. If no author follows, the change was
introduced by the editor. Most and more obvious changes are only present in the specific rubric
itself and annotated there.
Many symptoms have been moved to a more coherent location. Redundant symptoms have been
merged into one only and the other symptom has become a rubric referring to the rubric containing
the remedies. This further streamlining of Synthesis is the reason that some "new" rubrics will
appear including remedies referenced by Kent, which cannot be found at that location in the
original Kent. This is especially the case for all alternations, which contained often partial
information at one of two places where the same symptom could be expressed.
E.g.: "Loquacity - alternating with - answer; aversion to": contains cimic. K (as the remedy was
present in Kent in "Answers - aversion to - loquacious at other times"
For the rules used to systematize this formatting, read the relevant sections under "Editing of
symptoms".
Chagrin, which by many is believed to correspond to "grief" (if translated from the French), rather
indicates "mortification" and has been replaced as such on all occasions.
"Exanthema(tive)" has been removed from the repertory. It is considered synonymous with eruption
(accompanying a fever), according to different dictionaries. The only time to keep the term is to
indicate the disease "exanthema subitum". In all other cases the word has disappeared from
contemporary textbooks on dermatology. As a consequence some rubrics have been merged.
Hours have been changed to international format (0-24 h), as used in computer time, airports, etc.
The advantages are:
more concise writing ("10 a.m. - 3 p.m." becomes "10-15 h")
less ambiguous time schedule (who -outside of the English speaking countries- knows when is 12
a.m. and when 12 p.m. ?)
easier search possibilities for the program
For details, see appendix "Table of Times".
"Mental work": all over the repertory the expression "mental work" has been used to replace
expressions such as "mental exertion", ...
All symptoms expressing periodicity are made subrubrics of "... - periodical - ...". E.g.: "skin
-eruption - returning yearly" is changed into "skin - eruption - periodical - yearly returning". This will
allow you to find easily this type of symptoms that are now scattered among all other modalities in
many different ways. (See "Editing of symptoms", point 4c)
Remarks by chapter
Mind
All "Ailments from {any mental cause}" have been grouped under the rubric "Mind - Ailments from ...". Since this has been done in other repertories, it has not systematically been referenced. (e.g.:
you will not find "grief - ailments from", but "ailments from - grief")
If Weather modalities apply to the whole mental state, they have been grouped under a rubric
"mind - weather" (as in the Chapter generals). A fear or a sadness caused or influenced by a weather
modality will still be a subrubric depending on fear or sadness.
"anxiety - sedentary employment, from": as a translation of the German "stubensitzen" it is more
appropriate to translate this rubric as "anxiety - sedentary life, from" (Jean-Claude Grgoire,
France)
"black and sombre; aversion to everything that is": this symptom has been split into "colors - black
-aversion to" and " sombre; everything that is - aversion to"
"censorious - unoccupied, close application amel.": sapin. A1: taken as such from the MM, but when
reflected upon the meaning corresponds to "... - occupation amel." into which the rubric has been
renamed.
"cheerful" and "mirth" are split again since Synthesis 7 as it was pointed out by different
collaborators that the difference between the two symptoms was too big to allow a merger of these
rubrics.
"controlling - must control everything twice or more": remedies moved to "double-checking", which
is more like common language. (Nick Churchill, England)
has been split and renamed into the two following rubrics: "... - door - opening the door; when
there is a difficulty in" and "... - door - opened; when the door is". The sources for all additions are
indicated.
"fear - knaves; of" was not added as it clearly is a typing error in bg2 for "fear - knives; of".
"fear - losing senses" and "fear - losing reason": considered synonymous with "fear - insanity, of":
remedies are moved
"fear - sensation; of" in K2 this should be "far off sensation" as can be read from a1, where the
preceding symptom reads: "Dazed feeling; a far off sensation, as though things done today occurred
a week ago. Momentary loss of thought, caused by sensation of tightness in brain. Loses constantly
the thread of her talk.", as opposed to Kent's wording: "Confusion of mind, dazed; fear of sensation;
loses the idea when speaking.". The symptom has been deleted from Synthesis. The remedy med.
has been added to "stupefaction" which appears to be the closest rubric expressing "far off feeling".
"fear - position; to lose his lucrative": has been changed to "... - job; to lose his lucrative"
(Jean-Claude Grgoire, France)
"forsaken feeling - joyless; feels": the original symptom for alum. (h) does not related joyless to
forsaken feeling, but to a state of indifference, depression ("Niedergeschlagen und freudlos").
Therefore the remedy has been moved to the existing rubric: "Indifference - joyless". (Guy Loutan,
Switzerland)
"homesickness": eup-per.1 is quoted from A1: eup-per has no mind symptoms even. It should be
eup-pur., which is already in Kent (Srinivasan, India)
"hopeful": aur.1J5: comes from trembling as in hopeful joy: therefor the remedy was deleted from
this rubric (Schore, USA)
"insanity - eating - refuse, only": unclear symptom changed into "eating - dirt" (meli.)
"irritability - alternating with - hypochondriac mood during the day and merrines in the evening":
has been split into: "irritability - alternating with - hypochondriasis - daytime"; "irritability alternating with - cheerfulness - evening"; "cheerful - evening - alternating with - hypochondriasis daytime". The remedies sulph.1 K and viol-t.1 K have been copied to all rubrics.
"laughing - agg.": should contain only remedies which aggravate the mental state. None such
symptoms could be found in the MM, as most symptoms aggravated by laughing are local or at the
most equal to "generals - laughing - agg.". This latter symptom is the place where the remedies
from bg3 (pg. 24), bg2 (pg 209), bro1 (pg. 970) and from ptk1 (pg. 207) can be added, even if it is
an overstatement to call these a "general" aggravation from laughing as can be seen from reading
the corresponding MM.
"laughing - involuntarily - eating, after": puls. has been moved to "laughing - eating, after". All other
subrubrics were added to "laughing - ..." in stead of being added to "laughing - involuntarily - ...".
Also, all subrubrics were added to "laughing - ..." in stead of being added to "laughing spasmodically - ...".
"love - disappointed love - jealousy, anger and incoherent talk; with": this composed symptom was
split into "anger - love; from disappointed", etc.
"mirth": all remedies and subrubrics have been moved to "cheerful" in some other repertories.
Synthesis has maintained the difference between "mirth" and cheerful" (as advised by George
Dimitriadis, Australia and independently by Schore, Crothers and Nossaman, USA)
"passionate": a search in the older MM shows that passionate is almost everywhere linked to
expressions of anger or irritability. To differentiate it from amorous, emotional passion synonyms
have been added.
"positiveness": synonymous with "always claims to be right" (Jean-Claude Grgoire, France: Rev Belg
Hom (French), vol 18, pg 103, 1985)
"restlessness - night - midnight - after - 2 h": ambr.: this symptom expresses physical restlessness
rather than mental restlessness (A1). Ambr. has been moved to "GENERALS - restlessness - ...".
(Johannes von Keller, Germany: Cl Hom Q, vol 4, pg 59-65, 1991)
"restlessness - night - midnight - after - 3 h": agar: this symptom expresses physical restlessness
rather than mental restlessness (A1). Agar. has been moved to "GENERALS - restlessness - ...".
(Johannes von Keller, Germany: Cl Hom Q, vol 4, pg 59-65, 1991)
"sadness - noon - lively, in evening sad, or vice versa": has been changed into a more comprehensive
form: "cheerful - evening - alternating with - sadness" as read in A1 and H for zinc.
"stupefaction - forenoon - 11-18h": as the symptom in the MM indicated a sensation on the head, it
has been moved to the chapter head (Johannes von Keller, Germany: Cl Hom Q, vol 4, pg 59-65,
1991)
"stupefaction - suppressed exanthema" renamed to "stupefaction - eruptions; from suppressed"
"suicidal - position, in": must be "... - poison, by"
"talk - indisposed to - afternoon - 13 h": for grat. this Repertory symptom arises from two separate
symptoms in the Materia Medica (A1) Grat. has therefore been moved to "Aversion - everything, to afternoon - 13 h" and to "talk - indisposed to". (Johannes von Keller, Germany: Cl Hom Q, vol 4, pg
59-65, 1991)
"touched - aversion to be": lachn.1 is quoted from A1: lachn. has no such mind symptom. It should
be lach., which is already in Kent (Srinivasan, India)
"unconsciousness - exanthema slow to appear" has been changed to "... - eruptions - slow to appear"
"will - muscles refuse to obey the will": gels. K, H: from H1, one can see this symptom is a
secondary expression of a general confusion and not referring to an act of will. Therefore the rubric
has been renamed and moved to "confusion - muscles refuse to obey the will. (George Dimitriadis: A
J Hom Med, page 78, Vol 3, N2, 1994)
"work, mental": see general introduction about "mental work".
Head
"enlarged - extending to - vertex": "extending to" has
been replaced by "Vertex": symptom
becomes a localization in stead of an extension (confirm A1: Peter Vint, Germany)
"pain - morning - waking, on - preceded by disagreeable dreams": this symptom is not inserted
following the normal repertorial syntax, and has therefore been copied to "DREAMS - headache;
about - before the headache appears" and to "SLEEP - Dreaming - headache; before"
"pain - midnight - after - 1 a.m.": pall. is erroneously mentioned here, and should be mentioned
under "pain - afternoon - 13 h". See HR1. (Klaus-Henning Gypser, Germany)
"pain - night - midnight - after - 1 h - 1-10h": elaps should be moved to the rubric "... - 1 h - 1-11 h".
See A1. (Klaus-Henning Gypser, Germany)
"pain - suppressed eruptions" was changed to "pain - eruptions suppressed"
"pain - sides - both": this rubric was deleted and its remedies were moved to "pain - sides". If the
symptoms are connected to one side, to the left side only or to the right side only, they were made
subrubrics of the latter, so that this rubric "sides" now has the same logical structure as elsewhere.
"pain - stitching - forehead - sides of - left": sulph.3 (from Kent) was modified into staph.3 as can be
verified in HR1; only BG2 mentions sulph.
"pain - wandering pains - mist before eyes followed by fleeting pains - Occipital protuberances,
extending down neck and shoulders; at - lying in a dark, quiet place and sleeping amel. was
modified and split in a referring rubric to the following symptoms:
VISION - FOGGY - followed by - Occipital protuberances; fleeting pain in
HEAD - PAIN - lying - dark room; in a - amel.
HEAD - PAIN - noise, from
HEAD - PAIN - Occiput - Protuberance; occipital - extending to - Neck; down
HEAD - PAIN - Occiput - Protuberance; occipital - extending to - Shoulders
HEAD - PAIN - sleep - after - amel.
Eye
"cataract - perpendicular high-sight": rubric has been modified as the more modern "... - hemiopia,
with vertical"
"crooked - objects seem" has been deleted and moved to the more appropriate chapter "vision".
"pain - burning - morning - washing": for most of these remedies, the modality "washing" is the most
important, it is only accidental that the washing occurs in the morning so there is no real morning
agg. (otherwise the symptom should express this, e.g.: when washing the eyes, only in the
morning). The remedies have been copied to the rubric "... - burning - washing" for this reason.
"pain - evening - 8 p.m.- on reading and writing": nat-ar.: the modality "reading and writing" is not
especially present in the evening, and surely not precisely at 20 h =} moved to "pain - reading" and
"... - writing" : (A1)
"photophobia - sweat during, sun's light": this symptom is transcribed in Knzli's Repertory as
follows: "- sweat during, shun's light". In Hering MM we find under sulphur: "shuns light during
sweat". Therefore this symptom was transcribed in Synthesis as "photophobia - perspiration, during"
Vision
"Accommodation - overexertion": nux-v.2K: this unclear symptom corresponds with "Vertigo with
vanishing of sight, preceded by tensive headache, from mental overexertion" (HR1). Therefore the
original rubric has been removed and the remedy has been moved to several more appropriate
rubrics, among others to: "Vision - Dim - mental exertion"
Ear
In all symptoms the localization "inside" has been replaced by "meatus" to be more precise. These
were already indicated as synonymous by Kent in "Pain - inside (in meatus)" and "Swelling - inside
(meatus)".
"heat - coldness of body during- lying, while". This strange repertorial interpretation of the
following symptom in Hahnemann MM: "Towards evening he feels very uncomfortable in the body,
like fever, and when he lies down his head becomes hot, especially the ears, but the knees are cold"
(ars.). The remedy "ars" was moved to the following rubrics: "Fever - evening"; "Head - heat - lying
down"; "Ear - heat - lying down" and "Extremities - coldness - knees - hot - body, with".
"wind" all subrubrics have been put in a new, more logical order, giving priority to the localization
or direction of the wind-sensation (in the ear, into or out of the ear).
Nose
"coryza- rose cold" this peculiar expression has been modified into "coryza - roses; from the odor of"
(Peter Vint, Germany)
"swelling - root": "sar." a printing error in Kent should be replaced by "sarr." (A1)
Face
"pain - stitching - right - extending to left ear": coloc. Kent's Repertory mentions "pain - stitching left - extending to left ear"; some other Repertory mentions the same extension starting from the
right and the left ear. MM Hahnemann and Hering indicate coloc. has symptoms mostly at the left
side of the face (3rd degree in Repertory). The extension left face to left ear is also found there =}
in Synthesis only remains: "pain - stitching - left - extending to - left ear".
"pain - stitching - walking, amel - open air": ambiguous presentation of the symptom: does the
"amel." apply to "walking" or also to "open air"? MM Hahnemann: thuja: Prickling pain in the muscles
of the cheek, only when walking in the open air =} symptom changed to " ...- walking - air; in open".
Mouth
Many remedies, but not always all remedies in each rubric, have been added with the reference
vk1. These additions correspond to the clinical experience of Dr. Prakash Vakil (Bombay, India) who
spent a greater part of his life confirming remedies by looking at the tongue. Only the remedies
with this reference are the ones considered by the Vakil Module.
In version 7 of Synthesis the difference between "sides" of tongue and "edges" has been clarified
and checked in the Materia Medica. Edges contain the complete margin of the tongue, including the
sides. As a consequence some symptoms have been moved to a more correct position.
"dryness": replace nat-ac.3 by nat-c.3: see MM PTK2 and C1 (Henk van Munster, Netherlands)
"Mucous membrane - discoloration - blue, others pale; some places - covered with tough mucus
which lies in brown crusts on lips", (ars. from k) this symptom was split and moved to: "mouth discoloration - blue - accompanied by - pale spots", and "face - eruptions - crusty, scabby - "Lips brown crusts - accompanied by - blue and pale spots of mucous membrane of mouth"
"swelling - Gums - bluish-red, spongy, between lower incisors - beginning on left side and extending
to the right - bleeding frequently" this symptom for nat-m. comes from hr1 (A bluish red swelling of
a spongy nature on gums between lower incisors, commencing on left side, extending to right, bled
often, blood had a saltish taste). It was deleted as such and has been transcribed as follows:
"swelling - Gums - bluish-red - spongy swelling"; "swelling - Gums - between the lower incisors";
"swelling - Gums - left - to right" and "taste - saltish - blood tastes salty".
"swelling - Gums - bluish-red, spongy, between lower incisors - beginning on left side and extending
to the right - bleeding frequently - ecchymosis": this chaotic symptom of con. corresponds to the
following MM symptoms: "Swollen, bluish-red gums, as if suffused with blood. (h)"; "Gums swollen,
ecchymosed and bleeding. (c1)". The original symptom therefore has been removed and con. has
been placed in: "swelling - Gums - bluish-red". It was already present in "discoloration - Gums bluish-red" and in "bleeding - Gums".
"swelling - gums - side - right": the rubric has been deleted and its remedies (aur. and bell.) have
been moved to the existing rubric "... - gums - right", as can be verified in HR1 for bell.
"taste - purulent" delete merc. and nat-c. and add them to "taste purulent - throat, in" (See H)
((Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
Stomach
The remedies of the rubrics Aversion and Desire are the ones in Kent's original Repertory. All
additions are moved to "Generals - food - ...".
Nowadays cardialgia stands for pain in the heart. In the classical texts, such as a1, hr1, etc., it
means much more frequently "heartburn". (see: Cardialgia and sour eructations, especially after
drinking: in a1, canth.). If cardialgia is used in the context of stomach symptoms, the meaning of
heartburn is accepted.
"nausea - pressure - stomach, on": sars. (wrong alphabetical position) should become "ars."
"vomiting - mucus": cupr-r. (printing error and not existing in Kent's list) should be replaced by
"cupr-act." (aceticum) (See HR1)
Abdomen
"tension - inguinal region - rising arms" (apis) has been modified to "... - raising arms"
Rectum
For several symptoms Kent did not make a distinction between "rectum" and "anus". For most of
these symptoms this has been maintained in Synthesis. Example: "fistula" includes all rectal fistulas,
also these at the anus. In the whole pain section there has not been made a difference between
pain in the rectum and in the anus.
In all these symptoms the anus is considered as a (subjective) part or prolongation of the rectum. If
this is not the case a subrubric has been made: e.g.: "rectum - itching" (which is more inside) as
opposed to "rectum - itching - anus; around" (which is more outside).
"flatus - diarrhea, during": "cupr-m." (not existing in Kent's list) was replaced by "cupr."
"dropsy" and "dropsy - Perineum" were deleted; as in "apoc k2" we find "dropsical condition of the
body". The remedy already exists in "Generals - dropsy - internal dropsy".
"worm": the subrubrics "ascarides", "lumbricoides" and "taeniae" have been renamed following
modern terminology. Research done in dictionaries, medical dictionaries and in von Bnninghausen
Therapeutisches Taschenbuch, German edition pg. 74 (Jean-Claude Grgoire, France)
Bladder
"urination - dribbling - urination - after": arg. a printing error in Kent, and absent in his table of
abbreviations, has been replaced by agar. (HR1)
"urination - dribbling - urination, after - pressure in return, with": for nat-m. "pressure in rectum "
has to depend on "stool", so the symptom becomes: "... - dribbling - stool, after - pressure in
rectum; with"(A1) (Wolfgang Hettich, Germany)
" URINATION - dysuria - sphincter vesicae; pain in - hyperesthesia of the skin down the course of the
left sciatic nerve; with - popliteus and heel; pain in the left - coldness creeping over the whole
course of the nerve; with - heel; especially in the": this symptom has been split into meaningful bits
considering as well that dysuria in the repertory emphasizes "difficult urination" as opposed to
"pain.- urination; during".
Laryn - trachea
"constriction - throat-pit - anger open" has to be modified into "... - anger, after" (HR1, staph.)
Respiration
"difficult - talking - after": nat-c in Kent has to be replaced by nit-ac. (See A1: ... she could not
speak. It took away her breath) (Henk van Munster, Netherlands)
Cough
"CROUPY - sopor, stertorous breathing and wheezing; with - open mouth and head thrown back;
with - child starts up and is on point of suffocating, turns black and blue in face - rattling breathing
sets in again; after which cough with - suffocation and paralysis of lungs appear unavoidable": this
symptom has been split into meaningful bits.
Chest
Nowadays cardialgia stands for pain in the heart. In the classical texts, such as a1, hr1, etc., it
means much more frequently "heartburn". (see: Cardialgia and sour eructations, especially after
drinking: in a1, canth.). If cardialgia is used in the context of stomach symptoms, the meaning of
heartburn is accepted.
"oppression - dinner - after": mag-m. has to be moved to the rubric "oppression - dinner - during".
See MM Hahnemann (Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
"pain - cutting - middle amel. p.m.": (mag-c) in MM Hahnemann we find "painful cutting, deep in the
middle of the chest,... after dinner till evening": the opposite of what Kent has mentioned (no
amel. !). This symptom is reported in Synthesis as the following: "pain - cutting - middle" and " pain
- cutting - middle - afternoon".
"weakness - lying amel. - on side" this ambiguous symptom has been replaced by "... - lying - side;
on" for sulph. (A1)
Back
"heaviness, weight - Sacral region - weight" and "heaviness, weight - Sacral region - weight - as of a"
were both deleted and the remedies moved to "Back - Heaviness - Sacral region" as the meaning is
identical.
"pain - jerking - involuntary when pressing on dorsal vertebra": arn.: this symptom from Kent has
been modified and moved as "pain - dorsal region - spine - pressing on dorsal vertebra; jerking
involuntary when" as "jerking" in this case is not a description of the type of backache (Peter Vint,
Germany)
"pain - pressing - lumbar region - stepping - during - ...". The following rubrics are subrubrics of
stepping, which is erroneous. The sequence should be: "stepping"; "stool before (berb.1K,
carb-v.2K); "stool - during"; "stool - during - hard" and "stool -after"
"pain - stitching - dorsal - scapulae, between - spine": this symptom and its subrubrics are
positioned before "... - dorsal - scapulae - under, which makes it unclear. The correct symptom
should read: "... - dorsal - spine" and it has been moved accordingly in Synthesis.
" stiffness - chill, during - cramp-like": nit-ac. in Kent: rubric is indented too much to the right, and
has become: "stiffness - cramping" (A1: spasmodic stiffness ...)
Extremities
"asleep - thighs; as if they would fall": cham H: in text "as if legs would fall asleep" () in Synthesis:
symptom deleted, remedy added to: numbness - lower limbs
"cramps - upper limbs - midnight - on waking": caust must be "... - midnight - before - waking, on"
(Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
"crippled - finger nails": wrong translation of the German "verkrppelte Ngel": read German in
Hahnemann on graphites, sepia, etc. Error induced by Hering's translation. Therefore the rubric was
left with an explanation ("crippled (= ). The remedies and rubrics were moved to the new rubric
"stunted -finger nails, etc." (Jean-Claude Grgoire, France)
"eruption - upper limbs - pimples - head, black, with depressed": replaced by "... - head; with a
black depressed" (See A1: calc-s.). This description involves the head of the pimple.
"heat - foot - sole - evening - after lying down - wine": psor in Kent: this rubric is indented too much
to the right, and has been corrected in Synthesis as "... - evening - wine, after" (See A1: .. after ...
wine, itching of the soles ... with heat ...)
"heaviness - hip": replace nat-s. by nat-ars. (Henk van Munster, Netherlands)
"itching - foot - frozen ; as if": kali-c. should be moved to "... - frozen; as if - had been frozen; as if
it" (See H) (Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
"jerking - upper limbs - air, in windy weather": sulph. This strange symptom arises from the
awkward expression in Hering: "... in air, during windy, cold weather, jerkings ..." The symptom has
been deleted as such and sulphur was added to "... - cold air, in" and ... - wind; in cold".
"jerking - leg - lying on the back, while - motion amel.": carb-v. in Kent: rubric is indented too much
to the right, and has become: "... - leg - motion amel." (see A1: ...jerkings in both lower legs: ..
unable to lie still...")
"pain - upper limbs - right - upper lower left": HR1 mentions asc-t. should be added to "... upper
limb - right - and left lower limb" but also to "... - left - and right lower limb".
"pain - sore - motion - continued - amel.": nat-ar. has to be moved to the rubric "... - motion continued": read K2 and HR1 (Henk van Munster, Netherlands)
"pain - sprained, as if - thigh - stretching out limbs, on": for caps. this symptom should be "... - thigh
- abduction, on" (Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
"pain - tearing - fingers - joints of - first" with the remedies "agar, brom, kali-i, lyc, mag-c and zinc"
is a symptom we find in Kent. Knzli, howerver misinterpreted the first joint as the distal joint and
added a note saying that the remedies "agar, lyc, mag-c and zinc" were not to be included here.
Knzli was wrong because according to medical dictionaries the first joint is the proximal joint and
the third joint the distal joint. Synthesis 8 has been modified accordingly. The remedies "agar, lyc,
mag-c and zinc" should therefore be under proximal joints and not under distal joints.
"pain - tearing - hip - extending - of foot": should be "... - extending to - foot" (H and HR1)
"pain - tearing - leg - convulsive": for lyc. this symptom should be "... - leg - jerking" (Jost Knzli,
Switzerland)
Sleep
Symptoms indicating the content of dreams have been separated into a new chapter (DREAMS),
following sleep. The modalities of "dreaming" (e.g.: dreaming - menses - before) can still be found
here, under "SLEEP - dreaming - ...".
For different rubrics the difference has been made more salient between "sleepiness" and actually
"sleeping" (which, as a general symptom, is to be found under "falling asleep"). Synonyms have been
added to help the reader.
"heat - during, in intermittent": has been modified and moved to a more logical "falling asleep heat - during", which in the original Kent contains almost the same remedies.
"sleeplessness - night" and its subrubrics has been restructured a lot following a more logical
scheme. (See Table of times).
"sleeplessness - night - midnight - before - morning, towards": ambiguity existed for this rubric: was
it the wrong position of the symptom indicating "sleeplessness towards the morning", or was it
meant to be "sleeplessness from before midnight until (towards) the morning". Searching for the
indicated remedies of the rubric shows that the latter possibility emerges from the Materia Medica,
mostly from Hering, as for: ant-t., psor., ... The rubric has therefore been changed to "sleeplessness
- night - midnight - before - morning; until".
Dreams
"excrements - wading in excrements" The remedy "iod j5" was deleted and moved to "dirt - wading
in dirt" because the original word "Kothe" found in Jahr means " any liquid or formerly liquid
uncleanness, especially when it lies on the streets or roads ... ". (Peter Vint , Germany)
"wading in excrements"( iod k) was deleted and the remedy moved to "dirt - wading in dirt" because
the original word "Kothe" found in Jahr means " any liquid or formerly liquid uncleanness, especially
when it lies on the streets or roads ... ". (Peter Vint , Germany)
Chill
"suppressed - swallowing agg" for merc-c. was changed into "CHILL - swallowing agg."
"time - 7 to 9 a.m. - one day hard chill 12 m., next, light one" : eup-per.3. This sentence lacks
readability and corresponds to MM Hering: "... a heavy chill, early in morning of one day, and a light
chill about noon next day, and so on successively.". Therefore this symptom is corrected in
Synthesis as: "morning - 7 h - 7-9 h - heavy chill one day, and a light chill the next day at noon".
Fever
" night" and "midnight" with their subrubrics have been restructured to follow the time schedule
followed at other places. Midnight depends on night.
afternoon - 5 p.m." (acon. coff. ferr. lyc. nicc. sang.) is a misprint in Kent (see chronological order)
and was renamed "... - 15 h". The correct rubric "... - 17 h (5 p.m.) (con. kali-c. kali-n. ...) is listed
under evening in Kent, but has been moved to afternoon as well in Synthesis.
"succession of stages": this chaotic rubric has been restructured completely following the logical
rules described.
Perspiration
"cold": lac-ac was replaced by lac-c.: see HR1.
"profuse - rage, during": modify as "rage, during" on level 2
"sides": these rubrics have been moved to the beginning of the chapter, preceding "times (daytime,
morning, etc.)" as in all other chapters.
Skin
The pain section in skin is almost non-existent. However, several pain-sensations are reported in
the Repertory. We have grouped them together in the section "skin - pain" as in all other chapters.
Synonym-references are left of the original rubrics for those who might be used to finding this
information at the old site. Disagreeable sensations specific for skin, are not moved to the pain
section, again as in other chapters (e.g.: "skin - burning" or "- prickling").
"cicatrices - burning, sore, stinging, etc.": all pain descriptions are made subrubrics of "cicatrices painful"
"eruptions - coppery - covered parts": has to be changed to "eruptions - covered parts" as can be
confirmed for led. (TL1) and thuj. (HR1)
in "eruptions - discharging - corrosive": "merc-i." (which has no reference in the table of remedy
abbreviations of Kent, was replaced by "merc-i-f.", which is mercurius iodatus flavus, considered
synonymous with mercurius protoiodatus or mercurius iodatus (see C1 or PTK2)
in "eruptions - dry" "borx." was replaced by "bov." (see HR1)
in "eruptions - eczema": remedy abbreviation "lap-m." (without correspondence in the abbreviations
table in Kent's Repertory !) is replaced by "lappa" (= lappa arctium or major) - (See General remarks
- remedies).
"eruptions - rash - changing air": this ambiguous expression was modified as "eruption - rash
-weather; from change of" (apis in HR1)
in "eruptions - rupia" "nat-ac." was replaced by "nit-ac." (see HR1, under "follows well")
"eruptions - urticaria - cold - taking cold; from": this ambiguous expression was modified into "... cold - becoming; from" See HR1 under dulc.
"formication - beginning at feet and extending upwards" has been changed to "formication
-extending upwards; beginning at feet and " and moved after the modalities (to correspond to the
standardized order in the repertory)
"itching - spring, in - March; month of" replaced by "itching - March; month of": see Hering (bryonia)
and also: spring begins on March 21st only
"ulcers - aching": all pain descriptions are made subrubrics of "ulcers - painful"
Generals
The section Food contains all modalities: each particular food has at most four subrubrics: agg. amel. - aversion and desire. The latter two were normally present in Kent's chapter Stomach, but as
they are general, have been moved to Generals - food.
Some specifications on the structure of this rubric:
All more specific food symptoms depend on the above-mentioned four levels: aggravation from red
wine will be found as "wine - agg. -red" In all cases "agg from" has been considered synonymous with
"ailments from".
As much as possible, "combined taste" was listed as follows:
if the type of food was a specific type or a kind of preparation, it will be found under the heading
of the main food: "fresh meat" you will find under "meat", "olive oil" under "oil" (and not under
"olive"), etc.
if it was an exact type of food, you will find it as such, on level 3: "mutton" will be found under
"generals - food - mutton" and not as a subrubric of "meat"
If Weather modalities apply to the whole general state they have been grouped under a rubric
"generals - weather" (as in the Chapter Mind). A general state caused or influenced by a weather
modality will still be a subrubric depending upon this other rubric.
All types of Wind have been grouped together as "generals - wind". Really windy weather (= stormy
weather) you find under "generals - weather - windy".
"coat of skin drawn over inner parts; sensation of": symptom from Bnninghausen, wrongly
translated, has been moved with all its remedies to the correct translation: "Fur in inner parts;
sensation as if covered with" (Jean-Claude Grgoire, France)
"convulsions - exanthema": remedies have been moved into rubric "convulsions - eruptions" (see
General remarks: exanthema)
"dropsy - exanthema; from suppressed": remedies are merged with the rubric "dropsy - eruptions;
from suppressed" (see General remarks)
"food - farinaceous" means food containing farina and therefore is not equal to spaghetti only,
which is the way many homeopaths tend to use it. Farina-based food includes pastas, bread and
potatoes. We have added a rubric "food - pasta" and suggest you add there any symptoms related
only to pasta such as spaghetti, lasagna, macaroni, etc.
"food - starchy": all remedies and subrubrics have been moved to "food -farinaceous" with which it is
considered synonymous. In the Materia Medica "starchy" is most often used to describe the quality
of a discharge, expectoration, leukorrhea, etc. and less often to indicate a type of food.
"lying - after - amel.": replace sumb. by samb.
"medicines" see explanation under "remedies"
"remedies" under this rubric all information has been grouped together according to the
homeopathic remedies, as opposed to symptoms related to allopathic medicines, which are found
under "medicines". The difference between these two words is also illustrated in the symptom,
original in Kent: " oversensitive state and (homeopathic!) remedies fail to act; when too much
(allopathic) medicine has produced an", which can be found under "generals - irritability" in Kent. In
Synthesis, also this last symptom is moved to be a subrubric of "remedies".
"suppressed": all suppressions have been moved to the part suppressed (e.g.: "skin - eruptions
-suppressed")
"suppressed - exanthema": remedies merged into "skin - eruptions - from suppressed" (see General
remarks)
"trembling": in the original Kent, there is a headrubric "trembling, externally" from which all others
depend. When, alphabetically, "internally" comes, this seems to depend on "externally" and all
following rubrics are indented to the right and suggested to be subrubrics of "internally", which is
again confirmed by the header of the right column on page 1409. However, when you consider the
alphabetical order, this does not appear to be correct.
Barthel begins with "trembling, externally", and "trembling, internally". Then he makes all time
modalities subrubrics of a new rubric: "whole body". All other modalities are subrubrics of "
trembling".
Knzli mentions all rubrics , including "internally" and "externally" as subrubrics of "trembling".
Synthesis refers to the original but corrected format of Kent: on level 3, there is only "internally"
with almost no subrubrics, and then as second rubric "externally" which has all other rubrics as
subrubrics.)
"weather - cold wet - agg": delete canth. (Jost Knzli, Switzerland, quoting Kent)
Acknowledgement
Synthesis 9 is such a jump ahead that it almost equals two successive versions. The number of
people who have contributed to this version is larger than ever. Their names are mentioned in the
collaborators list. Still I would like to acknowledge a few people more especially.
This big switch would not have been possible without the skillfulness of our programmers. At some
stage each of them was involved.
The final brainstorm session to imagine this version of Synthesis took place during the weekend
preceding September 11, 2001. Many thanks to the thinkers of that moment: Dale Emerson, Kim
Elia, Peter Vint, Philippe Santantonio and Reinhard Ros. All along the realization of the project
Peter Vint has been a major help, along with Erik Van Woensel - thanks a lot!
The Boger-Bnninghausen encoding was only possible because of the great effort of the Rumanian
teams, one in Bucharest, one in Timisoara: thanks to all of you and to Gheorghe Jurj and Carmen
Appendix
Table of times
General table
- In general the order of the symptoms is as follows: first put the times, then the modalities.
Periods of time (from 10 to 11 h) are subrubrics of precise (beginning) hours (in this case 10 h). The
full symptom is: "10 h - 10-11 h"
In the following table, the space preceding each level indicates the different hierarchical levels.
daytime
day and night
morning (= 6-9 h)
7h
8h
modalities
sunrise
forenoon (= 9-12 h)
9h
noon (= 12-13 h)
12 h
afternoon (= 13-18 h)
14 h
siesta, during
evening (= 18-22 h)
modalities evening
sunset
night (= 22-6 h) 13(13)
midnight 14(14)
before
times
modalities
at 15(15)
2h, until
after
2 h 16(16)
2-3 h 17(17)
2-4 h
until 18(18)
before
at 19(19)
after
any other modalities of 2 h
3h
3 or 4 h
3.30 h
4h
4-17 h 20(20)
4.30-6 h
5h
5-6.30 h
...
daybreak, at 21(21)
heat, from
morning - towards
morning - until
sleepy in the day; and
...
modalities night 22(22)
waking, on
...
Remarks
- 12 p.m. >< 12 a. m.
noon = 12 a.m. = 12 h; 12.30 p.m. = 12.30 h;
midnight= 12 p.m. = 0 h;
12.30 a.m. = 0.30 h
(See in Repertory: "Chill - Time" and "Generals - Weakness")
- "sunrise" is always a time modality of morning; "sunset" and "twilight" always a time modality of
evening.
- "twilight" indicates the subdued light after sunset or, less common, before sunrise. If the symptom
is specific for one such period, "twilight" should be a subrubric of morning or evening. If twilight is
not a subrubric of these latter symptoms, it means that the symptom is influenced by both types of
twilight.
- Note the time symptoms always in the most compact possible way and in such a way they fit into
the above structure:
E.g. do not write "lasting until 17 h" but "17 h, until"
Table of periodicity
The rubrics are sorted as follows:
- hour - every
- hour - two hours; every
- hour - same hour; at the
...
- day - every
- day - every - morning
- day - every - forenoon
etc.: ... - noon / ... - afternoon / ... - evening / ... - night
- day - alternate
(= "day - second, every" and = "day - other day, every")
- day - alternate - morning
- day - alternate - forenoon
etc.: ... - noon / ... - afternoon / ... - evening / ... - night
- day - third, every ...
- day - Sunday, every (or another day of the week)
...
- week
...
- month
...
- year
- year - spring; every
- year - summer; every
- year - autumn; every
- year - winter; every
- year - August; in (or another month)
...
- intermittent
All these levels are considered as time qualifications as they tell us when the symptoms happen.
The superrubric itself (periodical, periodicity, seasons) is considered an M, so it will be sorted
between the modalities.
E.g.: GENERALS - PERIODICITY - afternoon - every = DMTT
air seaside
bed - heat of
bed- rising, from
bed - sitting up in
bed - warm
breath - holding; when
breathing - deep
change - temperature, of
change - weather, of
clearing throat
cold
cold - air
cold - air - going into cold
air from a warm room
cold air - entering cold air - amel.
cold - applications
-> cold applications agg. / cold applications - amel.
cold - drinks
-> cold drinks agg. / cold drinks - amel.
cold - food
-> cold food - agg. / cold food - amel.
cold - (agg. / amel. -) icy cold
cold - room - going to a -> cold room agg.; after entering a
cold room
cold - water
-> cold - applications OR
drinking cold water agg. / drinking cold water - amel.
cold - wet weather: all weather modalities go as subrubrics of "weather"
damp - weather
-> weather - wet
deep breathing
-> breathing - deep
deep breathing
-> breathing - deep
deep inspiration
-> inspiration - deep
decreasing - gradually / suddenly
drinking (if no specification of what is drunk, else check what is drunk, e.g. beer)
drinks - cold
-> cold drinks agg. / cold drinks - amel.
drinks - warm
-> warm drinks agg. / warm drinks - amel.
drinks and food
-> food and drinks
eating (if no specification of what is eaten, else check what is eaten, e.g. fat food)
eating - satiety, to
-> eating to satiety agg.; after / eating to satiety; after - amel
effort, physical
-> exertion
emotional excitement
-> excitement agg. / excitement - amel.
entering - house
-> entering a house
entering a cold room
-> cold - room - entering a cold room; after
entering a warm room
-> warm - room - entering a warm room; when
excitement, emotional
-> excitement agg. / excitement - amel.
excitement, sexual
-> sexual excitement - agg.
exertion - eyes; of the
-> exertion of the eyes agg. / exertion of the eyes - amel.
exertion - mental
-> mental exertion agg. / mental exertion - amel.
exertion- physical
-> exertion
flatulence - obstructed; -> flatus; from obstructed
from / with
flatus; passing - amel. / as from / before
food - cold
-> cold food - agg./ cold food - amel.
food - warm
-> warm food agg. / warm food - amel.
going to bed
-> bed; when going to
going into a warm room
-> warm room; when entering a
going into cold air
-> cold air - entering cold air from a warm room agg.
going into a cold room
-> cold room agg.; after entering a
ground - uneven
-> walking on uneven ground agg.
hat - weight of
-> hat; from pressure of a
heat - bed, of
-> warm bed agg. / warm bed - amel.
hot
-> warm (- agg. / amel. -) hot
icy cold
-> cold (- agg. /amel. -) icy cold
increasing - gradually - decreasing - gradually / suddenly
increasing - suddenly - decreasing - gradually / suddenly
-> inspiration agg.; deep / inspiration; deep - amel.
inspiration - deep
level ground, on
-> walking on level ground agg.
looking steadily
-> looking steadily agg. / looking steadily - amel.
lying - side; on - left - agg. / amel.
lying - side; on - right - agg. / amel.
lying - side; on - affected - agg. / amel.
lying - side; on - painful - agg. / amel.
lying - side; on - painless - agg. / amel.
menses - before / during / after
menses - as if menses -> menses - would appear; as if
would appear
menses - beginning of
-> menses; during - beginning of menses
menses - instead of
-> menses; instead of
menses suppressed, -> menses; from suppressed
from
from
mental excitement
-> excitement
mental exertion
moon - full / decreasing / new / increasing
motion of arm agg. / motion of arm - amel.
motion of eyelids agg. / motion of eyelids - amel.
motion of head agg. / motion of head - amel.
motion agg.; beginning of / motion; beginning of - amel.
motion agg.; continued / motion; continued - amel.
motion - quick
-> motion agg.; rapid / motion; rapid - amel.
motion - slightest motion agg. / motion - slightest motion - amel.
move -> motion
nervous excitement -> excitement agg. / excitement - amel.
open air -> air agg.; in open / air; in open - amel.
painful parts
parts, affected
-> affected parts
parts, painful
-> painful parts
physical exertion
-> exertion
pulse, synchronous with
-> synchronous
respiration
-> inspiration OR breathing
rising - after
-> rising agg.; after / rising; after - amel.
rising - bed, from
-> rising from bed agg. / rising from bed - amel.
rising - lying, from
-> rising from lying agg. / rising from lying - amel.
rising, on: most often equals rising
rising - seat; from a
-> rising from sitting agg. / rising from sitting - amel.
rising - stooping; from
-> rising from stooping agg. / rising from stooping - amel.
sexual - desire - diminished / increased / suppression of / with / without
sexual - excess
-> sexual excesses; after
sexual - excitement
-> sexual excitement; after
side lain on - not lain on
-> side not lain on (is a locality!)
sitting - up in bed
-> sitting up in bed agg. / sitting up in bed - amel.
sleep - going to; on
-> sleep agg.; on going to / sleep; on going to - amel.
sleep - preventing
stool - urging to
-> stool - urging to stool agg. / stool - urging to - amel.
suffering parts
-> affected parts
suppressed <whatever>
-> <whatever> - suppressed
swallowing - empty
-> swallowing agg.; empty / swallowing; empty - amel.
swallowing - not, when
-> swallowing agg.; when not / swallowing; when not amel.
synchronous with pulse
temperature - change of
-> temperature agg.; change of
uneven ground, on
-> walking on uneven ground agg.
urging: goes as a subrubric of the subject of the urge
urination - during - close -> urination; during - end of
of, at
urination - urging to
-> urination - urging to urinate; during
walking - while / when
-> walking agg.
walking - after
-> walking agg.; after / -> walking; after - amel.
walking - air; in the open - after
walking - air; in the open - agg.
walking - air; in the open - amel.
walking - beginning to walk
warm - applications
-> warm applications agg. / warm applications - amel.
warm - applications
-> warm applications agg. / warm applications - amel.
warm - bed
-> warm bed agg. / warm bed - amel.
warm - drinks - agg. / amel
warm - food - agg. / amel.
warm - (agg. /amel. -) hot
warm - room
-> warm room agg. / warm room - amel.
warm - room - going into -> warm room from cold air; when entering a
a warm room from cold
air
warm - water
-> warm water agg./ warm water - amel.
warm - weather
-> weather - warm
warmth should be avoided: use "warm applications", "weather - warm", etc.
washing: is considered to be different from bathing (= long duration >< washing: short
duration: an application of cold/warm water); but synonymous to "cold water" or "warm
water", ... (e.g.: washing in cold water -> cold applications)
water, drinking - cold
-> drinking cold water agg. / drinking cold water - amel.
water, drinking - warm
-> drinking warm water agg./ drinking warm water - amel.
weather - change of weather
weather agg.; cold dry
weather agg.; cold wet
weather; cold wet - amel.
weather - dry
->weather agg.; dry / weather; dry - amel.
weather; warm wet agg.
weather; warm wet - amel.
weather - wet
-> weather agg.; wet / weather; wet - amel.
wet - getting - feet
-> wet; getting - agg - feet
wet - getting, from - head
-> wet agg.; head getting
wet - weather
-> weather agg.; wet / weather; wet - amel.
wind - cold
-> wind agg.; cold
work, mental
-> mental exertion agg. / mental exertion - amel.
work physical
-> exertion
Meaning
In Synthesis
1
1
1
2
3
plain type
?
1
one bar
?
1
two bars
?
2
three bars
?
3
The correspondence with grades is made here on the basis of comparison with existing
additions since an explanation was not found.
BG2: Boger-Bnninghausen Repertory
plain type
?
italics
?
bold
?
capitals
?
1
2
2
3
first degree
second degree
1
2
occasional proving
more provings
verified by cures
repeated cures
approved characteristic
1
1
2
3
4
occasional proving
more provings
verified by cures
1
1
2
verified by cures
repeated cures
2
3
?
?
?
1
2
3
1
1
2-4
1
5-9
2
10 and more
3
Third degree for proving symptoms is only used when there is a confirmation from a different
proving (director) or from clinical experience by a different homeopath. To start, symptoms of
provings are introduced only in the first or second degree.
German Edition
English Edition
Synthesis 6.x
Dutch Edition
German Edition
Synthesis 7.x
Italian Edition
Spanish Edition
English Edition
German Edition
Synthesis 8.x
French Edition
English Edition
1993
1994
1994
1994
1995
1996
1995
1995
1995
1996
1996
1997
1998
1998
1997
1998
1998
2001
1998
1998
2000
2001
2001
2002
2002
2003
2003
2000
2001
2002
Synthesis 9.x
French Edition
English Edition
2002
2003
2003
2004
September (medium)
January (large)
March (medium)
August (large)
beside oneself from fear or rage or pain are very different things, the global rubric has been
removed as it only expresses the intensity of very different emotions.
MIND - BLASPHEMY : Profane speaking or writing of God or sacred things.
MIND - BLUSHING : To become red in the face from embarrassment or from confusion.
MIND - BROODING : To keep thinking and worrying about something.
MIND - BUOYANCY : To encourage with cheerfulness
MIND - CAPRICIOUSNESS : Changing one's mind or action without adequate motive
MIND - CAREFREE - desire to be : The person wants to be free of worry.
MIND - CHEERFUL : In good spirits, marked by an unruffled flow of spirits A cheerful person smiles,
a merry person (= mirth) laughs The following remedies were deleted here. They belong in "Mind Mirth": alum, am-c, anag, anan, ant-t, arn, ars-i, arund, asc-t, bar-c, 2calc, calc-s, camph, cham,
cimic, clem, coc-c, ferr-ar, ferr-i, form, ip, kali-c, kali-p, lachn, led, meny, merc-c, merc-i-f,
merc-i-r, merl, nat-ar, sumb. The remedies "sil" and "viol-t" were also deleted because they are
neither found in "Mind - Cheerful" nor in "Mind - Mirth". The degree of the following remedies was
changed as we find it in Kent in "Mind - Cheerful": agar, anac, carbn-s, ferr, op, ph-ac, stram.
MIND - CHEERFUL - collar against scratching; in spite of wearing a : Collars are big white things
that look like conus and the head is inside the conus. (Marc Br)
MIND - COMA : Profound and prolonged unconsciousness, without reaction to powerful external
stimuli
MIND - COMPULSIONS : Irresistible, irrational impulse to perform or repeat a certain action
MIND - CONFIDENT : To be assured of one's success
MIND - CONFIDING : Entrusting secrets in confidence
MIND - CONFORMISM : Behaving in a conventional way.
MIND - CONFUSION of mind - carousal; as after a : A merry drinking party
MIND - COQUETTISH : A women who wants, without sincere affection, to gain the attention and
admiration of men.
MIND - COQUETTISH - too much - children; in : Child is very conscious of his appearance.
MIND - CREDULOUS : Apt to believe too easily without sufficient evidence.
MIND - CYNICAL : Distrusting or contemptuous of the virtues of others
MIND - DELUSIONS - asylum : Institution for the care of the mentally ill, the poor or the aged
MIND - DELUSIONS - carousal; as if after a : A merry drinking party
MIND - DELUSIONS - debauch; as after a : Extreme indulgence into sensual pleasure
MIND - DELUSIONS - despised; is : To regard as worthless or to look down upon with contempt.
MIND - DELUSIONS - driving animals : Urging them on.
MIND - DELUSIONS - fantasies are forced upon him; a multitude of - dozing; when : Original text:
"slumber; in" = dozing
MIND - DELUSIONS - hand - taking her hand; something - midnight : The original text in Kent:
"Mind - Delusions - hand - midnight visions of something taking her"
MIND - DELUSIONS - horses - riding a horse : The remedy "cann-i k" was moved here from the rubric
"MIND - DELUSIONS - horses - horseback; is on a" which was deleted.
MIND - DELUSIONS - incubus; being weighed down by an : An incubus is an evil spirit having
intercourse with women (medieval belief), but in the context of the symptoms this word
corresponds to "nightmare" or to "burden"
MIND - DELUSIONS - insane - become insane; one will - head; from snapping in : Snapping is a
sudden, clicking sound such as produced by a whip or by clicking the fingers
MIND - DELUSIONS - legs - tin case filled with stair rods; leg is : A container made of tin filled with
sticks used to build stairs
MIND - DELUSIONS - man - muffled man starts from the wall : A muffled man is one wrapped in a
shawl or a blanket
MIND - DELUSIONS - man - perforate his throat with a gimlet; man in the room intending to : A
gimlet is a small boring tool with a handle at right angles to the shaft. The shaft ends in a spiral,
pointed cutting edge.
MIND - DELUSIONS - melting away, agg. from change of position, amel. when lying : We suspect
this to be an error by Kent. If one searches for "sumb + melt*" or "sumb + recumbent", all one
finds is the following text: [a1 - Sumbulus moschatus - Male] - Itching in prepuce (sixth day); heat
and burning sensation in genitals, at 6 P.M. ; at 8 P.M. , chiefly in perinaeum, between the thighs
and glans penis. ...... Prepuse swollen considerably, projecting beyond the glans; phimosis;
violent preputial gonorrhoea; oozing pains; sensation of melting away, as if drops were passing
from the extremity of the penis or it were becoming matter; the effort seems to be aided by the
whole body; increased by change of posture; the recumbent, with the muscles and fascia on the
stretch, is most easy pains in penis when pendant, relieved by being kept up (one hundred and
seventy-fourth day). ......
MIND - DELUSIONS - nerve were strung to the highest pitch; every : To the highest pitch = to the
highest degree
MIND - DELUSIONS - old : Do not add remedies to this symptom. Add them to the subrubrics.
MIND - DELUSIONS - pursued; he was - fiends, by : An evil spirit or a wicked person
MIND - DELUSIONS - repudiated; he is : Being not accepted or supported; casted off publicly.
MIND - DELUSIONS - stepping - down when walking; steps on feather : Down are the soft, floffy
feathers
MIND - DELUSIONS - whirled around - he - coal screen; and had been placed in a : A coal screen is
a big sieve used to separate the finer particles of coal from the coarser ones.
MIND - DELUSIONS - wrong - gives people something wrong from which they die; she : The
original German text is as follows: "Sie whnt den Leuten Unrechtes zu geben, dass sie davon
strben." (checked by Peter Vint - Germany)
MIND - DEMENTIA - dialysis dementia : Symptoms like loss of memory, incoordination of
movements, facial grimaces, myoclonic seizures, associated with high aluminium concentrations
in the brain due to high concentrations in the dialysate water , aluminium containing antiacids,
etc.
MIND - DEPERSONALIZATION : Loss of self-knowledge and self-control Dissociation from or
self-identification with environment
MIND - DETERMINATION : Firmness of purpose; the quality of being resolute
MIND - DIFFUSION : Using more words than needed.
MIND - DIRTY - eating; when : They get food all around their face when eating. (Marc Br)
MIND - DIRTY - everything; dirtying : The original Gallavardin's rubric (am-c., bry., nat-m.)reads
as: Salir (impulsion barbare tout) = barbarous impulsion to dirty everything - so the wording of
this Synthesis rubric is OK. (Jacqueline Ozanon - France)
MIND - DISCERNMENT; lack of : Exhibing keen insight, good judgment
MIND - DISCRIMINATION, lack of : Ability to see fine disctinctions
MIND - DOUBTFUL : Unsettled in opinion or belief
MIND - DOUBTFUL - skeptical : Doubting or questioning matters generally accepted
MIND - DRIVEN : Having to act by a sense of urgency or compulsion: working hard to reach a goal.
MIND - EATING - hunger; without : is not the same as "appetite; without" appetite: mental hunger:
physical
MIND - ELATED : Exalted state as from success or as over good fortune
MIND - ELEGANCE : Having or showing good taste in dress or style combined with dignity and
gracefulness.
MIND - ELOQUENT : Talking or writing in a vivid, forceful, fluent, persuasive, graceful manner.
MIND - EMOTIONS - predominated by the intellect : Emotionally excitable people, in whom the
intellect nevertheless predominates, possibly controls the emotions
MIND - ENVY : Desire to possess goods or qualities of other people.
MIND - ENVY - avidity, and : Avidity: having a very strong craving for something.
MIND - ERETHISM : Extreme irritability or sensitiveness. In the older books eps. used for "nervous or
sexual erethism". Nowadays rare expression more related to the state of a tissue (e.g.: venous
erethism).
MIND - ESCAPE, attempts to - run away, to - bitch in heat; to find a : bitch: female of the dog,
wolf, fox etc...
MIND - EXTRAVAGANCE : Unreasonable excess in behavior, speech, spending.
MIND - FAITH : Complete trust
MIND - FASTIDIOUS : Not easy to please; oversensitive so as to be easily disgusted
MIND - FASTIDIOUS - stressed; only when : The orininal text in "A caring capricious creature - Lac
felinum" by Anne Wirtz is : Desire for cleanness, orderliness, only fastidious when
decompensated.
MIND - FATALISTIC : The belief that all events are controlled by fate and happen by unavoidable
necessity, so that man can't control them. The acceptance of or the surrender to this belief.
MIND - FEAR - exposure by uncovering; of : The remedy "mag-c" was moved to "FEVER UNCOVERING - aversion" because of the meaning we found in the Materia Medica: [h2 Magnesium carbonicum] - At night, great internal heat, so that he can hardly stay covered in bed,
and yet there was a great dislike to exposure by uncovering (aft. 4 d.).
MIND - FEAR - falling, of : The remedy "lys" was replaced by "lyss", because in bg "lys" = "lyss".
MIND - FEAR - horses; of - herd of horses; in a : The original text was :"MIND - FEAR - crowd of
horses; in a".
MIND - FEAR - insanity - senses; of losing one's : Fear of losing the capacity of sound reasoning
MIND - FEAR - lectophobia : Fear of going to bed
MIND - FEAR - men; of [old rubric] : This rubric contained remedies which referred to "male
persons" as well as to "men in general". As far as it was clear from the Materia Medica, remedies
have been moved to more precise rubrics. The remedies which remain are not clear for the
moment.
MIND - FEAR - people; of - shuns the foolishness of : The fear is directed towards humankind, not
towards men.
MIND - FEAR - public places : Places accessible to public, such as a library or a market place
Ambiguous as many people may be present or not
MIND - FEAR - solitude, of : To be cut off from all human contact; being alone but stressing the
loneliness of such a condition (a hermit's solitude) The remedies which refer to the physical state
of being alone in a place were moved to "MIND - FEAR - alone; of being".
MIND - FEAR - sudden : Sudden fear (panic) often leads to irrational and generalised action.
MIND - FEAR - terror : Extreme, overwhelming fear
MIND - FECES - swallows his own : The remedy "camph" was deleted from this symptom and added
to " MIND - FECES - wallows in his own filth; wants to lie on bare floor and". [hr1 - Camphora
officinalis - Mind] - Mania after mental overexertion, in a boy, aet. 14; talks disconnectedly,
refuses to answer; wants to lie on bare floor, and wallows in his own filth.
MIND - FERVENT : Great warmth of emotion
MIND - FIRMNESS - desire to be tough : Displaying moral or mental firmness.
MIND - FLATTERING : Pleasing with exaggeration or without sincerity
MIND - FOPPISH : A man who is devoted to or vain about his appearence or dress.
MIND - FORAGING : To search for food or provisions.
MIND - FOREBODINGS : Forebodings means a prediction or presentiment, esp. of something bad or
harmful.
MIND - FORSAKEN feeling - joyless, feels : ("Niedergeschlagen und freudlos"). The former remedy
"Alumina" has been moved to the existing rubric: "Indifference - joyless".
MIND - FRIGHT : Sudden fear
MIND - HATRED - men, of [old rubric] : This rubric contained remedies which referred to "male
persons" as well as to "men in general". As far as it was clear from the Materia Medica, remedies
have been moved to more precise rubrics. The remedies which remain are not clear for the
moment.
MIND - HAUGHTY : 'Haughty' is closely related to the symptoms 'Egotism' and 'Contemptuous'. Kent
cross-references 'Arrogance', 'Pride' and 'Imperious' to it. The proud person is characterised by a
great feeling of his own worth. He is pleased with himself. The haughty person may be
recognised as much by what he tells you as by his arrogant attitude and bearing. He is the great
braggart who makes a show of being more than he really is. In his vanity he thinks that he is
better than everyone else. He wants to be famous and respected. He is the pompous pedant who
makes a show of his erudition. A haughty and arrogant attitude usually conceals a deep sense of
inferiority.
MIND - HIGH-SPIRITED : Daring, cheerful and vivacious.
MIND - HOLDING : The subrubric "attendant; to" was moved under "MIND - CLINGING" [ptk2 Antimonium tartaricum - Mind] - Clings to attendants.
retardation.
MIND - RETIREMENT; desire for : The end of all professional activity.
MIND - RETIRING : To go away, retreat, or withdraw to a private, sheltered, secluded place.
MIND - REVELING : Noisy and merry feasting
MIND - REVOLUTIONIST : The revolutionist fights against the ruling powers
MIND - RITUALISTIC BEHAVIOR : Ritualistic behavior: things must be done in a certain order.
MIND - RUBBING : Gently stroke with the application of some pressure.
MIND - SADNESS - chill - during : "Mind - sadness - chill, during": Knerr mentions kali-m., but A1
shows the remedy has to be kali-chl. (Erik Van Woensel, Holland)
MIND - SADNESS - exogenous : In Psychiatrics a distinction is made between endogenous and
exogenous depression. For "endogenous" sadness (depression), we have "MIND - SADNESS causeless". The exogenous or reactive depression is caused by external problems and disappears
when the external problems are solved. For "exogenous" sadness, we already have specific
rubrics (sadness from grief, disappointed love, fright, shock, music, chagrin, mortification,
deception, etc.) indicating the specific causation, and involving numerous other remedies. So if
one knows the specific cause of the sadness it is better to look under the specific rubric.
MIND - SADNESS - superfluous, feeling : Feeling non needed, unnecessary.
MIND - SCATTERED : A person who is incapable of concentrated or serious thinking; giddy, frivolous,
scatterbrained.
MIND - SCHIZOPHRENIA : A mental disease characterized by a separation between the emotions and
the mental processes, a distortion of reality with delusions, confusions of identity,
incoordinations, etc.
MIND - SCHIZOPHRENIA - hebephrenia : A form of schizofrenia, usually beginning in adolescence,
characterized by silly or childish behavior, incoherent thinking and delusions.
MIND - SELF-CONSCIOUS : Awkward and embarassed in the presence of others, feels as if people
are taking notice of him or her.
MIND - SENSUAL : Looking for bodily satisfaction of appetite or sexual desire
MIND - SLANDER, disposition to : To say untrue bad things about someone to damage his/her
reputation in the presence of another person.
MIND - SPINELESS : Lacking strength of character.
MIND - SPOONERISMS : The unintentional transposition of sounds or of parts of words in speaking,
as in "half-warmed fish" for "half-formed wish"
MIND - SQUANDERING : To spend wastefully, extravagantly, foolishly.
MIND - STEREOTYPIC MOVEMENTS : Abnormal repetition or maintenance of an action, a position or
posture, as seen in schizophrenia.
MIND - STRANGE - crank : An eccentric person, especially one who is unduly zealous
MIND - SUCKING - into the mouth; sucking objects : Sucking a sweater, a towel, etc.
MIND - SUICIDAL disposition - blood; at the sight of - abhors the idea; though she : Original text:
"At the sight of blood she has horrid ideas of killing herself, though she abhors the idea."
MIND - SUPERSTITIOUS : a belief or practice resulting from ignorance of what is generally
considered as true or rational, fear of the unknown, trust in magic or chance.
MIND - SUSCEPTIBLE : Easily influenced.
MIND - TACITURN : Disinclined to talk.
MIND - TACITURN - superficial matters; aversion to talk about : The remedy "positr nl2" was
moved here from the rubric "MIND - TACITURN - small talk; aversion to" which was deleted.
MIND - TAPHEPHOBIA : Fear of being buried alive.
MIND - TEMERITY : Reckless.
MIND - TIMIDITY : Not at ease with other people and shrinking from attention
MIND - TIMIDITY - bashful : Timidity implying awkward behaviour
MIND - TOURETTE'S syndrome : Neurological disorder occuring mostly in boys, beginning at the age
of 7 or 8. Symptoms are involuntary muscular movements; inarticulate laryngeal noises,
exclaiming loud obscene words or short phrases (coprolalia), repeating of words (echolalia) and
movements (echomimesia). Tics that may be very violent, stop during sleep and are intensified
by emotions. It has been reported that in some cases they may be suppressed by voluntary
control. Coprolalia manifests only in presence of other people; it may, by some patients, be
masked by coughing.
MIND - TRIBADISM : Homosexuality between women; lesbianism
MIND - UNCONSCIOUSNESS - frequent spells of unconsciousness : Mild form of epilepsy
characterized by attacks of momentary unconsciousness, possibly with other sensations such as
vertigo, but without convulsions (as opposed to grand mal)
MIND - UNOBSERVING [= nonconformism] : According to different homeopaths "unobserving" means
either nonconformism or inattentive. In the Materia Medica the word unobserving can only be
found in the meaning of inattentive. Because some homeopaths insist on the meaning of
nonconformism, two rubrics have been made available for further completion of Synthesis. This
rubric contains the original remedies as indicated by Kent. If any additions are made to this
rubric, these should reflect "non-conformism" from now onwards. For the time being this rubric
may not be helpful when taken in the latter sense.
MIND - VIVACIOUS : Full of life and animation
MIND - WEEPING - delirium : The remedy "stram k" was moved to "MIND - WEEPING - delirium during".
MIND - WEEPING - nursing a child; while : The remedy "lac-c" was moved to "MIND - WEEPING children; in - nursing; when"(see author note HR1)
MIND - WEEPING - spasmodic : The addition of "mag-p k" is correct because in Knzli on page 75 we
find the remedy under "Mind - weeping - convulsive".
MIND - ZEALOUS : Enthusiastic devotion to a cause
Vertigo
VERTIGO : The chapter vertigo contains all symptoms which are related to the sensation of whirling
of oneself or whirling of the surroundings around oneself. One may or may not loose balance. The
sensation of vertigo can be felt locally, in the head, or more general. In other words, here vertigo
is used in the broad sense of the word.
VERTIGO - ELEVATED, as if : In English "as if elevated" can mean either "state of elevation" or
"motion of elevation". Read the author notes attached to the remedies for clarification.
VERTIGO - EPILEPTIC : A short epileptic fit, without almost no symptoms except some vertigo.
VERTIGO - LYING - side; on - right - amel. : Original location in Kent: "2Turning - on - on right side
amel."
VERTIGO - REFLECTING - agg. - walking in open air agg. : The original Kent rubric is "VERTIGO MEDITATING, on - walking in open air agg.". We believe that in the period Kent was alive,
"meditating" was used in the sense of "reflecting" and not in the sense "meditation" is used today.
VERTIGO - REFLECTING - amel. : The original Kent rubric is "VERTIGO - MEDITATING, on - amel." We
believe that in the period Kent was alive, "meditating" was used in the sense of "reflecting" and
not in the sense "meditation" is used today.
VERTIGO - REFLECTING - amel. - thinking of something else amel. : The original Kent rubric is
"VERTIGO - MEDITATING, on - thinking of something else amel." We believe that in the period
Kent was alive, "meditating" was used in the sense of "reflecting" and not in the sense
"meditation" is used today.
VERTIGO - SINCIPUT : The upper part of the skull or head, especially the forehead
VERTIGO - TURNING; as if - he turns in a circle : He is the main centre of the turning sensation,
not so much the surroundings as opposed to the symptom :"everything were turning in a circle; as
if"
VERTIGO - YAWNING agg. : The remedies "agar" and "petr" were moved to "SLEEP - YAWNING vertigo; with". The author notes added to these remedies explain why.
Head
HEAD - APOPLEXY : A condition of severe hemorrhage in any organ. Formerly especially used to
indicate cerebral accident or stroke.
HEAD - BOILING sensation - Vertex - left : The original Kent symptom for the remedy lach. is:
"seething in left side of vertex".
HEAD - CEREBRAL HEMORRHAGE : "Head - cerebral hemorrhage": colch. in some editions of Kent
was replaced by cocc. 3 (Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland; Dr. Jacques Imberechts, Belgium)
HEAD - CEREBROVASCULAR ACCIDENT : This symptom applies to various events such as: - cerebral
hemorrhagia - thrombosis - embolism - ictus - apoplexy
HEAD - COMMOTION in head; sensation of a painless : The original symptom is: [h2 - Causticum]
Unruhe im ganzen Krper, vorzglich im Kopfe, wie ein schmerzloses Whlen, etliche Tage, zu
verschiedenen Zeiten. [h2 - Causticum] - Restlessness throughout the body, especially in the
head, like a painless digging, for several days, at various times. This word "Whlen" is not related
to commotion, shock, jerk etc. If you have a box full of things and you take your hands and dig in
this pile, this is "whlen". A kind of stirring around, more a sensation of a motion. E.g. you had a
lot of cabbage to eat and your intestines are full of wind, then you also might feel this sensation.
conclusion: not related to commotion.
HEAD - CONSTRICTION : The remedies of the symptom (HEAD - CONSTRICTION - alternating with
relaxation) were moved to (HEAD - CONTRACTION - Brain - alternating with - relaxation of brain)
HEAD - DOMED FOREHEAD : In the shape of a dome
HEAD - ENLARGED sensation - Vertex - upward; vertex seems extended : - "ENLARGED sensation Vertex - upward; vertex seems extended - split open by a wedge from the outside; and - cold,
skin moist and sticky; body icy - warm, even under a feather bed; cannot get - face yellow,
whines with the pain - head burning like fire, with thirst": this symptom has been split into
meaningful bits.
HEAD - ERUPTIONS - favus : Very contagious chronic cutaneous affection, appearing on the hairy
parts of the skin, mainly the scalp, caused by the fungus Trichophyton schonleini. Starts with
itching and red spots, later yellow crusts are formed. The roots of the hair can be destroyed
which results in baldness.
HEAD - ERUPTIONS - scales - fine : In the MM text of "par a1" we find "fine scurf" instead of "fine
scales". We leave the remedy here for now because in the dictionary we find: scurf = little, dry
scales shed by the skin.
HEAD - ERUPTIONS - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an UNCLEAR /
AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the following two
reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source in its
entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
HEAD - JERKING of the head - headshaker - strangles; after : A young horses disease caused by a
bacterial infection. There is inflammation of the mucous membrane of the respiratory tract and
the formation of abscesses in the adjacent pharyngeal lymph glands.
HEAD - LARGE SIZE : The remedies "caj" and "cor-r" were moved to "HEAD - ENLARGED sensation"
HEAD - MIGRAINE : We do not add "migraine" or "subrubrics of migraine" in Synthesis because the
difference with "headache" is too arbitrary. All subrubrics of "migraine" are added under "HEAD PAIN".
HEAD - PAIN - morning - comes and goes with the sun : Pain appears when the sun appears, and
stays more or less at this level until the sun disappears
HEAD - PAIN - morning - increasing - noon, or a little later; until - decreases gradually; then :
Pain increases until noon and decreases without relation to the sunlight (same periodicity in
winter and in summer)
HEAD - PAIN - morning - sun; increasing and decreasing with the : Pain increases in intensity as
the sun shines more strongly; then the pain subsides as the sun decreases as well
HEAD - PAIN - night - midnight - after - 1 h : "Head - pain - night - midnight - after - 1 h": pall. is
erroneously mentioned here, and should be mentioned under "pain - afternoon - 13 h". See HR1.
(Dr. Klaus-Henning Gypser, Germany)
HEAD - PAIN - night - midnight - after - 1 h - 1-10 h : "Head - pain - night - midnight - after - 1 h 1-10h": elaps should be moved to the rubric "... - 1 h - 1-11 h". See A1. (Dr. Klaus-Henning Gypser,
Germany)
HEAD - PAIN - accompanied by - Eye - contraction of eyelids : The remedy "sulph h2" was moved
here from the rubric "EYE - CONTRACTED eyes with headache" which was deleted.
HEAD - PAIN - aching - Brain : Original symptom: HEAD - PAIN - Brain, aching deep in. This symptom
contained many subrubrics which in fact were subrubrics of "Head - Pain - Brain". This is where
those subrubrics are now.
HEAD - PAIN - drawing pain - accompanied by - nausea : The original Kent symptom is "HEAD PAIN - drawing - nausea, during".
HEAD - PAIN - pressure - head against something hard amel.; pressing : The remedy "sang k" was
moved to "HEAD - PAIN - pressing back of head - amel." The author k was replaced by hr1 because
in Kent we do not find this symptom.
HEAD - PAIN - school children : We made a difference between "school children" and "students"
because of the age difference.
HEAD - PAIN - snow - reflection of snow : [ygj1] headache as a result of conjunctival irritation
caused by the reflection of bright sunlight from snow. Other symptoms include photophobia,
blepharospasm, and burning pain in the eyes.
HEAD - PAIN - students : We made a difference between "school children" and "students" because of
the age difference.
HEAD - PAIN - waking - on - sleep - amel. - boring pain : The original Kent symptom is "HEAD PAIN - boring - waking; on - amel. by sleep when sufficient".
HEAD - PAIN - yawning - agg. : Here yawning aggravates the headache. If yawning is a
concommitant of headache see "SLEEP - YAWNING - headache - with".
HEAD - PAIN - Forehead - reflecting agg. - stitching pain : The original Kent rubric is "HEAD - PAIN
- stitching - Forehead - meditation, on". We believe that in the period Kent was alive,
"meditating" was used in the sense of "reflecting" and not in the sense "meditation" is used today.
HEAD - PAIN - Forehead - thinking of the pain agg. - pressing pain : The original Kent rubric "HEAD
- PAIN - pressing - Forehead - thinking - of it" is not correct. "Thinking" aggravates the pressing
pain in Forehead, not "thinking about the headache". (see hr1 author note)
HEAD - PAIN - Forehead - Eyes - Between - pressing pain : The remedy "caust h2" was moved here
from the rubric "EYE - PAIN - pressing, pressure, etc. - Between" that was deleted.
HEAD - PAIN - Occiput - extending to - Forehead - nail; as from a : The original Kent symptom is
"HEAD - PAIN - nail, as from a - Forehead - extending from occiput to forehead".
HEAD - PAIN - Temples - pressing pain - finger; as from a : The original Kent symptom is "HEAD PAIN - pressing - Temples - digital".
HEAD - PAIN - Temples - reflecting agg. - pressing pain : The original Kent rubric is "HEAD - PAIN pressing - Temples - meditating, while". We believe that in the period Kent was alive,
"meditating" was used in the sense of "reflecting" and not in the sense "meditation" is used today.
HEAD - PAIN - Temples - extending to - Forehead - drawing pain : The original Kent symptom is
"Forehead, across".
HEAD - PAIN - Temples - extending to - Forehead - pressing pain : The original Kent symptom is
"Forehead, across".
HEAD - PAIN - Vertex - reflecting agg. : The original Kent rubric is "HEAD - PAIN - Vertex meditating, while". We believe that in the period Kent was alive, "meditating" was used in the
sense of "reflecting" and not in the sense "meditation" is used today.
HEAD - PAIN - Vertex - stitching pain - outward : Originally there were two Kent rubrics: HEAD PAIN - stitching - Vertex - extending to - outward (staph k) HEAD - PAIN - stitching - Vertex extending to - within outward (spig k) When we check the Materia Medica we see that both in
"staph" and in "spig" the meaning is "from within outward". Therefore we merged both rubrics.
HEAD - PULSATING - Brain - In brain - one side of brain - transient pulsating : The original Kent
symptom is: Head - pulsating, in brain - transient, in one-half of
HEAD - STOMACH, as if rising from : Based on the Materia Medica text we moved the remedies to
the 2 symptoms: STOMACH - HEAT - extending to - head STOMACH - PAIN - extending to - head
HEAD - TREMBLING : This rubric includes the sensation of trembling (Kent)
HEAD - TUMORS - Scalp; on - encysted : enclosed in a sac, bladder or cyst
HEAD - TWITCHING : This rubric includes twitching of the muscles of the head as well (Kent)
HEAD - HAIR - baldness : Alopecia capitis totalis: Loss of all of the scalp hair. Alopecia means
baldness and capitis refers to the head. Alopecia capitis totalis is thus total baldness of the scalp
with normal hair elsewhere on the body.
HEAD - HAIR - baldness - patches : Alopecia areata is patchy baldness (alopecia means baldness
and areata means occurring in patches) which typically begins with patchy hair loss on the scalp
and sometimes progresses to complete baldness and even loss of body hair.
HEAD - HAIR - bristling : The hair becomes stiff and erect like bristles.
HEAD - HAIR - cutting hair; complaints of head after : The original symptom "HEAD - HAIR - cutting
hair - ailments after" was modified to stress the fact that the ailments are in the head. The
remedies "glon, kali-i, psor, sep" were moved to "GENERALS - HAIR - cutting - agg." The other
subrubrics of "HEAD - HAIR - cutting hair" were moved to chapter Mind because they are mental
symptoms.
HEAD - HAIR - gray; becoming : If hair gets gray at a young age.(Marc Br)
HEAD - HAIR - tangles easily : Tangled hair means knots
Eye
EYE : Reviewed with the kind help of Edward C. Kondrot, M.D., homeopathic ophthalmology; USA
EYE - ABRASION : Wearing away by rubbing or scraping.
EYE - ADHESIONS - Cornea - Argyrol treatment; after : Trademark for silver protein.
EYE - AGGLUTINATED - accompanied by - pneumonia : The original rubric was "EYE - STICKY lids accompanied by - pneumonia".
EYE - AMBLYOPIA : Reduced visual acuity without structural abnormality of the eye or visual
pathway. May be found in case of 1. a difference in optical correction between the eyes; 2. an
ocular alignment problem; 3. physical blockage of vision, such as congenital catarract. Often
present since birth. The patient does not experience subjective findings.
EYE - ANEMIA of - Retina : Pierre Salan informed us that the remedy "chin" must be replaced by
"chinin-s". Therefore the "k" reference was deleted at "chin".
EYE - ASTHENOPIA : Fatigue of the eyes, without pathology, due to overuse of the eyes which has
caused muscular fatigue, or to straining from weak accomodation, refractive errors, etc. This
symptom complex may or may not include visual symptoms.
EYE - ASTHENOPIA - accommodative : Accomodative disorders in a person with asthenopia
EYE - ASTHENOPIA - muscular : Asthenopia due to muscular fatigue.
EYE - ASTHENOPIA - myopic : Myopic person who has symptoms of asthenopia
EYE - ASTIGMATISM : A condition in which the cornea of the eye is asymmetrically curved, causing
an error in the refraction of light within the eye resulting in blurred vision at all distances. Only
part of what you are looking at is in clear focus at any one time. The word "astigmatism" comes
from the Greek "a-" (without) + "stigma" (point) = "without a point" referring to there being no
point of convergence for the light rays on the retina.
EYE - BLEEDING from eyes - Retinal hemorrhage : Bleeding from the eyes is an external condition.
EYE - CATARACT - hemiopia; with vertical : The original rubric "Eye -cataract - perpendicular
high-sight" was modified as the more modern "... - hemiopia, with vertical"
EYE - CATARACT - soft : There is a type of cataract which has a "soft nature". It is in contrast to
the hard brunescent cataract. (Edward C. Kondrot, U.S.A.)
EYE - CATARRH : Catarrh: inflammation of a mucous membrane causing an increased flow of mucus
EYE - CATARRH - chronic : Catarrh: inflammation of a mucous membrane causing an increased flow
of mucus
EYE - CHEMOSIS : Chemosis is edema of the ocular conjuctiva.
EYE - CONDYLOMATA : Even though Kent uses "EYE - CONDYLOMATA" we refer to "EYE - WARTS"
because the term "condylomata" is mostly used close to anus and genitals.
EYE - CONTRACTION - Lids; of : CHK the real meaning is drawn shut, closing! [Peter Vint, Germany]
EYE - DEGENERATION - Retina - old people; in : Original rubric: "senile"
EYE - DISCOLORATION - blue - Sclera or conjunctiva : It is very difficult to distinguish blue
conjunctiva from blue sclera. Under the microscope the conjuctiva will move while the sclera is
fixed. For the the benefit of the average non ophthalmic homeopath we should include both in
one rubric (Dr. Ed Kondrot, ophthalmologist, USA).
EYE - DRAWN TOGETHER; eyes are : The original Kent rubric "EYE - PAIN - drawing - together" is
not clear. All remedies were checked in EH and moved to one of the following rubrics: "EYE DRAWN TOGETHER; eyes are" (no pain mentioned) "EYE - DRAWN TOGETHER; eyes are - pain;
from" (it is not pain in the eyes but in other parts of the body "EYE - DRAWN TOGETHER; eyes are
- sensation as if eyes were drawn together" (eyes feel drawn together)
EYE - DRAWN TOGETHER; eyes are - pain; from : The original Kent rubric "EYE - PAIN - drawing together" is not clear. All remedies were checked in EH and moved to one of the following
rubrics: "EYE - DRAWN TOGETHER; eyes are" (no pain mentioned) "EYE - DRAWN TOGETHER; eyes
are - pain; from" (it is not pain in the eyes but in other parts of the body "EYE - DRAWN
TOGETHER; eyes are - sensation as if eyes were drawn together" (eyes feel drawn together)
EYE - ERUPTIONS - Lids - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an UNCLEAR /
AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the following two
reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source in its
entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
EYE - EYE GUM : Eye gum is always sticky. That is why we made a referring rubric from "EYE - EYE
GUM - sticky" to "EYE - EYE GUM".
EYE - FALLING - Lids; of : We did not merge this rubric with "EYE - PARALYSIS - Lids; of" because we
feel "falling of lids" is a temporary condition while "paralysis of lids" is a more permanent state.
EYE - HEAT : The heat of fever
EYE - HIPPUS : Tremor of iris, producing rapid spasmodic alteration of the size of the pupil.
EYE - INFLAMMATION - croupous : An exudate on the surface of the conjunctiva hardens as a
membrane.
EYE - INFLAMMATION - panophthalmitis : A specific inflammation involving three areas of the eye:
sclera, choroid and iris.
EYE - INFLAMMATION - scrofulous - children disposed to scald-head and with inflammation of
external ear; in : Scald-head refers to any crusted or scurfy disease of the scalp, such as favus.
EYE - INFLAMMATION - Conjunctiva - pustular : This rubric includes pustular inflammation of the
cornea (Kent)
EYE - INFLAMMATION - Episclera and sclera : Episcleritis usually occurs together with scleritis.
EYE - INFLAMMATION - Retina - albuminuria : Retina inflammation with albuminuria.
EYE - INFLAMMATION - Retina - commotio retinae : Refers to swelling of the inner layers of the
retina after blunt trauma to the eye. It can occur with a fall if blunt forces are transferred to the
eye.
EYE - INFLAMMATION - Retina - hemorrhagic : An internal condition found when there is
hemorrhage into the retinal layer of the eye
EYE - INFLAMMATION - Retina - punctata albescens : Small white glistening dots and striae, closely
packed together, usually located near the central part of the retina.
EYE - INFLAMMATION - Retrobulbar : Swelling of the optic nerve between the optic chiasm and the
optic disc.
EYE - INFLAMMATION - Tenon's capsule : Fibrous sheath envelopping the eyeball and eye muscles,
connecting them to the orbit.
EYE - INFLAMMATION - Trachoma : A contagious infection of the conjunctiva and cornea, caused by
Chlamydia trachomatis. It produces a purulent follicular conjuctivitis followed by a granular type
of conjunctivitis.
EYE - MOVEMENT - constant : The remedy "arg-n br1" was moved here from "EYE - FIXED LOOK unable to keep eyes fixed steadily" which was deleted.
EYE - MOVEMENT - rolling : Gross movement of the eyeball in any direction.
EYE - MOVEMENT - rotary motion of the eyeball : Fire rotation of the eyeball, either clockwise or
counterclockwise.
EYE - NARROWING of intervals between lids : CHK In b4 and b7 you find: "Augenbeschwerden Empfindungen; nach den - Augenlidern; an den - Verengung der Augenspalte". [Peter Vint,
Germany]
EYE - NYSTAGMUS : Rapid involuntary movement of the eye, which can be lateral, vertical, rotary
or mixed
EYE - PAIN - drawing pain - backward : Original rubric: Pain drawing backward, the eyeball.
EYE - PAIN - reading - agg. : The symptom in Kent "Eye - pain - evening - 8 p.m.- on reading and
writing"with "nat-ar." was deleted. The modality "reading and writing" is not especially present in
the evening, and surely not precisely at 20 h. The remedy was moved to "Eye - pain - reading" and
"Eye - pain - writing" : (A1)
EYE - PAIN - writing agg. : The symptom in Kent "Eye - pain - evening - 8 p.m.- on reading and
writing"with "nat-ar." was deleted. The modality "reading and writing" is not especially present in
the evening, and surely not precisely at 20 h. The remedy was moved to "Eye - pain - reading" and
"Eye - pain - writing" : (A1)
EYE - PARALYSIS - Extrinsic ocular muscles : The muscles controlling the functions of opening and
closing the eyelids.
EYE - PROTRUSION : Eye protrusion is a more generic term which can be a finding in thyroid eye
disease, inflammation, tumors or infection. It often is only found in one eye.
EYE - PROTRUSION - exophthalmos : Exophthalmos usually occurs in both eyes and is a condition
which may or may not be related to abnormalities of the thyroid.
EYE - PTERYGIUM : Patch of thickened conjunctiva, spreading over the cornea, usually from the
inner canthus to the pupil
EYE - RUBBING the eyes : The patient is rubbing the eyes
EYE - SPASMS - Ciliary muscles : The ciliary muscle is located inside the eye and is related to the
process of accomodation.
EYE - STRABISMUS - upward : One eye is looking upward more than the other.
EYE - TIRED EXPRESSION : We did not make a referring rubric from"EYE - TIRED EXPRESSION" to
"FACE - EXPRESSION - tired" because we believe there can be a tired expression in the eyes
without the whole face having a tired expression.
EYE - TRICHIASIS : Ingrowing eyelashes
EYE - TUMORS - Lids - tarsal tumors : Tumor of the connective tissue which gives shape to the
eyelid
EYE - TWILIGHT; in the : Subdued light, just after sunset or, less common, just before sunrise
EYE - WEAK : Sensation of muscular weakness or fatigue at the eyes.
EYE - XEROPHTHALMIA : A form of conjunctivitis characterized by a dry and lusterless condition of
the eyeball and caused by a deficiency of vitamin A.
Vision
VISION : Reviewed with the kind help of Edward C. Kondrot, M.D., homeopathic ophthalmology; USA
VISION - BLURRED : Indistinct vision.
VISION - CIRCLES : We kept "VISION - CIRCLES" and "VISION - RINGS" as two separate rubrics because
a "ring" is only the circular line, while a "circle" can also be the whole plane figure bounded by
this circular line.
VISION - COLORS before the eyes - stripes; colored : "3striped" has been changed to "stripes;
colored" because of German "farbige Streifen". [Peter Vint, Germany]
VISION - CROOKED - objects appear : The original symptom "Eye - crooked - objects seem" has been
deleted and moved here to the more appropriate chapter Vision.
VISION - DIM : Experiencing a lack of illumination. Less light is going into the eye, such as in
cataract.
VISION - FEATHERY : CHK More in the sense of "sees feathers in front of the eyes". [Peter Vint,
Germany]
VISION - HEMERALOPIA : Day blindness. From the Greek words "hemera = day" and "alaos = blind".
Be careful however, in all French (and probably in some other european non-english) dictionaries,
this symptom means the opposite "defect of vision characterized by reduced visual capacity in
faint light". Also some classical authors use "hemeralopia" to denote "night blindness". Others use
"hemeralopia" for both day and night blindness. [c1 - Ranunculus bulbosus] - The word
"hemeralopia" has been used to denote both day-blindness and night-blindness. The following
explanation was sent to us by Edward Kondrot USA Homeopathic Ophthalmologist : Hemeralopia
means defective vision in "Daylight". Anatomically, defective vision in daylight - better at night implies a problem with the cones of the retina. The cones which are located in the macula of the
retina are responsible for central color vision which is better in the daylight. The rods are
located in the periphery of the retina and they are responsible for peripheral night vision. Hence
it is common to have better vision (central) in daylight and worse vision at night. The correct
reference for hemeralopia is Vision, Dim, daylight not vision, dim, evening.
VISION - NYCTALOPIA : Night blindness. Derived from the Greek words "nyctos = night" and "alaos =
blind". Be careful because in all French (and probably in some other european non-english)
dictionaries, this symptom is explained as "day blindness" and "hemeralopia" as "night blindness".
VISION - RINGS : We kept "VISION - CIRCLES" and "VISION - RINGS" as two separate rubrics because a
"ring" is only the circular line, while a "circle" can also be the whole plane figure bounded by this
circular line.
VISION - SWIMMING of - objects : The remedies "anag k, lyss k" were moved here from "VISION MOVING - objects seem to be moving - float; to".In Kent we find these remedies under : "VISION moving - objects seem to be - to and fro, towards noon - to float". The remedy "nux-m k" was
moved here from "VISION - MOVING - objects seem to be moving - floating". In Kent we find this
remedy under: "VISION - moving - objects seem to be - floating".
VISION - WEAK : Reduced visual acuity because of a pathology of the central nervous system.
Ear
EAR - DISTANCE between right ear and right shoulder; as if more : The remedy "agath-a" was
moved here from the symptom "EAR - PAIN - sensation, gap between right ear and shoulder is
longer" which was deleted because it is not a pain. (see author note)
EAR - ERUPTIONS - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an UNCLEAR /
AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the following two
reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source in its
entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
EAR - ERUPTIONS - About the ears - extending to : The original text in Kent is "spread to scalp". In
Synthesis we use "extending to".
EAR - HEAT - cold - body; with coldness of - lying agg. : "Ear - heat - coldness of body duringlying, while". This strange repertorial interpretation of the following symptom in Hahnemann MM:
"Towards evening he feels very uncomfortable in the body, like fever, and when he lies down his
head becomes hot, especially the ears, but the knees are cold" (ars.). The remedy "ars" was
moved to the following rubrics: "Fever - evening"; "Head - heat - lying down"; "Ear - heat - lying
down" and "Extremities - coldness - knees - hot - body, with".
EAR - HEMATOMA : A purplish, rounded, hard swelling of the auricle, due to an effusion of blood
between the cartilage and perichondrium: it may be the result of trauma or occur spontaneously
in the insane; hematoma auris, the insane ear.
EAR - PAIN - Lobes - Behind the ear - drawing pain : The original Kent symptom is "EAR - PAIN drawing - lobule - under".
EAR - ROUGH epidermis - Meatus : The original Kent symptom is: EARS - ROUGH epidermis in ears.
EAR - TUMORS - Lobes - Below : The original Kent symptom is "EAR - Tumors, cystic -lobe - under".
EAR - VESTIBULAR SYNDROME : Like a stroke, but it's none. It's a vascular problem in the vestibular
apparatus (Dr. Marc Br, Switzerland)
Hearing
HEARING - AUTOPHONY : Increased resonance of one's own voice
HEARING - IMPAIRED - changing the linen agg. : The symptom "HEARING - IMPAIRED - change of
clothing" was modified to "HEARING - IMPAIRED - changing the linen agg." Because in the MM we
find: [hr1 - Silicea terra - Hearing and ears] -
Nose
NOSE - ADENOIDS : Lymphoid tissue in the rhinopharynx
NOSE - CATARRH : Catarrh: inflammation of a mucous membrane, esp. of the nose or throat,
causing an increased flow of mucus
NOSE - CERE : This is the fleshy part of a bird's nose
NOSE - CONGESTION : The remedies of level 3 "Nose; to" were moved here because "NOSE CONGESTION" and "NOSE - CONGESTION - Nose; to" have the same meaning.
NOSE - CORYZA - odors - roses agg. of : "Nose - coryza- rose cold" this peculiar expression has been
modified into "coryza - roses; from the odor of" (Peter Vint, Germany)
NOSE - DYSPNEA in nose : The remedies of "RESPIRATION - DIFFICULT - nose, felt in" were moved
here.
NOSE - EPISTAXIS - blood - clotted, coagulated - liver; looking like : The original bg symptom
"livery" was changed to "liver; looking like" because it was not clear enough.
NOSE - HAY FEVER : "Hay fever" is spelled in two words in Webster's dicionary and Dorland's medical
dictionary. "Hayfever" spelled in one word is frequently found in the Materia Medica. Therefore
we decided to use "hay fever" in Synthesis and add "hayfever" as a synonym, in order to have both
spellings accessible in a search.
NOSE - INFLAMMATION : Rhinitis: inflammation of the nasal mucous membrane.
NOSE - ODORS; imaginary and real - animals - back part of nose; in : The remedy "con" was moved
to "NOSE - ODORS; imaginary and real - tar - back part of nose; in" [h2 - Conium maculatum] Eine
Art Theer-Geruch hinten in der Nase, den er auch zu schmecken whnt. Wrongly translated by
Allen as "a kind of animal smell" Correct translation: "a smell like tar back in the nose that he
imagines to taste as well.
NOSE - ODORS; imaginary and real - burning - tinder in the morning : Readily inflammable
substance, such as touchwood
NOSE - ODORS; imaginary and real - cancer; like : Kent originally used the term "cancerous".
Research in B4 proved it to be "Krebsgeruch" = "odor like cancer". To make the meaning less
ambiguous the symptom was changed to "cancer; like". [Peter Vint, Germany]
NOSE - ODORS; imaginary and real - sulphur; like : Kent originally used the term "sulfurous".
Research in B4 and B7 proved it to be "Schwefel; nach" = "like sulphur". To make the meaning less
ambiguous the symptom was changed to "sulphur; like". [Peter Vint, Germany]
NOSE - ODORS; imaginary and real - tinder : Readily inflammable substance, such as touchwood
NOSE - ODORS; imaginary and real - ulcer; like an : Kent originally used the term "ulcerous".
Research in B4 proved it to be "Geschwr; wie von einem" = "ulcer; as if from an". To make the
meaning less ambiguous the symptom was changed to "ulcer; like an". [Peter Vint, Germany]
NOSE - SMELL - acute : The expression "sensitive to the smell of xxx" has been put under "nose smell - acute - xxx", whereas the real aggravation from the smell has been put under "generals food - xxx - agg. - smell of".
NOSE - SNEEZING - accompanied by - dry nose : The original Kent symptom is "NOSE - SNEEZING dry - nose, with".
NOSE - VAPOR rising into the nose; as if : Exhalations from the stomach or throat
Face
FACE - ACRIDITY : Eine tzende Schrfe an der Oberlippe, dicht unter der Nase. Converted as
"corrosive pain".
FACE - ATROPHY - Masseter muscles; painful atrophy of : Either of a pair of large muscles in the
angle of the lower jaw, which raise the jaw in chewing, etc.
FACE - BELL'S PALSY : Sudden paralysis of the facial nerve resulting in paralyzed muscles on one
side of the face.
Mouth
MOUTH - APHTHAE - Tongue - bleeding : Original location: 4sensitive and bleeding
MOUTH - BROAD TONGUE : Large extent from side to side (as opposed to "enlarged", where the
change of size is in all directions). The original rubric "BROAD; tongue seems too" was split into
"BROAD TONGUE" and "sensation as if". The remedies that have the actual broadness are added to
level 2.
MOUTH - CANCRUM oris : Gangrenous stomatitis, dangerous childhood disease with great
exhaustion
MOUTH - CANKER sores : A canker sore is a corrosive ulceration due to a cancer, syphilis, etc.
MOUTH - DISCOLORATION - blue - accompanied by - pale spots : The original symptom "Mucous
membrane - discoloration - blue, others pale; some places - covered with tough mucus which lies
in brown crusts on lips", (ars. from k) was split and moved to: "mouth - discoloration - blue accompanied by - pale spots", and "face - eruptions - crusty, scabby - Lips - brown crusts accompanied by - blue and pale spots of mucous membrane of mouth"
MOUTH - DISCOLORATION - Tongue : Updated with the kind help of Prof. Dr. Prakash Vakil,
Bombay, India
MOUTH - DISCOLORATION - Tongue - black - accompanied by - scarlet fever : The referring rubric
to the chapter Skin was moved here from level 6 "scarlatina" which was deleted. We deleted
"scarlatina" because "scarlet fever" and "scarlatina" are synonymous. In Webster's we find :
Scarlatina: Nontechnical term for a mild form of scarlet fever.
MOUTH - DISCOLORATION - Tongue - white - Centre - dark brown : "Mouth - discoloration Tongue - white - centre - dark brown" and the two following rubrics are positioned in a misleading
way. From the MM it can be learned that not only the center of the tongue is white for these
remedies, but the whole tongue and that "dark brown" is the one thing which applies to the
centre of the tongue. All these subrubrics have therefore been moved to a more clearly
structured symptom, such as "DISCOLORATION - Tongue - white - accompanied by - centre brown - dark", etc.. To avoid confusion for those who know the rubrics, the old symptoms have
been maintained as referring rubrics.
MOUTH - DRYNESS : "Mouth - dryness": replace nat-ac.3 by nat-c.3: see MM PTK2 and C1 (Henk van
Munster, Netherlands)
MOUTH - ENLARGED - Tongue : Expresses a long standing state of the tongue, as opposed to
"swelling" which is a more acute, transitory event.
MOUTH - EPULIS : Fibroid of gingiva
MOUTH - HARD - Tongue - Edges - accompanied by - cracked tongue - Edges : The original text is
in vk1 on page 23 : ... cracked edges with painful hard margins.
MOUTH - LEUKOPLAKIA : White, thickened patches on gums, tongue or inner side of cheeks, with a
tendency to fissure and malignancy
MOUTH - ODOR - cress; like : Cress is a plant of the crucifer family, as watercress. The pungent
leaves are used in salads.
MOUTH - PAIN - Gums - cold - agg. - sore : The original Kent symptom "MOUTH - PAIN - sore - Gums
- cold - and warmth agg." was split into "MOUTH - PAIN - sore - Gums - cold - agg." and "MOUTH PAIN - sore - Gums - warmth - agg.".
MOUTH - PAIN - Gums - warmth agg. - sore : The original Kent symptom "MOUTH - PAIN - sore Gums - cold - and warmth agg." was split into "MOUTH - PAIN - sore - Gums - cold - agg." and
"MOUTH - PAIN - sore - Gums - warmth - agg.".
MOUTH - PAPILLAE of tongue - erect - strawberry tongue : Tongue red as a strawberry because of
elevated papillae (K2)
MOUTH - PLUMMER-VINSON syndrome : A syndrome usually found in women in the middle-age.
Hypochromic anemia, characterized by cracks at the corners of the mouth. The tongue is painful
with atrophy of the filiform and later the fungiform papillae. Dysphagia due to esophageal
stenosis.
MOUTH - PYORRHEA ALVEOLARIS : Chronic periodontitis of the gums and tooth sockets,
characterized by the formation of pus and, usually, by loosening of the teeth.
MOUTH - RANULA : Cystic tumor beneath the tongue due to obstruction of a gland
MOUTH - SALIVA - suppressed - dentition; during : Original text: "In teething children".
MOUTH - STOMATITIS, ulcerative - gangrenous : Gangrenous stomatitis, dangerous childhood
disease with great exhaustion
MOUTH - SWELLING - Gums - left - extending to - right : "Mouth - swelling - Gums - bluish-red,
spongy, between lower incisors - beginning on left side and extending to the right - bleeding
frequently" this symptom for nat-m. comes from hr1 (A bluish red swelling of a spongy nature on
gums between lower incisors, commencing on left side, extending to right, bled often, blood had
a saltish taste). It was deleted as such and has been transcribed as follows: "swelling - Gums bluish-red - spongy swelling"; "swelling - Gums - between the lower incisors"; "swelling - Gums left - to right" and "taste - saltish - blood tastes salty".
MOUTH - SWELLING - Gums - bluish red : "Mouth - swelling - Gums - bluish-red, spongy, between
lower incisors - beginning on left side and extending to the right - bleeding frequently ecchymosis": this chaotic symptom of con. corresponds to the following MM symptoms: "Swollen,
bluish-red gums, as if suffused with blood. (h)"; "Gums swollen, ecchymosed and bleeding. (c1)".
The original symptom therefore has been removed and con. has been placed in: "swelling - Gums
- bluish-red". It was already present in "discoloration - Gums - bluish-red" and in "bleeding Gums".
MOUTH - SWELLING - Gums - bluish red - spongy swelling : "Mouth - swelling - Gums - bluish-red,
spongy, between lower incisors - beginning on left side and extending to the right - bleeding
frequently" this symptom for nat-m. comes from hr1 (A bluish red swelling of a spongy nature on
gums between lower incisors, commencing on left side, extending to right, bled often, blood had
a saltish taste). It was deleted as such and has been transcribed as follows: "swelling - Gums bluish-red - spongy swelling"; "swelling - Gums - between the lower incisors"; "swelling - Gums left - to right" and "taste - saltish - blood tastes salty".
MOUTH - SWELLING - Gums - Between the lower incisors : "Mouth - swelling - Gums - bluish-red,
spongy, between lower incisors - beginning on left side and extending to the right - bleeding
frequently" this symptom for nat-m. comes from hr1 (A bluish red swelling of a spongy nature on
gums between lower incisors, commencing on left side, extending to right, bled often, blood had
a saltish taste). It was deleted as such and has been transcribed as follows: "swelling - Gums bluish-red - spongy swelling"; "swelling - Gums - between the lower incisors"; "swelling - Gums left - to right" and "taste - saltish - blood tastes salty".
MOUTH - SWELLING - Tongue : Expresses a a more acute, transitory event as opposed to "enlarged"
which is a long standing state of the tongue.
MOUTH - TASTE - cubebs; of : Cubeb or cubebs, the dried unripe, but fully grown fruit of Piper
cubeba, a climbing plant of the East Indies.
MOUTH - TASTE - purulent : "Mouth - taste - purulent" delete merc. and nat-c. and add them to
"taste purulent - throat, in" (See H) ((Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
MOUTH - TASTE - purulent - Throat, in : "Mouth - taste - purulent" delete merc. and nat-c. and add
them to "taste purulent - throat, in" (See H) ((Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland)"Mouth - taste purulent" delete merc. and nat-c. and add them to "taste purulent - throat, in" (See H) ((Dr. Jost
Knzli, Switzerland)
MOUTH - TASTE - saltish - blood tastes salty : "Mouth - swelling - Gums - bluish-red, spongy,
between lower incisors - beginning on left side and extending to the right - bleeding frequently"
this symptom for nat-m. comes from hr1 (A bluish red swelling of a spongy nature on gums
between lower incisors, commencing on left side, extending to right, bled often, blood had a
saltish taste). It was deleted as such and has been transcribed as follows: "swelling - Gums bluish-red - spongy swelling"; "swelling - Gums - between the lower incisors"; "swelling - Gums left - to right" and "taste - saltish - blood tastes salty".
MOUTH - TASTE - tannic : Bitter and astringent taste, as from grape skins or seeds
MOUTH - THRUSH : Mycotic stomatitis caused by the fungus Candida and characterized by aphthae
and white spots
MOUTH - TONGUE-TIE : Limited motion of the tongue usually caused by a short frenum.
MOUTH - ULCERS - canker sore : A canker sore is a corrosive ulceration due to a cancer, syphilis,
etc.
MOUTH - ULCERS - Tongue - Edges : "Edges" refers to the border of the tongue all round including
the tip. "Sides" only refers to right and left side excluding the tip.
MOUTH - ULCERS - Tongue - Sides : "Sides" only refers to right and left side excluding the tip.
"Edges" refers to the border of the tongue all round including the tip.
Teeth
TEETH - CORRODED SENSATION : An irritating feeling in the teeth caused by an acid that makes
the enamel blunt (e.g. in case of vomiting bile, eating rhubarb etc.) This rubric was formerly
called: " TEETH - EDGE; feel as if on".
TEETH - INFLAMMATION - Dentin : Dentin is the hard, dense, calcareous tissue forming the body of
a tooth, under the enamel and surrounding the pulp canal.
TEETH - PAIN - accompanied by - Submaxillary glands; swelling of : The remedy "clem h2" was
moved here from "TEETH - PAIN - swelling; with - Submaxillary glands; of"
TEETH - PAIN - chamomile : From smelling chamomilla
TEETH - PAIN - wind - raw wind; in : Raw wind means an uncomfortably cold and damp wind, a
bleak wind.
TEETH - SORDES : Foul deposit on the teeth (or lips), consisting of saliva proteins, food deposits,
epithelial matter, etc.
TEETH - WEDGE-SHAPED : The rubric "TEETH - WEDGE-SHAPED - sensation as if" was deleted and
the remedy "lach" moved to "TEETH - PAIN - pressing - wedged; as if".
Throat
THROAT - ADENOIDS : Hypertrophy of adenoid tissue in nasopharynx
THROAT - ANGINA : Angina may point to "chest - angina pectoris" as well.
THROAT - CATARRH : Catarrh: inflammation of a mucous membrane, esp. of the nose or throat,
causing an increased flow of mucus
THROAT - DIPHTHERIA : An acute infectious disease caused by Corynebacterium diphtheriae and
characterized among others by white patches or a false membrane in the air passages.
THROAT - INFLAMMATION - airsacculitis : The inflammation of the air sacs in birds
THROAT - MEMBRANE : Not every membrane in the throat indicates diphtheria. However, formerly
Kent included diphtheria in this rubric.
THROAT - PAIN - accompanied by - thirst for cold water : In "Children Types" by Borland Douglas
we find on page 32 : SUPHUR children often get chronic tonsillitis, a deeply injected throat, very
swollen, feeling very hot, with very offensive breath. And most SULPHUR children with tonsillitis
tend to get masses of glands in the neck - more than ordinary tonsillar gland enlargement and it
tends to spread, and involve particularly the submaxillary glands. The tonsillitis is accompanied
by irregular heat and cold, shivering attacks, sweaty attacks and thirst for cold water.
THROAT - PAIN - salivation - after - amel. : [hs1 - Arum maculatum] After chewing a young stalk
for a few seconds, a very intense pricking stinging pain was felt upon the tongue and mucous
membrane of the lips and throat, accompanied with a flow of saliva which seemed relieve the
pain a little ... [vml4 - Arum maculatum - Mouth] ... Intense pricking, stinging, in tongue and
mucous membrane of lips and throat, !!! flow of saliva, which seemed to amel. pain a little....
External Throat
EXTERNAL THROAT - STRANGLES : A young horses disease caused by a bacterial infection. There is
inflammation of the mucous membrane of the respiratory tract and the formation of abscesses in
the adjacent pharyngeal lymph glands.
EXTERNAL THROAT - TORTICOLLIS : 'Torticolis results from a cramp, spasm or contraction
affecting mainly sterno-cleido-mastoid muscles and the neck is generally drawn (twisted) to one
side. Also called 'wry-neck". [gtr1 - Torticollis] It is a painless contraction of one sternomastoid
muscle (a strap-like neck muscle arising from the sternum and inserting into the mastoid process
of temporal bone). The head is slightly flexed and drawn towards the contracted side and face
turned over the other shoulder. It is often painful. It may be caused by a birth injury to the
sternomastoid muscle, a tumour in the said muscle, severe burn. It is found in professional people
who have to do their fine work with fixed downward or one-sided position of the head. For
example, shoe-makers, men in embroidery work, needlework, etc., are particularly prone to
torticollis. It is difficult to cure, but acute cases of stiff-neck or wryneck can be cured. See
stiff-neck.
EXTERNAL THROAT - TORTICOLLIS - spasmodic : Spasmodic torticollis is torticollis due to
intermittent dystonia and spasms of neck muscles, particularly the sternocleidomastoid and
trapezius muscles. Irritation of the accessory nerve has been implicated in some cases, but the
cause is unknown. Cf. retrocollis and rotary spasm. Called also intermittent or neurogenic
torticollis.
Neck
NECK : This chapter contains symptoms related to the whole neck, that is the part joining the head
to the body. It should be compared with the chapters "External throat" for the anterior part only,
and with "Back" (which contains the cervical region) for the posterior part only.
Stomach
STOMACH - ACIDITY : A condition with heartburn, sour eructations and distress in the stomach.
STOMACH - CARDIALGIA : Nowadays cardialgia stands for pain in the heart. In the classical texts,
such as a1, hr1, etc., it means much more frequently "heartburn"
STOMACH - ERUCTATIONS : Expelling gas or other substances through the mouth, from the stomach
STOMACH - ERUCTATIONS - amel. : "STOMACH - ERUCTATIONS - amel." indicates a general rubric; it
are not only the problems in the stomach which are improved by these remedies. That is why the
referring rubric is made from chapter "STOMACH" to chapter "GENERALS".
STOMACH - ERUCTATIONS; TYPE OF - milk : The milk is regurgitated.
STOMACH - ERUCTATIONS; TYPE OF - milk; like : Something that resembles milk is regurgitated.
STOMACH - ERUCTATIONS; TYPE OF - water brash : Heartburn with eructation of acid fluid or
almost tasteless saliva into the mouth
STOMACH - ERUCTATIONS; TYPE OF - water brash - accompanied by - indigestion : The word
"dyspepsia" was replaced by "indigestion".
STOMACH - FLABBINESS : "STOMACH - FLABBINESS" and "STOMACH -HANGING down relaxed;
sensation of" are pretty much the same as can be seen in the following symptom: [nh8 - Ignatia
amara] - This weak feeling in the stomach in Ignatia is sometimes described as a feeling of
flabbiness, as though the stomach hung down relaxed. (Peter Vint, Germany)
STOMACH - GURGLING - morning - waking; on : Correction of error in Kent: there we find "walking;
while"
STOMACH - HANGING down relaxed; sensation of : "STOMACH - FLABBINESS" and "STOMACH
-HANGING down relaxed; sensation of" are pretty much the same as can be seen in the following
symptom: [nh8 - Ignatia amara] - This weak feeling in the stomach in Ignatia is sometimes
described as a feeling of flabbiness, as though the stomach hung down relaxed. (Peter Vint,
Germany)/ [nh8 - Ignatia amara] - This weak feeling in the stomach in Ignatia is sometimes
described as a feeling of flabbiness, as though the stomach hung down relaxed. In other
words,"STOMACH - FLABBINESS" and "STOMACH -HANGING down relaxed; sensation of" are pretty
much the same; it is just another way of describing it.
STOMACH - HEARTBURN : Burning sensation in the esofagus
STOMACH - HYPERCHLORHYDRIA : Excessive secretion of hydrochloric acid by the stomach cells.
STOMACH - INDIGESTION : This rubric includes complaints after substances not otherwise discribed
(Kent)
STOMACH - NAUSEA - pressure - stomach agg.; on : "Stomach - nausea - pressure - stomach, on":
sars. (wrong alphabetical position) should become "ars."
STOMACH - PAIN - convulsions - agg. : Cannot find this symptom for Agaricus in ExLibris
STOMACH - PAIN - extending to - Breasts - stitching pain : This is the original Kent rubric.
STOMACH - PAIN - Cardiac opening - forced through; as if something was : The rubric "Cardiac
end" was moved here from "STOMACH - PAIN - forcing - Cardiac end" because in Allen we find: [a1
- Bufo rana - Stomach] - Scraping and excoriating pains in the stomach, with a feeling as if stones
were being forced through the cardia, [a12].
STOMACH - PAIN - Pylorus : The pylorus or pyloric orifice is the aperture by which the stomach
contents enter into the duodenum.
STOMACH - PULSATION - reflecting agg. : The original Kent rubric is "STOMACH - PULSATION meditation, during". We believe that in the period Kent was alive, "meditating" was used in the
sense of "reflecting" and not in the sense "meditation" is used today.
STOMACH - THIRST - frequently; drinking : The 3 remedies "abrom-a ks5, cassia-s ccrh1, granit-m
es1" were move to "STOMACH - THIRST". Because "thirst" and "drinking frequently" have the same
meaning.
STOMACH - VOMITING - accompanied by - perspiration : Perspiration accompanies the vomiting in
this particular patient
STOMACH - VOMITING - coffee agg. : There were 21 remedies in this rubric in Synthesis 8. The 17
remedies that are no longer in this rubric come from the boger rubric NAUSEA AND VOMITING Aggravation - coffee, after Since Synthesis 9 this rubric has been connected (linked) with the
more general symptom "nausea" according to the principle: in case of combined chapters like
nausea and vomiting the symptoms have been linked with the rubric which fits with higher
probability (you may find nausea without vomiting, but hardly ever vomiting without nausea)
Therefore in Synthesis 9 only 6 remedies are left. (sulph hs1 is a new addition) Rule: In case you
don't find a certain modality for vomiting it is always a good idea to search for this modality
under nausea.
STOMACH - VOMITING - drinking - after - immediately after - food is retained longer; but : MRR1pg 66: Vomits liquids but food retained longer.
STOMACH - VOMITING - perspiration - during : Vomiting typically occurs during the stage of
perspiration in a feverish disease
STOMACH - VOMITING; TYPE OF - coffee grounds, like : Grounds: the particles that settle to the
bottom of a liquid; dregs; sediment (coffee grounds).
STOMACH - VOMITING; TYPE OF - fecal : CHK Fecal here is used in the sense of actual "vomiting of
feces". [Peter Vint, Germany]
STOMACH - VOMITING; TYPE OF - worms - sensation of : The Kent remedies "cocc k" and "2lach k"
were moved to "STOMACH - WORM; sensation of a" because in the MM we do not find "vomiting"
for "cocc" and "lach".
STOMACH - XIPHOID, to back : STOMACH - ENSIFORM, to back
Abdomen
ABDOMEN - CONTRACTION - Intestines : This rubric was moved here from "ABDOMEN - SPASMS Intestines".
ABDOMEN - DISTENSION - night - midnight - after : "ABDOMEN - DISTENSION - night - midnight after - distension of abdomen, with" with remedy "ambr." 1 K was not correct. The correct
symptom is: [br1 - Ambra grisea - Stomach] - Distention of stomach and abdomen after midnight.
The symptom was split into: ABDOMEN - DISTENSION - night - midnight - after and STOMACH DISTENSION - night - midnight ; after
ABDOMEN - DISTENSION - flatulence - from : This reference is only for the remedies :" canth, cocc,
plb" which were moved here from "ABDOMEN - SWELLING - flatulence; from", a rubric which was
deleted in Synthesis.
ABDOMEN - DRAWN IN : Retraction is a drawing or being drawn back or in.
ABDOMEN - ERUPTIONS - herpes - ringworm : Contagious skin diseases characterized by
ring-shaped, discolored patches covered with scales or vesicles. Kent referred rigworm to herpes
(skin - eruptions - ringworm: see herpes). In Synthesis herpes and ringworm have been separated.
ABDOMEN - ERUPTIONS - ringworm : Original location: Abdomen - eruptions - herpes - ringworm
Contagious skin diseases characterized by ring-shaped, discolored patches covered with scales or
vesicles. Kent referred rigworm to herpes (skin - eruptions - ringworm: see herpes). In Synthesis
Rectum
RECTUM - CHOLERA : An acute infectious disease caused by Vibrio cholerae, characterized by
profuse diarrhea, dehydration, etc. Asiatic cholera. Formerly cholera often indicated severe
enteritis in a more general way.
RECTUM - CHOLERA - beginning : Incipient stage or mild form of epidemic cholera
RECTUM - CHOLERA - infantum : Noncontagious, often fatal diarrhea, esp. in young children, esp.
in the summer
RECTUM - CHOLERA - morbus cholera : Acute gastroenteritis, esp. in the summer and usually
caused by improper food.
RECTUM - CONSTIPATION - chronic : stubborn = rebellious to all treatments and change of diet
RECTUM - DIARRHEA - daytime : Symptom was originally: RECTUM - DIARRHEA - daytime only
RECTUM - DIARRHEA - alternating with - constipation - diarrhea after a normal stool : Original
location: Abdomen - Diarrhea - stool; after a normal
RECTUM - DIARRHEA - followed by - rheumatism : The remedy "kali-bi k" was moved here from the
rubric "EXTREMITIES - PAIN - rheumatic - diarrhea - following"
RECTUM - ERUPTIONS - Anus; about - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an
UNCLEAR / AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the
following two reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source
in its entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
RECTUM - ERUPTIONS - Perineum - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an
UNCLEAR / AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the
following two reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source
in its entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
RECTUM - FISTULA : Including anal fistula
RECTUM - FLATUS - agg. : The symptom "RECTUM - FLATUS - agg." indicates a general rubric, it are
not only the problems in the rectum which are aggravated by these remedies. That is why the
referring rubric goes from chapter "RECTUM" to chapter "GENERALS".
RECTUM - FLATUS - amel. : "RECTUM - FLATUS - amel." indicates a general rubric, it are not only
the problems in the rectum which are improved by these remedies. Therefore the referring rubric
was made from chapter "RECTUM" to chapter "GENERALS".
RECTUM - INVOLUNTARY stool - daytime - eating; after : The original Kent rubric was: RECTUM INVOLUNTARY stool - night - eating; and after - daytime; in
RECTUM - LUMP; sensation of a - Perineum : "Rectum - lump - perineum": chin.3 has to be chim.3
(see PTK2 a.o.) (Arjen Pasma, Netherlands)
RECTUM - PAIN - clawing pain : The original Kent symptom is: Rectum - pain - clawing, squeezing,
as from a claw in anus.
RECTUM - PROTOZOA : Protozoon; in plural protozoa. A subkingdom comprising the unicellular
organisms of the animal kingdom.
Stool
STOOL - BLACK - fecal : See symptom note Synthesis under "STOOL - FECAL stool".
STOOL - BROWN - fecal : See symptom note Synthesis under "STOOL - FECAL stool".
STOOL - DARK - fecal : See symptom note Synthesis under "STOOL - FECAL stool".
STOOL - FATTY, greasy - oily-looking fecal : See symptom note Synthesis under "STOOL - FECAL
stool".
STOOL - FECAL stool : A fecal stool is a stool containing fecal matter or waste matter, as opposed
to stool which contains no fecal matter and only for example blood, water or mucus etc. The
following Materia Medica texts will clarify the matter. [a1 - Asclepias tuberosa - STOOL AND
ANUS.] - Stool without fecal matter; entirely albuminous, and containing the amount of at least
four or five whites of eggs (fourteenth day), [_a1]. [a1 - Croton tiglium - STOOL. - Diarrhoea.] Stool at first fecal, afterwards watery, with slight sticking pain in the abdomen, [a3]. [a1 Pulsatilla pratensis - STOOL. - Diarrhoea.] - Fecal stool, followed by blood, in the morning(after
seventy-two hours), [_a1].
STOOL - GREEN - fecal : See symptom note Synthesis under "STOOL - FECAL stool".
STOOL - LOOSE : A loose stool means different things to different people. It can be compared to
cottage cheese, barely formed. We decided not to put any remedies here, but to refer to more
precise symptoms.
STOOL - SOFT : A soft stool can be compared to soft cheese that can be spread. It is formed and its
consistency is somewhere between hard and loose.
STOOL - THIN - fecal : See symptom note Synthesis under "STOOL - FECAL stool".
STOOL - WHITE - fecal : See symptom note Synthesis under "STOOL - FECAL stool".
STOOL - YELLOW - fecal : See symptom note Synthesis under "STOOL - FECAL stool".
Bladder
BLADDER - IRRITABLE BLADDER : State of the bladder with contant desire to urinate
BLADDER - NERVOUS BLADDER : State of the bladder with constant, but ineffectual desire to
urinate
BLADDER - PAIN - tenesmus : Tenesmus means a painfully urgent but ineffectual attempt to
urinate or defecate. This rubric is redundant.
BLADDER - PAIN - Neck of bladder - accompanied by - dysuria : Original location: " URINATION dysuria - sphincter vesicae; pain in - hyperesthesia of the skin down the course of the left sciatic
nerve; with - popliteus and heel; pain in the left - coldness creeping over the whole course of the
nerve; with - heel; especially in the"
BLADDER - URINARY complaints - accompanied by - Heart complaints and difficult respiration :
Original location in Kent: "Respiration - difficult - heart - complaints and urinary troubles"
BLADDER - URINATION - dribbling - stool - pressure in rectum; with : The erroneous symptom
"Bladder - urination - dribbling - urination, after - pressure in return, with": for nat-m.was
deleted. "pressure in rectum" has to depend on "stool", so the symptom becomes: "... - dribbling
- stool, after - pressure in rectum; with"(A1) (Dr. Wolfgang Hettich, Germany)
BLADDER - URINATION - dribbling - urination - after - agg. : "Bladder - urination - dribbling urination - after": arg. in Kent, but absent in his table of abbreviations, has been replaced by
agar. (HR1)
BLADDER - URINATION - dysuria : Difficult urination. If there is a painful element then consider
"Bladder - Urination - dysuria - painful" or "Bladder - Pain - urination - during" or "Urethra - Pain urination - during"
BLADDER - URINATION - dysuria - accompanied by - Heel; coldness in the left : " URINATION dysuria - sphincter vesicae; pain in - hyperesthesia of the skin down the course of the left sciatic
nerve; with - popliteus and heel; pain in the left - coldness creeping over the whole course of the
nerve; with - heel; especially in the": this symptom has been split into meaningful bits
considering as well that dysuria in the repertory emphasizes "difficult urination" as opposed to
"pain - urination; during".
BLADDER - URINATION - dysuria - Sphincter vesicae; with pain in : " URINATION - dysuria sphincter vesicae; pain in - hyperesthesia of the skin down the course of the left sciatic nerve;
with - popliteus and heel; pain in the left - coldness creeping over the whole course of the nerve;
with - heel; especially in the": this symptom has been split into meaningful bits considering as
well that dysuria in the repertory emphasizes "difficult urination" as opposed to "pain - urination;
during".
BLADDER - URINATION - involuntary - night - adverse circumstances; from : Adverse
circumstances are setbacks or misfortune.
BLADDER - URINATION - strangury : Painful and slow urination
Kidneys
KIDNEYS - GLOMERULAR FILTRATION RATE : "Measurement of the GLOMULAR FILTRATION RATE
(GFR) is necessary to define the exact level of renal function." "The use of creatinine clearance is
dependent on the fact that daily production of creatinine (principally from muscle cells) is
remarkably constant and little affected by protein intake." "Given these observations, creatinine
clearance is a reasonably accurate measure of GFR in those situations in which it is most required
- normal or near normal renal fuction." "Where urine collections are difficult or deemed
inaccurate, the GFR may be measured by the single injection of compounds such as EDTA, DTPA,
or iothalamate, their excretion being primarily by glomerular filtration. Following intravenous
injection of the compound, three blood samples are obtained at 2, 3 and 4 hours (or rather longer
intervals if the patient is oedematous or if renal faillure is suspected). The GFR may then be
calculated from the slope of the exponential fall in blood level of the compound."
KIDNEYS - INFLAMMATION : Inflammation of kidneys which may involve glomeruli, tubuli or
interstitial tissue
KIDNEYS - INFLAMMATION - parenchymatous - acute : The original rubric "KIDNEYS INFLAMMATION - acute parenchymatous" was modified to "KIDNEYS - INFLAMMATION parenchymatous - acute".
KIDNEYS - INFLAMMATION - Glomeruli : A type of nephritis with inflamed glomeruli.
KIDNEYS - INFLAMMATION - Pelvis and kidneys : Inflammation of the kidney and its pelvis
KIDNEYS - NEPHRITIS : A disease of the kidneys characterized by inflammation, degeneration,
fibrosis, etc.
KIDNEYS - NEPHROSIS : Disease of the kidneys characterized by purely degenerative lesions of the
renal tubules and marked by generalized edema, albuminuria, and an increase in serum
cholesterol nephrotic.
KIDNEYS - RENAL FAILURE : Clinical conditions associated with rapid decreasing renal function.
Prostate Gland
PROSTATE GLAND - SWELLING : [hr1 - Selenium metallicum - Male sexual organs] PROSTATE GLAND - SWELLING - dribbling urine after stool and after urination : This was
originally a subrubric of "PROSTATE GLAND - ENLARGEMENT"
PROSTATE GLAND - SWELLING - old people; in : This was originally a subrubric of "PROSTATE
GLAND - ENLARGEMENT"
PROSTATE GLAND - SWELLING - sensation of : This was originally a subrubric of "PROSTATE GLAND
- ENLARGEMENT"
Urethra
URETHRA - CHORDEE : Painful and downward curved erection, usually in gonorrhea
URETHRA - CONSTRICTION - extending to - Bladder - urination agg.; after : The Kent rubric
"URETHRA - PAIN - burning - urination - constriction, pain extending to bladder; with" was deleted
because the meaning was not clear enough. In Allen we find: [a1 - Lycopodium clavatum - Urinary
organs] - Extremely painful constriction, dragging and burning along the urethra, extending into
the bladder after urinating (thirtieth day), [a30]. The remedy "lyc" was already present at::
URETHRA - PAIN - dragging - extending to - Bladder - urination; after The remedy "lyc" was also
added here at:: URETHRA - CONSTRICTION - extending to - Bladder - urination; after and at :
URETHRA - PAIN - burning - extending to - Bladder - urination; after
URETHRA - CONTRACTION - stool; before : The remedy "nat-m hr1, k" which was originally added
at "urethra - contraction - stool and urination, before" is now added at both rubrics separately:
urethra - contraction - stool; before urethra - contraction - urination - before
URETHRA - GLEET : Chronic gonorrheal urethritis
URETHRA - GONORRHEA : Contagious inflammation of the genital mucous membranes, due to
gonococci and marked by dysuria and urethral discharge. When it becomes chronic it may cause a
urethral stricture or a chronic urethral discharge (= gleet)
URETHRA - PAIN - flatus; passing - agg. - quietly; passing flatus - stitching pain - dull pain : The
original Kent symptom was: URETHRA - PAIN - stitching - dull - shooting, on quiet emission of
flatus. Because in kent and in Synthesis "shooting" is regarded as synonymous with "stitching" we
modified the symptom by leaving out "shooting". [a1 - Manganum-act. + -c. (old abbr.) - Urethra]
- A dull stitch shoots painfully into the urethra if he quietly emits
URETHRA - PAIN - urination - during - agg. - extending to - Bladder - burning : The remedies of
the original Kent symptom "URETHRA - PAIN - burning - urination - constriction, pain extending to
bladder; with" were moved to "URETHRA - PAIN - burning - urination - during - extending to Bladder" and to "URETHRA - PAIN - constricting - urination - during - extending to - Bladder".
URETHRA - PAIN - urination - during - extending to - Bladder - constricting : The remedies of the
original Kent symptom "URETHRA - PAIN - burning - urination - constriction, pain extending to
bladder; with" were moved to "URETHRA - PAIN - burning - urination - during - extending to Bladder" and to "URETHRA - PAIN - constricting - urination - during - extending to - Bladder".
URETHRA - PAIN - extending to - Anus - through urethra; from anus - drawing pain : "Urethra pain - drawing - extending to anus - from anus through urethra": as an extension is always
described from origin to end, the symptom has been moved to "RECTUM - pain - drawing - Anus extending to - Urethra; through"
URETHRA - PAIN - extending to - Bladder - urination agg.; after - burning : The Kent rubric
"URETHRA - PAIN - burning - urination - constriction, pain extending to bladder; with" was
deleted. The remedy "lyc" was added here and also at: URETHRA - CONSTRICTION - extending to Bladder - urination; after The remedy was already present at:: URETHRA - PAIN - dragging extending to - Bladder - urination; during
URETHRA - PAIN - extending to - Bladder - urination agg.; after - dragging : The Kent rubric
"URETHRA - PAIN - burning - urination - constriction, pain extending to bladder; with" was deleted
because the meaning was not clear. In Allen we find: [a1 - Lycopodium clavatum - Urinary organs]
- Extremely painful constriction, dragging and burning along the urethra, extending into the
bladder after urinating (thirtieth day), [a30]. The remedy "lyc" was already present here at::
URETHRA - PAIN - dragging - extending to - Bladder - urination; after The remedy "lyc" was added
also at:: URETHRA - CONSTRICTION - extending to - Bladder - urination; after URETHRA - PAIN burning - extending to - Bladder - urination; after
URETHRA - PAIN - extending to - Perineum into urethra; from - drawing pain : "Urethra - pain drawing - extending to anus - from perineum into urethra": as an extension is always described
from origin to end, the symptom has been moved to "RECTUM - pain - drawing - perineum extending to - urethra"
Urine
URINE - COLOR - high-colored [= bright] : In the old literature "high-colored urine" had the same
meaning as "dark urine" or "urine darker than usual". Consequently most remedies found in the
Materia Medica for "high-colored urine" are repertorized in Synthesis under "dark urine". In
modern English "high-colored" means "bright". To clarify this difference we have added two
rubrics, one referring to "dark" and the other to "bright".
URINE - COLOR - high-colored [= dark] : In the old literature "high-colored urine" had the same
meaning as "dark urine" or "urine darker than usual". Consequently most remedies found in the
Materia Medica for "high-colored urine" are repertorized in Synthesis under "dark urine". In
modern English "high-colored" means "bright". To clarify this difference we have added two
rubrics, one referring to "dark" and the other to "bright".
URINE - COLOR - yellow - reddish-yellow : The original Kent symptom is "URINE - COLOR - red reddish-yellow. But "reddish-yellow" is a type of yellow and not a type of red.
URINE - CREATININE increased : "Measurement of the GLOMULAR FILTRATION RATE (GFR) is
necessary to define the exact level of renal function." "The use of creatinine clearance is
dependent on the fact that daily production of creatinine (principally from muscle cells) is
remarkably constant and little affected by protein intake." "Given these observations, creatinine
clearance is a reasonably accurate measure of GFR in those situations in which it is most required
- normal or near normal renal fuction." "Where urine collections are difficult or deemed
inaccurate, the GFR may be measured by the single injection of compounds such as EDTA, DTPA,
or iothalamate, their excretion being primarily by glomerular filtration. Following intravenous
injection of the compound, three blood samples are obtained at 2, 3 and 4 hours (or rather longer
intervals if the patient is oedematous or if renal faillure is suspected). The GFR may then be
calculated from the slope of the exponential fall in blood level of the compound."
URINE - MYOGLOBINURIA : In the urine there is myoglobin present, like in crush injuries / dificiency
of muscle phosphorylase, or after prolonged and vigorous exercise in susceptible persons.
URINE - ODOR - leather; like Russian : Lettuce is wrong, it was a spelling error by Boger
URINE - SEDIMENT - chalk meal, like : Old rubric: chalk meal, like. This means with a sediment like
mealed (= ground and unbolted) chalk.
URINE - SEDIMENT - coffee grounds, like : Grounds: the particles that settle to the bottom of a
liquid; dregs; sediment (coffee grounds).
URINE - SEDIMENT - sand - gravel : FUS (= Feline Urological Syndrome)
URINE - SEDIMENT - sand - red - yellowish red crystals : The original Kent symptom is "URINE SEDIMENT - sand - yellow - yellowish red crystals". But "yellowish red" is a type of red and not a
type of yellow.
Male Genitalia/Sex
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - CRYPTORCHISM : The testicle is arrested in its normal path of descent
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - CRYPTORCHISM - Prepubic : Prepubic cryptorchism is the most common
condition
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - ECTOPIA testis : The testicle has strayed from the normal path of descent
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - ERUPTIONS - Penis - erythematous : Morbid redness of the skin due to
capillary congestion
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - ERUPTIONS - Scrotum - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2
has an UNCLEAR / AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for
the following two reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original
source in its entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies
attached to it available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original
German word is "Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be
translated as "herpes" which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most
cases these are itching eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - GLEET : Chronic gonorrheal urethritis
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - HEMATOCELE : Effusion of blood into the tunica vaginalis testis
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - HERNIA : in EH you even find as pathology "hernia or rupture" the moment
you check your MM with this knowledge you will find "Hodenbruch" scrotal hernia = Hernia Scrotum; of
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - HYDROCELE : Effusion of fluid into the tunica vaginalis testis
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - ITCHING - Penis - Glans : "Male genitalia/sex - itching - penis - glans":
replace ben. by benz-ac. (A1)
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - PAIN - grinding pain : The specification "shooting" was deleted because
"shooting" here is an extension upwards. [a1 - Phytolacca decandra - Sexual organs] - Hard
grinding pain shooting up both spermatic cords, in the morning(fourth and fifth days), [a12].
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - PAIN - Penis - Glans - Behind - urination agg.; during - burning : The
symptom "Male genitalia/sex - pain - burning - penis - glans - urination, after - behind, during
urination"was wrong and therefor deleted. The correct symptom can be read in Hering MM in
ery-a. and has been moved and modified accordingly in Synthesis: "... - glans - behind - urination,
during"
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - RELAXED : Male organs - Relaxation
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - RETRACTION : Male organs - Retraction
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - RUPTURE : in EH you even find as pathology "hernia or rupture" the moment
you check your MM with this knowledge you will find "Hodenbruch" scrotal hernia = Hernia Scrotum; of
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - SEXUAL DESIRE - increased - anorectic when a bitch in estrus is nearby :
bitch: female of the dog, wolf, fox etc...
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - SMEGMA - increased : The segma praeputii is the whitish, cheesy,
foul-smelling secretion of the Tyson's glands which collects beneath the prepuce.
MALE GENITALIA/SEX - SPOTS : Male organs - Stain, like spots, on
Female Genitalia/Sex
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - ABORTION - fever; from asthenic : Fever characterized by weakness or
feebleness.
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - DELIVERY : The remedies are at "DELIVERY - during; complaints" or
"DELIVERY - after; complaints".
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - ERUPTIONS - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an
UNCLEAR / AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the
following two reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source
in its entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - ESTRUS : Can be taken in animals for the sexual cycle: The heat of the
bitch, cat, mare, cow etc..
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - ESTRUS - heifers : Young cows that have not borne a calf
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - HAIR falling out - delivery; after : Original symptom was: FEMALE
GENTITALIA/SEX - HAIR falling out - confinement; during Confinement = childbed = lying-in
women = delivery; after
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - HYDROSALPINX : Distension of the oviduct from watery fluid
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - INFLAMMATION - Uterus - pyometra : Accumulation of pus in uterus.
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - LEUKORRHEA - meat washings; like : The original German word
"Fleishwasser" is sometimes translated as "like meat washings" and sometimes as "bloody water".
[h2 - Alumina] Weiflu, wie Fleischwasser, Nachmittags beim Gehen im Freien (und im Sitzen),
und auch Nachts [Ng.] [a1 - Alumina - Sexual organs] - Leucorrhoea, looking like meat washings,
in the afternoon, when walking in the open air (and when sitting), also at night, [_a3]. [h2 Alumina] - Leucorrhoea like bloody water in the afternoon, while walking in the open air (and
while sitting down), and also at night. [Ng.].
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - LOCHIA : Discharge from uterus occuring for several days after childbirth
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - LYING-IN women : Lying-in is an old-fashioned term referring to the
period of confinement of a pregnant woman during, and immediately after delivery of the baby.
More modern terms are labor and delivery, puerperal, and post-partum.
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - MENSES - morning - evening; and : The original Kent symptom is:
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - MENSES - morning and evening only
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - MENSES - suppressed menses; from - feeble women; in : We did not
merge this rubric with "FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - MENSES - suppressed - weakness; from" because
we believe "weakness; from" is a temporary condition, while "feeble women; in" is a permanent
condition.
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - MENSES - suppressed menses; from - weakness; from : We did not
merge this rubric with "FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - MENSES - suppressed - feeble women; in"
because we believe "weakness; from" is a temporary condition, while "feeble women; in" is a
permanent condition.
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - MENSES - vicarious : Menstruation is substituted by another function,
e.g. by epistaxis
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - MOLES : Fleshy uterine tumor formed by degenerative or abortive
development of an egg
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - MUMMIFICATION : If a fetus is mummificated in utero (dead and a
mummy, not infectious)
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - PAIN - Ovaries - accompanied by - Heart; complaints of - difficult
respiration; and : Original location: respiration - difficult - heart; with pain in - ovarian troubles;
during
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - PAIN - Ovaries - continence, from : Voluntary control over urination or
defecation
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - PREGNANCY - imaginary : False pregnancy is a physical condition
manifesting the symptoms of pregnancy, as opposed to the "delusion of being pregnant", which
may be a mental condition only.
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - PROLAPSUS : = procidentia: a prolapse, or falling down, especially
prolapse of the uterus to such a degree that the cervix protrudes from the vaginal outlet.
(Dorland)
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - SYMPHYSIOLYSIS : Separation of symphysis pubis
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - TUMORS - encysted : enclosed in a sac, bladder or cyst
FEMALE GENITALIA/SEX - TUMORS - Uterus - myoma : It is composed essentially of muscle tissue
although there is a variable amount of fibrous connective tissue as well, especially in the older
and larger tumors. It is therefore best called a "myoma" although it is also termed a
Respiration
RESPIRATION - ASTHMATIC - alternating with - rash : Original location: "rash - tightness of chest
alternating with asthma"
RESPIRATION - ASTHMATIC - emotions - after : The remedy "thyreotr mtf11" was moved here from
the rubric "RESPIRATION - ASTHMATIC - psychogenic causes; from" which was deleted.
RESPIRATION - ASTHMATIC - rose cold, following : Rose cold or rose fever: a sort of hay fever
caused by grass pollens, which are in the air while roses and other flowers are blooming.
RESPIRATION - DIFFICULT - accompanied by - Shoulders; raised : The remedy "ant-c k" was moved
here from "EXTREMITIES - RAISED - Shoulder - dyspnea, with". The remedy "eup-per k" was moved
to "RESPIRATION -DIFFICULT - lying - head; with the - high - must lie with head and shoulders
high".
RESPIRATION - DIFFICULT - talking - after : "Respiration - difficult - talking - after": nat-c in Kent
has to be replaced by nit-ac. (See A1: ... she could not speak. It took away her breath) (Henk van
Munster, Netherlands)
RESPIRATION - IMPEDED, obstructed - pressure; from - Heart; sensation of pressure at : [h1 Belladonna] Es kam ihr ans Herz (die Herzgrube), wie Herz-Drcken; sie konnte nicht recht
athmen; dabei belkeit, die nach dem Halse steigt, als sollte sie sich bergeben, und so
Herz-Drcken und belkeit absatzweise etwa aller 7 Minuten (n. 1/4 St.) [Stf.] versus: [h1 Belladonna] - She felt at the heart (the scrobiculus cordis) like cardiac oppression; she could not
breathe properly; at the same time nausea, which rises up to the throat, as if she must vomit,
and so cardiac oppression and nausea in fits about every seven minutes (aft. 1/4 h.). [Stf.] result:
Hahnemann does not talk about opression at all! Herz-Drcken: pressure felt at the heart /
scrobiculus cordis (Peter Vint - Germany)
Cough
COUGH - MORNING - noon; until : The original Kent rubrics were: - COUGH - NOON - lying down amel. - COUGH - LYING - noon - amel. In the Materia Medica we find that "noon" and "lying down"
do not belong in one symptom. [a1 - Manganum-act. + -c. (old abbr.) - Respiration organs] - *
Deep cough, without expectoration, ceasing on lying down, and recurring next day; with firm
mucous expectoration and shattering pain in the pit of the stomach and chest; suddenly
disappearing at noon, [a8]. That is why the remedy "mang" was moved to this new rubric "COUGH
- MORNING - noon; until". The remedy "mang" is also present in "COUGH - LYING - amel.".
COUGH - CROUPY - sopor; with : - "CROUPY - sopor, stertorous breathing and wheezing; with open mouth and head thrown back; with - child starts up and is on point of suffocating, turns
balck and blue in face - rattling breathing sets in again; after which cough with - suffocation and
paralysis of lungs appear unavoidable": this symptom has been split into meaningful bits.
COUGH - ELONGATED Uvula; from : The original symptom of Kent "COUGH - ELONGATED Uvula; as
from" has 6 remedies: alum, bapt, brom, hyos, merc-i-r, nat-m. Only "alum" and "brom" have
sensation of elongated uvula. The other remedies have actual elongated uvula. You find them in
this rubric. The remedies "alum" and "brom" were moved to "COUGH - ELONGATED Uvula; from sensation of elongated uvula".
COUGH - ELONGATED Uvula; from - sensation of elongated uvula : The original symptom of Kent
"COUGH - ELONGATED Uvula; as from" has 6 remedies: alum, bapt, brom, hyos, merc-i-r, nat-m.
Only "alum" and "brom" have sensation of elongated uvula. The other remedies have actual
elongated uvula. Therefore they were moved to "COUGH - ELONGATED Uvula; from".
COUGH - HACKING - day and night : The original Kent symptom is "COUGH - HACKING - night - and
day".
COUGH - HACKING - weather - cold - wet - agg. : The original Kent symptom is: COUGH - HACKING
- air - chill, during. We suspect Kent meant "in chilly air" because in the Materia Medica we find:
[k2 - Calcarea phosphorica] - In thin, pale, sickly people with dry, hacking cough worse in cold,
damp weather in rheumatic constitutions.
COUGH - IRRITATION; from - Palate; in : The original symptom was: Cough irritation extends to
palate.
COUGH - RACKING : To torment, as by torture
COUGH - REFLECTING agg. : The rubric we find in Boger is "Cough - meditating". We believe
however that in the period Boger lived "meditating" was used in the sense of "reflecting" and not
in the sense "meditation" is used today. Boenninghausen writes "nachdenken" which also means
"reflecting".
COUGH - SHOCKS; from - Heart; of : The remedy "phos h2" was first added here at "COUGH SHOCK; from - Heart; of". This is not very clear. The original symptom is: [h2.de - Phosphorus]
Nach dem Mittag-Essen, Herzstsse, zwei Stunden lang, die sie zum ftern Husten nthigten und
wobei ihr oft Rthe ins Gesicht steigt. (d. 4. T.) "shocks" is a misleading term here because
"Herzstsse" as I understand them are single violent beats of the heart a kind of thumping as
correctly translated by Allen (A1) [a1 - Phosphorus - Heart and pulse] - Thumping of the heart for
two hours after dinner, frequently provoking cough, with redness frequently mounting into the
face(fourth day), [_a1]. (Peter Vint - Germany)
COUGH - STRETCHING - agg. : The original Kent symptom is: COUGH - STRETCHING - followed by
coughing.
COUGH - YAWNING agg. or excites the cough : The act of yawning immediately excites or agg. the
cough. In case both yawning and coughing appear together see the rubric COUGH - ACCOMPANIED
BY - yawning
Expectoration
EXPECTORATION - ASH-COLORED clots; round : This is a mistake by Kent: "spots" should be "clots".
See the texts by Allen and Hering.
Chest
CHEST - AGALACTIA : Absence of or decreased secretion of milk following delivery
CHEST - ANGINA pectoris : Angina as such may indicate throat - inflammation
CHEST - ANGINA pectoris - pseudo angina pectoris : The same as false angina. It is a syndrome
appearing in nervous persons. We see precordial pain, fatigue, and lassitude, without evidence of
organic disease of the heart.
CHEST - CARDIALGIA : Nowadays cardialgia stands for pain in the heart. In the classical texts, such
as a1, hr1, etc., it means much more frequently "heartburn"
CHEST - CAVITIES; tubercular : A cavity, especially a pathological excavation from loss of
pulmonary tissue in tuberculosis.
CHEST - CHICKEN BREAST : Owing to the softness of the ribs, the thorax becomes compressed
laterally, with resulting projection of the sternum; this is the pectus carinatum, or chicken
breast.
CHEST - CHOREA CORDIS : Chorea accompanied by great irregularity of the heart's action.
CHEST - DISCOLORATION - redness - erythematous : Morbid redness of the skin due to capillary
congestion
CHEST - DROPSY - accompanied by - Heart disease; organic : The remedies "apoc k, spig k" were
moved here from the symptom "CHEST - DROPSY - disease, with organic" which was deleted.
CHEST - ENLARGED sensation - Heart : The remedies "acon bg3" and "stroph-s sp1" and the
subrubric "bulging through ribs when lying" were moved here from "CHEST - HYPERTROPHY Heart; of - sensation of". The remedies "bov sf1, lach k, sulph ptk2" were moved here from "MIND
- DELUSIONS - heart - large; too".
CHEST - ERUPTIONS - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an UNCLEAR /
AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the following two
reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source in its
entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
CHEST - INFLAMMATION - Bronchial tubes - Bronchioles : Inflammation of the smallest bronchial
tubes, the bronchioles. Also called capillary bronchitis.
CHEST - INFLAMMATION - Lungs - low forms : [k2 - Phosphorus] ...in low forms of pneumonia
known as typhoid fever.
CHEST - INFLAMMATION - Lungs - typhoid fever : Pneumonia accompanied by typhoid-like
symptoms (adynamia, sopor, delirium, fever), sometimes also called asthenic pneumonia.
CHEST - MILK - bloody : The remedies of the symptoom: CHEST - MILK - blood; with were move to
CHEST - MILK - bloody.
CHEST - MILK - decreased : Less mik is present since the beginning (>< disappearing !)
CHEST - MILK - disappearing : Normal flow of milk starts disappearing (>< decreased!)
CHEST - MILK - failing to release the milk - fear; from : This means that the milk is produced but
does not come out during nursing.
CHEST - MILK - failing to release the milk - pain; from : This means that the milk is produced but
does not come out during nursing.
CHEST - MILK - flowing spontaneously : When milk flows at an improper time, in a woman who is
breastfeeding.
CHEST - MILK - pregnancy; in women when not related to : Flow of milk is physiologic towards the
end of pregnancy, during breast-feeding, and to some extent, after pregnancy and after
breast-feeding. This symptom galactorrhea should be used, however, for the constant leakage of
milk in conditions different from the above.
CHEST - MILK FEVER : Milk fever is a disease that occurs in dairy cows after calving. It is
characterized in a drop in blood calcium, paralysis etc.
CHEST - MURMURS : Gentle, blowing sound during auscultation All Kent remedies were originally
added here at the general rubric "CHEST - MURMURS". Then two subrubrics were created in
Synthesis: cardiac murmurs and respiratory murmurs. We checked the Kent remedies and they all
refer to cardiac murmurs. That is why we moved them to the more specific subrubric.
CHEST - PAIN - drawing pain - inward : The original Kent symptom is: CHEST - PAIN - drawing pain extending to - before backwards. The meaning of "before backwards" is "inward". In Allen we find:
[a1 - Asterias rubens - Chest] - * Drawing pain towards the inner portion of the chest from before
backward; under the left breast, this pain extends over the whole inner portion of the arm to the
end of the little finger (fifth day), [_a1].
CHEST - PAIN - raw; as if : This rubric includes rawness in trachea and bronchi (Kent)
CHEST - PAIN - Heart - night when lying on the back, amel. by sitting up - bursting pain : The
original Kent symptom is "CHEST - PAIN - bursting - Heart - night when lying on the back, amel. by
sitting up; sensation of. We deleted "sensation of" at the end of the symptom, because "bursting
pain" already is a sensation.
CHEST - PAIN - Heart - accompanied by - respiration; difficult : Original location in Kent:
"Respiration - difficult - heart, during pain in"
CHEST - PAIN - Heart - palpitations - with - burning : The remedy "suprar rly4" belongs in "CHEST PAIN - burning" and "CHEST - PALPITATION of heart". There is no concommitance. ! [rly4 Suprarenalis - Chest] Heart palpitation. Burning pain in the chest. The remedy "kali-c br1" was
moved here from "CHEST - PALPITATIONS of heart - burning in heart, with".
CHEST - PAIN - Heart - extending to - Fingers - left hand; of : MRR1-78-16
CHEST - PAIN - Middle of chest - afternoon - cutting pain : The symptom "Chest - pain - cutting middle amel. p.m.": (mag-c) was deleted because in MM Hahnemann we find "painful cutting,
deep in the middle of the chest,... after dinner till evening": the opposite of what Kent has
mentioned (no amel. !). This symptom is reported in Synthesis as the following: "pain - cutting middle" and " pain - cutting - middle - afternoon".
CHEST - PAIN - Middle of chest - cutting pain : The symptom "Chest - pain - cutting - middle amel.
p.m.": (mag-c) was deleted because in MM Hahnemann we find "painful cutting, deep in the
middle of the chest,... after dinner till evening": the opposite of what Kent has mentioned (no
amel. !). This symptom is reported in Synthesis as the following: "pain - cutting - middle" and "
pain - cutting - middle - afternoon".
CHEST - PAIN - Pleura - intermittent : The rubric "intercurrent" we find in the original mtf11 is not
correct. Dr. Farokh Master says it is a pain that comes and goes, intermittent.
CHEST - PAIN - Ribs - Floating : Floating ribs : the eleventh and twelfth pairs of ribs, not attached
to the breastbone or to other ribs but only to the vertebrae False ribs (= short ribs) : the five
lower ribs on each side of the human body: so called because not directly attached to the
sternum
CHEST - PAIN - Ribs - Lower - right - splinter; as from a : The original symptom was "CHEST - PAIN
- splinter in right lower ribs". But in the MM we see that it is "as from a splinter".
CHEST - PAIN - Ribs - Short : OED (Oxford English Dictionary), vol IX, P. 743, 3rd column: short rib,
(a) a popular name for any of the lower ribs which do not attach to the sternum. A further hint is
that Jahr obviously considered "kurze Ribbe" and "falsche Ribbe" the same. hlb2.de - Alumina]
Brennen in der ganzen rechten Brustseite mit Stechen und Zwngen in einer rechten falschen
Ribbe, Nachmittags 1 Uhr (d. 1. T.). [j7.de - Alumina - Brust und Athem] Wrme in der Mitte der
Brust; Hitze, vorn, fhlbar beim Athmen; Brennen in der rechten Seite, mit Stechen und Zwngen
in einer kurzen Ribbe. A further hint you get from Synthesis or MM you find: CHEST - PAIN aching - Costal cartilages of short ribs CHEST - PAIN - cutting - Costal cartilages of short ribs
CHEST - PAIN - gnawing - Costal cartilages of short ribs CHEST - PAIN - sore, bruised - Costal
cartilages - Short ribs CHEST - PAIN - stitching - Costal cartilages - Short ribs near sternum; of
CHEST - PAIN - tearing - Costal cartilages of short ribs or in the MM [dgt1 - Argentum metallicum]
- of the costal cartilages, especially of the short ribs (with swelling). Now if you look what a
costal cartilage is: cartilago costalis, [TA] costal cartilage: a bar of hyaline cartilage by which
the ventral extremity of a rib is attached to the sternum in the case of the true ribs, or to the
superiorly adjacent ribs in the case of the upper false ribs; called also sternal cartilage. Then you
see that the floating ribs do not have them! A further hint is the fact that in Synthesis there is
not even one superrubric that has both short and false ribs? Ergo short rib = false rib [Peter Vint,
Germany]
CHEST - PAIN - Sides - left - extending to - right - aching : The original Kent symptom is "CHEST PAIN - aching - Sides - extending to - left to right"
CHEST - PAIN - Sides - left - extending to - left - stitching pain : Stitching pain towards left.
CHEST - PAIN - Spot; in a - burning : The original Kent symptom is "CHEST - PAIN - burning - spot; in
a fixed".
CHEST - PALPITATION of heart - irritable heart : Syndrome with palpitation, breathlessness and
giddiness which was noted chiefly in soldiers, in active war service. It could represent prolonged
anxiety or disturbed autonomic function, even if it is typically present in persons who are
physically and emotionally healthy
CHEST - PALPITATION of heart - talking agg. : "Chest - palpitation - talking": plat. has to be moved
to the rubric "... - talking - public; before talking in" (Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
CHEST - PERSPIRATION - night - midnight : "Chest - perspiration - night - midnight": delete lyc. (Dr.
Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
CHEST - PNEUMOTHORAX : The presence of air of gas in the pleural cavity.
CHEST - SWELLING - Heart - sensation as if : Swelling and enlargement are very similar. The
difference is that swelling is an active process, while enlarged is passive, done. (Erik Van
Woensel, The Netherlands)
CHEST - TUMORS - Axillae - encysted : enclosed in a sac, bladder or cyst
CHEST - HEART; complaints of the - accompanied by - respiration - difficult : Original location in
Kent: "Respiration - difficult - heart - complaints and urinary troubles"
CHEST - RIBS; complaints of - Short ribs : OED (Oxford English Dictionary), vol IX, P. 743, 3rd
column: short rib, (a) a popular name for any of the lower ribs which do not attach to the
sternum. A further hint is that Jahr obviously considered "kurze Ribbe" and "falsche Ribbe" the
same. hlb2.de - Alumina] Brennen in der ganzen rechten Brustseite mit Stechen und Zwngen in
einer rechten falschen Ribbe, Nachmittags 1 Uhr (d. 1. T.). [j7.de - Alumina - Brust und Athem]
Wrme in der Mitte der Brust; Hitze, vorn, fhlbar beim Athmen; Brennen in der rechten Seite,
mit Stechen und Zwngen in einer kurzen Ribbe. A further hint you get from Synthesis or MM you
find: CHEST - PAIN - aching - Costal cartilages of short ribs CHEST - PAIN - cutting - Costal
cartilages of short ribs CHEST - PAIN - gnawing - Costal cartilages of short ribs CHEST - PAIN sore, bruised - Costal cartilages - Short ribs CHEST - PAIN - stitching - Costal cartilages - Short ribs
near sternum; of CHEST - PAIN - tearing - Costal cartilages of short ribs or in the MM [dgt1 Argentum metallicum] - of the costal cartilages, especially of the short ribs (with swelling). Now
if you look what a costal cartilage is: cartilago costalis, [TA] costal cartilage: a bar of hyaline
cartilage by which the ventral extremity of a rib is attached to the sternum in the case of the
true ribs, or to the superiorly adjacent ribs in the case of the upper false ribs; called also sternal
cartilage. Then you see that the floating ribs do not have them! A further hint is the fact that in
Synthesis there is not even one superrubric that has both short and false ribs? Ergo short rib =
false rib [Peter Vint, Germany]
Back
BACK - CURVATURE of spine : Curvature in any direction (vertical or horizontal). (Marc Br)
BACK - CURVATURE of spine - Scheuermann's syndrome : painful dorsal kyphosis in children
BACK - ERUPTIONS - erythema : Morbid redness of the skin due to capillary congestion
BACK - ERUPTIONS - miliaria rubra : Miliaria rubra is a condition resulting from inflammation and
obstruction of the ducts of the sweat glands; the sweat escapes into the epidermis, causing
pruritic erythematous apulovesicles. When used alone "miliaria" refers to "miliaria rubra". This
condition is also called "heat rash" or "pricly heat".
BACK - ERUPTIONS - prickly heat : Miliaria rubra is a condition resulting from inflammation and
obstruction of the ducts of the sweat glands; the sweat escapes into the epidermis, causing
pruritic erythematous apulovesicles. When used alone "miliaria" refers to "miliaria rubra". This
condition is also called "heat rash" or "pricly heat".
BACK - ERUPTIONS - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an UNCLEAR /
AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the following two
reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source in its
entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
BACK - FIBROSITIS : Excessive growth of fibrous tissue in muscle sheaths, muscular rheumatism
BACK - INJURIES - Spine - railway spine : Neurotic symptoms following spinal injury
BACK - ITCHING - Dorsal region - Scapulae - Between - scratching - agg. - after scratching;
burning : The original Kent symptom "BACK - ITCHING - Dorsal region - Scapulae - Between scratching amel. - burning after" was not correct. It is not "scratching amel." but "burning after
scratching" (see a1 author note).
BACK - LUMBAGO : Pain in the lumbar region, esp. of a muscular type
BACK - PAIN - night - midnight - after - 4 h - waking; on - drawing pain : The original symptom
was "BACK - PAIN - drawing - morning - 4 h on waking"
BACK - PAIN - contracting : The remedies "canth, cocc, mag-m, nux-v and sabad" were moved here
from the symptom "Back - Pain - constringing" because the word "constringe" is rare and means
"to cause to contract, constrict or shrink".
BACK - PAIN - lying - hard; on something - amel. : This is the rubric to take if somebody (animals
or people) always prefer to lie with their back on something hard - even if it's not involved with
pain. Communication by Dr. J. Knzli. (Marc Br)
BACK - PAIN - menses - before - agg. - night - sore : The original Kent symptom is: BACK - PAIN sore - menses - before, agg. at night.
BACK - PAIN - Cervical region - twisting and turning the head; on - burnt; sensation as if : The
remedy "calc k" was moved here from "BACK - PAIN - burning - Cervical region - turning and
twisting head; as if burnt on" because the pain is "as if burnt" and not "burning" (see a1 author
note)
BACK - PAIN - Cervical region - Vertebrae - Articulation of last cervical and first dorsal vertebra :
The remedy "dig" was moved to the subrubric "bending neck forward; on" because the pain only
appears on bending the neck. (see author notes)
BACK - PAIN - Coccyx - stitching pain - startling : The remedy "mur-ac" was moved to "BACK - PAIN
- stitching - Sacral region - startling". Because in Hering we find: [hr1 - Muriaticum acidum - Neck
and back] BACK - PAIN - Dorsal region - bending - backward - amel. - constricting pain : The original Kent
symptom is: "BACK - PAIN - constricting - Dorsal region - sitting, bending back amel., bending
forward agg.". We split this symptom in: BACK - PAIN - constricting - Dorsal region - sitting agg.
BACK - PAIN - constricting - Dorsal region - bending - backward - amel. BACK - PAIN - constricting
- Dorsal region - bending - foreward - agg. (see a1 author note)
BACK - PAIN - Dorsal region - bending - forward - agg. - constricting pain : The original Kent
symptom is: "BACK - PAIN - constricting - Dorsal region - sitting, bending back amel., bending
forward agg.". We split this symptom in: BACK - PAIN - constricting - Dorsal region - sitting agg.
BACK - PAIN - constricting - Dorsal region - bending - backward - amel. BACK - PAIN - constricting
- Dorsal region - bending - foreward - agg. (see a1 author note)
BACK - PAIN - Dorsal region - sitting agg. - constricting pain : The original Kent symptom is: "BACK
- PAIN - constricting - Dorsal region - sitting, bending back amel., bending forward agg.". We split
this symptom in: BACK - PAIN - constricting - Dorsal region - sitting agg. BACK - PAIN - constricting
- Dorsal region - bending - backward - amel. BACK - PAIN - constricting - Dorsal region - bending foreward - agg. (see a1 author note)
BACK - PAIN - Dorsal region - Scapulae - right - anger; after : KR1-79-71
BACK - PAIN - Dorsal region - Scapulae - tearing pain - drawing pain : The remedy "stann h2" was
moved to "BACK - PAIN - drawing - Dorsal region - Scapulae - tearing".
BACK - PAIN - Dorsal region - Scapulae - Below - right - afternoon - 16 h : A1: Painful tearing
between the shoulderblades at 4 P.M.
BACK - PAIN - Dorsal region - Spine - pressing on dorsal vertebra; jerking involuntary when : The
original symptom "Back - pain - jerking - involuntary when pressing on dorsal vertebra": arn. from
Kent has been modified and moved as "Back - pain - dorsal region - spine - pressing on dorsal
vertebra; jerking involuntary when" as "jerking" in this case is not a description of the type of
backache (Peter Vint, Germany)
BACK - PAIN - Lumbar region - motion - agg. : The original rubric is: BACK - PAIN - Lumbar region motion - during.
BACK - PAIN - Lumbar region - pressure - deep - amel. - cutting pain : The way Kent wrote it, the
symptom indicates that pressing deeply ameliorates the pain. This is not correct. It is a deep
cutting pain that ameliorates by pressure. See text by Hahnemann in author note. The remedy
was moved to "BACK - Pain - cutting - Lumbar region - deep inside - amel.".
BACK - PAIN - Lumbar region - stepping agg. - pressing pain : The symptoms "Back - pain - pressing
- lumbar region - stepping - during - ..." etc. were deleted. These subrubrics of stepping are
erroneous. The sequence should be on level 5: "stepping"; "stool before (berb.1K, carb-v.2K);
"stool - during"; "stool - during - hard" and "stool -after"
BACK - PAIN - Lumbar region - extending to - Calves : The original text in Kent is the following :
Back - pain - lumbar, extending to - legs, down the - to calves.
BACK - PAIN - Sacral region - startling - stitching pain : The remedy "mur-ac" was moved here from
the symptom "BACK - PAIN - stitching - Coccyx - startling". Because in Hering we find: [hr1 Muriaticum acidum - Neck and back] BACK - PAIN - Sacroiliac symphyses - extending to - Down region of sciatic nerves - delivery;
during : The original Kent symptom : BACK - PAIN - Sacroiliac symphysis - extending to - Down
region of sciatic nerves - labor; during. In Synthesis we use "delivery" instead of "labor".
BACK - STIFFNESS - cramping : The symptom "Back- stiffness - chill, during - cramp-like": nit-ac. in
Kent: rubric is indented too much to the right, and has become: "stiffness - cramping" (A1:
spasmodic stiffness ...)
Extremities
EXTREMITIES - ACROCYANOSIS : Acrocyanosis: Blueness of the extremities (the hands and feet).
Acrocyanosis is typically symmetrical. It is marked by a mottled blue or red discoloration of the
skin of the fingers and wrists and the toes and ankles and by profuse sweating and coldness of the
fingers and toes.
EXTREMITIES - AGILITY : Agility implies both rapidity and dexterity of movement. The old RR to
"EXTREMITIES - RESTLESSNESS" was replaced by a RR to "GENERALS - AGILITY" because agility
implies both rapidity and dexterity of movement. (sugg. J. Ozanon Forum)
EXTREMITIES - ATAXIA : Lost ability to coordinate muscular movement
EXTREMITIES - ATHETOSIS : Slow recurrent motion of hands and feet, principally due to brain lesion
EXTREMITIES - BLOOD - rush of blood to : The rubric "EXTREMITIES - BLOOD - rush of blood to Limbs" was deleted, because "limbs" and "extremities" are synonymous. The remedy "calc-s k2" is
already present on level 3. (Peter Vint, Germany)
EXTREMITIES - BLOOD - rush of blood to - Hands - hang down agg.; letting arms : The original
Kent rubric is: "EXTREMITIES - BLOOD - rush of blood to - Hands - Arm hanging down". We
modified the rubric because Kent also has "EXTREMITIES - BLOOD - rush of blood to - Fingers letting arm hang down; on".
EXTREMITIES - BLOOD - rush of blood to - Upper limbs : The rubric "Arms" was modified to "Upper
limbs".
EXTREMITIES - CONTRACTION of muscles and tendons - Upper arms - Muscles - Flexor muscles :
The original rubric was "flexor tendon" but because "muscle" is in prolongation of "tendon" we
decided to use "flexor muscles" throughout Synthesis.
EXTREMITIES - CRAMPS - Legs - Calves - lying - agg. : The original Kent symptom is "EXTREMITIES CRAMPS - Leg - Calf - lying - while".
EXTREMITIES - CRAMPS - Toes - Muscles - Flexor muscles : The original rubric was "flexor tendon"
but because "muscle" is in prolongation of "tendon" we decided to use "flexor muscles" throughout
Synthesis.
EXTREMITIES - CRAMPS - Upper limbs - night - midnight - before - waking; on : "Extremities cramps - upper limbs - midnight - on waking": caust must be "... - midnight - before - waking, on"
applicable. In most cases these are itching eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
EXTREMITIES - ERUPTIONS - Legs - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an
UNCLEAR / AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the
following two reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source
in its entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
EXTREMITIES - ERUPTIONS - Lower limbs - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has
an UNCLEAR / AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the
following two reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source
in its entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
EXTREMITIES - ERUPTIONS - Thighs - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an
UNCLEAR / AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the
following two reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source
in its entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
EXTREMITIES - ERUPTIONS - Toes - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an
UNCLEAR / AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the
following two reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source
in its entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
EXTREMITIES - ERUPTIONS - Upper limbs - erythematous : Morbid redness of the skin due to
capillary congestion
EXTREMITIES - ERUPTIONS - Upper limbs - pimples - head; with a black depressed : "Extremities eruptions - upper limbs - pimples - head, black, with depressed": was replaced by "... - head; with
a black depressed" (See A1: calc-s.). This description involves the head of the pimple.
EXTREMITIES - ERUPTIONS - Upper limbs - urticaria : Slightly elevated patches, usually whiter than
the surrounding skin, with severe itching The difference between erythema and urticaria has not
always been clearly made in the old days. That is why some remedies which should be present
under "Erythema", may be found under "Urticaria" even if this is considered a very different
condition nowadays
EXTREMITIES - FELON : Purulent infection of the distal phalanx of the finger, including paronychia
and onychia
EXTREMITIES - FELON - Nail; beginning in : Purulent infection of the tissues lateral to the
fingernail
EXTREMITIES - FELON - Nail; beginning in - runaround : Paronychia progressing from one side of
the nail, around the base and to the other side of the nail
EXTREMITIES - FELON - Root of nail; at : Inflammation of matrix of nail
EXTREMITIES - GANGLION : Cystic tumour of an aponeurosis or tendon
EXTREMITIES - HARDNESS - Hands - Skin : The remedy "petr" was moved here from the rubric
"EXTREMITIES - HARDNESS - Hand - Tissue" which was deleted.
EXTREMITIES - HEAT - Feet - Soles - evening - wine; after : "Extremities - heat - foot - sole evening - after lying down - wine": psor in Kent: this rubric is indented too much to the right, and
has been corrected in Synthesis as "... - evening - wine; after" (See A1)
EXTREMITIES - HEAT - Hands - chill - during : The Kent symptom "EXTREMITIES - HEAT - Hand - cold
- during" was deleted because when we check the remedies in EH we find it is "chill; during". (see
author notes). The remedies were moved to this rubric.
EXTREMITIES - HEAT - Hands - chilliness; during : The Kent symptom "EXTREMITIES - HEAT - Hand cold - internal cold; during" was deleted because when we check the remedies in EH we find it is
"internal chilliness". (see author notes). The remedies were moved to this rubric.
EXTREMITIES - INFLAMMATION - Feet - Ringbone : A pathological bony growth on the pastern
bones of a horse, many times it causes lameness
EXTREMITIES - INFLAMMATION - Joints - synovitis : Synovitis: the inflammation of synovial
membranes
EXTREMITIES - INFLAMMATION - Knees - Bursae : Inflammation of the bursa in front of the patella,
with fluid accumulating in it. This is also called the "housemaid's knee".
EXTREMITIES - ISCHIAS : Pain along the nervus ischiadicus. In the old texts ischias (or ischialgia) is
sometimes used for pain at the ischium (hip bone), or more precisely at the tuber ischiadicum.
EXTREMITIES - JERKING - Legs - motion - amel. : "Extremities - jerking - leg - lying on the back,
while - motion amel.": carb-v. in Kent: rubric is indented too much to the right, and has become:
"... - leg - motion amel." (see A1: ...jerkings in both lower legs: .. unable to lie still...")
EXTREMITIES - JERKING - Upper limbs - cold air agg. : "Extremities - jerking - upper limbs - air, in
windy weather": sulph. This strange symptom arises from the awkward expression in Hering: "...
in air, during windy, cold weather, jerkings ..." The symptom has been deleted as such and
sulphur was added to "... - cold air, in" and ... - wind; in cold".
EXTREMITIES - JERKING - Upper limbs - wind agg.; cold : "Extremities - jerking - upper limbs - air,
in windy weather": sulph. This strange symptom arises from the awkward expression in Hering:
"... in air, during windy, cold weather, jerkings ..." The symptom has been deleted as such and
sulphur was added to "... - cold air, in" and ... - wind; in cold".
EXTREMITIES - MILK LEG : Phlebitis of the femoral vein with colorless swelling of the leg
EXTREMITIES - MOTION - Thumb - convulsive : The original Kent symptom: EXTREMITIES - MOTION Fingers - Thumb - convulsive. In Synthesis "Thumb" is not a subrubric of "Fingers".
EXTREMITIES - ONYCHOPHAGY : Habit of biting the nails
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - clawing : The subrubrics of "EXTREMITIES - CLAWING" were moved here
because they are "pain rubrics".
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - cut with a sharp instrument; as if slightly : The original word "Ritzen" means
to make a small incision, like you might do when you cut yourself and this results in a small
incision in the skin. [Peter Vint, Germany] Most subrubrics were first added at "EXTREMITIES PAIN - scratching" but this is not correct.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - lying - agg. - Side lain on : The original Kent symptom is "EXTREMITIES - PAIN
- lain on".
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - lying - Side lain on - sore : The original Kent symptom is "EXTREMITIES - PAIN
- sore - lying - on which he lies; in the limb.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - motion - continued motion - amel. - sore : "Extremities - pain - sore motion - continued - amel.": nat-ar. has to be moved to the rubric "... - motion - continued": read
K2 and HR1 (Henk van Munster, Netherlands)
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Ankles - extending to - Heels - shooting pain : The original rubric is
"EXTREMITIES - PAIN - shooting - Ankle - Heels; over the.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Feet - alternating sides : The original text was: "alternately in each".
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Fingers - First - Extensor muscle - drawing pain : The original rubric was
"extensor tendon" but because "muscle" is in prolongation of "tendon" we decided to use "extensor
muscles" throughout Synthesis.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Fingers - Joints - Distal - tearing pain : In Kent we find "Extremities - pain tearing - fingers - joints of - first" with the remedies "agar, brom, kali-i, lyc, mag-c and zinc".
Knzli misinterpreted the first joint as the distal joint and added a note saying that the remedies
"agar, lyc, mag-c and zinc" were not to be included here. Knzli was wrong because according to
medical dictionaries the first joint is the proximal joint and the third joint the distal joint.
Synthesis 8 has been modified accordingly. The remedies "agar, lyc, mag-c and zinc" should be
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Spots; in - sore : The original Kent symptom was: "spots here and there". But
it was changed to "spots; in" because of streamlining.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Thighs - stretching - limbs - agg. - sprained; as if : "Extremities - pain sprained, as if - thigh - stretching out limbs, on": for caps. this symptom should be "... - thigh abduction, on" (Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Thighs - walking - agg. - burning : "Extremities - pain - burning - thigh walking, while": ph-ac. should be moved to "... - thigh - walking, while - amel." (See MM H) (Dr.
Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Thighs - Knees; above - evening - tearing pain : "Extremities - pain - tearing
- thigh - above the knee - evening": mag-m. should be moved to the rubric "... - evening - bed, in"
(Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Thumbs - Joints - Distal - drawing pain : The original symptom was :
"EXTREMITIES - PAIN - drawing - Thumb - Joints - second" Because the thumb only has 2 joints, the
second joint is the distal joint.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Thumbs - Joints - Distal - stitching pain : Thumb only has two joints:
proximal and distal.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Toes - frozen previously : original Kent symptom is EXTREMITIES - PAIN Toes - frozen formerly
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Toes - First - evening - motion agg. - stitching pain : In Knzli on page 956
we find: (non 18: on motion: phos) The reference 18 stands for Knzli. So in Sy. we only keep "kl,
xxx" as authors.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Toes - First - Extensor muscle - tearing pain : The original rubric was
"extensor tendon" but because "muscle" is in prolongation of "tendon" we decided to use "extensor
muscles" throughout Synthesis.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Toes - Fourth - extending to - Hip : Stomach meridian draws a line over the
lower limb from the fourth toe to the hip.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper arms - night - lying on upper arm agg. : The original Kent symptom is
"EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper arm - night - lying on it".
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper arms - exertion agg. - tearing pain : Original Kent symptom:
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - tearing - Upper arm - work agg.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper arms - extending the arm - agg. - sore : To straighten out a flexed
limb of the body
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper arms - motion - agg. - burning - pricking : The original Kent symptom
is "EXTREMITIES - PAIN - buring - Upper arm - pricking on motion".
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper arms - raising arm agg. - broken; as if : The original Kent symptom is
"EXTREMITIES - PAIN - broken, sensation as if - Upper arm - raising it, on".
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper arms - stretching - arm - agg. - sore : To cause in the body or limbs a
reach out to full length Original Kent symptom: EXTREMITIES - PAIN - sore - Upper arm stretching limb agg.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper arms - uncovering arm agg. - tearing pain : Original Kent symptom:
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - tearing - Upper arms - uncovering it
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper limbs - right - and - left lower limb : HR1 mentions asc-t. should be
added to "... upper limb - right - and left lower limb" but also to "... - left - and right lower limb".
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper limbs - left - and right lower limb : HR1 mentions asc-t. should be
added to "... upper limb - right - and left lower limb" but also to "... - left - and right lower limb".
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper limbs - extending them : To straighten out a flexed limb of the body
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Upper limbs - stretching - agg. : To cause in the body or limbs a reach out to
full length
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Wrists - alternating sides : Original Kent symptom: EXTREMITIES - PAIN Wrist - alternately in one or the other
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Wrists - alternating sides - stitching pain : The original text was:
"alternately in each".
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Wrists - extending to - Fingers - First finger - burning : Original Kent
symptom: EXTREMITIES - PAIN - burning - Wrist - extending to - Finger; first
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Wrists - extending to - Fingers - First finger - Thumb; and - burning :
Original Kent symptom: EXTREMITIES - PAIN - burning - Wrist - extending to - Finger; first Thumb; and
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Wrists - extending to - Fingers - Fourth finger - burning : Original Kent
symptom: EXTREMITIES - PAIN - burning - Wrist - extending to - Fourth finger
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Wrists - extending to - Fingers - Third and fourth fingers - hanging down
arm; on - sprained; as if : In the Materia Medica we find "fourth and fifth fingers". But in modern
English we speak of the thumb and four fingers. Webster's clearly states "first finger = index
finger = forefinger". Therefore we modified "fourth and fifth" into "third and fourth" in Synthesis.
Original Kent symptom: EXTREMITIES - PAIN - sprained, as if - Wrist - extending to - Fingers; into
third and fourth - hanging down arm; on
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Wrists - extending to - Upward - stitching pain : Original Kent symptom:
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - stitching - Wrist - upward
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Wrists - extending to - Upward - Shoulders - stitching pain : EXTREMITIES PAIN - stitching - Wrist - upward - Shoulder
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Wrists - Radial side : On the side of the radius, the outer and shorter of the
two bones of the forearm.
EXTREMITIES - PAIN - Wrists - Ulnar side : Kent put as synonym : "outer side". This is not correct.
The ulna is the inner and larger of the two bones of the forearm on the opposite side of the
thumb. You have to consider the arms with palms facing up.
EXTREMITIES - PARALYSIS - rising - agg. : "Extremities - paralysis - rising - agg.": for phos. this
symptom should be "... - rising - amel." (Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
EXTREMITIES - RAISED - Shoulders : The remedy "ferr k" was moved to "EXTREMITIES - RAISED Upper arm - impossible to raise". [h1 - Ferrum metallicum] - Shooting and tearing in the upper
arm proceeding from the shoulder-joint, so that he could not raise the arm. We also find "ferr k"
in "EXTREMITIES - PAIN - tearing - Shoulder - raise arm; cannot".
EXTREMITIES - RAISED - Shoulders - dyspnea, with : The Kent remedy "ant-c" was moved to
"RESPIRATION - DIFFICULT - accompanied by - Shoulders; raised" and the Kent remedy "eup-per"
was moved to "RESPIRATION - DIFFICULT - lying - head; with the - high - must lie with head and
shoulders high".
EXTREMITIES - RAYNAUD'S DISEASE : Vasomotoric disease with attacks of sudden coldness,
capillary congestion and possibly blue swelling of the extremities
EXTREMITIES - SOFT - Feet - Soles - sensation of : The original Kent symptom is "Extremities - Soft,
sensation of soles". In Synthesis the rubric was moved under "Foot".
EXTREMITIES - SPAVIN : Disease of horses with as symptom the deposit of bone (bone spavin)
developped in the hock joint. Usually it causes lameness
EXTREMITIES - SPINA VENTOSA : Spina ventosa, a true dactylitis occurring mostly in infants and
young children, characterized by enlargement of the fingers or toes, with caseation,
sequestration, and sinus formation.
EXTREMITIES - STIFFNESS - Feet - rising - sitting; from - agg. : "Extremities - stiffness - foot rising after sitting": caps. should be deleted (Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
EXTREMITIES - STIFFNESS - Hands - holding anything : "Extremities - stiffness - hand - holding
anything" nit-ac. should be moved to "... -hand - grasping"(See MM H) (Dr. Jost Knzli,
Switzerland)
EXTREMITIES - SUPPURATION - Fingers - First - Nail; around : The original symptom in Kent is:
Suppuration - Fingers - nails - of first finger. This is not correct for remedy "nat-s". The
suppuration is around all fingers not only the first. Therefore the remedy "nat-s" was moved to
"EXTREMITIES - SUPPURATION - Fingers - Nails - Around".
EXTREMITIES - TREMBLING - metabolic causes; from : Tremors of metabolic origin may be fine or
irregularly coarse or flapping . It is chiefly found in hyperthyroidism, hepatic renal and
respiratory failure.
EXTREMITIES - TREMBLING - reflecting agg. : The original Kent rubric is "EXTREMITIES - TREMBLING
- meditating, while". We believe that in the period Kent was alive, "meditating" was used in the
sense of "reflecting" and not in the sense "meditation" is used today.
EXTREMITIES - TREMBLING - Hands - dinner - during - agg. : "Extremities - trembling - hand dinner - during": mag-m. should be moved to "... - dinner - after" (See MM H) (Dr. Jost Knzli,
Switzerland)
EXTREMITIES - TREMBLING - Hands - holding objects - hold of anything; on taking : There is a
difference between "take hold of" which means "taking" and "to hold" which means "to take and
keep with the hands".
EXTREMITIES - TREMBLING - Hands - holding objects - holding objects; on : There is a difference
between "take hold of" which means "taking" and "to hold" which means "to take and keep with
the hands".
EXTREMITIES - TWITCHING - Forearms - morning - walking agg.; after : "Extremities - twitching forearm - morning - walking, after": for puls. this symptom should be "... - morning - waking,
after" (Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
EXTREMITIES - WALKING - gressus gallinaceous : Walking like a bird.
EXTREMITIES - WALKING - gressus vaccinus : Walking like a cow.
EXTREMITIES - WEAKNESS - Upper limbs - paralytic : The remedies "ph-ac h2, stann h2" were
moved to this rubric "EXTREMITIES - WEAKNESS - Upper limbs - paralytic". Because "motion paralytic" was indented incorrectly. (Robert Shore, USA)
EXTREMITIES - WITHERED : The remedy "phyt a1" was moved here from the rubric "EXTREMITIES WITHERED - Limbs" which was deleted because "limbs" and "extremities" are synonymous.
EXTREMITIES - NAILS; complaints of - exfoliation of nails : Nails are coming off in scales or layers
EXTREMITIES - NAILS; complaints of - stunted nails : "Extremities - crippled nails": wrong
translation of the German "verkrppelte Ngel": read German in Hahnemann on graphites, sepia,
etc. Error induced by Hering's translation. The remedies and rubrics were moved to the new
rubric "nails - stunted" (Dr. Jean-Claude Grgoire, Belgium)
Sleep
SLEEP - COMA VIGIL : A state of muttering delirium in which the person is lethargic and partly
conscious, yet never actually sleeping or completely comatose.
SLEEP - CONSCIOUS sleep : Asleep but aware of one's surroundings.
SLEEP - DREAMING : The subrubrics of "SLEEP - DREAMING" contain the modalities of dream. For the
contents of the dreams look under "DREAMS".
SLEEP - FALLING ASLEEP - chill - during : "Sleep - chill, during" has been modified and moved to a
more logical "Sleep - falling asleep - chill - during"
SLEEP - FALLING ASLEEP - convulsions - during : "Sleep - convulsion, during" has been modified
and moved to a more logical "Sleep - falling asleep - convulsion - during"
SLEEP - FALLING ASLEEP - heat - during : "Sleep - heat - sleeps during heat": has been modified
and moved to a more logical "falling asleep - heat - during", which in the original Kent (heat,
during, in intermittent) contains almost the same remedies.
SLEEP - FALLING ASLEEP - perspiration - during : "Sleep - perspiration, during" has been modified
and moved to a more logical "Sleep - falling asleep - perspiration - during"
SLEEP - POSITION - abdomen, on - pregnancy; during : = ... - pregnancy - beginning of pregnancy;
only on
SLEEP - SLEEPINESS - exertion - agg. : This is the physical exertion. For mental exertion see:
"SLEEP - SLEEPINESS - mental exertion - from"
SLEEP - SLEEPINESS - walking - air; in open - agg. : P. Salan informed us that the remedy "ars"
should be replaced by "ars-met". Therefore we added "slp, xxx" to the remedy "ars" and "slp" to
the remedy "ars-met".
SLEEP - SLEEPLESSNESS - night - midnight - before - morning; until : "Sleep - sleeplessness - night
- midnight - before - morning, towards": ambiguity existed for this rubric: was it the wrong
position of the symptom indicating "sleeplessness towards the morning", or was it meant to be
"sleeplessness from before midnight until (towards) the morning". Searching for the indicated
remedies of the rubric shows that the latter possibility emerges from the Materia Medica, mostly
from Hering, as for: ant-t., psor., ... The rubric has therefore been changed to "sleeplessness night - midnight - before - morning; until".
SLEEP - SLEEPLESSNESS - eyes - close; from sensation as if eyes will not : As can be seen in a2,
the phrasing in Synthesis "SLEEP - SLEEPLESSNESS - eyes - close the eyes; will not" must be wrong.
[a2 - Phosphorus - Sleep] - Sleeplessness; ....for a long time after waking in evening and night; till
1 A.M. on account of restlessness, also he cannot get his feet warm; from 1 till 4 A.M. ; on
account of a feeling as if eyes would not close but had to be kept closed with the hands and
turned about in head; ....... Therefore the symptom was modified to: "SLEEP - SLEEPLESSNESS eyes - close; from sensation as if eyes will not" (Erik Van Woensel - The Netherlands)
SLEEP - SLEEPLESSNESS - fever - asthenic fever; during : Fever characterized by weakness or
feebleness.
SLEEP - SLEEPLESSNESS - itching; from - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an
UNCLEAR / AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the
following two reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source
in its entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
SLEEP - YAWNING - coughing - causes cough : Remedies have been moved to the rubric "COUGH YAWNING agg. or excites the cough"
Dreams
DREAMS : This chapter only describes the contents of the dreams. For the modalities look under
"SLEEP - DREAMING ....".
DREAMS - ABORIGINAL people - Maori : People native to New Zealand, of Polynesian origin.
DREAMS - BLOOD - spitting blood : The remedies "hep k, meph k, phos j5" were moved from
"Dreams - disease - hemoptysis" to "Dreams - hemoptysis. In Kent we find ""hep and meph" under :
Dreams - disease - spitting blood.
DREAMS - BURNING tinder or sulphur; dreams of smelling : Tinder is readily inflammable
substance, such as touchwood
DREAMS - COCKROACHES - trousers; in her : The original rubric was "pants; in her" but we think in
this rubric the meaning of "pants" = "trousers".
DREAMS - DIRT - wading in dirt : The original German text is : "Trume - vom Gehen im Kothe".
"Kothe" means "... any liquid uncleanness, which in lower language is called dirt. .... especially
when it lies on the streets or roads; this in the old days included excrements. This is why the
remedy "iod j5" was formerly added to "Dreams - wading - excrements; in" and in "Dreams excrements - wading in excrements.
DREAMS - DISGUSTED; being - wading in dirt : The symptom "Dreams - disgusting - wading in
excrements (= mud) was changed to "wading in dirt" because the original word "Kothe" found in
Jahr means " any liquid or formerly liquid uncleanness, especially when it lies on the streets or
roads ... in former days including excrements". (Peter Vint , Germany)
DREAMS - ESCAPING : The first meaning of "escape" is to break loose, get free as in escape from
prison. The second meaning is to get away from or flee from danger, pursuit etc.
DREAMS - EXCREMENTS - wading in excrements : "Dreams - excrements - wading in excrements"
The remedy "iod j5" was deleted and moved to "dirt - wading in dirt" because the original word
"Kothe" found in Jahr means " any liquid or formerly liquid uncleanness, especially when it lies on
the streets or roads ... ". (Peter Vint , Germany)
DREAMS - FLEEING : To flee means to run away from or escape from pursuit, danger,
unpleasantness etc.
DREAMS - FOOD - disgusting : Revolting was changed to disgusting.
DREAMS - HEMOPTYSIS : The remedies "hep k, meph k, phos j5" were moved here from "Dreams disease - hemoptysis". In Kent we find them under : Dreams - disease - spitting blood.
DREAMS - INSECTS - trousers; in her : The original rubric was "pants; in her" but we think in this
rubric the meaning of "pants" = "trousers".
DREAMS - REFLECTING during dreams : The rubric we find in Boger is "Dreams - with meditation".
We believe however that in the period Boger lived "meditating" was used in the sense of
"reflecting" and not in the sense "meditation" is used today. Boenninghausen writes
"nachdenkliche Trume" which also means "reflecting during dreams" and "Trume mit
berlegung" which means the same.
DREAMS - MEN - feminine : The remedy "coca-c sk4" was moved here from "DREAMS - MAN feminine looking"
DREAMS - PICNICS - disgusting food; with : Revolting was changed to disgusting.
DREAMS - POISONED, being : The remedies "kreos k, nat-m k, oci k" were moved here from the
symptom "Dreams - disease - poisoning" because in Kent on p. 1242 we find : "Dreams - poisoned;
being". Also the remedies "chr-ac a1, kali-n a1" were moved here. (see author notes)
DREAMS - RELOCATION; of : The remedies "galla quercina ruber" and "inachis io" were moved here
from "DREAMS - MOVING; of" because the meaning of moving in this context is "relocation".
DREAMS - SMELLING something - tinder; burning : Readily inflammable substance, such as
touchwood
DREAMS - TEETH - breaking off : Symbolically, relates to loss of aggressive force, defense, vital
energy, self-confidence.
DREAMS - THROAT - closing; that the throat is : The original symptom "DREAMS - THROAT grows
up" was modified because the meaning was not clear enough.
DREAMS - TORNADOES on the sea : DREAMS - WATERSPOUTS
DREAMS - VIVID - lurid : Vivid in a harsh or shocking way
Chill
CHILL - CHILL in general : This chapter indicates chillines related to a disease. Constitutionally
cold-blooded persons are represented in the rubric Generals - heat - lack of heat
CHILL - ONE SIDE : The symptoms "CHILL - SIDES, one-sided - side - lies; on which he" and "CHILL SIDES; one-sides - lain on; not" were modified to "CHILL - SIDE lain on" and "CHILL - SIDE not lain
on"
CHILL - AFTERNOON - 15 h - 15-3 h : The subrubric "tertian" was deleted and the remedy "canth"
moved here. See author notes.
CHILL - EVENING - eating - while - agg. : "Chill - evening - eating - while": con. should be moved to
"... - eating - after"(See MM H) (Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
CHILL - BEGINNING in - Stomach - Pit of : The original rubric "scrobiculus cordis" was modified to
"pit of stomach" because the original German word "Herzgrube" = "Magengrube" = "Scrobiculus
cordis" = "Fossa epigastrica" = Pit of stomach" (Peter Vint - Germany)
CHILL - QUARTAN : Intermittent fever where the paroxysms reccur every third day
CHILL - SWALLOWING agg. : "Chill - suppressed - swallowing agg" for merc-c. was changed into
"CHILL - swallowing agg."
CHILL - WARM - room - not amel. in warm room nor by a warm stove : The original Kent symptom
is "CHILL - WARM - room - amel. - not amel. in warm room nor by a warm stove"
CHILL - WARM - stove - not amel. : Original symptom: Chill - warm - bed - not amel. - heat of
stove; not amel. by
Fever
FEVER - FEVER, heat in general : This chapter indicates heat related to a disease. Constitutionally
warm-blooded persons are represented in the rubric Generals - heat - sensation of
FEVER - AFTERNOON - 15 h : The symptom in Kent "Fever - afternoon - 5 p.m." (acon. coff. ferr.
lyc. nicc. sang.) is a misprint and should read 3 p.m. which in Synthesis is 15 h. The correct rubric
"... - 17 h (5 p.m.) (con. kali-c. kali-n. ...) is listed under evening in Kent, but has been moved to
afternoon as well in Synthesis.
FEVER - ALTERNATING with - shivering : The Kent remedies "bry, cocc, dros, ip, nux-v, plat, acon,
bell, calc, kali-bi" were moved here from "FEVER - SHIVERING, with - alternating with heat".
FEVER - APYREXIA : The absence or intermission of fever
FEVER - ASCENDING agg. : FEVER - ASCENDING or DESCENDING applies to "sensation of heat
extending upwards or downwards", not to ascending or descending temperature.
FEVER - BLACKWATER fever : Complication of malaria tropica, with strong hemolysis, followed by
FEVER - TYPHUS FEVER : An acute infectious disease caused by various rickettsiae and transmitted
to people by the bite of fleas, lice, etc. The fever is associated with great prostration and
dullness. Formerly almost any high fever with great prostration was considered to be typhus.
(Researched with the help of Dr. Pierre Salan, France)
FEVER - TYPHUS FEVER - accompanied by - Bones; sensitive : Original location: FEVER - continued
fever - typhus fever with swelled parotid glands and sensitive bones
FEVER - TYPHUS FEVER - accompanied by - Parotid gland; swollen : Original location: FEVER continued fever - typhus fever with swelled parotid glands and sensitive bones
FEVER - TYPHUS FEVER - petechial : Original location: 1FEVER - Continued - petechial
Perspiration
PERSPIRATION - NIGHT - waking; on : "Perspiration - night - waking, on": delete hep. from this
rubric (Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland)
PERSPIRATION - COLD : "Perspiration - cold": lac-ac was replaced by lac-c.: see HR1.
PERSPIRATION - ODOR - fecal before stool : See symptom note Synthesis under "STOOL - FECAL
stool".
PERSPIRATION - RAGE; during : "Perspiration - profuse - rage, during": was modified as "rage,
during" on level 2
Skin
SKIN - ACANTHOSIS nigricans : Diffuse velvety acanthosis with dark pigmentation, chiefly in axillae,
occuring in an adult form, often associated with an internal carcinoma (called malignant
acanthosis nigricans), and in a benign, nevoid form, more or less generalized. Velvety dark
pigmentation with hypertrophy of the skin, mainly in neck, axillae and groins, and is probably the
skin manifestation of severe and chronic hyperinsulinemia.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - angioedema : Explanation of "angioedema" given by Yingling: an edema,
currently termed 'angioedema', caused by a disturbance of the vasomotor system either through
injury, spasms, or paralysis of blood vessels. Whereas urticaria is local blisters/bullae and
redness, a. edema is a similar eruption but with larger edematous areas that involve
subcutaneous tissues as well as the skin.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - baker's itch : A dermatitis and itching of the skin, due to the contact of flour
or sugar with skin -especially in man working in the bakery.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - boils - blood boils : Blood mixed with pus
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - boils - periodical : Recurring at regular times
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - demodicidosis : Demodectic mange, infestation with demodex Demodex: A
genus of mites or acarids which cause follicular mange
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - dry : In the symptom "Skin - eruptions - dry" "bor" was replaced by "bov." (see
HR1)
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - eczema : In "Skin - eruptions - eczema": remedy abbreviation "lap-m." (without
correspondence in the abbreviations table in Kent's Repertory !) is replaced by "lappa" (= lappa
arctium or major)
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - eczema - dyshidrotic eczema : "Pompholyx also called dyshidrotic eczema is a
cutaneous reaction pattern characterized by the sudden development of clear, deep vesicles
(with the appearance of tapioca) and bullae on the palms and soles, particularly along the sides
and between the digits, accompanied by pruritus, and a burning sensation and hyperhidrosis. It is
a self-limited condition usually lasting a few weeks. Emotional stress may be an important
precipitating factor."
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - eczema - excoriating : Rubs off the skin; abrading.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - erythema : Morbid redness of the skin due to capillary congestion
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - furuncles : Boil surrounding a hairfollicle or a cutaneous gland
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - heat rash : Miliaria rubra is a condition resulting from obstruction to the ducts
of the sweat glands; the sweat escapes into the epidermis, causing pruritic erythematous
papulovesicles. This condition is also called heat rash or prickly heat.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - leprosy - borderline : Unstable type of leprosy which may develop into
tuberculoid or lepromatous leprosy.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - leprosy - lepromatous : Severe form of leprosy with symmetric skin nodules or
plaques, distal peripheral neuropathy and loss of eyelashes and eyebrows. There is insufficient
immunity to M. leprae.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - leprosy - tuberculoid : Milder form of leprosy with few hypopigmented,
hypoesthetic spots with well defined borders. Peripheral nerves may be damaged and enlarged,
but usually asymmetric and near skin lesions.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - lichen : Eruptions which look like lichen planus, appearing as a reaction to
exogenous agents or related to systemic disease
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - lichen planus : Skin disease with flattened, reddish and shiny papules. These
may be single or grouped in patches. Itching varies and sometimes mucous membranes are
involved as well
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - miliaria rubra : Vesicular dermatitis caused by trapping of sweat and an acute
inflammation of the sweat glands, with burning itching, most often caused by thermal damage of
the skin. The term miliaria used alone refers to miliaria rubra.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - molluscum : Soft round cutaneous tumor
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - molluscum - contagiosum; molluscum : Viral skin disease with umbilicated
molluscae
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - molluscum - fibrosum; molluscum : Multiple fibromas which often form
pendulous growths
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - pityriasis : Eruption characterized by branny scales
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - rash - alternating with - Chest; oppression of : Original location: "rash tightness of chest alternating with asthma"
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - rash - weather; change of : "Skin - eruptions - rash - changing air": this
ambiguous expression was modified as "eruption - rash -weather; from change of" (apis in HR1)
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - ringworm : Contagious skin diseases characterized by ring-shaped, discolored
patches covered with scales or vesicles. Kent referred ringworm to herpes (skin - eruptions ringworm: see herpes). In Synthesis herpes and ringworm have been separated.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - rupia : In the symptom "Skin - eruptions - rupia" "nat-ac." was replaced by
"nit-ac." (see HR1, under "follows well")
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - tetters : Please pay attention: This rubric from B2 has an UNCLEAR /
AMBIGUOUS MEANING. It has been incorporated into Synthesis nevertheless for the follwoing two
reasons: a) to achieve completeness, i.e. in order to incorporate the original source in its
entirety. - The historical reason. b) to make both the symptom and remedies attached to it
available for any kind of future research. - The scientific reason. The original German word is
"Flechten", a term for a pretty unspecific skin disease, that should not be translated as "herpes"
which would imply that our modern medical term is applicable. In most cases these are itching
eruptions. [Peter Vint, Germany]
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - urticaria : Slightly elevated patches, usually whiter than the surrounding skin,
with severe itching The difference between erythema and urticaria has not always been clearly
made in the old days. That is why some remedies which should be present under "Erythema", may
be found under "Urticaria" even if this is considered a very different condition nowadays
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - urticaria - cold agg.; becoming : "Skin - eruptions - urticaria - cold - taking
cold; from": this ambiguous expression was modified into "... - cold - becoming; from" See HR1
under dulc.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - urticaria - tuberosa; urticaria : Tuberous urticatia or urticaria tuberosa is
urticaria occurring when the subcutaneous tissue is lax, it is marked then by the occurrence of
large, edematous, tumor-like swellings; urticaria gigans, angioneurotic edema.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - urticaria - warmth and exercise : Summer eczema.
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - vesication : Process of blistering
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - vesicular - sudamina : Miliaria with white, opaque fluid. Not equal to
dyshidrotic eczema!
SKIN - ERUPTIONS - Covered parts; on : "Skin - eruptions - coppery - covered parts": has to be
changed to "eruptions - covered parts" as can be confirmed for led. (TL1) and thuj. (HR1)
SKIN - EXCRESCENCES - fungus haematodes : A soft, easily bleeding, malignant fungoid growth
SKIN - GANGRENE : Necrosis of tissue most often due to obstructed bloodsupply and combined with
infection by various anaerobic organisms. According to Kent this rubric contains "gangrene from
burns" and "gangrenous sores"
SKIN - GANGRENE - cold : Gangrene which is not preceded by inflammation
SKIN - GANGRENE - hot : Gangrene which is preceded by inflammation
SKIN - GANGRENE - moist : Gangrene with watery, offensive discharge
SKIN - HAIR - baldness : Alopecia universalis: Loss of all of the hair, not only on the scalp, but also
on the entire body
SKIN - HAIR - shaggy : Looking unkempt or neglected (even if this is not the case). Shaggy is an
overall impression.
SKIN - INFLAMMATION - desquamation; with : Skin comes off in layers.
SKIN - ITCHING - spring; in : "Skin - itching - spring, in - March; month of" replaced by "itching March; month of": see Hering (bryonia) and also: spring begins on March 21st only
SKIN - ITCHING - vomitting - amel. : Original Kent symptom: SKIN - ITCHING - vomits; not relieved
until he
SKIN - PHOTODERMATOSIS : A morbid condition in the skin caused by exposure to light.
SKIN - PURPURA : Disease with purple patches on skin and mucous membranes
SKIN - PURPURA - hemorrhagica : Severe purpura with copious bleeding
SKIN - PURPURA - senilis : Purpura, usually on the legs of old people
SKIN - RINGWORM : Contagious skin diseases characterized by ring-shaped, discolored patches
covered with scales or vesicles. Kent referred rigworm to herpes (skin - eruptions - ringworm: see
herpes). In Synthesis herpes and ringworm have been separated.
SKIN - SCROFULODERMA : Tuberculosis of the skin with formation of hard nodules.
SKIN - SEBORRHEA : Excessive discharge from the sebaceous glands resulting in oily skin
SKIN - ULCERS - cold - feeling in them; with a cold : "Skin - ulcers - cold feeling, with" has been
changed to "ulcers - cold - feeling in them; with a cold" (see a.o. bry. in HR1)
SKIN - VITILIGO : A disorder in which there is a loss of pigment resulting in white patches of skin
Generals
GENERALS - ABSCESSES - blind : 3hasten suppuration; remedies to
GENERALS - ACROMEGALY : Disease with enlargement of bones and soft parts of hands, feet and
face, due to overfunctioning of pituitary body
GENERALS - AGUE : Alternating chills, fever and sweating related to malaria
GENERALS - AKINESIA : Abscence of lack of motion.
GENERALS - AMEBIASIS : Infestation with a protozoan parasite in the intestines or liver, especially
entamoeba hystolytica
GENERALS - ANESTHESIA [= insensibility] : Total or partial loss of sensibility
GENERALS - ANESTHESIA [= narcosis] : Insensibility induced by anesthetics
GENERALS - APOPLEXY : A condition of severe hemorrhage in any organ. Formerly especially used
to indicate cerebral accident or stroke.
GENERALS - CANCEROUS affections - lymphoma : Any neoplastic disorder of the lymphoid tissue.
GENERALS - CANCEROUS affections - ulcers : [hl1 - Trifolium pratense] The common red clover of
the fields has long had some reputation as a remedy for cancer. A paste, or solid extract is made
form the blossoms, and this is applied to the ulcer constantly.
GENERALS - CARRIED; being - amel. : This rubric used to be "GENERALS - CARRYING - amel.. But it
becomes clear from the author notes that the meaning is "carried; being - amel."
GENERALS - CATALEPSY : Attacks with rigid muscles, cold and pale body and slow respiration and
pulse which may last a few minutes to a few days
GENERALS - CHANCRE : Primary lesion of syphilis, a venereal sore, which ulcerates and is followed
by general syphilis
GENERALS - CHILDREN; complaints in : The internationally accepted categories are: newborns0 - 4
weeks nurslings0 - 1 year infants1 - 6 years children6 years and above They are used in this sense
in Synthesis. Remarks: * A child between 0 and 1 year of age, which is not nursing is still called a
nursling. * "Baby" is a popular expression and may refer to several of the categories mentioned.
Therefore it is to be avoided as it is not precise. * "Children" indicates the general term of all
human beings between 0 and ??? years of age and also indicates a precise category of youngsters
between 6 and ??? years of age.
GENERALS - CHOREA - corybantism; from : Wild delirium with hallucinations
GENERALS - CHOREA - lying on back - amel. : Pierre Salan informed us that "cupr k" was not
correct, it should be "cupr-act". Therefore "cupr" was deleted by adding "slp, xxx" as authors.
GENERALS - COAGULOPATHY : any disorder of blood coagulation
GENERALS - COLLAPSE - perspiration - without : [_Hom_Rec] Diphtheria, or any other disease,
beginning with collapse, dry skin, not sweating, is a most serious type of disease to meet. Merc.
cy. will give a wonderful result.(C. M. BOGER).
GENERALS - COMPLEXION - florid : Flushed with pink or red; rosy as said of the complexion.
GENERALS - CONVULSIONS - begin in - Fingers - Toes, and : Pierre Salan informed us that "cupr k"
was not correct, it should be "cupr-act". Therefore "cupr" was deleted by adding "slp, xxx" as
authors.
GENERALS - CONVULSIONS - epileptic - starting; after : The remedy "sulph a1" was moved to
"GENERALS - CONVULSIONS - epileptic - fright; from" The text from Allen: [a1 - Sulphur Generalities] - Epileptic paroxysm after starting up, or after running violently, [_a1]. is based on
Hahnemann: [h1dt - Sulphur] (Nach Erschrecken oder starkem Laufen, Fallsucht.) [h2dt - Sulphur]
Fallsucht-Anfall, nach Erschrecken oder starkem Laufen. Erschrecken = Schreck = after being
frightened which in Synthesis lingua would be" fright; after" which of course is to be considered
identical with "fright; from". (Peter Vint - Germany)
GENERALS - CONVULSIONS - epileptiform : Convulsive attacks which approximate the typical
epileptic fit (grand mal). Nearly every one of the individual features of epilepsy may be absent. If
there are no convulsions, and only some pallor, a brief loss of consciousness, then this is called
petit mal. (according to James Finlayson "Clinical Manual for the study of Medical Cases" (1891) with thanks to Bob Fordham, England.
GENERALS - CUSHING's syndrome : A condition due to hyperadrenocorticism resulting from
prolonged excessive intake of glucocorticoids for therapeutic purposes or from neoplasms of the
adrenal cortex or the anterior lobe of the pituitary.
GENERALS - DEBAUCH : Extreme indulgence into sensual pleasure
GENERALS - DERMATOMYOSITIS : A connective tissue disease with affections of muscles and skin
(heliotrope erythema and oedema of the periorbital skin ,often accompanied by macula papular
eruption in the butterfly area of face and extensor surfaces of the extermities), creatinuria,
edema, and sometimes with enlarged spleen, problems with the retina and vasomotoric
problems.
GENERALS - DINNER : Dinner: main course at noon
GENERALS - DROPSY : Abnormal accumulation of serous fluid in cellular tissue or in body cavities
GENERALS - DROPSY - external dropsy : Abnormal accumulation of serous fluid in cellular tissue
GENERALS - DROPSY - general; in : Internal as well as external dropsy are present, or the
difference is not clearly stated
GENERALS - DROPSY - internal dropsy : Abnormal accumulation of serous fluid in the internal
organs or in body cavities
GENERALS - ELECTRICITY of the atmosphere; ailments from : This symptom used to be "GENERALS
- ELECTRIC STATES; ailments from". We modified the symptom to make the meaning more clear.
If a person is sensitive to the electricity in the atmosphere, a sensation which is expecienced by
some people moments before a thunderstorm, this person is likely to develop ailments from this
electricity.
GENERALS - EMACIATION : Abnormally lean, from starvation or disease
GENERALS - ERUCTATIONS - amel. : "STOMACH - ERUCTATIONS - amel." indicates a general rubric;
it are not only the problems in the stomach which are improved by these remedies. That is why
the referring rubric is made from chapter "STOMACH" to chapter "GENERALS".
GENERALS - EXPECTORATION - agg. : The remedies were moved to this rubric from
"EXPECTORATION - agg." because the rubric refers to a general aggravation.
GENERALS - EXPECTORATION - amel. : The remedies were moved to this rubric from
GENERALS - FOOD and DRINKS - stodgy food : Heavy and unpalatable food.
GENERALS - FOOD and DRINKS - wafers : A thin, flat, crisp cracker or cookie.
GENERALS - FOOD and DRINKS - wine - desire - claret : Dry red wine, especially Bordeaux.
GENERALS - FUR in inner parts; sensation as if covered with : "Generals - coat of skin drawn over
inner parts; sensation of": symptom from Boenninghausen, wrongly translated, has been moved
with all its remedies to the correct translation: "Fur in inner parts; sensation as if covered with"
(Dr. Jean-Claude Grgoire, Belgium)
GENERALS - GLANDERS : A contagious disease of horses, mules, etc. characterized by fever,
swollen lymph nodes, ulcerous nodules, etc. It is caused by Pseudomonas mallei and can be
transmitted to humans
GENERALS - GLYCOGEN STORAGE DISEASES : Hereditary disorders caused by a lack of one or more
enzymes involved in synthesis or breakdown of glycogen and that give a deposition of abnormal
amounts or types of glycogen in tissues.
GENERALS - HEAT - lack of vital heat : This rubric represents coldblooded persons. If chilliness is
related to a disease process look in the chapter Chill
GENERALS - HEAT - sensation of : This rubric represents warmblooded persons. If heat is related to
a disease process look in the chapter Fever
GENERALS - HEAVINESS - Single parts; in : Originally this symptom was "GENERALS - HEAVINESS sensation of - Single parts; in". But level 3 was deleted because we believe "heaviness" already is
a sensation.
GENERALS - HISTORY; personal : These rubrics indicate the occurrence and the recurrence of a
disease in the history of the patient. If problems persist after an illness or since an illness then
look at the rubric "Convalescence" (also "never well since").
GENERALS - HYPERLIPIDEMIA : A general term for elevated concentrations of lipids (e.g.
cholesterol, triglyceride) in the plasma.
GENERALS - HYPOTONY : Abnormally low tension or tone, especially of the muscles.
GENERALS - INFLAMMATION - gangrenous : Decay and necrosis of tissue
GENERALS - INFLAMMATION - Joints; of - infectious : The 3 jl2 remedies "coli, influ, syph" were
moved here from the rubric "GENERALS - PAIN - rheumatic - infective" which was deleted.
GENERALS - INFLAMMATION - Joints; of - rheumatic - infective : J.Ozanon, France: infectious
rheumatism (literal translation of a pathology term found in a medical dictionary) describes all
ailments affecting joints during various acute infectious diseases. They may be due to the
"morbid agent" directly responsible for the disease, or to a secondary infection, and have nothing
in common with "acute articular rheumatism"
GENERALS - INJURIES - dislocation : Displacement of a part, esp. of a bone
GENERALS - INJURIES - sprains : Wrenching of a joint with injury to its attachments, not
necessarily accompanied by dislocation of bones
GENERALS - INJURIES - strains : Injury from overexertion of the muscles
GENERALS - KIMMELSTIEL-WILSON syndrome : Degeneration of the capillary walls of the kidney
glomerulus in diabetes with a group of symptoms characterised by proteinuria, hypoalbumineria,
edema, hypertension.
GENERALS - LABORATORY findings - creatinine : "Measurement of the GLOMULAR FILTRATION
RATE (GFR) is necessary to define the exact level of renal function." "The use of creatinine
clearance is dependent on the fact that daily production of creatinine (principally from muscle
cells) is remarkably constant and little affected by protein intake." "Given these observations,
creatinine clearance is a reasonably accurate measure of GFR in those situations in which it is
most required - normal or near normal renal fuction." "Where urine collections are difficult or
deemed inaccurate, the GFR may be measured by the single injection of compounds such as
EDTA, DTPA, or iothalamate, their excretion being primarily by glomerular filtration. Following
intravenous injection of the compound, three blood samples are obtained at 2, 3 and 4 hours (or
rather longer intervals if the patient is oedematous or if renal faillure is suspected). The GFR may
then be calculated from the slope of the exponential fall in blood level of the compound."
GENERALS - LASSITUDE : Physical exhaustion such as caused by fever
GENERALS - LEAN people : Peolpe with little flesh or fat
GENERALS - LEISHMANIASIS : Any disease due to infection with protozoan parasites of the genus
Leishmania, especially kala azar La leishmaniose est une rticulo-endothliose parasitaire dont
l'agent pathogne est un zooflagell appartenant au genre Leishmania transmis par la piqre d'un
insecte appartenant au genre Phlebotomus. Cet agent pathogne infecte les macrophages des
mammifres dont l'humain. Il y' a trois formes de leishmaniose : la leishmaniose cutane, la
leishmaniose muco-cutane et la leishmaniose viscrale.
GENERALS - LEUKEMIA - seronegative; getting : Also tigers, lions etc.
GENERALS - LIFTING, straining of muscles and tendons - Flexor muscles : The original rubric was
"flexor tendon" but because "muscle" is in prolongation of "tendon" we decided to use "flexor
muscles" throughout Synthesis.
GENERALS - LYMPHATIC GLANDS : In the chapter Generals, "glands" are mostly "lymphatic glands".
Therefore we refer to the 5 main "gland" rubrics. There are however several smaller "gland"
rubrics.
GENERALS - MALARIA - old : The remedy "helia stj"was moved here from "FEVER - MALARIA - old"
which was deleted.
GENERALS - MARASMUS : Progressive emaciation and growth retardation in infants
GENERALS - MONONUCLEOSIS : The presence in the peripheral blood of mononuclear leucocytes
(monocytes) in abnormal numbers. The term "mononucleosis" is often used alone to refer to
"infectious mononucleosis" also called "glandular fever", "Filatov's disease", "kissing disease" and
"Pfeiffer's disease".
GENERALS - MONONUCLEOSIS - chronic : In Dorland's Medical Dictionary: chronic mononucleosis :
chronic fatigue syndrome. In LAROUSSE medical dictionary: "EVOLUTION: Les signes de la
maladie disparaissent au bout d'une trois semaines, mais la convalescence est souvent marque
par une asthnie durable". (clinical signs of the disease disappear within 1-3 weeks, but
convalescence is marked by durable asthenia). Chronic mononucleosis is a shortcut meaning
"chronic ailments from" (Jacqueline Ozanon, France) Mononucleosis can last from 3 weeks to
several years, in the sence that people have the sx. of the disease during this time. Chronic
mononucleosis is not the same as chronic fatigue syndrome. They have, apart from some mutual,
a lot of different sx. It seems that a lot of people that get chronic fatigue syndrome have had
mononucleosis, but that is a totally different matter. They should not be mixed. (Erik Van
Woensel - the Netherlands)
GENERALS - MOON : In the new moon, the moon's surface is completely in the shadow. About a
week later, the moon is in its first quarter, resembling a luminous half-circle. About another
week later, the full moon shows its fully lighted surface. At last, one more week afterwards, the
moon appears as a half-circle again: its last quarter. When the moon is more than
half-illuminated, it is said to be in gibbous phase. The moon is waning when it progresses from
full to new, and waxing when it proceeds from new to full.
GENERALS - MUCOVISCIDOSIS : A hereditary systemic disease of the exocrine glands affecting
primarily the gastrointestinal and respiratory tract (liver, pancreas, glands for salivation and
perspiration) and leading to chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases (stasis of tough mucus),
obstruction of bowels due to decrease in gland activity, pancreatic cystic fibrose, and others.
GENERALS - MYOGELOSIS : An area of abnormal hardening in a muscle.
GENERALS - OSTEOCHONDROSIS : A disease of the growth or ossification centers in children which
starts as a degeneration or necrosis followed by regeneration or recalcification; also called
epiphyseal ischemic necrosis.
GENERALS - OSTEOPOROSIS : Osteoporosis is the reduction in bone density accompanied by
increasing porosity and brittleness.
GENERALS - PAIN - neuralgic : Pain radiating along the course of a nerve
GENERALS - PAIN - tearing pain - away : The German original is "Abreiungsgefhl" which correctly
translates as "sensation as if something was / had been torn off". [Peter Vint, Germany]
GENERALS - PAIN - Bones - paralyzed; as if : Original rubric: "GENERALS - PAIN - Bones - disabling".
Explanation by Dr. Farokh Master: This means that the pain is so severe that the person is not
able to do anything. Jacqueline Ozanon: This type of pain is usually described as a
laming/paralytic (paralyzing) pain.
GENERALS - PARALYSIS - appearing gradually : Progressive means that the process is still going on
and spreading, it doesn't say anything about the speed of the process. 'appearing gradually' has
to do with the speed of the process itself. So it is different from the rubric 'progressive'. (Erik
Van Woensel - Netherlands)
GENERALS - PARALYSIS - progressive : Progressive means that the process is still going on and
spreading, it doesn't say anything about the speed of the process. 'appearing gradually' has to do
with the speed of the process itself. So it is different from the rubric 'progressive'. (Erik Van
Woensel - Netherlands)
GENERALS - PARALYSIS - spastic paralysis : Paralysis marked by rigidity of muscles and heightened
tendon reflexes
GENERALS - PARALYSIS - spastic spinal : Spastic paralysis due to lateral sclerosis of the spinal cord
GENERALS - PARALYSIS OF SENSES : Paralysis is always motoric except for "paralysis of the senses".
That is why "paralysis of senses" was moved from level 3 to level 2.
GENERALS - POLYCYTHEMIA : Increase of the total red cell mass of the blood.
GENERALS - PULSE - wiry : Ressembling a vibrating wire
GENERALS - RABIES : Hydrophobia is the former term for rabies. Because of the typical mental
symptoms the rubric was put in Mind.
GENERALS - RADIUM TREATMENTS; from : Different from "radiation therapy"
GENERALS - SJGREN'S SYNDROME : Dryness of all mucous membranes, resulting from deficient
secretion of glands. Both "Sicca syndrome" and "Sjgren's syndrome" are marked by
keratoconjunctivitis and xerostomia. "Sicca's syndrome" occurs without connective tissue disease,
while "Sjgren's syndrome" occurs with a connective tissue disease, usually rheumatoid arthritis.
In medical texts they are often used as synonyms.
GENERALS - SLUGGISHNESS of the body : Lacking vigor, slow moving and indisposed to exertion.
GENERALS - SUBSTANCE - abuse of controlled : Controlled substance is a drug regulated by the
Federal Controlled Substances Acts, including opiates, depressants, stimulants and hallucinogens.
GENERALS - SUN - solstice : The day of the year having the longest period of sunlight.
GENERALS - SYNALGIA : Synalgia/synesthesia are well defined in Burnett as association of pains
often situated very far from the causal affection. A classical dictionary example is "pain in right
arm during hepatic colic".
GENERALS - THROMBOCYTOPENIA; idiopathic : Decrease in the number of blood platelets.
GENERALS - TOBACCO - agg. - nicotinism : Diseased condition due to nicotine poisoning, as from
tobacco.
GENERALS - TUMORS - noma : Gangrenous stomatitis with great prostration, affecting most often
children and often fatal
GENERALS - VACCINATION; ailments after - BCG vaccination : bacille Calmette-Gurin
GENERALS - VACCINATION; ailments after - DTP; for : Diphtheria, tetanus and pertussis vaccine.
GENERALS - VIGOR : Physical or mental strength; vitality.
GENERALS - WEAKNESS : Lacking vitality and strength
GENERALS - WEARINESS : Tired and worn out, without further liking of one's occupations
GENERALS - WEATHER - cloudy weather : This rubric should be applied not just for such weather
conditions that are characterized by clouds, but also for any weather condition where the sun is
hidden by a high hanging fog, by smog, etc. The German rubrics which were used to make up
these rubrics "cloudy" include "trbes" Wetter, which points to "dull weather without sunshine".
[Peter Vint, Germany]
GENERALS - WEATHER - cold weather - wet - agg. : "Generals - weather - cold wet - agg": delete
canth. (Dr. Jost Knzli, Switzerland, quoting Kent)
GENERALS - WEATHER - windy and stormy weather : In this symptom there is windy weather but
not necessarily physical contact with the wind. In "GENERALS - WIND" there is actual physical
contact with the wind.
GENERALS - WEGENER'S GRANULOMATOSIS : Granulomatous inflammation of respiratory tract,
including sinuses, with lung infiltrations, developing into necrotizing granulomatous vasculitis and
glomerulonephritis with renal insufficiency, also complaints of joints, destruction of cartilage,
purpura, anemia and serious eyeproblems.
GENERALS - WIND : In this symptom there is physical contact with the wind; whereas in "windy
weather" it is during windy weather but not necessarily with physical contact with the wind.
Catalogue of Remedies
A
abel. : abelmoschus
abies-a. : abies alba
abies-c. : abies canadensis (abies balsamea, balsam fir, pinus canadensis, tsuga canadensis)
abies-n. : abies nigra (black spruce, picea mariana, picea nigra, resina piceae)
abr. : abrus precatorius (jequirity)
abrin. : abrusinum (jequiritol, jequiritolum)
abrom-a. : abroma augusta
abrom-a-fol. : abroma augusta folia
abrom-a-r. : abroma augusta radix
abrot. : abrotanum (artemisia abrotanum)
absin. : absinthium (artemisia absinthium)
absintls. : absintalsem
acac-ar. : acacia arabica (Acacia senegal)
acac-f. : acacia farnesiana
acal. : acalypha indica
acanth-v. : acanthus virilis (marapuana)
accip-ge. : accipiter gentilis (habicht, northern goshawk)
acenoc. : acenocoumarol
acer-c. : acer campestre
acer-circ. : acer circinatum (vine maple)
acet-ac. : aceticum acidum (acidum aceticum glaciale)
acetald. : acetaldehyde (ethanal)
acetan. : acetanilidum (antifebrinum)
acetars. : acetarsolum (stovarsol)
acetaz. : acetazolamide
aceton. : acetonum
acetontl. : acetonitrilum
acetoph. : acetophenonum
acetylar. : acetylarsan
acetylch. : acetylcholine
acetylch-m. : acetylcholinum muriaticum
acetyls-ac. : acetylsalicylicum acidum (aspirinum)
achil-m. : achillea moschata
achil-n. : achillea nana
achil-p. : achillea ptarmica
achras : achras sapota
achy. : achyranthes calea
achy-a. : achyranthes aspera
acicl. : aciclovir
acioa-d. : acioa dewevrei
acip-st-ov. : acipenser sturio ex ovis (caviar, streier)
aclad. : acladium castellanii (aleurisma castellanii)
acok-op. : acokanthera oppositifolia (acokanthera venenata, bushman's poison bush, hottentot's
poison bush)
acon. : aconitum napellus (napellus)
acon-a. : aconitum anthora
acon-ac. : aconiticum acidum (acidum cis aconiticum)
acon-c. : aconitum cammarum
acon-co. : aconitum columbianum
arab. : arabinosum
arag. : aragallus lamberti (rattle weed, white loco weed)
aral. : aralia racemosa
aral-c. : aralia californica
aral-h. : aralia hispida
aral-nu. : aralia nudicaulis (bamboo brier, false sarsaparilla, small spikenard, wild liquorice, wild
sarsaparilla)
aral-sp. : aralia spinosa (prickly elder)
ara-maca. : ara macao (macaw)
aran. : aranea diadema (diadema aranea, papal cross spider)
aranin. : araninum
aran-ix. : aranea ixobola (araneus ixobolus Thorell, European cross-spider)
aran-sc. : aranea scinencia (North American grey spider)
arb. : arbutus andrachne
arbin. : arbutinum
arb-m. : arbutus menziesii
arb-u. : arbutus unedo
archa-e. : archaeopsylla erinacei (hedgehog flea)
ard-l. : ardesius lapis
arec. : areca catechu
areco-hbr. : arecolinum hydrobromicum (arecolinum bromhydricum)
aren. : arenaria glabra
aren-r. : arenaria rubra
aren-s. : arenaria serpyllifolia
arg-act. : argentum aceticum
arg-ars. : argentum arsenicicum
arg-br. : argentum bromatum
arg-c. : argentum carbonicum
arg-col. : argentum colloidale
arg-cy. : argentum cyanatum
arge. : argemone mexicana
argent. : argentite (silver glance)
arge-pl. : argemone pleicantha (crested prickle poppy)
arg-f. : argentum fluoratum
arg-i. : argentum iodatum
argin. : argininum
arg-met. : argentum metallicum (argentum foliatum)
arg-mur. : argentum muriaticum (argentum chloratum)
arg-n. : argentum nitricum (argenti nitras)
arg-o. : argentum oxydatum
argon : argon
arg-p. : argentum phosphoricum
arg-pr. : argentum proteinatum
arg-s. : argentum sulfuricum
arg-vi. : argentum vitellinicum
arion : arion empiricorum (limax ater)
arist-cl. : aristolochia clematitis (aristolochia infesta)
arist-co. : aristolochia colombiana
aristl. : aristol
arist-m. : aristolochia milhomens (aristolochia cymbifera)
arist-r. : aristolochia rotunda
aris-vg. : arisarum vulgare (arum arisarum)
arizon-l. : Arizona lava (Basaltic lava, Flagstaff lava)
arlo. : arlome
armo-r. : = coch. = armoracia rusticana (old abbr.)
astat. : astatinum
aster. : asterias rubens (asteriacanthion rubens)
asthm-r. : asthma nosode Reckeweg
astra-ca. : astragalus campestris
astra-ci. : astragalus cicer
astra-e. : astragalus excapus
astra-gl. : astragalus glycyphyllos
astra-gu. : astragalus gummifer
astra-h. : astragalus Hornii
astra-l. : astragalus legum
astra-m. : astragalus menziesii (astragalus mollissimus, purple loco weed, wooly loco weed)
astra-mo. : = astra-m. = astragalus mollissimus
atha. : athamanta oreoselinum (peucedanum oreoselo)
atis. : atista indica (glycosmis pentaphylla)
atis-r. : atista radix
atox. : atoxyl
atp. : adenosinum triphosphoricum acidum (atp)
atra-r. : atrax robustus (Sydney funnel-web spider)
atri. : atriplex hortensis
atro. : atropinum-pur. + -s. (old abbr.)
atro-pur. : atropinum purum
atro-s. : atropinum sulphuricum (atropini sulfas)
auc-j. : aucuba japonica
aug. : augopora
aur. : aurum metallicum (aurum foliatum, triturated metallic gold)
auran. : aurantii cortex
aur-ar. : aurum arsenicum (aurum arsenicicum)
aur-br. : aurum bromatum
aur-col. : aurum colloidale (auri solutio colloidalis, colloidal gold)
aur-cy. : aurum cyanatum
aurel-a. : aurelia aurita
aureom. : aureomycinum
aur-f. : aurum fluoratum
aur-fu. : aurum fulminans (ammonium auricum)
aur-i. : aurum iodatum
aur-kcy. : aurum kalicyanatum
aur-m. : aurum muriaticum
aur-m-k. : aurum muriaticum kalinatum
aur-m-n. : aurum muriaticum natronatum (aurum natrium chloratum, natrium tetrachloroauratum)
aur-n. : aurum nitricum
aur-n-f. : aurum natrum fluoricum
aur-p. : aurum phosphoricum
aur-s. : aurum sulphuratum
aur-ts-n. : aurum thiosulfuricum natronatum
aven. : avena sativa
aven-g. : avena germinata
avic. : avicularia
aza. : azadirachta indica (melia azadirachta, melia azadirachta indica)
B
bac. : bacillinum Burnett
bacch-c. : baccharis crispa
bacls-10. : bacillus 10 (Paterson) (10 (Paterson), bacillus ten (Paterson), ten (Paterson))
bacls-7. : bacillus 7 (Paterson) (7 (Paterson), bacillus seven (Paterson), seven (Paterson))
C
cac. : cacao (theobroma cacao)
cact. : cactus grandiflorus (cactus selenicereus grandiflorus, cereus grandiflorus, myrtillocactus,
selenicereus grandiflorus, selenicereus spinulosus)
cactin-m. : cactinum mexicanum
cact-xyz. : cactus unknown part
cadm-act. : cadmium aceticum
cadm-ar. : cadmium arsenicosum
cadm-bi. : cadmium bichromatum
cadm-br. : cadmium bromatum
cadm-c. : cadmium carbonicum
cadm-calc-f. : cadmium calcarea fluoricum
cadm-chl. : cadmium chloratum
cadm-chr. : cadmium chromatum
cadm-f. : cadmium fluoratum
cadm-f-i. : cadmium ferrum iodatum
cadm-gl. : cadmium gluconicum
cadm-i. : cadmium iodatum (iodide of cadmium)
cadm-m. : cadmium muriaticum
cadm-met. : cadmium metallicum
cadm-n. : cadmium nitricum
cadm-o. : cadmium oxydatum
D
dact-g. : dactylis glomerata
dam. : damiana (damiana aphrodisiaca, turnera aphrodisiaca, turnera diffusa)
danaz. : danazol
daph. : daphne indica (daphne odora, daphne odorata)
daph-l. : daphne laureola
dat-a. : datura arborea (bougmanica, brugmansia candida)
dat-f. : datura ferox
datin. : daturinum
datis. : datisca cannabina
dat-m. : datura metel
dat-s. : datura sanguinea
dauc-c. : daucus carota
dchlo-de-s. : dichlorodiethyl sulfide (mustard gas)
del. : delphinus amazonicus
delphin. : delphininum staphysagria
delphin-n. : delphinium nudicaule
dema. : dematium petraeum
dendr-pol. : dendroaspis polylepsis (black mamba)
der. : derris pinnata (derris elliptica, tuba root)
derm-f. : dermatophagoides farinae
derm-p. : dermatophagoides pteronyssinus
des-ac. : desoxyribonucleicum acidum (adn, deoxyribonucleicum acidum, dna, thymonucleicum
acidum)
desch-f. : deschampsia flexuosa
descu-s. : descurainia sophia
desm-g. : desmodium gangeticum
desmon-r. : desmoncus rudentum
de-s-oestr. : diethylstilboestrolum
deut-o. : deuterium oxydatum
deut-t-o. : deuterium tritium oxydatum
dexam. : dexamethason
dextr. : dextrinum
dhchol-ac. : dehydrocholicum acidum
dhcort. : deltahydrocortisone
dhretin. : dehydroretinol (vitamine A2)
dh-strept. : dihydrostreptomycine sulfate
dial-f. : dialium ferrum (bread of iron, pan de hierro)
dianthe-p. : dianthera pectoralis
E
eaux : Eaux Bonnes aqua
eberth. : eberthinum (salmonella typhi, typhobacillinum, typhus nosode)
echi. : echinacea angustifolia (rudbeckia angustifolia)
echinc. : echinococcinum
echinp. : echinops spinosus
echi-p. : echinacea purpurea (rudbeckia purpurea)
echi-pa. : echinacea pallida (brauneria pallida, rudbeckia pallida)
echit. : echites suberecta
echium : echium vulgare
eich-c. : eichhornia crassipes
einstein. : einsteinium
eke-me. : ekebergia meyeri
elae. : elaeis guineensis (oleum elaeis)
elaeo-v. : elaeodendron velutinum
elaps : elaps corallinus (cobra corallinus, micrurus corallinus, micrurus fulvius)
elat. : elaterium (ecballium elaterium, elaterium officinarum, momordica elaterium)
elea-gr-r. : eleaocarpus granitus roxb (rudraksh)
elec. : electricitas (electricitas frictionale, electricity)
elem. : elemuy gauteria
eleph-b. : elephantorhiza burchelli
eleut. : eleutherococcus (senticosus eleutherococcus)
elm : elm (Bach fl.)
F
fab. : fabiana imbricata (pichi, pichi-pichi)
faba-vg. : faba vulgaris (vicia faba)
faec. : bacillus Faecalis (Bach) (faecalis (bach))
fago. : fagopyrum esculentum (polygonum fagopyrum)
fagu. : fagus sylvatica (beech)
fagu-p. : pix fagus sylvatica (buchenholzteer, tar of beechwood)
falco-bi. : falcon biarmicus (lanner falcon)
falco-ch. : falcon cherrug (saker falcon)
falco-co. : falcon columbarius (merlin)
falco-el. : falcon eleonorae (eleonora's falcon)
falco-me. : falcon mexicanus (prairie falcon)
falco-pe. : falcon peregrinus disciplinatus (peregrine falcon)
falco-ru. : falcon rusticolus (gyr falcon)
falco-sp. : falcon sparverius (american kestrel)
falco-su. : falcon subbuteo (hobby)
falco-ti. : falcon tinnunculus (kestrel)
fall-au. : fallopia aubertii
fasci-h. : fasciola hepatica
fax-cae-al. : fax caelestis allende
febr-wolhy. : febris wolhynia nosode Merck (quintan fever nosode, shin bone fever nosode)
febr-xyz. : febris species unknown
fel : fel tauri (bilinum, bilis de bovino, bos taurus bilis)
fel-s. : fel sui
fenot-hbr. : fenoterolum hydrobromatum
ferm. : fermium
ferr. : ferrum metallicum
ferr-act. : ferrum aceticum
G
gab. : gabbro (gabro)
gaba : gamma-aminobutyricum acidum
gad. : gadus morrhua
gado-br. : gadolinium bromatum
gado-c. : gadolinium carbonicum
gado-f. : gadolinium fluoratum
gado-i. : gadolinium iodatum
gado-lac. : gadolinium lacticum
gado-m. : gadolinium muriaticum
gado-n. : gadolinium nitricum
gado-o. : gadolinium oxydatum
gado-ox. : gadolinium oxalicum
gado-p. : gadolinium phosphoricum
gado-s. : gadolinium sulphuricum
H
haem. : haematoxylon campechianum
haemat. : haematite (hematite)
haem-i-b-vc. : haemophilus influenzae B vaccinus (HIB vaccine)
haff. : haffkine
hafn-met. : hafnium metallicum
haliae-lc. : haliaeetus leucocephalus (haliaethus leukocapitus)
hall : Hall aqua
halo. : haloperidolum
ham. : hamamelis virginiana (hamamelis virginica)
haplo-b. : haplopappus baylahuen (haplopappus bailahuen)
haro-ma. : = haru-ma. = haronga madagascariensis (old abbr.)
harp. : harpagophytum procumbens (harpagophyti radix)
haru-ma. : harungana madagascariensis
haru-pa. : harungana paniculata
hcg. : choriongonadotropinum (human gonadotropin)
heath. : heather (Bach fl.)
hecla : Hecla lava (hekla lava, lava heclae, lava scoriae)
hed. : hedera helix (common ivy)
hedeo. : hedeoma pulegioides (American pennyroyal oil, cunila pulegioides)
hedy. : hedysarum ildefonsianum
I
iber. : iberis amara
ibo. : iboga
ibupr. : ibuprofen
ichth. : ichthyolum (ichthyolammonium)
ictod. : ictodes foetida (draconitum foetidum, pothos foetidus, symplocarpus foetidum)
ig-a. : immunoglobulin A
ign. : ignatia amara (amara, strychnos ignatiae)
ignis-alc. : ignis alcoholis (feuer, fire)
ihydr-ac. : iodhydricum acidum
ille. : illecebrum verticillatum
ilx-a. : ilex aquifolium (holly, Ilex opaca)
ilx-c. : ilex casseine (ilex cassine)
ilx-v. : ilex vomitoria (yaupon)
imp. : imperatoria ostruthium (imperatoria peucedanum, peucedanum ostruthium)
impa-b. : impatiens balsamina
impa-ca. : impatiens capensis
impa-g. : impatiens glandulifera (impatiens, impatiens roylei)
impa-n. : impatiens noli tangere (impatiens pendulifera)
impat. : impatiens (Bach fl.)
impa-w-a : impatiens walleriana alba
ina-i. : inachis io (peacock butterfly, tagpfauenauge)
inca. : incajea
ind. : indium metallicum
indg. : indigo tinctoria (indigofera tinctoria)
indgf-a. : indigofera atriceps
indol. : indolum
indom. : indometacine
influ. : influenzinum (flu vaccine, grippe nosode, influenzinum vaccinus, vaccinum influenzae
inactivatum)
influ-eq-vc. : influenza equine vaccinus (horse flu vaccine)
ing. : ingluvin (fowl's gizzard, gallinae stomachi tunica interior)
inos. : inositol (vitamin b7)
ins. : insulinum
insig-m. : Insight meditation
interf. : interferon alpha leucocytaire
inul. : inula helenium
inul-d. : inula dysenterica
inul-g. : inula graveolens
inulin. : inulinum
inul-p. : inula pulicaria
inul-v. : inula viscosa
iod. : iodium (iodium purum, jodium)
iod-act. : iodium aceticum
iod-br. : iodium bromatum
iod-h. : iodium hydrogenisatum (acidum hydriodicum, acidum hydroiodicum, hydriodic acid,
hydrogen iodide)
iod-m. : iodium muriaticum
iodof. : iodoformium (iodoformum)
ip. : ipecacuanha (cephaelis ipecacuanha, ipeca, psychotria ipecacuanha, uragoga ipecacuanha)
ipat. : ipatropium
ipom-ba. : ipomoea batatas (batate, ssskartoffel, sweet potato)
ipom-f. : ipomoea ficifolia
ipom-nil. : ipomoea nil
ipom-p. : ipomoea purpurea (common morning-glory, convolvulus purpureus, ipomoea hirsutula,
pharbitis purpurea, tall morning-glory)
ipom-vi. : ipomoea violacea (heavenly-blue morning-glory, ipomoea rubrocaerulea, ipomoea
tricolor)
ip-rd. : ipecacuanhae radix
irid-m. : iridium muriaticum (iridium chloride)
irid-met. : iridium metallicum
iris : iris versicolor
iris-fa. : iris factissima
iris-fl. : iris florentina
iris-foe. : iris foetidissima
iris-g. : iris germanica
iris-h. : iris harwegii (sierra iris)
irisin. : irisinum (iridinum)
iris-ps. : iris pseudacorus
iris-pu. : iris pumila
iris-t. : iris tenax (iris minor)
isoleuc. : isoleucinum
ison. : isoniazide
isop. : isoprenaline
itu : itu (resina itu)
ix. : ixodes ricinus
ix-vc. : ixodes ricinus vaccine (CEE, Central European encephalitis, Central European tick-borne
J
jab. : jaborandi (microphyllus pennatifolius, pilocarpus jaborandi, pilocarpus microphyllus,
pilocarpus pennatifolius)
jac-c. : jacaranda caroba (bignonia caroba, bignonia copaia, caroba, cordelistris syphilitica,
jacaranda braziliensis, jacaranda copaia (Goebaja) Bignoniaceae, jacaranda procera)
jac-g. : jacaranda gualandai
jac-m. : jacaranda mimosifolia (jacaranda ovalifolia)
jade : jade
jal. : jalapa (convolvulus purga, exogonium purga, ipomea purga)
jas. : jaspis (iaspis, jaspe)
jasm. : jasminum officinale (white jessamine)
jasper : jasper
jatr-c. : jatropha curcas
jatr-g. : jatropha gossypifolia
jatr-u. : jatropha urens
jatz. : Jatzfeld aqua (Jatzfeld Soolbad)
jeff-di. : jeffersonia diphylla
joan. : joanesia asoca (aka joanesia asoca, ashoka, janosia, jenosia ashoka, jonosia asoka, saraca
indica)
jug-c. : juglans cinerea (juglans cathartica)
jugin. : juglandinum
jug-r. : juglans regia (nux juglans, walnut)
junc-e. : juncus effusus (juncus communis)
junc-ja. : juncus jaquinii (black alpine rush)
junc-p. : juncus pilosus (luzula pilosa, luzula vernalis)
juni-br. : juniperus brasiliensis
juni-c. : juniperus communis (baccae juniperi)
juni-o. : juniperus oxycedrus
juni-o-p. : juniperus oxycedrus pix
juni-p. : juniperus phoenicea
juni-v. : juniperus virginiana (juniperus virginianus)
just. : justicia adhatoda (adhatoda, adhatoda vasika, basaka, justicia cydoniifolia)
just-r. : justicia rubrum
K
kal. : kalanchoe pinnatum (bryophyllum calycinum, bryophyllum pinnatum)
kalag. : kalagua
kalam. : kalamegh
kali-act. : kalium aceticum (acetate of potash, kalii acetas, potassium acetate)
kali-ar. : kalium arsenicosum (potassium arsenite)
kali-asp. : kalium asparticum
kali-aur-cy. : kalium auro-cyanatum
kali-bi. : kalium bichromicum (kalii bichromas)
kali-biox. : kalium bioxalicum
kali-bit. : kalium bitartaricum (tartarus depuratus)
kali-br. : kalium bromatum (bromide of potash, bromide of potassium, kalii bromidum)
kali-b-t. : kalium borotartaricum
kali-c. : kalium carbonicum (dikalii carbonas)
kali-caust. : kalium causticum
kali-chl. : kalium chloricum
kali-chls. : kalium chlorosum
kola : kola (cola acuminata, cola nitida, cola nut, cola vera, nux colae, sterculia acuminata)
kosen : Kosen aqua (Kosen Soolbad)
kou. : kousso (brayera anthelmintica, hagenia abyssinica, koso)
krent-l. : krentophyllum lanatum
kreos. : kreosotum
kres. : kresolum (cresolum, cresylolum)
kronth. : Kronthal aqua
krypt. : krypton
kurch. : kurchi (holarrhena antidysenterica, wrightia antidysenterica, wrightia tincto)
L
lac-ac. : lacticum acidum (acidum lacticum, lactis acidum)
lac-as. : lac asinum (lac equinuus assinus)
lac-c. : lac caninum
lac-cp. : lac caprinum
lac-cp-m. : lac caprinum masculinum
lac-d. : lac vaccinum defloratum (lac defloratum)
lac-del. : lac delphinum (lac delphinum)
lac-e. : lac equinum (lac equie)
lac-eleph-m. : lac elephas maxiumus (asian elephant milk, indian elephant milk)
lacer. : lacerta agilis
lacer-viv. : lacerta vivipara (common lizard, lacerta (zootoca) vivipara, Waldeidechse, zootoca
vivipara)
lac-f. : lac felinum (felix domestica lac)
lach. : lachesis mutus (surukuku, trigonocephalus lachesis)
lac-h. : lac humanum
lachn. : lachnanthes tinctoria (gyrotheca tinctoria)
lac-leo. : lac leoninum (lac leonis)
lac-loxod-a. : lac loxodonta Africana
lac-lup. : lac lupinum
lac-mac-m. : lac macaca mulatta (rhesus monkey milk, rhesusaffenmilch)
lac-mat. : lac maternum
lac-o. : lac ovis
lac-pan-tr. : lac pan troglodytes
lac-pr. : lac primatum
lac-sui. : lac suinum
lact. : lactuca virosa (old abbr.)
lacta-d. : lactarius deliciosus
lact-e. : lactuca elongata
lactob. : lactobacillus (bacillus acidophilus)
lactof. : lactoflavinum (vitamin g)
lactrm. : lactucarium thridace
lact-sa. : lactuca sativa
lact-sc. : lactuca scariola
lact-v. : lactuca virosa (lactuca silvestris)
lac-urs. : lac ursinum
lac-v. : lac vaccinum
lac-v-b. : lac vaccinum butyricum
lac-v-c. : lac vaccinum coagulatum
lac-v-f. : lac vaccinum flos (lac vaccini flos, lactis vaccini flos)
lac-v-fe. : lac vaccinum fermentatum (koumiss, kumiss, kumyss)
lam. : lamium album
lam-am. : lamium amplexicaule
lamin-d. : laminaria digitata (laminaria flexicaulis)
M
macro. : macrotinum (resina cimifugae)
macroz. : macroziama spiralis
maesa-l. : maesa lanceolata
maesa-t. : maesa trichophlebia
maeso-f. : maesobotrya floribunda
mag-act. : magnesium aceticum
mag-ar. : magnesium arsenicicum
mag-art. : magnesium artificialis
mag-asp. : magnesium asparticum
mag-bcit. : magnesium borocitricum
mag-br. : magnesium bromatum
mag-c. : magnesium carbonicum (magnesii subcarbonas levis)
mag-chl. : magnesium chloricum
mag-cit. : magnesium citricum (magnesii citras)
mag-f. : magnesium fluoratum
mag-form. : magnesium formicum
mag-gl. : magnesium gluconicum
mag-gp. : magnesium glycerophosphoricum
mag-hox. : magnesium hydroxydum (magnesii hydroxidum)
mag-hp. : magnesium hypophosphorosum
mag-hs. : magnesium hyposulfurosum
mag-i. : magnesium iodatum
mag-lac. : magnesium lacticum
mag-m. : magnesium muriaticum (magnesii chloridum hexahydricum)
mag-mang-p. : magnesium manganum phosphoricum
mag-met. : magnesium metallicum
mag-n. : magnesium nitricum
magn-gl. : magnolia glauca
magn-gr. : magnolia grandiflora
mag-o. : magnesium oxydatum (magnesia, magnesii oxydum, magnesium calcinatum)
mannohep. : mannoheptulose
mant-r. : mantis religiosa (gottesanbeterin, praying mantis)
manz. : manzanita (arctostaphylos manzanita)
mapr. : maprotiline
marant-a. : maranta arundinacea (arrowroot)
marb-w. : white marble (lapis marmoreus Connemara, marble, white)
m-arct. : magnetis polus arcticus
marien. : Marienbader aqua ( Mairenbader kruzbrunne)
markh-l. : markhamia lutea
marr. : = marr-vg. = marrubium album (old abbr.)
marr-vg. : marrubium vulgare (marrubium album)
mastoid. : mastoiditis nosode
mate : ilex mate (ilex paraguaiensis, ilex paraguariensis, mate)
mati. : matico (artanthe elongata, piper angustifolium, piper angustifolium elongatum, piper
elongatum)
matr-d. : matricaria discoidea (matricaria suaveolens)
matr-i. : matricaria inodora
matth. : matthiola graeca
m-aust. : magnetis polus Australis
MDMA : methylenedioxy-n methylamphetamine (ecstasy, XTC)
mec. : meconinum (opianyl)
med. : medorrhinum (glinicum, glynicum, gonococcinum)
medic-l. : medicago lupulina
medul-o. : medulla oblongata
medul-os. : medulla ossis
medul-os-si. : medulla ossis suis
medul-ren. : medulla renalis
medul-spi. : medulla spinalis
medul-spi-ce. : medulla spinalis cervicalis
medul-spi-do. : medulla spinalis dorsalis
medul-spi-lu. : medulla spinalis lumbalis
medul-spi-s. : medulla spinalis suis
medul-spi-sa. : medulla spinalis sacralis
medul-supr. : medulla suprarenalis
medus. : medusa
medus-xyz. : medus. + physal-p.
mein-p. : Meinberg Pyrmont aqua
mel : mel
mela. : melastoma Ackermanni
melal-alt. : melaleuca alternifolia
melal-alt-ol. : melaleuca alternifolia oleum
melal-hy. : melaleuca hypericifolia
melam-a. : melampyrum arvense
melan. : melaninum
mel-c-s. : mel cum sale
meli. : melilotus officinalis
meli-a. : melilotus alba
meli-alt. : melilotus altissima
melin. : melitine
melis. : melissa officinalis
melit. : melitagrinum
meli-xyz. : melilotus off. + -a.
melo. : melolontha vulgaris (scarabaeus melolontha)
meloe-m. : meloe majalis (majalis)
meltis-g. : melittis grandiflora (melittis melissophyllum)
N
nabal. : nabalus serpentarius (nabulus albus, prenanthes serpentaria, white lettuce)
nack. : nackelia
nad. : nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (nadid, nadide, nadidum)
naja : naja tripudians (kobra, naja haje, naja naja, naja naja naja)
naja-n. : naja nigricollis (cobra nigricolis, naja nigricolis)
nalox. : naloxon (naloxone)
nandr-php. : norandrostenolon phenylpropion
napht. : naphtha
naphtaz-m. : naphthazolinum muriaticum
naphtaz-n. : naphthazolinum nitricum
naphthoq. : naphthoquinone (naphthalenedione)
naphtin. : naphthalinum
napin. : napellinum
narcin. : narceinum
narcot. : narcotinum
narcot-act. : narcotinum aceticum
narcot-m. : narcotinum muriaticum
narc-po. : narcissus poeticus
narc-ps. : narcissus pseudonarcissus
narz. : Narzan aqua
nast. : = nast-o. = nasturtium aquaticum (old abbr.)
nast-o. : nasturtium officinale (nasturtium aquaticum, rorippa nasturtium aquaticum, watercress)
nat-act. : natrium aceticum (natrii acetas)
nat-ae-s. : natrium aethylosulphuricum (natrium sulphorinicum)
nat-ar. : natrium arsenicosum (natrium arsenicicum, sodium arseniate)
nat-be. : natrium benzoicum (natrii benzoas)
nat-bi. : natrium bichromicum
nat-bic. : natrium bicarbonicum
nat-bis. : natrium bisulfurosum
nat-bor. : natrium boricum
nat-br. : natrium bromatum (bromide of sodium, natrii bromidum)
nat-c. : natrium carbonicum (cacodilato de sodio, natrii carbonas monohydricus, natrium
cacodylicum)
nat-cac. : = nat-c. = natrium cacodylicum
nat-caust. : natrium causticum (natrii hydroxydum)
nat-ch. : natrium choleinicum
nat-chl. : natrium chloricum
nat-chr. : natrium chromicum
ninhy. : ninhydrine
niob-m. : niobium muriaticum
niob-met. : niobium metallicum (columbium niobium)
niob-s. : niobium sulphuricum
nit-ac. : nitricum acidum (nitri acidum)
nit-m-ac. : nitromuriaticum acidum (aqua regia, chlornitrosum acidum, nitroso-muriaticum acidum)
nitraz. : nitrazepam
nitro. : nitrogenium
nitrob. : nitrobenzolum (nitrobenzenum)
nitro-o. : nitrogenium oxygenatum (nitrogenii oxidum, nitrogenum oxygenatum)
nitroph. : nitrophenolum
nitro-pox. : nitrogenium peroxydatum
nitros-ac. : nitrosum acidum (nitrous acid)
nit-s-d. : nitri spiritus dulcis (aethylium nitrosum, spiritus aetheris nitrosi, spiritus dulcis nitri,
spiritus nitrico-aethereus)
nn-diphel. : n nitrosodiphenylamin
nobel. : nobelium
noc-a. : nocardia asteroides
noradr. : noradrenalinum (levoarterenol, noradrenalini hydrochloridum, norepinephrine)
norepi. : = noradr. = norepinephrine (old abbr.)
norleuc. : norleucine
nosc. : noscapinum
note-st. : notechis scutatus
novoc. : novocainum
nucl-ac. : nucleinicum acidum
nuph. : nuphar luteum (nymphaea lutea)
nuph-p. : nuphar pumilum
nux-a. : nux absurda
nux-m. : nux moschata (myristica fragrans, myristica officinalis, nutmeg)
nux-v. : nux vomica (colubrina, strychnos nux vomica, strychnos nux-vomica)
nyct. : nyctanthes arbor tristis (arbor tristis)
nymph. : nymphaea odorata (castalia pudica, nymphea odorata)
nymph-a. : nymphaea alba (castalia speciosa, nymphea alba)
nyst. : nystatine
O
oak : oak (Bach fl.)
ochn-a. : ochna atropurpurea
oci. : ocimum canum
oci-car. : ocimum caryophyllatum
oci-g. : ocimum gratissimum
oci-m. : ocimum micranthum
oci-sa. : ocimum sanctum
oci-su. : ocimum suave
oct-mac. : octopus maculosa
oena. : oenanthe crocata (water dropwort)
oena-f. : oenanthe fistulosa
oeno. : oenothera biennis
oest. : oestrus cameli
oestrd. : oestradiol
oestrd-be. : oestradiol benzoas
okou. : okoubaka aubrevillei
ol-ac. : oleicum acidum (acidum oleicum)
ol-an. : oleum animale aethereum (oleum animae aetherum dippeli, oleum cornu cervi, oleum
P
paeon. : paeonia officinalis
pali-a. : paliurus aculeatus (paliurus Australis, paliurus spina christi, zisyphus paliurus)
pall. : palladium metallicum
pall-f. : palladium fluoratum
pall-m. : palladium muriaticum
pall-o. : palladium oxydatum
palm-ac. : palmiticum acidum
palo. : paloondo
p-ambe-ac. : para-aminobenzoicum acidum
p-ambes-ac. : para-aminobenzoicumsulfamidum acid
pambt. : pambotano
p-amsal-ac. : para-aminosalicylicum acidum
pana. : panacea arvensis
pancr. : pancreatinum (pancreatis pulvis)
pann. : panna (aspidium panna)
pant-ac. : pantothenicum acidum (acidum pantothenicum, vitamin b5)
papain. : papainum
pap-d. : papaver dubium (long-headed poppy)
papin. : papaverinum
papin-m. : papaverinum muriaticum (papaverini hydrochloridum)
pap-r. : papaver rhoeas (common poppy, papaver vulgaris)
par. : paris quadrifolia
paraf. : paraffinum (paraffinum liquidum)
paraph. : paraphenylendiaminum
parat. : paratyphoidinum (paratyphoidinum a, salmonella parathyphoidea)
parat-b. : paratyphoidinum B (salmonella schotmullieri)
parathyr. : parathyreoidinum (glandula parathyroidea, parathormonum, parathyreoid glands)
pareir. : pareira brava (chondodendron tomentosa, chondodendron tormentosum, cocculus
platyphylla)
pariet. : parietaria officinalis
parit-t. : paritium tiliaceum
parn-p. : parnassia palustris
paro-i. : paronychia illecebrum
parot. : parotidinum (glandula parotis, parotitis nosode)
parot-vc. : parotitis vaccinus (vaccinum parotitidis vivum)
parth. : parthenium hysterophorus (congress grass, escoba amargo, parthenium hysterophorus lynn)
passi. : passiflora incarnata
passi-c. : passiflora coerulea
past. : pastinaca sativa
past-u. : pastinaca urens
paull. : paullinia pinnata
p-benzq. : parabenzoquinonum (parabenzochinon, para-benzoquinonum)
p-dchlbe. : paradichlorobenzolum
pect. : pecten jacobaeus
pectin. : pectinum
ped. : pediculus capitis
pedclr. : pedicularis canadensis
ped-p. : pediculus pubis (crab lice, genital louse, pediculus inguinalis, phthirus pubis, pubic louse)
pegan-ha. : peganum harmala (Esphand, Syrian rue)
pelarg. : pelargonium reniforme
pelarg-o. : pelargonium odoratissimum (geranium odoratissimum)
pellin. : pelletierinum
pen. : penthorum sedoides (ditch-stonecrop, siempreviva)
penic. : penicillinum
penic-calc. : penicillinum calcium
penic-cm. : penicillium camemberti (penicillium candidum, penicillium caseicolum)
penic-cy. : penicillium cyclopodium (penicillium cyclopium)
penic-e. : penicillium expansum (penicillium giordanoi, penicillium glaucum)
penic-g. : penicillium griseum
penic-n. : penicillium notatum
penic-p. : penicillium piceum
pentac-m. : pentaclethra macrophylla
pentad-b. : pentadiplandra brazzeana
pentaz. : pentazocine
peps. : pepsinum (pepsini pulvis)
perchlet. : perchlorethylene
perh. : perhexilinum
perh-mal. : perhexilinum maleatum (pexid)
perhydr. : perhydrol
peri. : periploca graeca
perid-b. : perideridia bolanderi (yampah)
perill-f. : = perill-o. = perilla frutescens (old abbr.)
perill-o. : perilla ocymoides (perilla frutescens)
periproc. : periproctitic abscess nosode
perkin. : perkinismus
pern-c. : pernus canaliculus
perob. : perobinha
pers. : persea Americana (avocado, persea gratissima)
pert. : pertussinum (coqueluchinum)
pert-vc. : pertussis vaccinus
pest. : pestinum (Vaccin of Haffkine)
petan-v. : petanisia variabilis
peti. : petiveria tetandra (phytolacca tetandra)
peti-a. : petiveria alliacea
petr. : petroleum (oleum petrae)
petr-cr. : petroleum crudum
petr-di. : petroleum diesel
petrola. : petrolatum
petros. : petroselinum sativum (apium petroselinum, petroselinum crispum, petroselinum hortense)
petros-c. : = petros. = petroselinum crispum (old abbr.)
petr-ra. : petroleum raffinatum
petr-xyz. : petroleum unknow preparation
peuc-o. : peucedanum officinale
pg-a1ta1. : prostaglandinum a1 tromboxane a1
pg-a2ta2. : prostaglandinum a2 tromboxane a2
pg-all. : prostaglandinum all types
pg-e1. : prostaglandinum e1
pg-e2. : prostaglandinum e2
pg-f2a. : prostaglandinum f2 alpha
ph-ac. : phosphoricum acidum (acidum phosphoricum)
phal. : phallus impudicus
phasco-ci. : phascolarctos cinereus
phase. : phaseolus nanus
phase-l. : phaseolus lunatus
phase-vg. : phaseolus vulgaris
phase-xyz. : phase.+ phase-vg.
phel. : phellandrium aquaticum (foeniculum aquaticum, nabo acutico, oenanthe aquaticum,
oenanthe phellandrium)
phell-n. : phellinus nigricans (polyporus nigricans)
phenac. : phenacetinum
phenan. : phenanthrenum
phenerg. : phenergan
phenob. : phenobarbitalum (gardenalum, luminal, phenylaethylimalonylureum)
phenolpht. : phenolphtaleinum
phenoth. : phenothiazinum
phenylal. : phenylalanine (phenylalaninum)
phenylbe. : phenylbenzene
phenylbu. : phenylbutazone
phenylhy. : phenylhydrazinum
phila. : philadelphus coronarius
Q
quas. : quassia amara
quasin. : quassinum
queb. : quebracho (aspidosperma quebracho)
querc. : quercus (quercus fructus)
querc-g. : quercus glandium (acorn kernels)
querc-l. : quercus lobata (valley oak)
querc-pu. : quercus pubescens
querc-r. : quercus robur (english oak, oak, quercus pedunculata, quercus sessilifera)
querc-r-fl. : quercus robur flos
querc-r-g-aq. : quercus robur aqua glandium (aqua glandium quercus robur)
querc-r-g-s. : quercus robur glandium spiritus (spiritus glandium quercus robur)
quill. : quillaya saponaria (quillaya smegmaderma)
quin-chl. : quinacrine chlorhydrate
quinhydr. : quinhydrone (chinhydron)
quinid. : quinidinum
quinid-m. : quinidinum muriaticum
quinid-s. : quinidinum sulfuricum
quinol. : quinoleinum
R
rad-br. : radium bromatum
rad-chl. : radium chloratum
rad-met. : radium metallicum
rado. : radon
raja-s. : rajania subsamarata
ran-a. : ranunculus acris
ran-b. : ranunculus bulbosus
ran-fi. : ranunculus ficaria (ficaria ranunculoides, ficaria verna)
ran-fl. : ranunculus flammula
ran-g. : ranunculus glacialis
ran-p. : ranunculus pinnatus
ran-r. : ranunculus repens
ran-s. : ranunculus sceleratus
raph. : raphanus sativus (black garden radish)
raphani. : raphanistrum arvense
raphis-g. : raphispermum gerardioides
rapp. : rappenau aqua
rat. : ratanhia peruviana (krameria triandra, mapato, pumacuchu, ratanhiae peruvianae radix)
ratt-norv. : rattus norvegus (brown rat)
ratt-r. : rattus rattus (black rat, mus rattus rattus, roof rat)
rauw. : rauwolfia serpentina (rauvolfia serpentina)
red-ch. : red chestnut (Bach fl.)
rein. : Reinerz aqua
ren. : kidneys
res. : resorcinum
resc. : rescue (Bach fl.)
reser. : reserpinum
retin. : retinol (vitamine A1)
retin-ac. : retinoicum acidum (vitamine A)
rham-cal. : rhamnus californica
rham-cath. : rhamnus cathartica
rham-f. : rhamnus frangula (frangula, frangulae cortex)
rham-f-cor. : frangulae corticis extractum siccum
rham-f-xyz. : rhamnus unknown part
rham-pr. : rhamnus prinoides
rhen-met. : rhenium metallicum
rhen-o. : rhenium oxydatum
rheum : rheum palmatum (rheum officinale)
rheum-r. : rheum rhaponticum
rhiz. : rhizopus niger (rhizopus nigricans)
rhod. : rhododendron chrysanthum
S
sabad. : sabadilla (asagraea officinalis, schoenocaulon officinale)
sabal : sabal serrulata (brahea serrulata, chamaerops serrulata, saw palmetto, serenoa repens,
serenoa serrulata)
sabb. : sabbatia angularis
sabin. : sabina (juniperus sabina)
sacch. : saccharum officinale
sacch-a. : saccharum album (saccharum raffinatum)
sacchin. : saccharinum
sacch-l. : saccharum lactis
sacch-xyz. : saccharum unknown type
sacmy-a. : saccharomyces apiculata
sag-s. : sagittaria sagittaefolia
sal-ac. : salicylicum acidum (acidum salicylicum)
sal-al. : salix alba
salam. : salamandra maculata (salamandra maculosa)
sal-am. : salix Americana
salam-l. : salamandra lacerta
salbut. : salbutamol
sal-fr. : salix fragilis (crack willow)
salic-p. : salicaria purpurea (lythrum salicaria)
salin. : salicinum
sal-l. : salix lasiolepis (salix vitellina, willow)
sal-ma. : salix madagascariensis
sal-mar. : sal marinum
sal-mo. : salix mollissima
salmon-e. : salmonella enteridis
salmo-sal. : salmo salar (Gemeiner Lachs)
salmo-trut. : salmo trutta (Bachforelle, brown trout, truite de rivire)
sulfa. : sulfanilamidum
sulfag. : sulfaguanidinum
sulfamrz. : sulfamerazine
sulfamtz. : sulfamethizol
sulfap. : sulfapyridinum
sulfatz. : sulfathiazolum
sulfon. : sulfonalum (diethylsulphone-dimethyl-methane., diethylsylfone-dimethyl-methane)
sulfonam. : sulfonamidum (M&B 693, sulphonomide)
sul-h. : sulphur hydrogenisatum
sul-i. : sulphur iodatum (iodide of sulphur)
sulo-ac. : sulphurosum acidum
sulph. : sulphur (sulfur, sulphur lotum, sulphur sublimatum)
sulph-tinct. : sulphur tinctura
sulph-trit. : sulphur trituratum
sulpi. : sulpiride
sul-s-l. : sulphur sublimatum lavum
sul-ter. : sulphur terebinthinatum
sumb. : sumbulus moschatus (euryangium sumbul, ferula moschata, ferula sumbul, sumbul ferula)
suprar. : suprarenalis (glandula suprarenalis, suprarenalis glandula)
sus-scr. : sus scrofa (wild boar, wild varken)
sutox. : sutoxol
sweet-ch. : sweet chestnut (Bach fl.)
syc. : bacillus Sycoccus (Paterson) (sycoccus (paterson), sycoccus bacillus (paterson), sycotic co.
(paterson), sycotic compound (paterson))
symph. : symphytum officinale
sym-r. : symphoricarpus racemosus (common snowberry, knackbeere, knallerbse, lacrima d'italia,
symphoricarpos albus, symphoricarpus rivularis, symphorine grappes, thin-leaved snowberry)
synad-g. : synadenium grantii
syph. : syphilinum (luesinum, lueticum)
syr. : syringa vulgaris
syzyg. : syzygium jambolanum (eugenia jambolana, syzygium cumini)
T
tab. : tabacum (nicotiana tabacum)
taber-i. : tabernanthe iboga
tabern-s. : tabernaemontana stapfiana
tal-m. : talauma mexicana (heartflower tree, magnolia yolotxochitl, nobel lord flower, yolotxochitl,
yoloxochitl)
talp-eu-p. : talpae Europeus pel (european mole, maulwurf)
tam. : tamus communis
tama. : tamarix germanica
tama-c. : tamarix cinariensis (tamarix gallica)
tamox. : tamoxifen
tamrnd. : tamarindus indica
tanac. : tanacetum vulgare (chrysanthemum vulgare)
tanac-b. : tanacetum balsamita
tanac-er. : tanacetum erectum
tang. : tanghinia venenifera
tann-ac. : tannicum acidum (tanninum)
tant-f. : tantalum fluoratum
tant-met. : tantalum metallicum
taosc. : Taosca aqua
taper. : taperiba
tarant-xyz. : tarantula alive or dead
U
ulc-cr. : ulcus cruris nosode
ulc-du. : ulcus duodeni nosode
ulc-ve. : ulcus venticuli nosode
ulm-c. : ulmus campestris
ulm-m. : ulmus montana (ulmus pyramidalis)
ulm-pra. : ulmus procera (elm)
ulm-r. : ulmus rubra (slippery elm, ulmus fulva)
ulm-xyz. : ulmus unknown species
ulx-eu. : ulex Europaeus (gorse)
umck. : umckaloabo
uncar-tom. : uncaria tomentosa (Cat's Claw)
undec-ac. : undecylenicum acidum
une-e. : unedo edulis
upa. : upas tieut (strychnos tieut)
upa-a. : upas antiaris (antiaris toxicaria)
ur-ac. : uricum acidum
uran-act. : uranium aceticum
uran-ar. : uranium arsenicicum
uran-c. : uranium carbonicum
uran-f. : uranium fluoratum
uraninit. : uraninitum
uran-lac. : uranium lacticum
uran-m. : uranium muriaticum
uran-met. : uranium metallicum
uran-n. : uranium nitricum
uran-o. : uranium oxydatum
uranoth. : uranothorium
uran-ox. : uranium oxalicum
uran-p. : uranium phosphoricum
uran-s. : uranium sulphuricum
V
v-a-b. : vaccin attnu bili (bacillus Calmette-Gurin, bcg, bcg-vaccine)
vac. : vaccininum (vaccinotoxinum)
vacc-m. : vaccinium myrtillus (myrtillus)
vacc-v. : vaccinium vitis idaea
vacuum : vacuum (vakuum)
valer. : valeriana officinalis (valerianae radix)
valer-ac. : valerianicum acidum
valerl-o. : valerianella olitoria
valin. : valinum
vanad. : vanadium metallicum
vanad-m. : vanadium muriaticum
vanad-o. : vanadium oxydatum
vanad-s. : vanadium sulphuricum
vanes-u. : vanessa urtica (kleiner fuchs (schmetterling), small tortoise shell butterfly)
vang-e. : vangueria emirnensis
vang-l. : vangueria lasiantha
vanil. : vanilla aromatica (planifolia, vanilla planifolia)
vanilin. : vanillinum
varic. : varicellinum (chicken pox nosode, varizellen nosode)
vario. : variolinum
vasel. : vaselin (vaseline)
vasop. : vasopressine
vauc-s. : vaucheria sessilis
ven-m. : venus mercenaria (hard shell clam, mercenaria mercenaria, palourde amricaine, quahog)
ven-s-e. : venus stella errans (venus planetes)
ventus : ventus
ver-ac. : vernix caseosa
verat. : veratrum album
verat-n. : veratrum nigrum
verat-v. : veratrum viride (helonias viridis)
W
waln. : walnut (Bach fl.)
wede-n. : wedelia natalensis
weilb. : Weilbach aqua
white-ch. : white chestnut (Bach fl.)
wies. : Wiesbaden aqua
wildb. : Wildbad aqua
wildu. : Wildungen aqua
will. : willow (Bach fl.)
wist-fl. : wisteria floribunda (Japanese wisteria)
wist-s. : wisteria sinensis (Chinese wisteria)
wither. : witherite
with-s. : withania somnifera
w-oat : wild oat (Bach fl.)
w-rose : wild rose (Bach fl.)
w-viol. : water violet (Bach fl.)
wye. : wyethia helenoides (alarconia helenoides, wyethia)
X
xan. : xanthoxylum fraxineum (xanthoxylum Americanum, zanthoxylum fraxineum)
xan-al. : xanthoxylum alatum (zanthoxylum alatum, zieria minutiflora)
Y
yatr. : yatren
yell-vc. : yellow fever vaccinum
yers. : serum yersiniae (Yersin)
yohim. : yohimbinum (corynanthe yohimbe, johimbe, pausinystalia yohimba, yohimbehe)
yohim-m. : yohimbinum muriaticum
yttrb-br. : ytterbium bromatum
yttrb-c. : ytterbium carbonicum
yttrb-f. : ytterbium fluoratum
yttrb-i. : ytterbium iodatum
yttrb-lac. : ytterbium lacticum
yttrb-m. : ytterbium muriaticum
yttrb-n. : ytterbium nitricum
yttrb-o. : ytterbium oxydatum
yttrb-ox. : ytterbium oxalicum
yttrb-p. : ytterbium phosphoricum
yttrb-s. : ytterbium sulphuricum
yttrb-sil. : ytterbium silicatum
yttr-met. : yttrium metallicum
yttr-o. : yttrium oxydatum
yttr-ox. : yttrium oxalicum
yuc. : yucca filamentosa (yuca)
Z
zant. : zantedeschia aethiopica (arum lily, calla aethiopica, calla lily, nyckterinia capensis,
nycterinia capensis, richardia aethiopica, zaluzianskya capensis)
zanthox-c. : zanthoxylum capense
zea-i. : zea italica (zea putrefatto)
zinc. : zincum metallicum
zinc-act. : zincum aceticum (Rademacher's solution)
zinc-ar. : zincum arsenicosum
zinc-be. : zincum benzoicum
zinc-br. : zincum bromatum
zinc-c. : zincum carbonicum
zinc-chl. : zincum chloricum
zinc-chr. : zincum chromicum (zincum chromatum)
zinc-col. : zincum colloidale
zinc-cy. : zincum cyanatum
Catalogue of Authors
A
ACHE M. (aem): (1952-)
ACHE M. and MATTITSCH G. (aem1) Proving of Aegopodium podagria, Documenta Homoeopathica,
12 ( 1989)
ACHTZEHN Hans-Jrgen (az): Contemporary homeopath [Germany] (1951-)
ACHTZEHN Hans-Jrgen (az1.de) Carcinosinum, H Einblicke, Vol 1: pg 6 ( 1990)
ACKERLY Sarah (acl): Contemporary homeopath [Portland, USA]
ACKERLY Sarah (acl1) A case of Intractable Constipation, N Eng. J H, Vol 3 nr 2: pg 17-18 ( 1994)
ADAMS Suzanne C. (ads): Contemporary homeopath [Washington, USA]
ADAMS Suzanne C. (ads1) Cases: Dermoid Cysts, N Eng. J H, Vol 3 nr 1: pg 19-20 ( 1994)
AEGIDI (ag): French homeopathic physician. One of the founders of homeopathy in France.
AGRAWAL M. L. (aw7): Measles and small-pox
AGRAWAL M. L. (aw8): A Repertory of desires and aversions
AGRAWAL M. L. (aw9): Dreams and nightmares
AGRAWAL M. L. (aw1) Materia medica of the human mind, ( 1989)
AGRAWAL M. L. (aw2): Homeopathy in accidents and injuries
AGRAWAL M. L. (aw3): A comparative study of chronic diseases
AGRAWAL M. L. (aw4): Diseases of hair and nails
AGRAWAL M. L. (aw5): Homeopathy in asthma
AGRAWAL M. L. (aw6): Insomnia and sleep
AGRAWAL Y. R. (awy): (1941-)
AGRAWAL Y. R. (awy1) Treatise on Bowel Nosode, ( 1981)
AGRAWAL Y. R. (awy2) Homeopathy in asthma, New Delhi: Vijay Publication ( 1985)
AGRAWAL Y. R. (awy3) Homoeopathy in Accidents and Injuries., Delhi: Vija Publications (India) (
1983)
Agricultural Research Service of the USDA (usda1): Common weeds of the United States.
AHMAD Shafiq (amd1): A short Repertory on Indian drugs
ALBIN Steve (abs): Contemporary homeopath [Portland, USA]
ALBIN Steve (abs1) Poison Oak Miseries, N Eng. J H, Vol 2 nr 1: pg 8-9 ( 1993)
ALEEM Mohammed (alm1) The Rhythm of Volcano, Links, Vol 1: pg 39-40 ( 1994)
ALEEM Mohammed (alm): Contemporary homeopath [Madras, India] (1954-)
ALLEN Henry C. (al4) The therapy of intermittent fever, New Delhi: Jain Publishers ( 1884)
ALLEN Henry C. (al11.es): Comparaciones de Algunos Medicamentos de la Materia Mdica
Homeoptica
ALLEN Henry C. (al8) Silica, Med Adv, Vol 39/1: pg 8 ( 1901)
ALLEN Henry C. (al1.fr): Symptmes cls et caractristiques des principaux remdes.
ALLEN Henry C. (al9) Malaria officinalis, Med Adv, Vol 39/4: pg 180 ( 1901)
ALLEN Henry C. (al10) Tuberculinum, Med Adv, Vol 39/1: pg 1 ( 1901)
ALLEN Henry C. (al7) Salicylic Acid, International Hahnemannian Association Proceedings ( 1895)
ALLEN Henry C. (al1a.es) Keynotes Reordenados y clasificados con Medicamentos sobresalientes de
la MM y Nosodes intestinales (9th Ed.), New Delhi: Jain Publishers ( 2000)
ALLEN Henry C. (al5) The therapy of tuberculous affections, New Delhi: World Homeopathic links.
Reprint in 1983
ALLEN Henry C. (al6) Gregg consumption, Calcutta: Sett Dey & Co ( 1889)
ALLEN Henry C. (al1.de): Grundzge und Characteristika der Materia Medica mit Nosoden
ALLEN Henry C. (al3) The therapy of fevers, Philadelphia: Boericke & Tafel ( 1884)
ALLEN Henry C. (al): American homeopathic physician (1836-1909)
ALLEN Henry C. (al1) Keynotes and Characteristics with Comparisons, Wellingborough: Thorsons
Publ. ( 1898)
ALLEN Henry C. (al3.fr) Matire Mdicale de la fivre, Paris: Similia ( 1990)
ALLEN Henry C. (al2) The Materia Medica of some important nosodes, Philadelphia: Boericke & Tafel
( 1910)
ALLEN James H. (alj4) Chronic Miasms: Sycosis, Vol II ( 1900)
ALLEN John H. (alj): American homeopathic physician (1854-1925)
ALLEN John H. (alj2) Diseases and Therapeutics of the Skin, Philadelphia: Boericke and Tafel ( 1902)
ALLEN John H. (alj1.es) Los Miasmas Crnicos. Psora y Pseudopsora, Buenos Aires: Editorial Albatros
( 1985)
ALLEN John H. (alj1) The Chronic Miasms, Psora & Pseudopsora, Bombay: Roy and Co ( 1910)
ALLEN John H. (alj3) Medorrhinum, Med Adv, Vol 32/2: pg 59 ( 1894)
ALLEN Timothy F. (a3) Primer of Materia Medica, New Delhi: Jain Publishers ( 1892)
ALLEN Timothy F. (a1.fr): Encyclopdie de la Matire Mdicale pures : Slction de remdes
ALLEN Timothy F. (a2) Handbook of Materia Medica and Homeopathic Therapeutics, Philadelphia:
Boericke & Tafel ( 1889)
ALLEN Timothy F. (a1) Encyclopedia of Pure Materia Medica (Vol. 1-10), New-York / Philadelphia:
Boericke & Tafel ( 1879)
ALLEN Timothy F. (a4) A general symptom register of homoeopathic materia medica - index to the
Encyclopaedia of Pure Materia Medica., Philadelphia: Boericke and Tafel ( 1880)
ALLEN Timothy Field (a): (1837-1902)
ALLEN William A. (alw): (1842-)
ALLEN William A. (alw1) Repertory to Symptoms of Intermittent Fever, ( 1882)
ALTHER (atr): Swiss homeopathic physician from the time of Hahnemann (1800-1860)
ALTMANN Micha (am): Contemporary homeopath [Israel] (1950-)
AMBROS Julio J. (abj1.es) Semiologa Homeoptica Infanto Juvenil [2nd Ed.], Argentina: Ambros J. Yabes E. ( 1993)
ANAND Sunil (ans1) Prescribing for Children, Links, Vol 2: pg 9-10 ( 1993)
ANAND Sunil (ans): Contemporary homeopath [Bombay, India]
ANDREASSEN Alf (ada): (1953-)
ANGELL Henry C. (agh1) Treatise on diseases of the eye., Boston ( 1870)
anonymous author (aa4): Provings - Contemporary Provings
B
BAAS Cees (bs): Contemporary homeopath [Netherlands] (1956-)
BACH Edward (bh): English Homeopathic physician. Originator of the Bowel Nosodes and Bach
Flowers. (1886-1936)
BAD BOLL (zzb) Homeopathische Kreis - Bad Boll, ( 1985)
BAEHR Bernhard (bhb): (1828-1884)
BAEHR Bernhard (bhb1) The Science of Therapeutics, According to The Principles of Homoeopathy
Vol. I, New York: Boericke & Tafel ( 1870)
BAEHR Bernhard (bhb2) The Science of Therapeutics, According to The Principles of Homoeopathy
Vol. II, New York: Boericke & Tafel ( 1870)
BAGNULO (bnl1.it): Note di Dinamica Miasmatica e Keynotes dei principali Rimedi Omeopatici
BAILEY Philip M. (blp2): Personality Profiles of the Major
BAILEY Philip M. (blp1) Homeopathic Psychology, Berkeley: North Atlantic Books ( 1995)
BAILEY Philip M. (blp): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Australia]
BAILEY Philip M. (blp3): Constitutional Remedies
BAKSHI Jatinder P.S. (bsi1): Phoenix repertory
BAKSHI Kirpal S. (bsk1) Homeopathic remedies in verse, New Dehli: Jain ( 1991)
BALDOTA Sudhir (bdt2) Elegance - A case of eagle, Links, Vol 2: pg 83-86 ( 1999)
BALDOTA Sudhir (bdt): Contemporary homeopath [Bombay, India] (1955-)
BALDOTA Sudhir (bdt1) The case of Princess Daisy, Links, Vol 1: pg 36 ( 1995)
BALLANCE Sue (blc): Contemporary homeopath [New Zealand] (1948-)
BALLANCE Sue (blc1) Proving of Salix alba. Linking trees project., Links, Vol 12: pg 172-173 ( 1999)
BANDELIN Karin (bda): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Germany]
BANDLISH Renu (blr1) Students Guido to Materia Medica, New Delhi: Jain Publishers ( 1996)
BANDLISH Renu (blr): Contemporary homeopath (India, Student of P. Rastogi.]
BANDOEL Maria Clara (bdm2.es): Homeopatia Los Sintomas Mentales De Las Experimentaciones
Puras Y Su Desarrollo Dinamico Vital - Tomo 2
BANDOEL Maria Clara (bdm3.es): Homeopatia Los Sintomas Mentales De Las Experimentaciones
Puras Y Su Desarrollo Dinamico Vital - Tomo 3
BANDOEL Maria Clara (bdm4.es) Fundamentos Filosoficos De La Clinica Homeopatica, Buenos Aires:
Editorial Albatros ( 1990)
BANDOEL Maria Clara (bdm1.es) Homeopatia Los Sintomas Mentales De Las Experimentaciones Puras
Y Su Desarrollo Dinamico Vital - Tomo 1, Buenos Aires: Editorial Albatros ( 1991)
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu): Contemporary homeopath [Calcutta, India] (1957-)
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu2) Materia Medica made easy, ( 1993)
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu10): Clinical and Comparative Materia Medica. Schematic Comparison
of Remedies.
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu11) Synoptic Memorizer of Materia Medica, New Delhi: Jain Publishers
( 1980)
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu8): Brain Tumor in Homeopathy
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu7): Miasmatic Diagnosis
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu6): Essential Guide to Materia Medica
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu9): Homeopathy Around the World
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu5): Essential Guide to Pharmacy
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu3) Materia Medica of a few Rare Nosodes, ( 1994)
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu4): Fifty homeopathic Indian Drugs
BANERJEA Subrata Kumar (bnu1) Thyroidinum, Links, Vol 2: pg 15-17 ( 1993)
BANERJEE N. K. (bnk2) Blood Pressure its etiology and treatment, New Dehli: Jain ( 1960)
BANERJEE N. K. (bnk): (1900-)
BANERJEE N. K. (bnk2.es): Tensin arterial.
BANERJEE N. K. (bnk1) Realistic Materia Medica with therapeutics repertory, Calcutta: Salzer
BANERJEE Prosad (bnj5) Chronic disease: its causes and cure, New Dehli: Jain ( 1985)
BANERJEE Prosad (bnj4): Coronary thrombosis
BANERJEE Prosad (bnj): (1945-)
BANERJEE Prosad (bnj2): Dysentery
BANERJEE Prosad (bnj1) Materia medica of Indian drugs, West Bengal ( 1992)
BANERJEE Prosad (bnj3): Sexual disease and its treatment
BANNAN Robert (ban1) A proving of Tilia cordata, Links, Vol 9: pg 104-106 ( 1996)
BANNAN Robert (ban2): Urtica urens
BANNAN Robert (ban): (1961-)
BAUELOS MARINO Rodrigo (blm1.es) Cuestionario Del Kent, New Delhi: Jain Publishers ( 1994)
BR Marc (brm): [Switzerland] (1955-)
BARANDIARAN Anselmo (brd): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Spain]
1989)
BERNOVILLE F. (ftb6.es) Diabetes Mellitus. Translated by QUINTERO RAMREZ Gilberto, New Delhi:
Jain Publishers ( 1991)
BERRIDGE Edward W. (bra): (1878-1929)
BERRIDGE Edward W. (bra1) Complete Repertory to the Homeopathic Materia Medica on diseases of
the Eyes.[2nd Ed.], London: Heath ( 1873)
BERRIDGE Edward W. (bra3) = bra1 = Complete Repertory on the diseases of Eyes (old abbr.), (
1994)
BERRIDGE Edward W. (bra2) Repertory Corrections, International Hahnemannian Association ( 1919)
BERRIDGE Edward W. (bra4): A proving of Medorrhinum. Presented by Julian Winston.
BEUCHELT H. (bch2) Datisca cannabina., A H Z. 216 ;156 ( 1971)
BEUCHELT Hellmuth (bch1.de) Konstitutions- und Reaktionstypen in der Medizin u.s.w., Heidelberg:
Haug [5th Ed.] ( 1977)
BHANJA K. C. (bj): (1894-)
BHANJA K. C. (bj2) Masterkey to Homoeopathic Materia Medica, Darjeeling ( 1947)
BHANJA K. C. (bj1): Constitutional drug pictures
BHATIA V.R. (btv1) Influenza and Its Homoeopathic Treatment, ( 1994)
BHATT Smruti (bts1) A case of Eczema, Links, Vol 3: pg 29 ( 1993)
BHATT Smruti (bts): Contemporary homeopath [Bombay, India]
BHATTACHARYA Benoytosh (bty1): Tridosha and Homeopathy
BHATTACHARYYA H. CH. (bth1) The Homeopathic Family Practice, Calcutta: Bhattacharyya (13th
Ed.)
BHATTACHARYYA M. et al. (btm1) Manual of Materia Medica [with Allen's Clinicals] 2 Vols., Calcutta:
Bhattacharyya
BIANCHI Ivo (bci): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Italia] (1948-)
BIANCHI Ivo (bci1) Principles of homotoxicology, Baden-Baden: Aurelia - Verlag ( 1989)
BIANCHINI Roberto (bcr): Contemporary homeopath [London, Great Britain] (1958-)
BIANCHINI Roberto (bcr1) A case of Menopausal symptoms, Links, Vol 3: pg 26 ( 1994)
BICKLEY Antony (bka): Contemporary homeopath [United Kingdom] (1947-)
BICKLEY Antony (bka1) The bowel nosodes., American Homoeopath ( 2002)
BIDWELL Glen I. (bwg1) How to Use the Repertory with a Practical Analysis of forty Homoeopathic
Remedies, Calcutta: N.K. Banerjee ( 1915)
BIDWELL Glen I. (bwg1.es) Como manejar el repertorio., New Delhi: Jain Publishers
BINET (bnt): (1911-1985)
BINET (bnt2.fr): L'homopathie pratique
BINET (bnt1.fr): Thrapeutique Homopathique
BIRCH K. (bhk): (1954-)
BIRCH K. and ROCKWELL J. (bhk1) A Homeopahtic Proving of Sequoia sempervirens, ( 1994)
BLACK G. (bk1): Viscum Album, the common Mistletoe
BLACKIE Margery G. (bc1) The Challenge of Homoeopathy (The patient Not the Cure), London:
Macdonald and Jane ( 1976)
BLACKIE Margery G. (bc): English homeopathic physician. British Queen's physician. (1898-1981)
BLACKIE Margery G. (bc2) Classical Homeopathy, Beaconsfield (England): Beaconsfield Publ. ( 1986)
BLACKIE Margery G. (bc3) A comparison of Arsenicum, Nitricum. Acidum, Hepar Sulphur and Nux
vomica, ( 1961)
BLACKIE Margery G., CLOSE S., ROBERTS H. y WRIGHT E. (bc4.es) Clinica Homeoptica. Translated
by Raul Ibarra Ovando, Buenos Aires: Editorial Albatros ( 1993)
BLACKWOOD Alexander L. (bwa3) Manual of Materia Medica, therapeutics and Pharmacology with
Clinical Index, ( 1906)
BLACKWOOD Alexander L. (bwa5) Diseases of the Liver, Pancreas and Ductless Glands, ( 1907)
BLACKWOOD Alexander L. (bwa1) Diseases of the kidneys and nerves, ( 1913)
BLACKWOOD Alexander L. (bwa4) The food tract: its ailments and disease of the peritoneum.,
Philadelphia: Boericke & Tafel ( 1909)
BLACKWOOD Alexander L. (bwa): (1862-1924)
BLACKWOOD Alexander L. (bwa2) Diseases of the heart, ( 1901)
BTTCHER - HAASE C. and LIDO H. and STUBLER M. (btr2) Luffa operculata, Br H J ( 1988)
BOTTI Maurizio (btb): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Italy]
BOUKO-LEVY (bkl): (1947- )
BOUKO-LEVY (bkl1) Homeopathic and Drainage Repertory, ( 1992)
BOUKO-LEVY (bkl2.fr) Guide d' Homopathie, ( 1990)
BOURGARIT (bgt): (1916-)
BOURGARIT (bgt2.fr): Thrapeutique homopathique de l'enfant
BOURGARIT (bgt1.fr) Thrapeutique homopathique du nouveau-n et du nourrison, Paris: Maloine (
1987)
BOVINA Giuseppina (bv): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Italy]
BOYD H. (bdy1) Introduction to Homeopathic Medicine, England: Beaconsfield ( 1982)
BOYD Wm. Ernest (bd): (1891-1955)
BOYLE C. C. (be1): Therapeutics of the Ear
BRADFORD Thomas Lindsley (bft3) Index of Homeopathic Provings, New Delhi: Jain Publishers
BRADFORD Thomas Lindsley (bft): (1847-1918)
BRADFORD Thomas Lindsley (bft1) Homoeopathic Bibliography of the United States, Philadelphia:
Boericke & Tafel (Pennsylvania) ( 1892)
BRADFORD Thomas Lindsley (bft2) The Life and Letters of Hahnemann, New Delhi: Jain Publishers
BRADLEY F. J. (blf1) Cancer Latency Prevention and Cure through Miasmatics, New Delhi: Jain
Publishers ( 1988)
BRAUN Artur (bna1.de) Methodik der Homootherapie, Regensburg: Johannes Sonntag ( 1975)
BRAUN Eva Maria (bne): Contemporary homeopath [Germany]
BREWSTER O'REILLY Wenda (brw1) = h3a = Organon of the Medical Art by Dr. Samuel Hahnemann.
Annotated by Wenda Breweter O'Reilly, Edited by Wenda Breweter O'Reilly
BREYFOGLE William LaMartine (bfw): (1845-1915)
BREYFOGLE William LaMartine (bfw1) Epitome of Homeopathic Medicines, ( 1879)
BRIGGS Derek (bsa1) Gelsemium, The Heroic Coward, Links, Vol 1: pg 13-14 ( 1994)
BRIGGS Derek (bsa3): Ruapehu lava
BRIGGS Derek (bsa2): Coriaria Ruscifolia = tutu
BRIGGS Derek (bsa): Contemporary homeopath [New Zealand] (1931-)
BRIGHAM G. N. (bhg1) Catarrhal Diseases of the nasal and respiratory Organs, Calcutta: Haren and
Brother (3th Ed.)
BRIONES Flavio Silva (bnf3.es): Sintomas Claves de los Principales Medicamentos de la Materia
Medica Homeoptica
BRIONES Flavio Silva (bnf2.es): Nomenclatura y sinonimia Homeoptica
BRIONES Flavio Silva (bnf1.es) Manual de medicina veterinaria homeoptica [1st Ed.], Santiago de
Chile: Editorial Universitaria. ( 1990)
BRIONES Flavio Silva (bnf1a.es) Manual de medicina veterinaria homeoptica (2nd E.), Mxico:
Propulsora de Homeopata ( 1997)
BRIONES Flavio Silva (bnf): Veterinary [Chili] (1950-)
BRONFMAN Zalman J. (bmz1.es) El dinero en la materia mdica homeoptica, Buenos Aires:
Editorial Club de Estudio ( 1999)
BRONFMAN Zalman J. (bmz2.es) El Malhumor de los Homeopatas., Buenos Aires: Editorial Albatros (
1992)
BRONFMAN Zalman J. (bmz3.es) Dilogos con un Homepata, Buenos Aires: Editorial Club de Estudio
( 1998)
BRONFMAN Zalman J. (bmz4.es) Ilusiones, Sueos y Delirios en homeopatia, Buenos Aires: Editorial
Club de Estudio ( 1999)
BRONFMAN Zalman J. (bmz5.es) La Identidad y el Doble en la Materia Mdica Homeoptica, Buenos
Aires: Editorial Club de Estudio ( 1995)
BROUSSALIAN Edouard (bse): (1962-)
BROWN Donald (bnd): (1952-)
BROWN Donald and LANGE Andrew (bnd1) Candida Parapsilosis, ( 1992)
BRUK Larry (brl): Veterinary
BRUNINI (bni1.pt) Materia Medica Homeopathica [2nd. Ed.], So Paulo: Mythos engenharia de
CASTAEDA Luis Zepeda (cdl5.es) Nueva Farmacopea Homeopatica, Mxico: CASTAEDA Luis
Zepeda ( 2000)
CASTAEDA Luis Zepeda (cdl1.es) Clinica homeopatica, Guadalajara: Ediciones de Homeopata de
Guadalajara ( 1986)
CASTAEDA Luis Zepeda (cdl2.es) Diccionario Mdico Homeopatico Ilustrado, Mxico: CASTAEDA
Luis Zepeda ( 1996)
CASTAEDA Luis Zepeda (cdl4.es) Los Antecedentes de la Homeopatia, Mxico: CASTAEDA Luis
Zepeda ( 1992)
CASTAEDA Luis Zepeda (cdl6.es) Samuel Hahneman - El Triunfo Sobre La Adversidad, CASTAEDA
Luis Zepeda ( 1992)
CASTAEDA Luis Zepeda (cdl3.es) La Homeopatia, Mxico: Edamex ( 1990)
CASTELLINI Maurizio (cti): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Italy]
CASTRO Miranda (csm): (1949-)
CASTRO Miranda (csm1): Borax veneta
CENERELLI Carlo (cn): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Italy]
CENTRAL COUNCIL FOR RESEARCH IN HOMEOPATHY (zzc1) Provings, ( 1995)
Central Council for research in Homoeopathy, New Delhi (ccrh1) A proving of Cassia Sophera, (
1987)
Centre Ligeois d'Homopathie (zzl) Additions verified by Marc Brunson et al., ( 1995)
CERAMI Fiorella Maria (crf): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Italy]
CHAKRABORTY A. (cry1): Hom. Drug personalities with therapeutic hints
CHAKRAVARTY B.N. (cky1) A short proving of S.E.Ray [Solar eclipse], 35th Liga Medica Hom. Int.
congress ( 1982)
CHAKRAVARTY B.N. (cky): (1937-)
CHAMBREAU Christina (cbc): (1950-)
CHAND Diwan Harish (cdd4) Homoeopathy in geriatrics, New Delhi: National Homoeopathic
Pharmacy ( 1991)
CHAND Diwan Harish (cdd5) Short biography of Dr. D.H. Chand., New Colony ( 1962)
CHAND Diwan Harish (cdd): Contemporary homeopathic physician [India]. Vice President for India at
the LIGA. (1934-)
CHAND Diwan Harish (cdd3) A Fantasy in materia medica [reprint], New Delhi: National
Homoeopathic Pharmacy ( 1981)
CHAND Diwan Harish (cdd7) A proving of cassia sophera, 1986, 35th Liga Medica Hom. Int. congress,
1982 ( 1982)
CHAND Diwan Harish (cdd8) Microdoses, Megaresults. Clincial Cases, New Delhi: National
Homoepathic Pharamcy ( 1995)
CHAND Diwan Harish (cdd1) Peptic Ulcer [reprint], New Delhi: National Homoeopathic Pharmacy (
1982)
CHAND Diwan Harish (cdd2) Follow up of the case [reprint], New Delhi: National Homoeopathic
Pharmacy ( 1983)
CHAND Diwan Harish and SCHMIDT P. (cdd6) Kent's final General Repertory of the homeopatic
Materia Medica, New Delhi: National Homeopathic Pharmacy(2nd Ed.) ( 1982)
CHAND Diwan Vijay (cdv): Contemporary homeopathic physician [India]
CHARETTE Gilbert (cr1.fr) Prcis d'homopathie: la matire mdicale pratique, Paris: Editions
Mdicales ( 1928)
CHARETTE Gilbert (cr): ((1878-1953)
CHARGE A. (ce1.fr) Traitement homopathique des organes de la respiration, Paris: L.H.F.
CHASE (cec1) Proving of Myricin, Trans. Mass Hom. Med. Soc. 1861-1866 ( 1861)
CHASE Sandra M. (ces1) Bufo: The Toad - its Materia Medica, Links, Vol 3: pg 20-24 ( 1993)
CHASE Sandra M. (ces): Contemporary homeopath [Fairfax, USA]
CHATTERJEE Ardhendu Sekhar (cte2) A Study over Thyroidinum, Homeopathic practioners
conference Chandpara ( 1984)
CHATTERJEE Ardhendu Sekhar (cte1) Glycyrrhiza glabra Linn, ( 1997)
CHATTERJEE Ardhendu Sekhar (cte): (1958-)
CHATTERJEE Sujit (cts): Contemporary homeopath [Bombay, India]
CHATTERJEE Sujit (cts1) A case of Behavioural Problems, Links, Vol 2: pg 27-28 ( 1993)
CHATTERJEE T. P. (ctj5): Fundamentals of Homeopathy and Valuable hints for Practice
CHATTERJEE T. P. (ctj): (1947-)
CHATTERJEE T. P. (ctj2) Highlights of homoeo-practice [2nd Ed.], New Delhi: Jain Publishers (
1991)
CHATTERJEE T. P. (ctj3) A Handbook of useful thoughts on homoeo-practice and disease
terminology, New Delhi: Jain Publishers [1st Ed.] ( 1991)
CHATTERJEE T. P. (ctj6) Hints on Homeopathic Practice and Children's Diseases, ( 1994)
CHATTERJEE T. P. (ctj4) My Random Notes on some Homeopathic Remedies Reprint, New Delhi: Jain
Publishers ( 1994)
CHATTERJEE T. P. (ctj1) My memorable cures, ( 1987)
CHATTERJI A.N. (cji1) Three in One, ( 1990)
CHAUHAN R.K. (chr1) Expressive drug pictures of homoeopathic materia medica [Vol. 1], New Delhi:
Jain Publishers ( 1999)
CHAUHAN R.K. (chr2) Expressive drug pictures of homoeopathic materia medica [Vol. 2], ( 1990)
CHAVANON Pierre and LEVANNIER R. (cv1) Emergency homeopathic First-Aid [Translated from
French by G.A. Dudley], Northamptonshire, England: Thorsons Publishers limited ( 1977)
CHETNA N. SHUKLA (cns2): The Soul of the spirit in the substances - The hom. Proving of the
Butterfly, the Donkey's Milk & the Rose
CHETNA N. SHUKLA (cns1.de) Diabetes mellitus : ein Fal von Lac asinum, H Zt, Nr 1: pg 33-36 (
1999)
CHETNA N. SHUKLA (cns): (1968-)
CHETNA N. SHUKLA und KITTLER Monika (cns3.de) Anas Indica - Indische Ente: Prfung und
Kasuistik, Zweibrcken:Verlag Karl-Josef Mller ( 2001)
CHETNA N. SHUKLA und MLLER Karl-Josef (cns5.de) Lac asinum: Zwei homopatische Prfungen
und Kasuistik., Zweibrcken:Verlag Karl-Josef Mller ( 1999)
CHETNA N. SHUKLA, Nayana C. Khopade, Guddi makhija, RUSTER Gerhard (cns4.de) Oxygenium:
Zwei homopatische Prfungen und Kasuistik., Zweibrcken:Verlag Karl-Josef Mller ( 2000)
CHHABRA Divya (cbd2): Lac felinum
CHHABRA Divya (cbd1): Magnesia sulphate
CHHABRA Divya (cbd3): Lac defloratum
CHIANESE Francesco (cna): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Italy]
CHIMTHANAWALA Kasim (ctk1) An unusual case of Amenorrhoea, Links, Vol 2: pg 14 ( 1993)
CHIMTHANAWALA Kasim (ctk): Contemporary homeopath [Nagpur, India]
CHIPKIN Peggy (ckp): Contemporary homeopath [Albany, USA]
CHIPKIN Peggy (ckp1) Vulvitis in a Four Year Old Girl, N Eng. J H, Vol 4 nr 4: pg 33-35 ( 1995)
CHIRON Paul (yyc1.es) Elementos de Materia Mdica Homeopthica, Mxico, D.F.: Ediciones
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CHIRON Paul (yyc1.fr): Matire Mdicale
CHITKARA H. L. (ckh1) Update Addition to Repertory of Mind, New Dehli: Jain ( 1995)
CHITKARA H. L. (ckh5): Relationship of Remedies
CHITKARA H. L. (ckh): Contemporary homeopathic physician [New Dehli, India] (1937-)
CHITKARA H. L. (ckh2) New Comprehensive Materia Medica of Mind, ( 1990)
CHITKARA H. L. (ckh3): Quick Reference Guide to Repertory of Mind symptoms
CHITKARA H. L. (ckh4): New Updated Materia Medica of Mind
CHOUDHURI N. M. (cda2) Hepar sulphuris, Hom Rec, Vol XIII nr. 9: pg 396 ( 1898)
CHOUDHURI N. M. (cda): (1858-)
CHOUDHURI N. M. (cda1) A Study on Materia Medica and Repertory, New Delhi: Jain Publishers (
1929)
CHOUDHURI N. M. (cda3) Homoeopathic cases from India, Hom Rec, Vol XIII nr. 9: pg 396 ( 1898)
CHOUDHURY A.W.K. (cdx2) Natrum muriaticum, Homoeopathic Recorder, Vol 15, nr 2 ( 1900)
CHOUDHURY A.W.K. (cdx1) A Case Treated With Nux Vom., Stopping the Paroxysm With the First
Dose, Homoeopathic Recorder, Vol 14, nr 7 ( 1899)
CHOUDHURY Harimohon (cdh1) Indications of Miasms, New Delhi: Jain Publishers ( 1988)
CHOUDHURY Harimohon (cdh2) 50 Millesimal Potency in Theory and Practice, ( 1990)
D
DABBAH Flora (dbf): Argentinian homeopathic physician
DACK Laurie (dkl1) Professional Case Conference 1993, ( 1993)
DACK Laurie (dkl): (1953-)
DAHLKE Paul (dkp1): Repertorium
DAM Kees (dmk): (1953-)
DAM Kees (dmk1) Dreams and homoeopathy, Links, Vol 12: pg 10-13 ( 1999)
DAM Kees (dmk2.de) Die Furcht, berrascht zu werden. Lac caprinum (Ziegenmilch), H Zt, Vol 1: pg
31-39 ( 1996)
DANGELA Gunther (dgb): Contemporary homeopathic physician for internal medicine [Villingen,
Germany].
DAPTARDAR B. G. (dtd1) A case of Asthma, Links, Vol 3: pg 21 ( 1994)
DAPTARDAR B. G. (dtd): Contemporary homeopath [Bombay, India]
DARMON P. (dmp1.fr): Dictionnaire des Thmes de la Matire Mdicale
DAS Bishamber (das): (1945-)
DAS Bishamber (das1) Select your remedy, revised and enlarged., New Delhi ( 1988)
DAS E. Radha (dar1) Synopsis of Homeopathic Aetiology., New Delhi: Jain Publishers (2nd Ed.) (
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DAS N.C. (dan1) Thunderstorm repertory, ( 1950)
DAVIDSON Stephen Myles (dvs): Contemporary homeopath [Phoenix, USA]
DAVITS Maria (dvm): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Netherlands]
DAWS Jean (dsa): (1938-)
DAWS Jean and SCRIVEN Daphne (dsa1) The making of the Proving of Sol Brittanic, Turnbridge Wells:
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DAY Christopher (dyc): (1947-)
DAY Christopher (dyc1) The homeopathic treatment of small animals, principles and practice, New
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DAY Christopher (dyc2): The Homoeopathic Treatment of Beef and Dairy Cattle
DE BAETS Piet (dbp): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Eeklo, Belgium]. Founder of H.R.I.C.
[Homeopathic Research and Information Centre] (1953-)
DE CASTRO Benedict J. (dcb1.es) Logica de Repertorios, New Delhi: Jain Publishers
DE MEDIO Horacio (dmh): Contemporary homeopath [Argentina, Buenos Aires]
DE MEDIO Horacio (dmh1.es) Introduccin a la homeopata veterinaria, ( 1995)
DE MEDIO Horacio (dmh1) Introduction to the veterinary homeopathy, ( 1995)
DE SCHEPPER Luc (dsl1) Hahnemann Revisited - A textbook of Classical Homeopathy - For the
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DEACON Louise and RIBOT-SMITH Alan (dcm1) Spagyrical Proving of Bellis Perennis, ( 1996)
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DEARBORN Frederick Myers (dbb): (1876-1960)
DEBATS Fernand J. M. (dba): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Netherlands]
DECKERS Arnold (dc): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Netherlands]
DEGKWITZ Kari, CHETNA N. Shukla, KITTLER Monika und MULLER Karl-Josef (dkk1.de) Rosa: Zwei
Prfungen und Kasuistik, Zweibrcken:Verlag Karl-Josef Mller ( 2002)
Degroote (xyz60) test, ( 2003)
DEGROOTE Filip (dgt): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Brugge, Belgium] (1952-)
DEGROOTE Filip (dgt3) Carcinosinum Essay, Articles, ( 1986)
DEGROOTE Filip (dgt1) Physical Examination and Observation in Homeopathy, Gent:Homeoden Book
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DEGROOTE Filip (dgt2) Notes on Miasms, heredity and remedy interactions, ( 1994)
DEHOND Jean Pierre (dhj): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Belgium]
DEL FRANCIA Franco (dff): Contemporary homeopathic veterinary physician [Italy]
DEL FRANCIA Franco e ZUCO Willy (dff1.it) Veterinaria Omeopatica e psicopatologia del Cavallo,
Sommacampagna:Demetra ( 1990)
DEL MAS R. (dm1) Clinical Cases, Hom Rec, Vol XLV nr. 7 ( 1930)
DEL MAS R. (dm): American homeopathic physician (1890-)
DEMANGEAT Georges (dmg): [1913-1990]
DEMARQUE D. (dmd): (1915-1999)
DEMARQUE D., JOUANNY J., POITEVIN B. e SAINT-JEAN Y. (dmd1.it) Farmacologia e materia medica
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DEMARQUE D., JOUANNY J., POITEVIN B. et SAINT-JEAN Y. (dmd1.fr) Pharmacologie et matire
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DEMEURES (dmx2) Menyanthes, Journal de la Socit Gallicane de Mdicine Homoopathique
DEMEURES (dmx1) Mentholum, Journal de la Socit Gallicane de Mdicine Homoopathique
DEMEURES (dmx3) Pinus sylvestris, Journal de la Socit Gallicane de Mdicine Homoopathique
DEN HARTOG Hans (dhh1) Proving of Populus tremulodes - Linking trees project., Links, Vol 12,
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DEN HARTOG Hans (dhh): (1959-)
DESAEDELEER (dsj): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Belgium]
DESAI Bhanu D. (ds1) How to find the Similimum with Boger-Boenningshausen's Repertory., New
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DESAI Rupal (dsr1): Re-exploring our Magnificient Plants [1st Ed.]
DESAI Rupal (dsr2): Magnificent Plants 2
DESCHERE Martin (dse): (1848-1902)
DESCHERE Martin (dse1) Proving of Sanicula mineral spring Water, North American Journal of
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DETAND Patrick (dtp): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Brussel, Belgium]. Teacher at the
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DETINIS Luis (dtn1) Mental symptoms in homeopathy, Beaconsfield ( 1994)
DETINIS Luis (dtn2): Semiologia homeopatica y bases para un repertorio orgnico
DETINIS Luis (dtn4.es): Congreso del Dr. Luis Detinis
DETINIS Luis (dtn3.es): Veratrum album: Respuestas a las principales preguntas de la clinica
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DETINIS Luis (dtn): Contemporary homeopath [Buenos Aires, Argentina] (1954-)
DETINIS Luis (dtn1.es): Sntomas mentales en homeopatia 2
DEVAUX Rene (dvr): Veterinary (1940-)
DEWEY Willis Alonzo (dw5) Practical Homeopathic Therapeutics, ( 1933)
DEWEY Willis Alonzo (dw3) Twelve Tissue Remedies, ( 1928)
DEWEY Willis Alonzo (dw4) Ferrum phosphoricum, Hom Rec, Vol XIV nr. 1: pg 37 ( 1908)
DEWEY Willis Alonzo (dw2) Essentials of Homeopathic therapeutics, Philadelphia: Boericke & Tafel (
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DEWEY Willis Alonzo (dw1) Essentials of Homeopathic Materia Medica, Philadelphia: Boericke &
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DEWEY Willis Alonzo (dw1.es) Esencialidades de Materia Mdica Homeoptica. Translated by L.
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DEWEY Willis Alonzo (dw): American homeopathic physcian. Professor Materia Medica Michigan.
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DEY H. K. (dy1): Complications of menstruation
DEY H. K. (dy2) Rheumatism cured by homoeopathy, Calcutta: Haren and Brothers ( 1975)
DEY H. K. (dy): (1935-)
DHAWALE M. L. (dwm1) Principles and Practice of Homeopathy [part 1, 2], Bombay: Institute of
clinical research (2nd Ed.) ( 1986)
DHAWALE M. L. (dwm): (1927-1987)
DHAWLE M.L. (dlm1): Principles and Practice of Homeopathy
DIEFFENBACH Wm. Hermann (db): (1865-)
DIENST G. E. (dt1) What to do for the stomach, Philadelphia ( 1907)
DIENST G. E. (dt): Student of Kent (1867-1932)
DIEUDONNE Andr (dd): Contemporary homeopathic physician [France]
E
EBERLE Hans (ebh): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Rosenheim, Germany] (1950-)
EBERLE Hans und RITZER Friedrich (ebh2.de) Arzneimittellehre: Neue homopatische Arzneien I,
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EBERLE Hans und RITZER Friedrich (ebh1.de) Arzneimittelprfung Uranium metallicum, ( 1996)
EGGERT W. (egt1) The Homoeopathic Therapeutics of Uterine and Vaginal Discharges, New York:
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EICHELBERGER Otto (ech2) Praxis und Forschung, Heidelberg: Haug ( 1987)
EICHELBERGER Otto (ech): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Germany]
EICHELBERGER Otto (ech1) Lehre und Praxis, Heidelberg: Haug ( 1989)
EICHENBERGER A. (ec): Contemporary homeopath [Switzerland]
EICHLER O. and KOCH Chr. (ecr1) Harpagophytum procumbens, Arzneim. Forsch 20; 107 ( 1970)
EIGENRAAM Karel (egr): Contemporary homeopath [Netherlands]
EISING Nuala (es3) Vacuum: The proving, ( 2000)
EISING Nuala (es3.de) Vakuum Die Prfung, Zweibrcken:Verlag Karl-Josef Mller ( 2001)
EISING Nuala (es2a.de) Feuer (Ignis alcoholis): Die Prfung, Zweibrcken:Verlag Karl-Josef Mller (
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EISING Nuala (es1) Granite, Marble and Limestone, ( 1995)
EISING Nuala (es2) Provings of Ignis alcoholis and Succinum, ( 1998)
EISING Nuala (es): (1947-)
EISING Nuala (es2b.de) Bernstein (Succinum) - Die Prfung, Zweibrcken:Verlag Karl-Josef Mller (
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EISING Nuala (es1a.fr): La Premire Pathognsie de Granit
EIZAYAGA Francisco Xavier (ez1): Treatise on Homeopathic Medicine, Lectures and Practice.
EIZAYAGA Francisco Xavier (ez2.pt) El moderno Repertorio de Kent, Buenos Aires ( 1979)
EIZAYAGA Francisco Xavier (ez): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Buenos Aires, Argentina]
(1921-)
EIZAYAGA Francisco Xavier (ez3.es) Enfermedades Agudas Febriles, su tratamiento homeoptico,
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ELEFTHERIADIS John (elt): Contemporary homeopath [Greece]
ELEFTHERIADIS John (elt1) Homeopathic treatment of Pneumonia, E J Cl. H, Vol 1 nr 3-4: pg 16-17 (
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ELLINGER Liesbeth (elg): (1960-)
ELMORE Durr (emd): Contemporary homeopath [USA]
ELMORE Durr (emd1) Acute Versus Chronic: An Unusual Otitis Prescription, N Eng. J H, Vol 1 nr 1: pg
4-5 ( 1992)
ENGEL Peter B. (egp1) A proving of Nidus edulis, Br H J, Vol 64: pg 225-230 ( 1975)
ENGELS W. (egw1) Haplopappus bailahuen, Karlsruhe, Naturwiss.Fa.Diss.v. 29.5.1970
ENGLISH John (el): Contemporary homeopathic physician [UK]
ENGLISH Mary (elm1) Tempestas - Storm - A Remedy Proving., Stud Hom, Vol 84 december ( 1999)
ENGLISH Mary (elm2) Proving of Naufragium helvetia, ( 2002)
ENNIS Sylvia (ens1) The Natural Choica Sickle Cell, ( 1994)
EPPS John (esj): (1805-1869)
EPPS John (esj1) Domestic Homoeopathy: or, Rules for the Domestic Treatment of the Maladies of
Infants, Children, and Adults, and for the Conduct and the Treatment during Pregnancy,
Confinement, and Suckling.[5th Ed.], Boston: John Wilson & Son (Massachusetts) ( 1853)
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ESPANET A. (epa1.es) Tratado Metodico y Practico de Materia Medica y de Terapeutica. Translated
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ESPECHE Brbara (epb1.es) Las Flores de Bach, Manual Prctico y Clnico, Buenos Aires: Ed.
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EVANS W. H. (ev1) Proving of Naphthalinum, North American Journal of Homoeopathy, Vol 33: pg
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F
FABBROCINI Vincenzo (fbv): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Italy] (1945-)
FAFCHAMPS Jean (fc): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Belgium]
FAHENSTOCK J. C. (fh1): A manual of Homeopathic Materia Medica
FARIAS DIAS Aldo (fra): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Rio de Janeiro, Brasil]
FARRINGTON Ernest A. (fr1.es): Materia Mdica clinica
FARRINGTON Ernest A. (fr1.de) Klinische Arzneimittellehre, Leipzig: Schwabe ( 1913)
FARRINGTON Ernest A. (fr3) Therapeutics Pointers and Lesser writings with some clinical cases.,
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FARRINGTON Ernest A. (fr2) Comparisons in Materia Medica with Therapeutic Hints., Philadelphia:
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FARRINGTON Ernest A. (fr1) Clinical Materia Medica, Philadelphia: Hahnemann Medicall College (
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FARRINGTON Ernest A. (fr): American homeopathic physician (1847-1885). Professor of MM at the
Hahnemann Medical College in Philadelphia from 1874 onwards.
FARRINGTON Ernest A. (fr4) Therapeutic pointers to some common remedies, Calcutta: Bagchi Publ.
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FARRINGTON Harvey (frh): (1872-1957)
FARRINGTON Harvey (frh1) Homeopathy and homeopathic Prescribing, Philadelphia: American
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FASSLER Kristy (flk1) Attention Sensory Deficit, N Eng. J H, Vol 3 nr 3: pg 29-33 ( 1994)
FASSLER Kristy (flk): Contemporary homeopath [Portsmouth, Great Britain]
FAUST Jurgen (ftj): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Germany]. Translator of "Essences" of G.
Vithoulkas
FAYAZUDDIN M. (fyz): (1936-)
FLICK Reinhard und KLUN Claudia (fkr7.de) HAMP von Vespa crabro, ( 2004)
FLICK Reinhard und SCHOITSCH S. (fkr6.de) HAMP von Natrium phosphoricum, Documenta
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FLORES Matilde (frm): Contemporary homeopath [Stow, USA]
FLORES Matilde (frm1) An Anxious Patient, N Eng. J H, Vol 2 nr 1: pg 12-15 ( 1993)
FLORES TOLEDO David (ft1) Psilocybe caerulescens Murray, ( 1980)
FLORES TOLEDO David (ft): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Mexico] (1926-)
FLORES TOLEDO David (ft2) Pituitrinum anterior, Similia Similibus Curentur, Vol 19 nr. 3: pg 83
FLORES TOLEDO David (ft3.es): Iniciacin a la homeopata
FLORES Villalva Fernando (frv1) Pathogenesy of croton lecheri [Dragon's blood], Proc 54th LMHI
Congr.,Salvador- Bahia, Brasil ( 1999)
FLORES Villalva Fernando (frv1.es) Patogenesia de Croton Lecheri (Sangre de drago), ( 1999)
FLOYD Rosalind (fdr): (1952-)
FLOYD Rosalind and AZGARD Izzy (fdr1) Cladonia, ( 1992)
FLURY Rudolf (fry2) Homoeopathy and the principle of reality, ( 1979)
FLURY Rudolf (fry3) Proceedings of the Swiss society of homeopaths, ( 1977)
FLURY Rudolf (fry): Swiss homeopathic physician (1903-1977). Prsident of the "Association Suisse
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FLURY Rudolf (fry1.de) Praktische Repertorium, bern: Lemberg ( 1979)
FOLLAS Greig (flg1) An inadvertent Proving of Granite?, Links, Vol 2: pg 37-38 ( 1993)
FOLLAS Greig (flg): Contemporary homeopath [Tauranga, New Zealand]
FORNIAS Eduardo (fne1) Bothrops lanceolatus, Homeopathic Recorder, Vol.23, No.10, p.436, Oct. (
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FORNIAS S. (fns1) Proving of Parthenium hysterophorus, Homoeopathic Recorder, Vol 1
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FORTIER - BERNOVILLE (ftb6) Diabetes Mellitus [Translated from French by Raj Kumar Mukerji], New
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FORTIER - BERNOVILLE (ftb8) Syphyilis and Sycosis [Translated by Raj Kumar Mukerji], New Delhi:
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FORTIER - BERNOVILLE (ftb5) Therapeutics of Intoxication [Translated from French by Raj Kumar
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FORTIER - BERNOVILLE (ftb4) Remedies for Circulatory and Respiratory System [Translated from
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FORTIER - BERNOVILLE and ROUSSEAU A. (ftb7) Chronic Rheumatism, New Delhi: Jain Publishers (
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FORTIER - BERNOVILLE et al. (ftb3) Therapeutics of the Diseases of Liver and Biliary Ducts
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FORTIER - BERNOVILLE et al. (ftb2) Eruptive Fevers and contagious Diseases of Children [Translated
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FORTIER - BERNOVILLE Maurice (ftb): (1896-1939)
FOSTER J. (ftr1): Toothache and its cure
FOTIADIS Vassilis (ftv): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Greece]
FOUBISTER Donald and Templeton (Studies of Dr Mabilon and Dr Payen) (fb1) Indications for certain
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FOUBISTER Donald et Templeton (Studies of Dr Mabilon and Dr Payen) (fb1.fr) Recueil d'tudes sur
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FOUBISTER Donald M. (fb3) Tutorials on Homeopathy, Beaconsfield (England): Beaconsfield Publ. (
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FOUBISTER Donald M. (fb8) A Clinical Study of Carcinosin as a Constitutional Remedy, Br H J, Vol
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FOUBISTER Donald M. (fb9) Clinical Impressions of Carcinosin, Br H J, Vol 44/2 ( 1954)
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FOUBISTER Donald M. (fb6) Constitutional effects of anaesthesia, New Dehli: Indian Books &
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FOUBISTER Donald M. (fb5): Notes on Helleborus Niger
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FOUBISTER Donald M. (fb): English homeopathic physician. Introduced carcinosin in the MM.
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FOUBISTER Donald M. (fb2) Homeopathy and pediatrics, Bombay: Hom. Med. Publ. ( 1978)
FOUBISTER Donald M., (fb10): The Significance of Past History in Homeopathic Prescribing
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FRANCOIS Jean Marie (fcj): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Belgium]
FRANCOIS-FLORES Fernando Daro (fff4.es) Samuel Hahnemann : Su vida y recuerdo, Mxico:
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FRANCOIS-FLORES Fernando Daro (fff3.es) Materia Medica Mexicana, Mxico ( 2000)
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FRANCOIS-FLORES Fernando Daro (fff5.es): Historia de la Escuela libre de Homeopata y Historia de
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FRENDO Ramon (fdo5.fr): Thmes et Etude de la Matire Mdicale
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FRENDO Ramon (fdo3.fr): Luna : Etude et Thmes
FRENDO Ramon (fdo2.fr) Cuprum Metallicum, ( 2000)
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FRISCHKNECHT Pablo (fk): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Switzerland]
FRISHMUTH J. (fmh1): Diseases of Childhood with Therapeutic Indications
FROHMAN Monica (fmx): Veterinary
FUCKERT Manfred (fkm): (1958-)
FUCKERT Manfred (fkm1) An involuntary proving of Capsicum, Links, Vol 12: pg 30-32 ( 1999)
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GABANYI Dieter (gby1.de): Hompathie fr Allgemein und Fachpraxen
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GBLER Hartwig (gbh): Contemporary homeopathic pharmacist [Karlsruhe, Germany]
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GHEGAS Vassilis (gg): Contemporary homeopath [Greece] (1948-)
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GHOSE S. (gsb): (1874-)
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HAHNEMANN Samuel (h5): Ninety homeopathic remedies
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HAHNEMANN Samuel (h4.es): Escritos Menores Hahnemann
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KANSAL Kamal (ksk3) Homeopathic Treatment - Dental Diseases, ( 1994)
KANSAL Kamal (ksk6): Kansal's Practice of Medicine with Homoepathic Therapeutics
KANSAL Kamal (ksk5) Homeopathic Treatment - Pet Animals, ( 1998)
KANSAL Kamal (ksk7.es) Usted y su Bebe. Una Gua Homeoptica Familiar, New Delhil: Jain
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KANSAL Kamal (ksk2) Homeopathic Treatment - Constipation, ( 1995)
KANSAL Kamal (ksk4) Homoeopathic Treatment - Diabetes Mellitus, ( 1992)
KANSAL Kamal (ksk1) The Biochemics, ( 1993)
KAPLAN Brian (klb): Contemporary homeopathic physician [UK]
KAPLAN Brian (klb1) The Homeopathic Conversation: the art of taking the case, London: Natural
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KARO W. (kow2): Diseases of the Skin
KARO W. (kow5): Urinary and Prostatic Troubles
KARO W. (kow4): Diseases of the Male Genital Organs
KARO W. (kow3): Homeopathy in Women's Diseases
KARO W. (kow1): Diseases of Respiratory System
KASTNER Raimund F. (knr): (1955-)
KASTNER Raimund F. (knr1.de) Boenninghausens Physiognomik der Homeopathischen Arzneimittel
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KIRSCH Sarah (kh): German homeopathic physician from the time of Hahnemann (1835-)
KISHORE Jugal (ks2) M&B 693 = sulfonamidum, ( 1977)
KISHORE Jugal (ks6) Evolution of Homeopathic Repertories and Repertorization [1st Ed.], New
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KISHORE Jugal (ks5) Abromata augusta, ( 1974)
KISHORE Jugal (ks3): Saraca indica
KISHORE Jugal (ks1): Cynodon dactylon
KISHORE Jugal (ks): (1918-)
KISHORE Jugal (ks4): Tylophora indica
KITTLER Monika (klm1.de) Thea Chinensis: Die Prfung, Zweibrcken:Verlag Karl-Josef Mller (
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KITTLER Monika (klm1) Thea chinensis, ( 1999)
KLEIN Louis (knl2) Helodrilus caliginosus - Information and Synopsis of a New Proving, Links, Vol 11:
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KLEIN Louis (knl4) Loxosceles reclusa - The brown Recluse spider, ( 1998)
KLEIN Louis (knl6) Coriandrum proving, ( 2000)
KLEIN Louis (knl1) Scutellaria, IFH Conference ( 1990)
KLEIN Louis (knl5): Lumbricus terrestris
KLEIN Louis (knl3) Carbon dioxide, ( 1990)
KLEIN Louis (knl): Contemporary homeopath [Canada] (1946-)
KLEIN Louis and MANTEWSIWICH Emily (knl7): Hahnemanian Proving of Argentum Sulphuricum
KLOSS P. (ksp2) Luffa operculata, Cogn. Arch. Pharmaz. 299; 351-355 ( 1966)
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KLUNKER Will (kk3.fr) Spigelia ou Spigurrus?, Rev Belg Hom, Vol 3: pg 41-50 ( 1992)
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KLUNKER Will (kk1.de) Eine Arzneiprfung von Espeletia Grandiflora, A H Z, Vol 217: pg 5 - 14 (
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KLUNKER Will (kk): Contemporary homeoathic physician [Heiden, Switzerland]. Creator of the
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KLUNKER Will (kk6) Synthetic Repertory: Sleep, Dreams, sexuality. Vol 3, New Delhi: Jain Publishers
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KLUNKER Will (kk5.fr) Rves et Delusions de serpents, Rev B H, Vol XXIII Decembre nr. 4 ( 1990)
KLUNKER Will and MILLER G. (kk4) Beziehungen der arznien unter sich., Heidelberg: Haug verlag
KNELLE (klx): (1938-)
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KNERR Calvin B. (kr): American homeopath (1847-1940)
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KOEHLER Gerhard (klr): (1946-)
KOEHLER Gerhard (klr1) Lehrbuch der Homopathie [2 Vols], Stuttgart: Hippokrates Verlag ( 1988)
KOHLRAUSCH Stefan (krs1) Die Milch von misshandelten Schweinen lst Wut und Aggression aus - Lac
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KOHLRAUSCH Stefan (krs): (1959-)
KOKELENBERG Guy (kkb): Contemporary homeopathic physician [St Niklaas, Belgium] (1948-)
KNIG Peter (kgp): (1955-)
KNIG Peter and SANTOS Ute (kgp4): Convallaria
KNIG Peter and SANTOS Ute (kgp2) Dream Proving of rhododendron chrysantum, Links, Vol 8: pg
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KNIG Peter and SANTOS Ute (kgp3) Berberis Vulgaris, ( 1994)
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KORNDOERFER A. (kda1) C. von Boenninghausen's Homoeopathic Therapia of Intermittent and Other
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KRNER R. und RAUCH H. (krr1.de): Taraxacum
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KRISHNAMOORTY V. (kmy2): Beginner's guide to Bach Flower remedies
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KRISHNAMOORTY V. (kmy4): New Bach remedies
KRISHNAMOORTY V. K. (kmy): (1939-)
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KRISHNAMURTHY P.S (knp1) Osteoarthritic nosode proving, ( 1988)
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KROSCHEWSKI - KNIG Friedel (ksf2.de): Repertorium Nachtrge
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L
LA JOYA (ljy): Veterinary [Mexico] (1940-)
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MACFARLAN Donald (mf2): Provings and clinical observations
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MALHOTRA H.C. (mhh2) Menses and Health [A Lady's Manual of Homeopathic care], ( 1991)
MALHOTRA H.C. (mhh1) Care and Treatment - Fistula, Piles, ( 1990)
MANGIALAVORI Massimo (mgm1) I Think of Death when I'm alone, 2 Cases of crotalus Cascavella,
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MANGIALAVORI Massimo (mgm): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Modena, Italy]. Creator of
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MANGIALAVORI Massimo (mgm4) Official Repertory Additions, ( 2000)
MANGIALAVORI Massimo (mgm3): Remedy Themes
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MARCY and PETERS and FILLIGRAPH (mcx2): New Provings & Clinical Experiences
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MARSCH H. R. (mh): (1912-)
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MARTIN BALLESTERO Juan (mtb): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Spain]
MARTINEZ Fragoso Gabriel (mtg1.es): Perfil Biogrfico de Homepatas Universales
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MASTER Farokh Jamshed (mtf3) Ammoniums: The Sour Prunes, ( 1998)
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MORGAN A. R. (mgc): (1859-)
MORGAN Fred B. (mgf2) Feldspar in Mononucleosis - Acute Infectious Mononucleosis, The
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MORRISON Roger (mrr): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Berkeley, USA] (1954-)
MORRISON Roger and HERRICK Nancy (mrr4) Seminar [Part 3] - Leystad [Netherlands] November
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MORROW H. C. (mrb): (1901-)
MORTELMANS Guido (mt): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Lier, Belgium]
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MLLER Karl-Josef (mlk5.de) Das Geheimnis der offenen Tur - Schnelle Hilfe bei Warzen durch lac
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MURE Benoit (mre): (1809-1858)
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MURPHY Robin (mp2): Homeopathy and Cancer
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MURPHY Robin (mp): Contemporary homeopath [USA]. Creator of the Homeopathic Medical
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MURPHY Robin (mp5): Reversed repertory
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MUSCARI TOMAIOLI Gennaro (mca): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Italy]
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RIMMLER Uli (rmu1): The Flight of the Condor - The Andean Condor: Vultur gryphus
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ROBERTS Herbert Alfred (rb): American homeopathic physician (1868-1950)
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SCHUBY Hugo (sbh): (1850-)
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SCHULZ Hugo (szh): (1853-1932)
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TAYLOR Lorraine (tll): Contemporary homeopath [Bern, Switzerland]
TEMPLETON D. M. (tp): (1930-)
TEMPLETON W. Lees (tpw1) The Homoeopathic Treatment of Influenza, New Delhi: Jain Publishers (
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TEMPLETON W. Lees (tpw): (1889-)
TEMPLETON W. Lees (tpw2) Provings of Carcinosin, Br Hom J, Vol 44 nr 2: pg 108-115 ( 1954)
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TESSIER Jean-Paul (ts): (1811-1862)
TESTE Alphonse (tt3): Homeopathic Drug Pictures
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TESTE Alphonse (tt): (1814-1898)
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TETAU Max (ttm4.es): Homeopata
TETAU Max (ttm5.es): Nuevos Aspectos Clinicos de la Organoterapia Diluida y Dinamizada
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TETAU Max (ttm3.fr) Signes Majeurs des grands remdes homopathiques., Maline (Paris) ( 1979)
TETAU Max (ttm): Contemporary homeopathic physician [France] (1927-)
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THOMAS H. (tmh1): External remedies
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THOMPSON Michael (tsm): (1942-)
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TIRASPOLSKI Ilia (tpi) (1966-), Russia
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TORRE Blzquez Jos Ramon (trj): (1953-)
TRINKS Carl Friedrich (tsc): (1800-1868)
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TRIONFI Maurizio (tf): Contemporary homeopathic physician [Brescia, Italy] (1950-)
TRIPPI Biaggio (tpb1.it): Lessico pratico omeopatico
TUMMINELLO Peter (tmo2): Molybdenum
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UNDERWOOD Benoni F. (uw): (1843-)
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Families of Remedies
Database
IMPONDERABLES
radiant energy remedies
KINGDOMS - IMPONDERABLES - radiant energy remedies : elec., ignis-alc., luna, POSITR., sol, x-ray
magnets
KINGDOMS - IMPONDERABLES - magnets : ferr-ma., galv., m-ambo., m-arct., m-aust.
hydrogenium (hydrogen)
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Elements hydrogenium : HYDROG.
Metallic elements
Alkali metals
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Elements - Metallic
elements - Alkali metals : caes-met., francm., kali-met., lith-met., nat-met., rubd-met.
Transition metals
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Elements - Metallic
elements - Transition metals : ARG-MET., AUR., cadm-met., chr-met., Cob., CUPR., FERR.,
hafn-met., Irid-met., mang-met., MERC., moly-met., nicc-met., niob-met., osm., osm-met.,
Pall., PLAT., rhen-met., rhodi., ruth-met., scand-met., tant-met., techn., titan., tung-met.,
vanad., yttr-met., ZINC., zirc-met.
Metals
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Elements - Metallic
elements - Metals : alumin., bism-met., gal-met., Ind., PLB., STANN., thal., thal-met.
Metalloids
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Elements - Metallic
elements - Metalloids : ant-met., ars-met., Germ-met., polon-met., sil-met., Tell.
Actinides
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Elements - Metallic
elements - Rare earth metals - Actinides : plut-met., thor-met., uran-met.
Non-metals
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Elements - Non-metals
: Adam., bor-met., bor-pur., carbn., GRAPH., oxyg., ozone, PHOS., SEL., SULPH.
Halogens
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Elements - Halogens :
astat., BROM., Chlor., fl-pur., IOD.
Noble gases
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Elements - Noble gases
: argon, helium, krypt., neon, rado., xen.
compounds - Rare earth metals and compounds - Lanthanides and compounds - Neodymium and
compounds : neod-met., neod-n., neod-o., neod-s.
Plutonium compounds
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Metallic Elements and
compounds - Rare earth metals and compounds - Actinides and compounds - Plutonium
compounds : plut-met., PLUT-N.
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Non-metals and
compounds - Phosphorus and compounds : Alum-p., alumin-p., am-p., arg-p., bar-p., calc-hp.,
CALC-P., calc-py., creat-p., cupr-p., FERR-P., ferr-p-h., ferr-py., hphos-ac., kali-hp., KALI-P.,
lith-p., mag-gp., mag-hp., Mag-p., mang-p., merc-p., nat-hp., NAT-P., PH-AC., PHOS., phos-h.,
phos-m., phos-pbr., phos-pchl., phos-ps., phos-tbr., phos-ti., plb-p., ZINC-P., zinc-phic.
oxides
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Non-metals and
compounds - oxides : ALUM., alumin-o., ant-o., aq-pur., arg-o., ARS., bar-o., beryl-o., Bism.,
bism-o., cadm-o., carbn-o., cer-o., chr-o., cob-o., cupr-o., deut-o., deut-t-o., dyspr-o., erb-o.,
eur-o., ferr-o-r., gado-o., gal-o., holm-o., lanth-o., lith-o., lute-o., mag-o., mang-o., merc-pr-r.,
nat-o., neod-o., nitro-o., osm-o., plb-o., plb-o-f., plb-o-r., pras-o., rhen-o., rhodi-o-n., sam-ox.,
scand-o., sel-o., stann-o., stront-o., terb-o., thor-o., titan-o., uran-o., vanad-o., yttr-o.,
yttrb-o., zinc-o., zirc-o.
peroxides
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Non-metals and
compounds - peroxides : mag-pox., perhydr., stann-pox., zinc-pox.
Sulphides (S-- )
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Non-metals and
compounds - Sulphides (S-- ) : ant-s-aur., ant-s-r., ARS-S-F., ars-s-r., AUR-S., bism-sula.,
Cadm-s., CINNB., cob-sula., nat-sula., plb-s., stann-s., sul-h.
Halogens
Fluorine and compounds
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Halogens - Fluorine
and compounds : am-f., arg-f., cadm-f., Calc-f., cupr-f., ferr-f., FL-AC., fl-pur., kali-f., lap-a.,
lith-f., mag-f., mag-sil-f., mang-f., nat-f., nat-sil-f., zinc-f.
Sulphites (SO3-- )
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Salts of Complex
Inorganic Anions - Sulphates and Sulphites - Sulphites (SO3-- ) : kali-sulo., nat-bis., nat-sulo.
Nitrites (NO2- )
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Salts of Complex
Inorganic Anions - Nitrates and Nitrites - Nitrites (NO2- ) : kalium-ns., merc-ns., nat-ns.
Phosphates (PO4-)
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Salts of Complex
Inorganic Anions - Phosphates (PO4-) : Alum-p., alumin-p., am-p., arg-p., aur-p., bar-p., cadm-p.,
CALC-P., chr-p., cob-p., cupr-p., FERR-P., ferr-p-h., gal-p., KALI-P., lith-p., Mag-p., mang-p.,
merc-p., NAT-P., plb-p., ZINC-P.
Arsenates, arsenites
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Salts of Complex
Inorganic Anions - Arsenates, arsenites : Aur-ar., Calc-ar., cupr-ar., Ferr-ar., KALI-AR.
Bicarbonates [HCO3-]
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Salts of Complex
Inorganic Anions - Carbonates and Bicarbonates - Bicarbonates [HCO3-] : nat-bic.
Thiocianides [SCN-]
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Salts of Complex
Inorganic Anions - Cyanides, Cyanates, Thiocyanides, Ferrocyanates - Thiocianides [SCN-] :
calc-hs., kali-tcy., mag-hs., merc-s-cy., nat-hsulo.
Ferrocyanates [FCN-]
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Salts of Complex
Inorganic Anions - Cyanides, Cyanates, Thiocyanides, Ferrocyanates - Ferrocyanates [FCN-] :
kali-fcy., zinc-fcy.
Silicates
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Salts of Complex
Inorganic Anions - Silicates : ALUM-SIL., CALC-SIL., cob-sil., cupr-sil., ferr-sil., granit-m.,
hf-sil-ac., KALI-SIL., mag-sil., mag-sil-f., NAT-SIL., nat-sil-f., nicc-sil., SIL., sil-col., sil-mar.
Borates
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - Elements and Inorganic compounds - Salts of Complex
Inorganic Anions - Borates : BORX.
organic compounds
structural organic groups
carbohydrates
aliphatic ring carbohydrates
heterocyclic aliphatic ring carbohydrates
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - structural organic groups carbohydrates - aliphatic ring carbohydrates - heterocyclic aliphatic ring carbohydrates : Allox.
aromatic carbohydrates
heterocyclic aromatic carbohydrates
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - structural organic groups carbohydrates - aromatic carbohydrates - heterocyclic aromatic carbohydrates : antip., chrys-ac.,
methyl.
aldehydes
aliphatic aldehydes
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - aldehydes aliphatic aldehydes : ald.
amines
aliphatic amines
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - amines aliphatic amines : hist.
catecholamines
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - amines catecholamines : adren., adren-bt.
alkalis
alkaloids
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - alkalis alkaloids : berbin., brucin., brucin-n., cinch., cocain., cod., cod-p., cod-s., coffin., colchin.,
conin., conin-br., cryp., cytin., dub., duboin., emetin., emetin-m., ergot., esin., esin-sal.,
hydrin-m., hydrin-pur., hydrin-s., hydrinin-m., hydrinin-s., hyosin., hyosin-hbr., hyosin-s.,
Morph., morph-act., morph-m., morph-pur., morph-s., narcin., narcot., narcot-act., narcot-m.,
nicot., OP., pellin., pilo., pilo-m., pilo-n., pilo-pur., reser., sangin-act., sangin-n., sangin-pur.,
sangin-t., scopin., solin., solin-act., solin-pur., Stry., verin., yohim., yohim-m.
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - alkalis alkaloidal salts with organic anion : stry-val.
esters
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - esters :
aml-act., meth-sal., salol.
ethers
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - ethers :
aether, apiol., meth-ae-ae.
ketones
cyclic ketones
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - ketones cyclic ketones : Allox.
lactates
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - organic
acids and derivates - aliphatic acids and derivates - with one acid group - lactates : alumin-l.,
calc-lac., calc-ln., calc-lp., ferr-lac., kali-l., Lac-ac., lith-lac., mag-lac., mang-lact., merc-lac.,
nat-lac., sarcol-ac., stront-lac.
valerianates
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - organic
acids and derivates - aliphatic acids and derivates - with one acid group - valerianates : am-val.,
chinin-val., ferr-val., stry-val., valer-ac., zinc-val.
tartrates
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - organic
acids and derivates - aliphatic acids and derivates - with two acid groups - tartrates : adren-bt.,
am-t., ANT-T., ergotam-t., ferr-t., kali-b-t., kali-bit., kali-nat-t., kali-t., nat-tar., sangin-t.,
tart-ac.
gall acids
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - organic
acids and derivates - gall acids : chenod-ac., dhchol-ac., gal-ac.
terpenes
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - functional organic groups - organic
acids and derivates - terpenes : retin-ac.
pharmaceutical groups
additives from animal origin; pharmaceutical
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - pharmaceutical groups - additives
from animal origin; pharmaceutical : adeps-s., casein., lanol., lec.
antibiotics
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - pharmaceutical groups - antibiotics :
chloram., penic.
antipyretics
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - pharmaceutical groups - antipyretics :
acetyls-ac., antip., antip-sal., phenac., sal-ac.
hypnotics
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - pharmaceutical groups - hypnotics :
barbit.
miscellaneous pharmaceuticals
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - pharmaceutical groups - miscellaneous
pharmaceuticals : methyl.
narcotics
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - pharmaceutical groups - narcotics :
aether
tranquillizers
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - pharmaceutical groups - tranquillizers
: chlordia., chlorpr., diaz., halo., levo., phenob.
vegetable alkaloids
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - vegetable organic compounds vegetable alkaloids : apom., apom-m., Atro., atro-pur., atro-s., berbin., brucin., brucin-n.,
chinid., CHININ-AR., chinin-fcit., chinin-hcy., chinin-m., chinin-p., chinin-pur., CHININ-S.,
chinin-sal., chinin-val., cinch., cocain., cod., cod-p., cod-s., colchin., conin., conin-br., cryp.,
cytin., digin., dub., duboin., emetin., emetin-m., ergot., esin., esin-sal., hydrin-m., hydrin-pur.,
hydrin-s., hydrinin-m., hydrinin-s., hyosin., hyosin-hbr., hyosin-s., Morph., morph-act.,
morph-m., morph-pur., morph-s., narcin., narcot., narcot-act., narcot-m., nicot., OP., pellin.,
pilo., pilo-m., pilo-n., pilo-pur., reser., sangin-act., sangin-n., sangin-pur., sangin-t., scopin.,
solin., solin-act., solin-pur., Stry., stry-af-cit., stry-ar., stry-n., stry-p., stry-s., stry-val., verin.,
yohim., yohim-m.
vegetable carbohydrates
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - vegetable organic compounds vegetable carbohydrates : carbmc.
vegetable ethers
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - vegetable organic compounds vegetable ethers : apiol.
vegetable tars
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - vegetable organic compounds vegetable tars : Eupi., KREOS., pix
containing Lithium
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Lithium : lith-be., lith-cit., lith-gl., lith-lac., lith-sal.
containing Magnesium
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Magnesium : mag-act., mag-asp., mag-bcit., mag-cit., mag-form., mag-gl., mag-gp.,
mag-lac., mag-orot., mag-sal., mag-t.
containing Calcium
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Calcium : calc-act., calc-cit., calc-form., calc-gl., calc-glt., calc-lac., calc-ln.,
calc-lp., calc-ox., calc-pic., calc-pt.
containing Strontium
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Strontium : stront-gl., stront-lac.
containing Yttrium
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Yttrium : yttr-ox.
containing Cereum
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Cereum : cer-ox.
containing Gadolinium
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Gadolinium : gado-ox.
containing Thorium
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Thorium : thor-act.
containing Uranium
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Uranium : uran-act.
containing Chromium
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Chromium : chr-act., chr-gl.
containing Cadmium
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Cadmium : cadm-act., cadm-gl.
containing Thallium
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Thallium : thal-act.
containing Phosphorus
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Phosphorus : adp., amp., atp., calc-glp., calc-lp., chinin-p., cod-p., creat-p., mag-gp.,
nat-gp., stry-p.
containing Sulphur
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS - organic compounds - containing common element containing Sulphur : aethyl-s., anil-s., atro-s., CHININ-S., cinch., hydrin-s., morph-s., nicc-s.,
stry-s., sul-ter., sulfa., sulfonam., sulo-ac.
gasses
Noble gases
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS other families - gasses - Noble gases : argon, helium, krypt.,
neon, rado., xen.
radioactive substances
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS other families - radioactive substances : plut-met., PLUT-N.,
explosives
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS other families - explosives : GLON., gunp., plut-met.,
PLUT-N.
waters
mineral waters
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS other families - waters - mineral waters : adel., aq-pet.,
aq-sil., bart., bond., Carl., eaux, franz., gast., get., hall, hochst., kiss., lev., lipp., narz., rein.,
Sanic., skook., tep., vichy-g., vichy-h., voes., wies., wildb.
sea waters
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS other families - waters - sea waters : aq-mar.
metabolic stones
KINGDOMS - MINERALS and CHEMICALS other families - metabolic stones : cal-bil., cal-ren., cal-sal.
PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) (Plants ASP Group
)
Fungi
Ascomycota (Ascomycetes)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Fungi - Ascomycota :
asperg-n., cand., cordyc., moni., tinea-xyz., tor.
Lichens
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Fungi - Lichens : cetr.,
cladon., stict., usn.
Basidiomycota (Basidiomycetes)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Fungi - Basidiomycota :
AGAR., agar-cit., agar-cpn., agar-cps., agar-em., agar-pa., agar-ph., agar-pr., agar-se., agar-st.,
agarin., bol-la., bol-lu., bol-s., BOV., ergot., muscin., phal., polyp-p., Psil., russ., SEC.,
sol-t-ae., Ust.
Zyogmycota (Zygomycetes)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Fungi - Zyogmycota : mucor
Non-flowering plants
Phaeophyceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Non-flowering plants Phaeophyceae : fuc.
Equisetophyta
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Non-flowering plants Equisetophyta : equis-a., equis-h.
Filicophyta
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Non-flowering plants Filicophyta : fil.
Lycopodiophyta
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Non-flowering plants Lycopodiophyta : LYC.
Gymnospermae (Gymnosperms)
Coniferophyta (Conifers)
Auarcariaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Non-flowering plants Gymnospermae - Coniferophyta - Auarcariaceae : AGATH-A.
Cupressaceae (Cupressids)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Non-flowering plants Gymnospermae - Coniferophyta - Cupressaceae : cupre-au., cupre-l., juni-c., juni-v., SABIN.,
seq-s., THUJ., thuj-l.
Pinaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Non-flowering plants Gymnospermae - Coniferophyta - Pinaceae : abies-c., abies-n., pin-con., pin-s., pix, pseuts-m.,
sul-ter., TER., tere-ch., tere-la., terebe.
Taxaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Non-flowering plants Gymnospermae - Coniferophyta - Taxaceae : Tax., tax-br.
Ginkgophyta
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Non-flowering plants Gymnospermae - Ginkgophyta : Gink-b.
Gnetophyta
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Non-flowering plants Gymnospermae - Gnetophyta : ephe., ephe-si.
Piperales
Aristolochiaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Piperales Aristolochiaceae : arist-cl., arist-m., ASAR., serp.
Piperaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Piperales Piperaceae : cub., pip-m., pip-n.
Illiciales
Illiciaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Illiciales Illiciaceae : anis.
Laurales
Lauraceae (Laurel Family)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Laurales Lauraceae : benzo., CAMPH., camph-br., cinnm., coto, oreo., oxeod.
Magnoliales
Annonaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Magnoliales
- Annonaceae : asim., guat.
Monocots
Alismatales
Araceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Alismatales - Araceae : amor-r., arum-d., arum-dru., arum-i., arum-m., Arum-t., CALAD.,
calam., ictod.
Lemnaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Alismatales - Lemnaceae : lem-m.
Melanthiaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Alismatales - Melanthiaceae : alet., helin., Helon., SABAD., VERAT., verat-n., Verat-v., verin.,
xero.
Dioscoreales
Dioscoreaceae (Yam family)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Dioscoreales - Dioscoreaceae : DIOS.
Smilacaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Dioscoreales - Smilacaceae : SARS.
Trilliaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Dioscoreales - Trilliaceae : PAR., tril-c., tril-p.
Colchicaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Liliales - Colchicaceae : COLCH., colchin.
Melanthiaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Liliales - Melanthiaceae : alet., helin., Helon., SABAD., VERAT., verat-n., Verat-v., verin., xero.
Asparagales
Agavaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Asparagales - Agavaceae : agav-a., agav-t., phor-t., yuc.
Alliaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Asparagales - Alliaceae : All-c., all-s.
Amaryllidaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Asparagales - Amaryllidaceae : gala., narc-po., narc-ps.
Asparagaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Asparagales - Asparagaceae : aspar.
Asphodelaceae (= Aloaceae)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Asparagales - Asphodelaceae (= Aloaceae) : ALOE
Convallariaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Asparagales - Convallariaceae : conv., rusc-a.
Hyacinthaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Asparagales - Hyacinthaceae : agra., orni., SQUIL.
Phormiaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Asparagales - Phormiaceae : phor-t.
Xanthorrheaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Asparagales - Xanthorrheaceae : xanrhoe.
Commelinoids
Arecales
Palmae (= Arecaceae) (Palm family)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Commelinoids - Arecales - Palmae (= Arecaceae) : arec., elae., musa, sabal
Commelinales
Commelinaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Commelinoids - Commelinales - Commelinaceae : trad.
Haemodoraceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Commelinoids - Commelinales - Haemodoraceae : Lachn.
Zingiberales
Cannaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Commelinoids - Zingiberales - Cannaceae : canna
Zingiberaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Commelinoids - Zingiberales - Zingiberaceae : Zing.
Poales
Gramineae (= Poaceae) (Grasses)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots -
Juncaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Commelinoids - Poales - Juncaceae : junc-e.
Typhaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Monocots Commelinoids - Poales - Typhaceae : typh.
Eudicots
Buxaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Buxaceae : bux.
Ranunculales
Berberidaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Ranunculales - Berberidaceae : BERB., berb-a., berbin., caul., PODO.
Menispermaceae (Menisperms)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Ranunculales - Menispermaceae : COCC., Cur., menis., pareir., picro., tinas.
Clematideae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Ranunculales - Ranunculaceae - Clematideae : CLEM., clem-vit.
Delphinieae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Ranunculales - Ranunculaceae - Delphinieae : ACON., acon-a., acon-ac., acon-c., acon-f.,
acon-l., acon-s., aconin., delphin., STAPH.
Helleboreae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Ranunculales - Ranunculaceae - Helleboreae : act-sp., aqui., calth., CIMIC., HELL., hell-f.,
hell-o., hell-v., macro., nig-s.
Hydrastidaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Ranunculales - Ranunculaceae - Hydrastidaceae : HYDR., hydrin-m., hydrinin-m.
Ranunculeae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Ranunculales - Ranunculaceae - Ranunculeae : adon., ran-a., RAN-B., ran-g., ran-r., Ran-s.
Proteales
Platanaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Proteales - Platanaceae : platan., platan-oc.
Core Eudicots
Gunneraceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Gunneraceae : gunn-p.
Vitidaceae (= Vitaceae)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Vitidaceae (= Vitaceae) : ampe-qu., vitis-v.
Saxifragales
Crassulaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Saxifragales - Crassulaceae : cot., pen., sed-ac., semp.
Hamamelidaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Saxifragales - Hamamelidaceae : HAM.
Paeoniaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Saxifragales - Paeoniaceae : paeon.
Santalales
Santalaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Santalales - Santalaceae : okou., ol-sant., santa.
Viscaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Santalales - Viscaceae : Visc.
Caryophyllales
Amaranthaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Caryophyllales - Amaranthaceae : achy., achy-a.
Caryophyllaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Caryophyllales - Caryophyllaceae : agro., ille., paro-i., sapin., sapo., scler., stel.
Chenopodiaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Caryophyllales - Chenopodiaceae : chen-a., chen-v., chen-vg.
Droseraceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Caryophyllales - Droseraceae : DROS.
Nepenthaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Caryophyllales - Nepenthaceae : nep.
Nyctaginaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Caryophyllales - Nyctaginaceae : boerh-d.
Phytolaccaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots -
Plumbaginaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Caryophyllales - Plumbaginaceae : plumbg.
Polygonaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Caryophyllales - Polygonaceae : Fago., lapa., polyg-h., polyg-pe., polyg-xyz.,
RHEUM, RUMX., rumx-act., SENEG.
Tamaricaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Caryophyllales - Tamaricaceae : tama., tamrnd.
Rosids
Zygophyllaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Zygophyllaceae : GUAJ., palo., pegan-ha., trib.
Geraniales
Geraniaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Geraniales - Geraniaceae : erod., ger., ger-i.
Krameriaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Krameriaceae : Rat.
Eurosids I (Eurosids 1)
Celastraceae (= Hippocrateaceae)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Celastraceae (= Hippocrateaceae) : euon., euon-a., euonin.
Oxalidales
Oxalidaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Oxalidales - Oxalidaceae : oxal-a., oxal-c.
Rosales
Cecropiaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Rosales - Cecropiaceae : cecr.
Moraceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Rosales - Moraceae : fic-c., fic-r., fic-v., upa.
Rhamnaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Rosales - Rhamnaceae : cas-s., cean., karw-h., rham-cal.,
rham-cath., rham-f.
Fabales
Leguminosae-Papilionoideae (= Fabaceae / Papilionaceae) (Legume family)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Fabales - Leguminosae-Papilionoideae (= Fabaceae /
Papilionaceae) : abr., alf., arag., astra-e., astra-m., bals-p., BAPT., bapt-c., caesal-b., cassia-f.,
Cassia-s., chrysar., Cop., cyt-l., der., desm-g., dol., eryt-j., esin., eys., galeg., genist., haem.,
hedy., Indg., joan., kino, lath., meli., meli-xyz., onon., oxyt., phase., phase-vg., phase-xyz.,
PHYS., pisc., rob., saroth., senn., tong., trif-p., trif-r., ulx-eu.
Leguminosae-Mimosoideae (= Mimosaceae)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Fabales - Leguminosae-Mimosoideae (= Mimosaceae) : calli-h.,
mim-h., mim-p.
Cucurbitales
Coriariaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Cucurbitales - Coriariaceae : cori-m., cori-r.
Corynocarpaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Cucurbitales - Corynocarpaceae : kara
Fagales
Betulaceae (Birch family)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Fagales - Betulaceae : aln., betu., CARB-V.
Corylaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Fagales - Corylaceae : ost.
Myricaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Fagales - Myricaceae : myric.
Malpighiales
Dichapetalaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Malpighiales - Dichapetalaceae : dicha.
Erythroxylaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Malpighiales - Erythroxylaceae : Coca, cocain.
Flacourtiaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Malpighiales - Flacourtiaceae : chaul.
Guttiferae (= Clusiaceae)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Malpighiales - Guttiferae (= Clusiaceae) : Gamb., haru-ma.,
HYPER.
Linaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Malpighiales - Linaceae : linu-c., linu-u.
Malpighiaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Malpighiales - Malpighiaceae : galph.
Passifloraceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Malpighiales - Passifloraceae : passi.
Turneraceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids I - Malpighiales - Turneraceae : dam.
Eurosids II
Myrtales
Combretaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Myrtales - Combretaceae : term-a., term-c.
Lythraceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Myrtales - Lythraceae : cuph.
Melastomataceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Myrtales - Melastomataceae : mela.
Onagraceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Myrtales - Onagraceae : epil., oeno.
Punicaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Myrtales - Punicaceae : gran.
Brassicales
Capparidaceae (= Capparaceae)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Brassicales - Capparidaceae (= Capparaceae) : capp-crc.,
capp-crm., capp-g.
Malvales
Bixaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Malvales - Bixaceae : bix.
Cistaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Malvales - Cistaceae : Cist.
Malvaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Malvales - Malvaceae : abel., goss., hib-su.
Sterculiaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Malvales - Sterculiaceae : abrom-a., abrom-a-r., cac., Choc.,
KOLA
Thymelaeaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Malvales - Thymelaeaceae : daph., dirc., MEZ.
Tiliaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Malvales - Tiliaceae : Til.
Sapindales
Aceraceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Sapindales - Aceraceae : acer-circ., cardios-h.
Burseraceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Sapindales - Burseraceae : OLIB-SAC.
Meliaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Sapindales - Meliaceae : aza., guare.
Rutaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Sapindales - Rutaceae : aegle-f., ANG., atis., atis-r., baros.,
cit-l., cit-v., dict., diosm., jab., pilo., PTEL., RUTA, Xan.
Sapindaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Sapindales - Sapindaceae : guar., paull.
Simaroubaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Rosids - Eurosids II - Sapindales - Simaroubaceae : Ail., Cedr., chap., quas., sima.
Asterids
Cornales
Cornaceae (Dogwood family)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Cornales - Cornaceae : corn., corn-a., corn-f.
Hydrangeaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Cornales - Hydrangeaceae : hydrang.
Ericales
Balsaminaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Ericales - Balsaminaceae : impa-g.
Myrsinaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Ericales - Myrsinaceae : emb-r.
Polemoniaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Ericales - Polemoniaceae : hoit.
Sarraceniaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Ericales - Sarraceniaceae : sarr.
Theaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Ericales - Theaceae : thea
Euasterids I
Boraginaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Boraginaceae : borra-o., helio., myos-a., onos., SYMPH.
Gentianales
Apocynaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Gentianales - Apocynaceae : alst., alst-s., Apoc., apoc-a.,
echit., kurch., OLND., queb., rauw., reser., stroph-h., stroph-s., tang., thev., vinc.
Asclepiadaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Gentianales - Asclepiadaceae : asc-c., Asc-t., calo.,
cund., gymno.
Gentianaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Gentianales - Gentianaceae : canch., gent-c., gent-ch.,
gent-l., gent-q.
Loganiaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Gentianales - Loganiaceae : bruc., brucin., Cur., GELS.,
IGN., NUX-V., SPIG., spig-m., Stry., stry-af-cit., stry-ar., stry-n., stry-p., stry-s., stry-val.,
stry-xyz., strych-g., strych-h., strych-s.
Rubiaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Gentianales - Rubiaceae : asper., cain., ceph., CHIN.,
chin-b., CHININ-AR., chinin-m., CHININ-S., chinin-sal., cinch., COFF., coff-t., coffin., emetin.,
gali., IP., mit., rub-t., uncar-tom., yohim.
Hydrophyllaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Hydrophyllaceae : erio., hydro-v.
Solanales
Convolvulaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Solanales - Convolvulaceae : convo-d., convo-s., ipom-p.,
jal., oper., scam.
Lamiales
Acanthaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Lamiales - Acanthaceae : anders., androg-p., hygroph-s.,
just.
Bignoniaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Lamiales - Bignoniaceae : catal., jac-c., jac-g.
Oleaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Lamiales - Oleaceae : chion., frax., jasm., nyct.
Orobanchaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Lamiales - Orobanchaceae : epiph.
Pedaliaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Lamiales - Pedaliaceae : harp.
Plantaginaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Lamiales - Plantaginaceae : Plan.
Verbenaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids I - Lamiales - Verbenaceae : AGN., clerod-g., clerod-i., lip.,
lip-as., verbe-h., verbe-o.
Euasterids II
Adoxaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids II - Adoxaceae : adox.
Aquifoliales
Aquifoliaceae (= Ilicaceae)
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids II - Aquifoliales - Aquifoliaceae (= Ilicaceae) : ilx-a., mate,
prin.
Apiales
Araliaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids II - Apiales - Araliaceae : aral., aral-h., gins., hed.
Dipsacales
Caprifoliaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids II - Dipsacales - Caprifoliaceae : lon-x., SAMB., samb-c.,
sym-r., trios., vib., vib-p., vib-t.
Valerianaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots -
Asterales
Campanulaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids II - Asterales - Campanulaceae : Lob., lob-c., lob-d., lob-e.,
lob-p., lob-s., lobin.
Menyanthaceae
KINGDOMS - PLANTS APG Group (= Angiosperm Phylogeny Group 1998) - Angiospermae - Eudicots Core Eudicots - Asterids - Euasterids II - Asterales - Menyanthaceae : MENY.
ANIMALIA (ANIMALS )
Porifera (Sponges)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Porifera : bad., SPONG.
Cnidaria
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Cnidaria : cor-r., medus., physala-p.
Echinodermata (Echinoderms)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Echinodermata : Aster.
Nematoda (Nematodes)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Nematoda : enterob-v.
Mollusca (Molluscs)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Mollusca : CALC., conch., helx., murx., pect., SEP., ven-m.
Arthropoda (Arthropods)
Chelicerata (Chelicerates)
Insecta (Insects)
Hymenoptera
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Chelicerata - Insecta - Hymenoptera : APIS, apisin., Form.,
form-ac., gal-ac., galla-q-r., mel-c-s., propl., vesp., vesp-xyz., vespul-vg.
Coleoptera (Beetles)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Chelicerata - Insecta - Coleoptera : CANTH., canthin., cocc-s.,
dor.
miscellaneous Insecta
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Chelicerata - Insecta - miscellaneous Insecta : aphis, blatta-a.,
blatta-o., cimx., COC-C., culx., ped., pulx.
Arachnida (Arachnids)
Araneae (Spiders)
Mygalomorphae (Mygalomorphs)
Theraphosidae (New-world Tarantulas)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Chelicerata - Arachnida - Araneae - Mygalomorphae Theraphosidae : mygal., tarent-c.
Depluridae
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Chelicerata - Arachnida - Araneae - Mygalomorphae Depluridae : atra-r.
Theridiidae (= Nesticidae)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Chelicerata - Arachnida - Araneae - Labidognatha (=
Aranaeomorphae) - Entelegynae - Theridiidae (= Nesticidae) : lat-h., lat-k., lat-m., tela, Ther.
Haplogynae
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Chelicerata - Arachnida - Araneae - Labidognatha (=
Aranaeomorphae) - Haplogynae : loxo-recl.
Scorpionida (Scorpions)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Chelicerata - Arachnida - Scorpionida : Androc., buth-a., scor.
Acari
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Chelicerata - Arachnida - Acari : ix., trom.
Merostomata
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Chelicerata - Merostomata : lim.
Crustacea (Crustaceans)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Crustacea : astac., hom-am., onis.
Myriapoda
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Arthropoda - Myriapoda : scol.
Chordata (Chordates)
Chondrichthyes (Sharks & Rays)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Chondrichthyes : Galeoc-c-h., urol-h.
Amphibia (Amphibians)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Amphibia : BUFO, bufo-s., salam.
Reptilia (Reptiles)
Ophidia (Snakes)
Xenophidia (= Caenophidia / Culubroidea) (Xenophidia)
Elapidae (Elapids)
Bungarinae
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Reptilia - Ophidia - Xenophidia (= Caenophidia / Culubroidea) Elapidae - Bungarinae : bung-fa., dendr-pol., NAJA
Viperidae (Vipers)
Viperinae (Pitless vipers)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Reptilia - Ophidia - Xenophidia (= Caenophidia / Culubroidea) Viperidae - Viperinae : ceras-ce., Cloth., Vip., vip-a., vip-l-f., vip-r., vip-t.
Boidae
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Reptilia - Ophidia - Boidae : boa-co.
Sauria (Lizards)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Reptilia - Sauria : helo., helo-h., helo-s., lacer.
Ornithischia (Dinosaurs)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Reptilia - Ornithischia : maias-l., tyran-rex.
Amphisbaenidae
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Reptilia - Amphisbaenidae : amph.
Aves (Birds)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Aves : buteo-j., colum-p., corv-cor., cygn-ol., falco-ch.,
FALCO-PE., haliae-lc., ing., lars-arg., nid., oscilloc., ovi-p., vult-gr.
Mammalia (Mammals)
Milks
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Mammalia - Milks : colos., LAC-C., lac-cp., Lac-d., lac-del.,
lac-e., lac-f., Lac-h., lac-leo., lac-loxod-a., lac-lup., lac-mat., lac-v., lac-v-c., lac-v-f., lac-v-fe.
Rodentia (Rodents)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Mammalia - Rodentia : Castm., sanguis-s., sphing.
Artiodactyla
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Mammalia - Artiodactyla : adeps-s., CARB-AN., cartl-s., cerv.,
fel, lac-cp., Lac-d., lac-v., lac-v-c., lac-v-f., lac-v-fe., medul-os-si., MOSCH., OL-AN., plac-s.,
suis-chord-umb., suis-em., suis-hep., suis-pan.
Perissodactyla
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Mammalia - Perissodactyla : castor-eq., hipp., lac-e.
Proboscidea
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Mammalia - Proboscidea : lac-loxod-a.
Carnivora (Carnivores)
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Mammalia - Carnivora : LAC-C., lac-f., lac-leo., lac-lup., Meph.,
pulm-v., vulpes-s.
Primates
KINGDOMS - ANIMALIA - Chordata - Mammalia - Primates : amn-l., cal-ren., chord-umb., colos.,
foll., Lac-h., lac-mat., mucs-nas., plac., skat., urin.
KINGDOMS - ANIMALS other families - Water animals - Aquatic animals (= Fresh-water Animals) :
astac., bad., Castm., del., hir., oncor-t., ser-ang.
Milks
KINGDOMS - ANIMALS other families - Milks : colos., LAC-C., lac-cp., Lac-d., lac-del., lac-e., lac-f.,
Lac-h., lac-leo., lac-loxod-a., lac-lup., lac-mat., lac-v., lac-v-c., lac-v-f., lac-v-fe.
Musks
KINGDOMS - ANIMALS other families - Musks : AMBR., Castm., Meph., MOSCH.
Predators
KINGDOMS - ANIMALS other families - Predators : AMBR., amph., Androc., aran., aran-ix., aran-sc.,
Aster., atra-r., boa-co., both., both-a., both-ax., BUFO, bufo-s., bung-fa., buteo-j., buth-a.,
Cench., ceras-ce., Cloth., colos., Crot-c., CROT-H., del., dendr-pol., ELAPS, falco-ch.,
FALCO-PE., foll., haliae-lc., helo-s., hydroph., LAC-C., lac-del., lac-f., Lac-h., lac-leo., lac-lup.,
lac-mat., lacer., LACH., lat-h., lat-k., lat-m., loxo-recl., Meph., murx., mygal., NAJA, nid.,
pulm-v., salam., scor., SEP., TARENT., tela, Ther., toxi., urol-h., Vip., vip-a., vip-l-f., vip-r.,
vip-t., vulpes-s.
Scavengers
KINGDOMS - ANIMALS other families - Scavengers : astac., corv-cor., hom-am., lars-arg., vult-gr.
Parasites
Parasites on Animals
KINGDOMS - ANIMALS other families - Parasites - Parasites on Animals : cimx., enterob-v., hir., ix.,
ped., pulx., trom.
Parasites on Plants
KINGDOMS - ANIMALS other families - Parasites - Parasites on Plants : aphis, COC-C., gal-ac.,
galla-q-r.
Sarcodes
KINGDOMS - ANIMALS other families - Sarcodes : adren., chol., cortico., cortiso., foll., hypoth., ins.,
lutin., orch., ov., pancr., parathyr., pitu., pitu-a., pitu-gl., pitu-p., plac., plac-s., pulm-v.,
suis-pan., suprar., testis, thala., thym-gl., thyr., thyreotr., thyroiod.
For this work, I limited my attention to those 1632 remedies listed in 3 or more rubrics. The 600+
remedies this eliminated are typically listed only for a gross clinical indication from eclectic or
domestic medical or toxicological experience, and lack known characterizing symptoms essential
for homeopathic prescribing.
In addition, I found that many of the plants among these barely-described remedies are difficult to
clearly identify, with names not reconcilable with contemporary lists of named species, and
insufficient information in our literature to guide identification.
Types of Families
In this article, I will confine myself largely to the consideration of taxonomic families - groupings
created on the basis of presumed phylogenetic/evolutionary relationships for plants and animals, or
on the basis of chemical composition for minerals. Many other forms of classification of remedies
have been or could be described - e.g., groups based on habitat or bioregion ("sea remedies"),
groups based on strategy ("predators," "scavengers"), groups based on external appearances ("trees*"
"vines"), groups based on the part of the source used ("roots," "barks," "venoms"). Groupings of this
sort have been included in the Families Database discussed in this article, but I will defer discussion
of these to a future installment.
*Note that trees do not represent a taxonomically-meaningful group, but rather a growth strategy of
plants that evolved autonomously in several independent lineages.
The Plants
The first task I faced with the plants was identifying their contemporary Latin names. Although
some of our plant remedies are easy to confidently place in botanical families, many required a
search of the botanical literature for accurate placement; and for this, I needed identification of
the plant in contemporary botanical nomenclature. Beyond the issue of classification within
taxonomic families, I feel that an accurate description/identification of the plant species we use, in
contemporary nomenclature, is in order.
Botanical nomenclature has changed and evolved since the 19th century, and the contemporary
names and classifications of many of our plant remedies have changed over time. An early example
of confusion around botanical names is seen with our Cimicifuga racemosa, which Hering names
Actea racemosa in the print copy of his Guiding Symptoms.
Others are more difficult. A search for contemporary information on Anacardium orientale reveals
that this tree has been renamed Semecarpus anacardium. Even our Ledum has been renamed:
Rhododendron palustre!
(MM Pura)
...this had to be his plant. The text accompanying a photo of this specie confirmed that it had been
called in the past "Cyclamen europaeum".
Rhododendron chrysanthum, the Siberian Snow Rose, yellow-flowered rhododendron specie - was
quite hard to find in any of my references. Searching the Plants for a Future Database, I found
Rhododendron aureum, which caught my interest with its reference to the color "gold" (an unusual
color in wild rhododendrons).
The description of this specie mentioned the common descriptor "yellow rhododendron, the
synonym "Rhododendron chrysanthum," and the range of E. Asia; high mountain areas, both alpine
and sub-alpine - all consistent with the description of our specie.
Rhus Research
Poison Ivy, Oak and Sumac
The several Rhus species in our materia medica were an interesting exercise in research, and
required pooling information from several resources. On the Rhus tox / Rhus radicans question,
"Rhus toxicodendron" and "Rhus radicans" are terms that have been used historically somewhat
interchangeably to describe theses 3 separate North American species:
Some taxonomic schemes retain "Rhus" as the genus name for these species, but
Toxicodendron is more widely accepted
To complicate matters further, Eastern Poison Ivy (Toxicodendron radicans) has two growth habits,
as a sub shrub/groundcover and as a vine, dependent on environmental conditions; which has
occasionally resulted in its description as two distinct species (see the discussion of this in Charles
Millspaugh's, American Medicinal Plants).
It appears that our Rhus-t and Rhus-r both refer to the single specie Toxicodendron radicans
(Eastern Poison Ivy), with Rhus-r referring specifically to the vining habit of this plant.
It is possible that some Atlantic Poison Oak crept into the later American toxicological reports here
and there, but the European experience (Hahnemann's proving, etc.) was more certain to be purely
Eastern Poison Ivy.
There are no native European Rhus species; Toxicodendron radicans (Eastern Poison Ivy) was
introduced to Europe as an ornamental in the mid-1600s. Atlantic Poison Oak is not present in
Pennsylvania, Ohio, or the New England States (having a more southern distribution), so would not
have been widely available to the early homeopaths of North America.
Theses sources also were used as references for historical and contemporary synonyms, and for
common English names for plant families.
I have applied common English names only when these are in common use within the homeopathic
and/or botanic communities; there is no formal assignment of common English names to plant
families apart from colloquial usage, and these are usually merely based on a "typical" or
commonly-known member of the group. E.g., the family to which Conium maculatum and Cicuta
virosa belong is termed the Umbelliferae (Umbelliferae = Apiaceae as a synonym in historical and
occasional contemporary use.)
Although this has sometimes been called the "carrot family" or the "parsley family", these names are
merely derived from commonly known members of this family, which are not necessarily typical of
the group; these common English names hold no formal significance and are not in widespread use,
and so were not included in my database.
In contrast, the common English name for the Solanaceae, the nightshade family, is more
descriptive of the family as a whole and is in widespread common use both by botanists and by
homeopaths; and so was included.
In the rare cases where these groups did not concur with a placement to family, I pursued a variety
of alternate references to reconcile their differences. Some of the plant species - particularly the
South American and Indian species - needed to be researched separately, on sites with regional
plant descriptions.
As example - in the APG scheme, the remedy Cistus canadensis (Helianthemum canadense,
Rockrose) is placed in the family Malvaceae, of the Malvales, Eurosids II. In the Dahlgren scheme, it
is in the family Cistaceae, Malvales, Malviflorae.
However Cronquist places it in the Cistaceae, Violales, adjacent to the family Violaceae (Viola
odorata, Viola tricolor) - which allows us to reflect upon some fascinating concordances with these
latter two remedies, helping us to appreciate the scope of action of this relatively small (657
rubric) remedy.
Conversely, in the APG scheme, Paeonia officinalis (family Paeoniaceae) and Hamamelis virginiana
(Hamamelidaceae) are both classified in the order Saxifragales. Although the Dahlgren and
Cronquist schemes classify these remedies in those same respective families, they do not relate
these two families closely to one another; and hence fail to bring these two remedies of very
similar properties together for comparison.
Non-flowering Plants
The classification schemes discussed above apply to the Angiosperms or Flowering Plants. The
non-flowering plants were organized according to the families and taxonomic scheme outlined in
the Tree of Life Web Project.
We have only 32 remedies in this group - most of these only scantily described in our literature:
It is my impression that the "bacterial/viral remedies" do not form a group large enough, or
cohesive enough, to warrant consideration as a "kingdom" of remedies. And with the exception of
the bowel nosodes, these all involve diseased tissues in addition to the suggested pathogen.
The Animals
Identification and classification of the animal remedies posed a generally greater puzzle than that
of the plants. Many of our heritage were amateur or professional botanists, and the conventional
medicine of the 18th-early 20th centuries was largely botanical; so the details and importance of
botanical classification were not far from the reach of homeopathic practitioners. The technical
classification of remedies from animals however appears to have been a different matter
altogether.
Tracking down the identification of Theridion is a case in point. Hering introduced this spider to our
materia medica in 1832, while in Surinam. He described it as Theridion curassavicum, the 'Orange
Spider'.
"A small spider known to people as very poisonous, chiefly found in the island of Uraoa. This
spider, about the size of a cherry stone, is found upon orange trees in the West Indies.
When young it is velvety-black in appearance, marked with antero-posterior lines composed of
white dots; on posterior part of body there are three orange-red spots, while upon belly there is a
large square yellow spot."
[C. Hering, Guiding Symptoms]
A review of the arachnological literature revealed no contemporary or historical use of "Theridion"
as a genus name. There is, however, a family Theridiidae, comprising the cobweb-weavers and the
black widow spiders - these latter closely resembling Hering's description of his critter. Scouring the
arachnology literature for widow spiders from the Caribbean region matching Hering's description, I
found the spider Latrodectus curacavensis.
In his Cyclopaedia of Drug Pathogenesy, Hughes wrote,
"Hering admits that his 'Theridion curassavicum' is very similar in many respects to the Aranea
tredecim-guttate, by which name Fabricius has designated the Latrodectus malmignattus of
Volterra and other places"
- this latter spider being the black widow spider of central Europe.
Carolina and Texas, is a larger spider of a dark-brown color, not so poisonous, and covered
with more hairs than the Tarantula hispanica. Dr. Howard had some specimens sent from
Cuba..."
These descriptions indicate that it is not of the same family as Tarantula hispanica (the Lycosidae,
or wolf-spiders), but rather is a new-world Tarentula, a Mygalomorph.
My research identified 21 species of tropical tarantulas in Cuba, none having borne the names used
for this spider in our literature. We have no better description of our "Tarentula cubensis" in our
literature - which is compounded by the fact that when MacFarion saw this spider, it was macerated
and partially decomposed. (Mathur tells this story in his Systematic Materia Medica:
"The Tarentula cubensis was being shipped into this country (USA) in a container
with alcohol to preserve it. The container broke on the way up, the alcohol ran
out, and the specimen decomposed."
Mygale lasiodora is described as another Cuban tarantula, yet its identification is even more
problematic. Mygale was introduced to our practice by John Houard, and described only as "a large
black Cuban spider". The two "provings" recorded in Allen as Mygale are both the results of
accidental bites; one is recorded as "Mygale lassiodora" and the other as "Mygale avicularia."
Even a brief review reveals very different symptom complexes in these two "provers," leading one to
question the identity of the two spiders involved. Compounding this, Hering's collaborators refer to "
Tarentula cubensis" as being the spider introduced by "Howard" - yet Howard's introduction was our
" Mygale".
About all we can really say about these spiders, is that they represent 2
(perhaps 3?) of the approximately 21 Cuban theraphosid mygalomorphs, or tropical tarantulas
(caranguejeiras); most likely of the genus Phormictopus, Citharacantus, Avicularia, or perhaps
Cyrtopholis or Holothele. And that Tarentula cubensis needs also to be placed as well in a small
"family" of "decaying animal tissue" remedies, along with Pyrogenum.
Snakes
The snakes were much easier to work with, thanks largely to the EMB Reptile Database. In addition
to providing taxonomic classifications, this site lists historical records of Latin names that have
been applied to given specie over time.
The Minerals
Bermhard Blosey did much of the work on the minerals, and particularly on classification of the
Organics. The inorganic minerals, with their relatively simple structure, lent themselves more easily
to classification. The principal classifications were by atomic constitution, according to periodic
table organization. Additional categories were added for common functional groups (e.g., acids)
and complex anions and cations such as nitrites, nitrates, hydroxides, ammonium salts, etc.
A few substances normally regarded by homeopaths as simple substances needed to be classified as
the complex substances they truly are. Arsenicum album is the white oxide of Arsenic, As203; and is
functionally an inorganic acid.
Our information on Mercurius, for which Merc (Mercurius solubilis) and Merc-v (Mercurius vivus) are
often employed interchangeably, is based principally on Mercurius solubilis. This is a complex
compound 2[NH2Hg2)NO3-H2O] which is both a nitrate and an ammonium salt, and needed to be
placed in these "families," as well as classified under the obvious element Mercury.
Relationships of Remedies
A
Abies canadensis (abies-c.)
Similars : abies-n., abrot., all-s., caul., chin., gels., lyc., nat-m., nux-v., olnd., Sabin., sep., Thuj.
Abrotanum (abrot.)
Followed well by : acon., bry., chin., Hep.
Follows well after : acon., bry., hep.
Complementary remedies : acon., bry., hep., kali-bi., lyc., nat-m., psor., sars., sil., syph., tub-m.
Similars : absin., acet-ac., aeth., agar., alum., arg-n., ars., ars-i., bar-c., benz-ac., Bry., calc-p.,
carb-v., cham., chin., cina, colch., gels., gnaph., Iod., mut., Nat-m., nux-v., op., puls., rhus-t.,
sanic., sars., scroph-n., stel., sul-i., sulph., Tub., tub-k., Zinc., zinc-ar.
Absinthium (absin.)
Complementary remedies : abrot., art-v.
Similars : abrot., agar., alco., arg-n., Art-v., bell., cham., chin., cic., cina, cupr., hydr-ac., hyos.,
lach., nux-v., stram., stry.
Aether (aether)
Antidoted by : bell., hep., hyos., nux-v.
Aethylium (aethyl.)
Complementary remedies : lyc.
Similars : ars., cocc., gels., lach., plb.
Alfalfa (alf.)
Similars : agn., ars., Aven., chin., chinin-ar., galeg., hydr., kali-p., ph-ac.
Alumina (alum.)
Antidoted by : bry., cadm-met., camph., cham., ip., jab., puls.
Followed well by : alum-sil., Arg-met., bell., bry., carc., fl-ac., lach., sep., stann., sulph.
Follows well after : arg-met., bry., lach., sulph.
Complementary remedies : bry., Calc., caust., dulc., ferr., Ign., Lyc., nat-m., Nux-v., op., Phos.,
PULS., sep., SULPH.
Similars : abrot., Alumin., alumn., ambr., Arg-n., ars., BAR-C., Bell., borx., Bry., Calc., Calc-act.,
carc., Caust., Cham., Chin., con., cupr., cur., ferr., ferr-i., fl-ac., gnaph., Graph., hed., IGN.,
iod., ip., Kali-bi., Kali-c., kreos., Lach., lath., Lyc., Mag-c., mag-m., mand., med., merc.,
NAT-M., nat-p., nat-s., nicc., nit-ac., nux-v., op., petr., phos., plat., PLB., podo., psor., PULS.,
Rhus-t., ruta, sec., sep., SIL., Sulph., symph., tarent., tub., Zinc.
Alumen (alumn.)
Antidoted by : aloe, camph., cham., ip., nux-v., sulph.
Inimicals : alco.
Similars : aloe, Alum., bry., calc., caps., carb-an., caust., con., ferr., ferr-i., graph., hydr.,
Kali-bi., mag-c., merc., merc-c., mur-ac., nit-ac., nux-v., op., plb., rat., slag, stann., sul-ac.,
sulph., zinc., zinc-s.
Complementary remedies : all-c., Ant-c., Bry., Calc., coff., merc., nux-v., Phos., Puls., rhus-t.,
Sanic., Sep.
Similars : aloe, Am-c., ant-c., ant-t., Arg-n., Ars., Bell., bry., Calc., carb-v., CAUST., Chin., Cocc.,
coloc., con., glon., Graph., hep., hydr., Ign., iod., Kali-bi., Kali-c., kali-chl., kali-hox., lyc.,
Mag-m., Med., merc., merc-c., mur-ac., nat-m., nux-v., PHOS., puls., Rhus-t., Seneg., sep., sil.,
spong., Sulph.
Anilinum (anil.)
Similars : ars., glon., Sal-ac.
Anthracinum (anthraci.)
Antidoted by : apis, ars., camph., carb-ac., carb-v., chin., kreos., lach., puls., rhus-t., sal-ac., sil.
Followed well by : ars., aur., aur-m-n., euph., Sil., tarent-c.
Follows well after : ars., ph-ac.
Complementary remedies : ars., bell., hep., pyrog., sil.
Similars : ARS., carb-v., Crot-h., Echi., euph., hippoz., LACH., Pyrog., Tarent., tarent-c.
Anthracokali (anthraco.)
Complementary remedies : dulc., ferr-i.
Similars : acon., ant-c., ant-t., ars., bry., calc., carb-an., carb-v., kali-c., rhus-t., verat.
Antipyrinum (antip.)
Antidoted by : bell.
Inimicals : coff.
Apisinum (apisin.)
Inimicals : rhus-t.
sep., sieg., sil., Spig., Staph., stront-c., SUL-AC., sulph., symph., verat., verat-v., vit.
Similars : alf., am-c., anac., ang., aq-mar., arg-met., arg-n., arn., ars., ASAF., aur-ar., aur-br.,
aur-i., aur-m., aur-m-k., aur-m-n., aur-s., bar-c., Bell., calc., calc-p., caps., Caust., chin.,
clem., cocc., coff., Con., cund., cupr., dig., ferr., fl-ac., glon., ham., hell., hep., hydr., Hyos.,
ign., iod., kali-bi., kali-br., kali-c., kali-i., kali-p., lach., lyc., mang., meli., MERC., mez.,
Nat-m., NIT-AC., nux-v., pall., ph-ac., PHOS., Plat., plb., Puls., RHUS-T., sars., sep., Sil.,
sol-ni., spig., spong., stront-met., sulph., syph., tarent., ther., thuj., Verat., verat-v., zinc.
B
Bacillinum Burnett (bac.)
Followed well by : bar-c., Calc-p., dros., hydr., ins., lach., lev., nat-m., psor., puls., sil., tarent.,
thuj., thyr.
Complementary remedies : Calc-p., dys., hydr., kali-c., kali-i., lach., nat-m., psor.
Similars : ars-i., bac-t., calc., cupr-cy., lach., ol-j., psor., puls., thuj., tub., tub-a.
Badiaga (bad.)
Followed well by : brom., calc-f., fl-ac., iod., kali-f., lach., lap-a., mag-f., nat-f.
Follows well after : ars.
Complementary remedies : Iod., lach., Merc., Sulph.
Similars : calc-s., carb-an., cist., clem., Con., euph., hep., hydr., Iod., kali-i., lach., Merc., nat-p.,
nit-ac., phos., phyt., seneg., sil., SPONG., sulph.
Complementary remedies : ars., Bry., Crot-h., crot-t., echi., ham., nit-ac., pyrog., ter.
Similars : ARN., ARS., bapt-c., bell., BRY., but-ac., caj., echi., GELS., ham., HYOS., kali-chl.,
Lach., mand., MUR-AC., nit-ac., nux-v., Op., phos., puls., Pyrog., RHUS-T., sil., stram., sulph.
Belladonna (bell.)
Antidoted by : acon., alco., arum-t., atro., camph., chin., coff., con., cupr., ferr., hep., hyos.,
jab., merc., nux-v., op., plat., plb., puls., rad-br., sabad., stram., thea
Followed well by : abrot., acal., acon., agar., am-c., amyg., Apis, arn., Ars., art-v., Atro., aur.,
Bar-c., benz-ac., BRY., cact., cadm-met., CALC., calc-p., camph., carb-v., caul., Cham., Chin.,
cic., coff., Con., cupr., Cur., dulc., eucal., Ferr-p., glon., hell., HEP., Hyos., ign., ip., jac-g.,
kali-bi., kali-m., kali-n., LACH., lyc., lyss., mag-p., MERC., merc-c., merc-cy., merc-i-f.,
Merc-i-r., mez., mosch., mur-ac., nit-ac., nux-v., op., Phos., phyt., psor., puls., pyrog., Rhus-t.,
Sang., Seneg., sep., Sil., spong., stann., Stram., Sulph., Valer., verat., zinc.
Follows well after : ars., cham., cupr., hep., lach., merc., nit-ac., phos.
Complementary remedies : acon., Arn., Ars., Aur., borx., Bry., CALC., Caps., Caust., cham., Chin.,
Cic., cist., Cocc., Con., cupr., cupr-act., glon., Hep., hyos., Ign., Ip., lach., lyc., Merc., Nat-c.,
nat-m., nit-ac., nux-v., op., Phos., puls., pyrog., rhus-t., sang., seneg., Sep., Spig., Staph.,
Stram., sulph., tub., valer., vario., Verat., zinc.
Inimicals : acet-ac., dulc., merc-i-f., sec.
Similars : ACON., adren., alco., am-c., apis, arn., ars., atro., atro-s., aur., bapt., borx., Bry.,
CALC., caps., carb-ac., carc., Caust., cham., Chin., Chion., cic., coff., con., crot-h., cupr., dol.,
dulc., eup-pur., ferr-c., ferr-p., fl-ac., gels., Glon., guaj., hell., hep., hoit., hydr-ac., HYOS.,
Ign., ip., kali-bi., Kali-c., kreos., lach., lyc., lycpr., mag-p., Mand., meli., Merc., myris., nux-v.,
OP., phos., phyt., prot., puls., rhus-t., sapin., sep., sil., sol-ni., STRAM., stront-c., sulph., ter.,
thuj., thyr., tub., usn., Verat., verat-v., zinc-val.
Benzinum (ben.)
Similars : ben-n., Bry., Sulph.
Bromium (brom.)
Antidoted by : am-c., camph., colch., mag-c., op.
Followed well by : am-br., ant-t., arg-n., hep., kali-c., lyc., spong.
Follows well after : iod., kali-c., phos., spong.
Complementary remedies : arg-n., kali-c., microc., Tub.
Similars : acon., AM-BR., ant-t., apis, arg-n., ars., arum-t., bell., borx., carb-an., caust., chin.,
Chlor., cina, coff., con., cupr., fl-ac., hed., Hep., hydrobr-ac., IOD., kali-bi., Lach., lap-a., lyc.,
lyss., mand., med., merc., nat-m., phos., puls., rhus-t., samb., sep., sil., SPONG., sul-ac., sulph.
Cainca (cain.)
Antidoted by : colch., rhus-t., verat.
Complementary remedies : ars.
Follows well after : ars.
Similars : apis, Apoc., ars., bry., coff., sars.
Cajuputum (caj.)
Similars : acon., bell., colch., plan.
Antidoted by : bism., bry., camph., chin., chinin-s., coff., dig., hep., iod., ip., mez., nit-ac.,
nit-s-d., nux-m., nux-v., phos., sep., sulph.
Followed well by : acal., agar., am-c., aran., arg-met., arn., ars., aster., bar-c., Bell., berb.,
bism., borx., calc-cn., calc-f., calc-i., calc-p., con., dros., dulc., graph., ip., lyc., nat-c., nit-ac.,
nux-v., phos., plat., podo., puls., rhus-t., sars., sep., sil., ther., tub.
Follow well after : bell., cham., chin., con., cupr., dulc., nit-ac., Nux-v., Puls., Rhus-t., Sulph.
Complementary remedies : aeth., agar., arg-n., Ars., bar-c., BELL., bufo, calc-ar., cham., chin.,
cina, con., cupr., cupr-act., dulc., graph., hep., Ign., ip., kali-c., lach., LYC., mag-c., Merc.,
nat-m., nat-s., Nit-ac., nux-m., nux-v., parathyr., pareir., PH-AC., phos., plat., podo., psor.,
puls., Rhus-t., sars., SEP., Sil., spig., Spong., sul-i., sulph., teucr., thlas., thuj., Tub., tub-m.
Inimicals : bar-c., bry., kali-bi., nat-c., nit-ac., sulph.
Similars : Aeth., agar., agra., aloe, alum., am-m., ant-c., ant-i., arn., ars., arum-t., aster., BAR-C.,
Bar-i., Bell., bry., calad., calc-br., calc-cn., calc-m., calc-p., calc-s., caps., carc., cham., Chin.,
cimic., cina, cist., cocc., con., cupr., fil., fl-ac., Graph., hep., ign., Iod., Ip., kali-br., kali-c.,
lac-c., lac-d., lap-a., LYC., Mag-c., mag-i., mag-p., med., merc., mez., Nat-c., nat-m., nit-ac.,
Nux-v., onos., PHOS., phyt., plat., Puls., rheum, rhus-t., sacch-a., salv., sang., sanic., sec., Sep.,
SIL., Staph., SULPH., syph., teucr., Thuj., tub., Tub-m., tub-sp., verat., zinc.
Complementary remedies : ars., ars-i., bac., calc., carb-an., cham., chin., equis-h., Hep., iod.,
kali-p., mag-c., mag-p., merc., nat-m., Ruta, senec., sil., sul-i., Sulph., thyr., tril-p., tub-k.,
tub-m., zinc.
Inimicals : bar-c., nat-m.
Similars : Agar., ars., Ars-i., Bar-c., berb., cal-ren., CALC., Calc-f., calc-i., carb-an., Carc., Cham.,
cheir., chin., cina, conch., ferr-p., Fl-ac., guaj., hed., ign., Iod., kali-m., kali-p., kreos., mag-c.,
mag-p., med., merc., nat-m., nat-p., nux-v., ox-ac., ph-ac., Phos., psor., Puls., Ruta, sang.,
Sanic., SIL., Sul-i., SULPH., symph., Thyr., tub., Tub-a., Tub-m., Tub-sp., v-a-b., zinc.
Canchalagua (canch.)
Similars : chin., Gent-l., ip.
Carcinosinum (carc.)
Followed well by : ail., bar-c., bell-p., lach., ph-ac., psor., sacch., sep.
Complementary remedies : alum., arg-n., ars., ars-i., calc-p., dios., dys., lach., lyc., med., Nat-m.,
nat-s., nux-v., op., phos., psor., puls., sep., staph., sul-ac., sulph., syph.
Similars : acon., aeth., alum., ambr., arg-n., arn., Ars., ars-i., aur., bar-c., bell-p., calc., Calc-ar.,
calc-p., caps., carb-an., carb-v., Coff., crot-h., Cund., cupr., dys., Foll., gels., graph., hep.,
Hippoz., hydr., ign., ip., kali-bi., kali-c., Lac-c., lach., Lyc., mag-c., mag-m., mand., Med.,
merc., nat-m., nit-ac., nux-v., op., phos., phyt., plat., prot., Puls., rad-br., scir., Sep., sil.,
staph., sulph., Syph., tarent., Thuj., thyr., Tub., x-ray, zinc.
lept., Lyc., Mand., MERC., merc-d., nux-v., Podo., polyg-h., Ptel., sang., tarax., thlas., thyr.
Cascarilla (casc.)
Similars : chin., crot-t., Graph.
Cassada (cass.)
Antidoted by : caps.
Causticum (caust.)
Antidoted by : ant-t., asaf., cham., chin., coff., coloc., dulc., euph., euphr., grat., guaj., kali-n.,
nit-s-d., nux-v., pip-m., plb.
Followed well by : am-caust., Ant-t., arg-n., Arum-t., bac., bar-c., bry., cadm-met., Calc.,
calc-cn., canth., carb-v., coloc., diph., diphtox., dulc., Guaj., hell., kali-i., lath., lyc., mur-ac.,
Nux-v., Phos., Puls., rhus-t., Ruta, sep., Sil., squil., stann., staph., stram., Sulph., syc.
Follows well after : calc., cocc., coloc., cupr., hyos., ign., petr., rhus-t., sep., stram., sulph.
Complementary remedies : acon., alum., am-c., ang., ant-t., ars., asaf., asar., BELL., calc.,
calc-f., CARB-V., cocc., colch., coloc., cupr., cupr-m., graph., guaj., hyos., ign., kali-i., kali-p.,
lach., lyc., merc-c., nat-m., nux-v., petr., Petros., ph-ac., phos., podo., puls., rhus-t., ruta,
seneg., sep., sil., stann., staph., stram., sulph., tub., zinc-s.
Inimicals : acet-ac., cham., cocc., coff., kali-n., nux-v., phos.
Similars : acon., agar., all-c., alum., Am-c., am-p., ang., ant-t., arg-met., arn., ars., aur., bar-c.,
Bell., Brom., Bry., Calc., Carb-an., carb-v., cocc., Con., crot-h., cupr., fl-ac., gels., hell., hep.,
hyos., iod., ip., kali-bi., kali-c., kali-i., kreos., lyc., mag-c., Med., Merc., nat-c., nat-m., Nux-v.,
petr., Phos., plat., Plb., puls., rhus-t., sal-ac., Sec., Sep., sil., Spong., stann., still., stram.,
SULPH., thiosin., Thuj., urt-u., zinc., zinc-pic.
Cedron (cedr.)
Antidoted by : bell., chin., lach.
Followed well by : cean.
Complementary remedies : aran., nat-m.
Similars : agar., aran., aran-ix., Ars., berb., cedr., Chin., chinin-s., myric., nat-s., polym.,
querc-r-g-s., sabad., spig., syph., thuj., verb.
Chamomilla (cham.)
Antidoted by : acon., all-c., alum., borx., camph., caust., chin., cocc., coff., coloc., com., con.,
ign., merc., nux-v., OP., puls., valer.
Followed well by : acon., arn., ars., BELL., Bry., cact., calc., cina, cocc., ferr., ferr-p., form.,
Grat., hep., iris, kreos., lach., mag-c., mag-p., Merc., nux-v., puls., rhus-t., samb., sep., sil.,
squil., staph., sul-ac., Sulph.
Follows well after : merc., puls., sulph.
Complementary remedies : Acon., BELL., Bry., Calc., Grat., Lyc., Mag-c., mag-p., Merc., nux-v.,
Phos., puls., Rhus-t., sanic., Sep., sil., SULPH.
Inimicals : caust., nux-v., phos., zinc.
Similars : ACON., Agar., alum., Ant-c., ant-t., Arn., ars., BELL., borx., Bry., calc., calen., carc.,
caust., Chin., cic., Cina, cocc., COFF., coloc., con., corla-o., cypr., ferr-p., Hep., Hyos., Ign.,
kali-bi., kreos., lyc., mag-c., mand., med., meph., Merc., nat-m., nat-p., Nux-v., oci., Phos.,
phyt., podo., PULS., Rheum, rhus-t., sabin., samb., sang., sec., SEP., sil., Staph., Stram.,
SULPH., syph., tarax., Thuj., Tub., valer., verat.
MERC., myric., nat-s., nit-ac., Nux-v., op., PHOS., Podo., puls., rhus-t., sang., sel., sep., sil.,
spig., Sulph., viol-o.
Antidoted by : am-m., ang., ant-t., aran., arn., ars., bell., bism., calc., carb-v., castm., cham.,
chel., cic., coff., dig., ferr., hep., ign., ip., lach., merc., mosch., nat-m., nux-m., nux-v., op.,
parth., puls., sulph., verat.
Followed well by : am-c., ars-br., chen-a., chinin-ar., eucal.
Similars : apis, Ars., baj., bry., camph-mbr., carb-an., cedr., chin., chinin-ar., chinin-sal., cimic.,
eup-per., eup-pur., ferr., gaert., helia., methyl., nat-m., nat-sal., nux-v., puls., stann., staph.,
sul-ac.
Chloroformium (chlf.)
Antidoted by : alco., aml-ns., ip.
Followed well by : phos.
Similars : chion., chlol., menth.
Chlorum (chlor.)
Antidoted by : album., bry., ip., lyc., plb-act.
Follows well after : phos.
Complementary remedies : diph.
Similars : brom., meph.
Cholesterinum (chol.)
Complementary remedies : lyc.
Similars : berb., cal-bil., Card-m., Chel., chin., dios., hydr., lyc., mag-s., Mand., nat-s., Podo.,
teucr.
nux-m., Nux-v., oena., petros., phys., PULS., ran-b., RHUS-T., SEP., SIL., Stram., stry., stry-p.,
SULPH., zinc.
Cinnabaris (cinnb.)
Antidoted by : chin., hep., nit-ac., op., sulph.
Followed well by : hep., sil.
Complementary remedies : syph., thuj.
Similars : camph., hep., iod., kali-bi., lach., Merc., Nit-ac., sep., Thuj.
Coca (coca)
Antidoted by : gels.
Complementary remedies : fl-ac.
Similars : arg-n., ars., cann-i., cham., chin., coff., crat., cypr., fl-ac., paull., scut., spig., valer.
Codeinum (cod.)
Similars : agar., ars., hyos., lach., rhus-t., sul-ac., sulph.
Colibacillinum (coli.)
Complementary remedies : form., thuj., tub., tub-r.
Similars : anac., ars., avic., benz-ac., form., kali-c., kali-p., nat-m., psor., sep., sil., terebe., thuj.,
tub., tub-m.
Colocynthis (coloc.)
Antidoted by : camph., caust., cham., cocc., coff., mag-met., nux-v., op., staph.
Followed well by : ars., bell., bry., Caust., cham., chin., coll., dios., ferr-p., grat., iris, Kali-c.,
Mag-p., Merc., nux-v., puls., rhus-t., spig., Stann., Staph., sulph.
Complementary remedies : Bell., Caust., cham., coff., kali-c., lyc., Mag-p., Merc., Nux-v., Puls.,
Staph.
Similars : acon., agar., arn., ars., Bell., berb., Bry., calc., canth., caust., Cham., chel., chin.,
cimic., cocc., coch., coff., con., cupr., dig., Dios., gamb., gnaph., graph., Ign., kali-c., kali-i.,
lob-c., Lyc., Mand., med., Merc., nat-m., nit-ac., Nux-v., ph-ac., Phos., plat., plb., puls.,
Rhus-t., Sep., sil., spig., stann., staph., Sulph., thiosin., verat.
Cortisonum (cortiso.)
Similars : psor., puls., sulph.
Similars : acon., apis, Ars., both., bry., bung-cl., camph., Carb-v., carc., caust., chinin-ar., crot-c.,
cupr., dig., echi., Elaps, kreos., LACH., laur., NAJA, nit-ac., nux-v., op., ph-ac., Phos., pyrog.,
sec., sil., Sul-ac., tarent-c., verat., vip.
Cundurango (cund.)
Complementary remedies : lach.
Followed well by : psor.
Similars : ant-c., ant-t., arg-n., ars., arum-t., aster., bapt., caj., carb-an., Carc., cist., con.,
graph., hydr., kali-bi., kreos., lyc., nat-s., nit-ac., phyt., puls., senec., sep., sil., thuj., trif-p.
Curare (cur.)
Antidoted by : brom., chlor., tab.
Complementary remedies : arn., bar-c., bell.
Followed well by : arn., bar-c., bell.
Follows well after : arn., bell.
Similars : aran., caust., con., crot-h., ferr., gels., Graph., nat-c., nux-v., plb., stry-n., Thyr., zinc.
D
Daphne indica (daph.)
Complementary remedies : sul-i., sulph.
Antidoted by : bry., chr-ac., dig., merc., rhus-t., sep., sil., zinc.
Similars : asaf., aur., benz-ac., bry., cimic., eug., fl-ac., merc., mez., puls., rhus-t., sep., staph.,
thuj., verat.
Dichapetalum (dicha.)
Similars : calc-f., fl-ac., meny., sulph.
elaps, ferr., ferr-p., ferr-pic., flor-p., GELS., glon., grin., Hell., iber., Ign., kali-c., kali-m.,
Kalm., lach., laur., led., liat., lob., lyc., lycps-v., merc., myric., naja, nat-m., nux-v., olnd.,
Ph-ac., phos., pop., Puls., Rhus-t., sabal, sang., saroth., sep., SPIG., spong., squil., Staph.,
sulph., TAB., verat.
Diphtherinum (diph.)
Similars : caust., chlor., diphtox., gels., kali-bi., kali-m., Lac-c., lach., merc-cy.
Dulcamara (dulc.)
Complementary remedies : alum., Ars., Bar-c., bry., CALC., calc-s., con., kali-c., kali-s., lyc.,
merc., Nat-s., nit-ac., Puls., Rhus-t., SEP., sil., Sulph., thuj., verat.
E
Echinacea angustifolia (echi.)
Complementary remedies : myris.
Followed well by : pyrog.
Similars : anth., apis, Bapt., calc-ox., carb-v., chinin-ar., crot-h., Lach., mag-c., myris., puls.,
pyrog.
Elaterium (elat.)
Similars : apis, aran., arg-n., bry., canth., cimx., colch., coloc., crot-t., dulc., hep., ign., rhus-t.,
verat.
Electricitas (elec.)
Antidoted by : morph., morph-act., phos.
Similars : m-aust.
Similars : arn., bar-c., bell., bell-p., Canth., card-m., cham., cop., cub., erech., ham., ip., meli.,
mill., op., phos., podo., rad-br., rhus-t., sabin., senec., stront-c., ter.
Erythrinus (eryth.)
Complementary remedies : aur-m.
Similars : alco., aur-m., bell., chlf., phos., syph.
Eserinum (esin.)
Antidoted by : arn.
Eupionum (eupi.)
Antidoted by : graph.
Similars : calc., graph., kali-c., kreos., lach.
F
Fabiana imbricata (fab.)
Similars : canth., Chim., coc-c., ter.
Puls., Rhus-t., rumx., sang., sec., sel., SEP., SIL., spong., Sulph., syc., thuj., tub-sp., valer.,
zinc.
Followed well by : alum., ars., bell., brom., calc-f., calc-s., graph., nit-ac., ph-ac., rhus-t., sil.,
sulph., syph., thuj.
Follows well after : ars., kali-c., ph-ac.
Similars : aesc., ang., arn., ars., aster., aur., bad., Borx., Calc-f., calc-p., cinnb., cit-ac., coca,
coff., ferr-p., Graph., ham., hecla, helon., hydr., Iod., kali-bi., kali-c., lach., luf-op., lyc.,
Mag-f., med., nat-m., ox-ac., phos., puls., rhus-t., ruta, sep., Sil., spong., staph., sul-ac.,
thiosin., tub.
Folliculinum (foll.)
Complementary remedies : progest.
Followed well by : carb-v., carc., sep.
Similars : ars., Carc., caust., graph., ign., lyc., nat-m., nux-v., phos., psor., sep., tub.
G
Gadus morrhua (gad.)
Similars : calc., calc-p., Ol-j.
Gambogia (gamb.)
Antidoted by : camph., coff., coloc., kali-c., op.
Followed well by : napht.
Similars : Aloe, coloc., crot-t., elec., gels., grat., Kali-br., m-arct., m-aust., Mand., merc., nabal.,
Podo., puls.
Glonoinum (glon.)
Complementary remedies : bell., sulph.
Antidoted by : acon., bell., camph., coff., nux-v.
Followed well by : meli., op., usn.
Similars : acon., AML-NS., Apis, Arn., bar-m., BELL., cact., ferr., Gels., Iod., Lach., lycps-v., meli.,
Nat-c., nat-m., nux-m., op., sel., sil., Stram., ther., verat., vip.
Granatum (gran.)
Similars : ars., chin., cina, cocc., colch., con., fil., Gels., iod., kou., nux-v., pellin., phos., teucr.,
tub.
Graphites (graph.)
Complementary remedies : arg-n., Ars., Bell., calc., CAUST., chel., cob., coll., Ferr., HEP., hydr.,
lappa, LYC., Merc., Nux-v., Phos., puls., Rhus-t., SEP., Sulph., tab., thuj., tub.
Antidoted by : acon., alco., ars., chin., iod., nux-v., rhus-t.
Followed well by : arg-n., ars., calc., carc., diph., euph., hep., kali-sil., lyc., merc-c., nat-s., phos.,
Psor., puls., rhod., sep., SIL., squil., stann., Sulph., thiosin., tub.
Follows well after : calc., lyc., puls., sep., sulph.
Similars : abrot., agar., alet., Alum., Anac., ant-c., Arn., ars., ars-i., bar-c., BELL., BRY., Calc.,
calc-f., Caps., carb-an., Carb-v., carbn-s., carc., castor-eq., Caust., Cham., chel., chin., Con.,
des-ac., dros., dys., eup-a., ferr., fl-ac., flor-p., hep., hydr., ign., iod., jug-r., kali-ar., kali-bi.,
Kali-c., kali-i., kali-m., lac-d., lol., Lyc., mag-c., mag-f., maland., Mand., MERC., Nat-m.,
nit-ac., NUX-V., ol-an., ov., PETR., phos., phyt., plb., Psor., puls., RHUS-T., Sang., sel., Sep.,
Sil., skook., staph., Sulph., tab., thiosin., thuj.
Guaco (gua.)
Antidoted by : kreos., sulph.
Similars : alum., bell., carb-an., caust., gels., lath., nit-ac., ox-ac., ph-ac.
Guarana (guar.)
Complementary remedies : CALC., Carb-v., Chin., Lyc., Merc., Puls., Sil., Sulph.
Similars : agar., cact., coloc., ign., nux-v.
Gunpowder (gunp.)
Complementary remedies : hep., thuj.
Similars : arn., calen., crot-h., ham., hep., kali-n., lach., sil., sulph.
H
Haematoxylon campechianum (haem.)
Antidoted by : camph.
Similars : cact., chin., coloc., ger., gins., naja, sil.
Hippomanes (hipp.)
Antidoted by : caust., coff.
Similars : anac.
Hippozaeninum (hippoz.)
Similars : aur., aur-m., Bac., cadm-s., Carc., crot-h., hep., kali-bi., kali-br., lach., nit-ac., psor.,
serp., Syph., vario., vip.
Followed well by : bell., bry., caust., Con., lach., lyc., lyss., nux-v., op., Phos., puls., rhus-t.,
stram., verat.
Follows well after : bell., nux-v., op., rhus-t.
Similars : Acon., agar., aloe, apis, arg-n., arn., ars., BELL., BRY., calc., Cann-i., canth., caust.,
Cham., chin., cocc., con., cupr., cypr., dor., dros., hep., hyosin-hbr., ign., ip., lach., lyc., merc.,
mur-ac., Murx., nat-m., Nux-v., op., phos., plat., PULS., rhus-t., rumx., sec., sep., sil., staph.,
STRAM., Sulph., Tarent., Verat., viol-o.
I
Iberis amara (iber.)
Complementary remedies : amyg., bell., cact., dig.
Followed well by : amyg., bell., cact., dig.
Similars : acon., aml-ns., amyg., arn., aur., bell., cact., crat., Dig., gels., kalm., lepi., phos., spig.,
verat.
Ichthyolum (ichth.)
Similars : calc., carb-ac., caust., lyc., petr., plan., sulph.
Influenzinum (influ.)
Complementary remedies : v-a-b.
Followed well by : oscilloc.
Similars : all-c., ars., bac., bell., bry., cadm-met., cimic., gels., hep., merc., oscilloc., sil., stict.,
Tub.
Iodium (iod.)
Complementary remedies : abrot., acon., arg-n., Ars., ars-i., bac., bad., Bell., Calc., calc-f.,
calc-p., cupr., hep., kali-i., lach., Lyc., merc., nat-m., nux-v., phos., phyt., Sil., spig., spong.,
sumb., Thyr., tub.
Antidoted by : acon., ant-t., apis, ars., bell., camph., chin., chinin-s., coff., conv., ferr., graph.,
grat., hep., merc., op., phos., spong., sulph., thuj.
Followed well by : Acon., apis, arg-n., ars., art-v., bell., BROM., calc., calc-f., Calc-p., chol.,
fl-ac., Kali-bi., kali-br., kali-f., kali-i., lach., lap-a., lyc., mag-f., merc., nat-f., nux-v., phos.,
puls., sep., spong., stram., sulph.
Follows well after : ars., hep., merc.
Similars : abrot., Acon., adon., Anac., apis, aq-mar., Ars., Ars-i., aur-i., BELL., Brom., bry., cact.,
CALC., calc-i., carb-ac., caust., chel., Chin., cina, coff., con., dig., dros., ferr-i., Fl-ac., flor-p.,
gels., grat., Hed., hep., hydr., ign., iodof., iris, kali-bi., Kali-c., kali-i., kalm., kreos., lach.,
Lap-a., leon., lil-t., lyc., lycps-v., mag-c., mag-f., mand., Merc., nalox., Nat-m., NUX-V., ph-ac.,
Phos., Puls., Rhus-t., sec., Sep., Sil., spig., Spong., Sulph., sumb., Tub., uran-n.
Iodoformium (iodof.)
Antidoted by : hep., sang.
Similars : arg-n., Ars., Bell., Calc., iod., kali-i., LYC., MERC., Nux-v., PHOS., sel.
Ipecacuanha (ip.)
Complementary remedies : acon., ant-t., arn., Ars., Bell., Bry., cadm-s., calc., cham., chin., cocc.,
Cuph., cupr., cupr-act., ign., kali-i., lyc., merc., nux-v., phos., puls., rhus-t., samb., Sep.,
sulph., tab., verat.
Antidoted by : alum., arn., ars., camph., chin., dulc., ferr., laur., nux-v., op., sul-ac., tab., verat.
Inimicals : aster., bism., op.
Followed well by : acon., am-c., ant-c., ANT-T., apis, aran., arn., Ars., bell., bry., cact.,
cadm-met., cadm-s., calad., calc., cham., chin., cocc., colch., cupr., hep., ign., kali-c., lyc.,
merc., nit-ac., Nux-v., phos., podo., puls., pyrog., rheum, rhus-t., seneg., sep., Sulph., tab.,
verat.
Similars : Acal., Acon., aeth., Ant-c., ant-i., ant-t., aral., arg-n., arn., Ars., ars-i., asar., Bell.,
BRY., Calc., Carb-v., Carc., caust., cham., chel., chin., coc-c., cocc., colch., coloc., croc.,
Cupr., Dros., Erig., eup-per., Ferr., hep., hyos., ictod., Ign., iris, Lac-d., lach., lob., LYC., Merc.,
merc-c., Mill., nat-m., nat-p., Nux-v., Phos., plat., psor., Puls., Rhus-t., ric., sabin., sec., senn.,
sep., sil., sulph., tab., thlas., thyr., typh., verat.
Gels., Iod., ip., iris-fl., iris-g., iris-t., jug-c., kali-bi., lac-d., lept., lob., lyc., Mag-c., mag-f.,
mand., merc., Nat-m., Nat-p., Nux-v., peps., phos., puls., Rob., Sang., senn., sil., sul-ac.,
sulph., verat.
J
Jaborandi (jab.)
Antidoted by : bell.
Similars : aml-ns., atro., calad., cor-r., Thuj.
Jalapa (jal.)
Inimicals : cann-i., cann-s., elat.
Antidoted by : cann-s., elat.
Similars : Ars., camph., Cham., coloc., elat., iod., ip., mag-c., psor., rheum
K
Kalium arsenicosum (kali-ar.)
Complementary remedies : nat-m.
Antidoted by : ars., kali-i.
Similars : ars., ars-i., chin., cic., hep., iod., kali-bi., kali-br., merc-c., mez., nat-ar., rad-br., sil.,
spong., thuj.
RHUS-T., samb., sep., SIL., spig., squil., Stann., staph., SULPH., verat., zinc.
Similars : agar., Ars., bapt., carb-v., caust., Chin., cimic., ferr-pic., gels., ign., kali-c., kali-hp.,
kreos., Lach., lyc., macroz., Mur-ac., ph-ac., phos., phyt., pic-ac., puls., rad-br., rhus-t., stram.,
zinc.
Kreosotum (kreos.)
Complementary remedies : ARS., carb-v., phos., sulph., ter., tub.
Inimicals : ant-t., carb-an., carb-v., chin., graph., hep., iod., ip., lach., merc., petr., phos.
Antidoted by : acon., ars., carb-v., cham., ferr., ferr-m., iod., ip., nux-v.
Followed well by : ARS., bell., calc., kali-c., lyc., nit-ac., nux-v., phos., rhus-t., sep., Sulph.
Similars : ant-t., arg-n., ars., ars-i., arum-t., BELL., Calc., Carb-ac., carb-an., carb-v., cham.,
eup-per., fl-ac., fuli., Graph., hep., hydr., iod., ip., lach., LYC., mag-c., Merc., mez., nit-ac.,
NUX-V., petr., phos., pix, psor., PULS., RHUS-T., sec., sep., sil., staph., SULPH.
Kresolum (kres.)
Similars : aran., calc-ar., caust., nit-ac., oena., phos., plb.
Kurchi (kurch.)
Followed well by : ip.
Similars : acon., aloe, ars., ham., ip., merc-c., nux-v., sulph.
L
Lacticum acidum (lac-ac.)
Complementary remedies : bry., psor.
Inimicals : coff.
Antidoted by : bry.
Followed well by : psor., tab.
Similars : acon., act-sp., bell., berb., caul., cimic., elaps, ip., iris-foe., iris-g., Lith-c., med.,
nat-lac., nux-v., ph-ac., psor., puls., Rhus-t., sacch-l., Sarcol-ac.
Similars : aeth., agar., alet., bell., calc-p., cann-i., caust., cic., Cimic., crot-c., crot-h., dulc., fel,
gels., Glon., gymno., hyos., iris, Lach., op., par., phos., plat., sang., sel., stram., sulph., verat.
Laurocerasus (laur.)
Complementary remedies : bell., Bry., Calc., carb-v., Lyc., Nux-v., phos., puls., Rhus-t., Sep.,
Sulph., valer., verat.
Antidoted by : am-c., ant-t., camph., coff., cupr., ip., nux-m., op.
Followed well by : bell., carb-v., phos., puls., verat.
Similars : Acon., am-c., ambr., ant-t., ars., bar-c., bell., bry., calc., camph., caps., Carb-v., caust.,
Con., CONV., crat., cupr., dig., dros., gels., hell., Hydr-ac., hyos., Ign., ip., kali-c., kalm., lach.,
LYC., Merc., Nat-c., nux-v., op., Ph-ac., Phos., prun., psor., puls., rhus-t., sec., sep., Stram.,
sulph., valer., verat., zinc.
Levomepromazinum (levo.)
Complementary remedies : tub.
Followed well by : chlorpr., phos., psor.
Similars : bar-c., Chlor., con., gels., kali-c., merc., Nat-m., PHOS., psor., Sep., Tub.
dios., elaps, Equis-h., euph., ferr., fl-ac., Graph., hell., hep., hydr., hydrang., ign., iod., ip.,
jal., kali-c., kali-i., kali-m., Lach., lith-met., Mag-c., mag-m., Mand., Merc., MORG-G., murx.,
Nat-m., nat-p., nat-s., Nit-ac., NUX-V., Phos., pic-ac., plat., Plb., plumbg., podo., psor., PULS.,
Rhus-t., rib-ac., sabad., Samb., sang., sanic., Sars., Senec., Sep., Sil., solid., spong., staph.,
SULPH., thuj., tub.
Lyssinum (lyss.)
Complementary remedies : arg-n., nat-m., stann., staph., tab.
Antidoted by : agn., bell., cedr., fagu., hyos., lach., stram.
Followed well by : gels., lach., led., naja, nat-c., nat-m., stram.
Follows well after : arg-n., stram., tab.
Similars : agn., apis, bell., canth., Cocc., con., helon., Hydr., hyos., lac-c., lach., lil-t., Pic-ac.,
sep., staph., Stram., tanac., xanth.
M
Magnetis poli ambo (m-ambo.)
Antidoted by : elec., galv., ign., zinc.
Similars : anac., bell., caust., ign., lyc., m-arct., m-aust., nux-v., petr., podo., puls., sabin.,
stram., teucr.
led., lyc., mag-f., mag-m., mag-p., mand., MERC., Nat-m., nit-ac., nux-m., Nux-v., phos., puls.,
rat., rheum, rhus-t., sanic., sep., sil., sulph.
Malandrinum (maland.)
Complementary remedies : nat-m.
Followed well by : sulph.
Similars : calc., canth., graph., med., petros., sars., sil., sulph., thuj., Vario.
Mancinella (manc.)
Antidoted by : coff.
Similars : canth., cist., crot-t., euph., jatr-c., mez., rhus-t., sul-ac., yuc.
Medorrhinum (med.)
Complementary remedies : gonotox., nat-m., Nat-s., Psor., rhus-t., sulph., syc., syph., Thuj., tub.
Antidoted by : ip.
Followed well by : calc., carc., lap-a., lyc., puls., rhus-t., sulph., syph., Thuj.
Follows well after : TUB.
Similars : am-c., ant-t., arg-n., bar-c., calc-f., calc-s., camph., carb-v., carc., cimic., cocc., elaps,
equis-h., eup-per., fl-ac., galeg., gels., GONOTOX., guaj., hydr., ip., kali-i., led., lept., lyc.,
mag-c., maland., nat-s., nit-ac., phos., pic-ac., plb., psor., puls., sabad., samb., sanic., sec.,
sel., sep., sil., stel., sulph., syc., syph., thuj., tub., tub-a., verat., xanth., zinc.
Medusa (medus.)
Complementary remedies : nat-m.
Similars : apis, physal-al., sep., urt-u.
Methysergidum (methys.)
Complementary remedies : tub-r.
Similars : calc-f., caust., fl-ac., graph., hed., thiosin.
Mezereum (mez.)
Complementary remedies : Bell., bry., calc., caust., hep., ign., lyc., merc., nux-v., phos., puls.,
Rhus-t., Sep., Sil., Sulph., syph.
Antidoted by : acon., alum., bry., calc., camph., hep., kali-i., merc., nit-ac., nux-v., phos., rhus-t.
Followed well by : bell., bry., calc., caust., ign., kreos., lyc., merc., nit-ac., nux-v., phos., puls.,
rhus-t., sep., sil., sulph.
Similars : anac., ars., arum-t., asaf., BELL., brom., BRY., CALC., canth., caust., chrys-ac., Con.,
euph., guaj., hep., hydr., IGN., Kali-c., kali-chl., kali-i., mand., med., MERC., nit-ac., phyt.,
psor., puls., RHUS-T., sars., SEP., SIL., Staph., still., SULPH., syph., thuj., viol-t.
Millefolium (mill.)
Complementary remedies : acon.
Inimicals : coff.
Antidoted by : ant-t., ars-i., arum-m.
Followed well by : plb-act.
Similars : acal., acon., arn., bell-p., calen., carb-v., chin., croc., erech., erig., ger., ham., ip.,
led., nat-n., phos., ruta, sabin., senec., tril-p.
Morbillinum (morb.)
Followed well by : bac., tub.
Similars : bry., carb-v., Dros., kali-c., Puls., sulph., thuj.
Moschus (mosch.)
Complementary remedies : ambr.
Antidoted by : camph., coff.
Followed well by : valer.
Similars : acon., agn., ambr., ammc., Ars., Asaf., Bell., bry., Calc., camph., canth., carb-v.,
castor-eq., Caust., cham., coca, Con., croc., cupr., hyos., ign., ip., Lyc., mag-m., meph., Merc.,
nuph., Nux-m., nux-v., Ph-ac., Phos., plat., puls., rhus-t., sabad., sep., Stram., sumb., valer.,
Verat.
Muscarinum (muscin.)
Antidoted by : atro., atro-s.
N
Naja tripudians (naja)
Complementary remedies : spig.
Antidoted by : alco., ammc., tab.
Followed well by : cact., kali-c., lach.
Similars : acon., am-c., apis, apoc., arg-n., Ars., aur., brom., cact., caust., chinin-ar., Cimic.,
coc-c., crat., CROT-H., elaps, iber., kali-c., kalm., LACH., lat-m., Laur., leon., mygal., pyrog.,
SPIG., spong., sumb., thyr.
Naphthalinum (naphtin.)
Followed well by : dros.
Similars : am-c., anil., carb-ac., carb-v., Chol., cina, coc-c., dros., ip., kali-n., phos., sabad.,
samb., sec., sulph., thuj.
med., morg., morg-p., nat-m., ox-ac., puls., sep., sil., sulph., thuj.
Similars : ant-c., aran., ars-i., aur., bapt., bar-c., bar-m., bold., Bry., Calc., cann-s., carc., chin.,
chol., Dulc., form., glon., graph., hed., hydr-ac., ins., iod., ip., kali-m., kali-p., lac-ac., lach.,
lyc., mag-p., malar., Med., nat-c., nat-ch., nat-hp., nat-i., Nat-m., nux-v., ox-ac., podo., poll.,
Puls., rhus-t., rumx., sil., still., stry., sul-ac., sulph., Thuj., thyr., tub., viol-t.
Nicotinum (nicot.)
Antidoted by : tab.
Similars : absin., dig., lob., oena., tab.
Similars : agn., aloe, calad., chin., con., dam., nux-v., nymph., ph-ac., podo., staph., sulph.,
yohim.
O
Ocimum canum (oci.)
Followed well by : dios., ter.
Similars : bell., berb., coloc., hedeo., lyc., mag-p., pareir., tab.
Oleander (olnd.)
Complementary remedies : Bell., Bry., CALC., con., lyc., nat-m., Nux-v., puls., rhus-t., sep., spig.,
Sulph.
Antidoted by : camph., cocc., nux-v., sulph.
Followed well by : bell., bry., calc., con., croc., lyc., nat-m., nux-v., puls., rhus-t., sep., spig.,
sulph.
Similars : aloe, Anac., apoc., Ars., BELL., BRY., CALC., caust., chin., chinin-s., clem., cocc., Con.,
conv., cop., cur., dig., gels., graph., Ign., LYC., mez., nat-m., nux-v., onos., Phos., psor., PULS.,
RHUS-T., SEP., sil., Spig., squil., staph., sulph., vinc., Viol-t., visc.
Opium (op.)
Complementary remedies : acon., Alum., ant-t., bar-c., bell., Bry., camph., cupr., daph., hyos.,
nux-m., nux-v., phos., Plb., sulph., tab.
Inimicals : gels., ip.
Antidoted by : acet-ac., aeth., ALCO., ant-t., arg-n., atro., bell., berb., calc., camph., caps.,
cham., chinin-s., cic., cinnm., coff., con., cupr., dig., gels., hep., ip., kali-n., kali-perm., lach.,
merc., mur-ac., nat-m., nux-v., ozone, passi., plb., puls., sang., sars., stram., stry-xyz., sulph.,
vanil., verat., vinc., zinc.
Followed well by : acon., agar., alum., ant-t., apis, Arn., ars., Bell., Bry., calad., calc., carc.,
coff., con., hell., Hyos., nux-m., Nux-v., plb., raph., samb., sulph., zinc.
Similars : acon., adren., aloe, alum., am-c., ambr., apis, apom., arg-n., arn., ars., aster., bar-c.,
Bell., bry., cann-i., carb-v., carc., Cham., chel., Chin., cimic., cod., coff., Con., Gels., glon.,
grin., hell., hyos., ign., ip., Kali-c., lac-c., Lach., laur., LYC., mag-c., morph., mosch., mur-ac.,
nux-m., Nux-v., petr., phos., Plb., psor., puls., rad-br., RHUS-T., sang., sep., Sil., stram.,
Sulph., VERAT., zinc.
Ouabainum (ouabin.)
Complementary remedies : dig.
Similars : cupr., dig., dros.
Oxygenium (oxyg.)
Antidoted by : camph.
Ozonum (ozone)
Similars : camph., chlor., chr-ac., elec., kali-bi., kali-chl., kali-perm., osm.
P
Paeonia officinalis (paeon.)
Complementary remedies : sulph.
Antidoted by : aloe, rat.
Similars : aesc., Aloe, arn., fl-ac., glech., graph., ham., Hura, nit-ac., Rat., sil., sulph.
Similars : agar., anac., apis, arg-n., arn., ars., bar-c., bell., BRY., CALC., caust., chin., gels.,
graph., hep., ign., kali-c., Lach., led., lyc., Merc., nat-c., nux-v., PHOS., PULS., RHUS-T., SEP.,
sil., spig., Staph., stram., SULPH., verat.
Paraffinum (paraf.)
Similars : alum., eupi., kreos., nuph., petr.
Paratyphoidinum (parat.)
Followed well by : ars.
Similars : bapt., carb-v., kali-p., psor., pyrog., typh.
Parotidinum (parot.)
Followed well by : merc-i-f., merc-i-r.
Similars : berb., merc., merc-i-f., merc-i-r., pilo., rhus-t.
Penicillinum (penic.)
Similars : apis, bell., ferr-p., hep., hydr., Phos., phyt., Sil., sulph., Thuj.
Pertussinum (pert.)
Complementary remedies : caust., cor-r., podo.
Followed well by : caust., cor-r., influ., podo.
Similars : coc-c., cor-r., cupr., dros., mag-p., meph., nuph.
Petroleum (petr.)
Complementary remedies : Bell., bry., calc., cocc., lyc., nit-ac., nux-v., phos., psor., puls.,
Rhus-t., Sep., sil., sulph.
Antidoted by : acon., camph., cocc., nux-v., phos.
Followed well by : bell., bry., calc., caust., lyc., nit-ac., nux-v., phos., puls., rhus-t., sep., sil.,
squil., sulph.
Similars : Agar., Alum., anac., bell., BRY., calc., carb-v., caust., cocc., colch., Con., glon.,
GRAPH., Hep., ign., LYC., mand., merc., Nat-m., Nit-ac., NUX-V., olnd., phos., psor., puls.,
Phosphorus (phos.)
Complementary remedies : acet-ac., acon., All-c., Am-c., arn., ARS., ars-i., aven., bapt., bell.,
bry., Calc., calc-p., Carb-v., chel., Chin., cist., cob., coff., con., cupr., dig., fl-ac., hydr., ign.,
ip., kali-bi., Kali-c., kali-p., kreos., lac-ac., lach., laur., lept., Lyc., mez., nat-m., nux-v., op.,
petr., ph-ac., pic-ac., puls., rhus-t., rhus-v., ric., rumx., sang., sec., seneg., sep., Sil., spig.,
sulph., ter., thuj., Tub.
Inimicals : apis, caust., cham., rhus-t.
Antidoted by : alco., ars., calc., camph., cham., chlf., coff., kali-perm., mez., nux-v., psor.,
rhus-t., rhus-v., sep., ter.
Followed well by : acon., all-c., all-s., am-c., ant-t., apis, arn., Ars., Ars-i., bapt., bell., bism.,
brom., bry., cact., calc., Calc-p., carb-v., carc., chin., chlor., chol., cina, cocc., con., cupr-ar.,
dig., dys., Ferr-p., gaert., graph., hep., iris, Kali-c., kali-p., kreos., lach., Lyc., meph., nat-m.,
nit-ac., Nux-v., op., pen., petr., ph-ac., pic-ac., plb., Psor., puls., pyrog., Rhus-t., sang., sel.,
sep., Sil., stann., Sulph., tub.
Follows well after : nux-v.
Similars : acal., Acon., adon., agar-em., aloe, alumn., Am-c., am-m., ambr., amph., ant-i., apis,
apoc., arg-n., arn., ars., ars-i., aster., aur-m., bapt., bell., berb., bism., brom., bry., bufo,
cact., calc., calc-f., calc-i., calc-p., carb-an., Carb-v., Carc., card-m., caust., chin., chinin-s.,
chion., chol., cimic., con., crot-h., des-ac., dig., dys., ferr., ferr-act., ferr-i., ferr-pic., fl-ac.,
gaert., gels., glyc., graph., ham., hed., hep., Hir., hydr-ac., hyos., ign., iod., ip., iris, kali-bi.,
kali-c., kali-i., kali-n., kreos., LACH., lat-m., Lyc., mag-m., mand., med., merc., mill., mosch.,
nat-m., nit-ac., NUX-V., petr., ph-ac., phos-h., pic-ac., pneu., prun-v., psor., puls., pyrog.,
rad-br., Rhus-t., ruta, sang., senn., sep., sil., spig., squil., stict., sul-ac., sulph., symph., syph.,
ter., Thuj., thymol., thyr., tub., tub-a., uran-met., valer., verat., vinc., zinc.
Picrotoxinum (picro.)
Similars : cocc., nux-v.
Similars : arn., asaf., bell., clem., ferr-p., mag-c., merc., mez., psor., puls., staph., sul-i.
Propolis (propl.)
Complementary remedies : plb.
Antidoted by : coff.
Psorinum (psor.)
Complementary remedies : arn., ars., bac., bar-c., bell-p., calc-p., carb-v., chin., hep., kali-bi.,
lac-ac., med., nat-m., petr., sec., Sep., sil., sulph., thuj., tub.
Inimicals : con., lach., sep.
Antidoted by : coff.
Followed well by : alum., arn., bac., bar-c., berb., borx., calc-p., carb-ac., carb-v., carc., chel.,
chin., hep., iod., lac-ac., lyc., med., naja, ph-ac., phos., Sulph., Syph., Tub., urea
Follows well after : arn., lac-ac., sulph., Syph.
Similars : adren., Anac., ars-i., bac., berb-a., calc., Calc-f., carb-v., caust., chin., cop., ferr-pic.,
gaert., graph., grat., guaj., Hep., hyper., Iod., kali-p., lach., lap-a., laur., lyc., Mag-c., mang.,
med., meli., mur-ac., nit-ac., Nux-v., op., ped., petr., ph-ac., phos., plb., rad-br., sil., skook.,
squil., stel., sulph., thyr., Tub., valer., x-ray, zinc., zinc-p.
lyc., meny., nat-m., nit-ac., nux-v., pen., petr., phos., phyt., polyg-h., psor., rhod., rhus-t.,
rosm., ruta, sanic., sep., Sil., sol, Spong., Stann., sul-ac., sul-i., Sulph., thuj., Tub., zinc.
Similars : abrot., acon., aesc., agar., alum., am-c., anag., Ant-c., ant-t., apis, arg-met., arg-n.,
ARS., aster., aur., bac., Bell., bry., Calc., Calc-f., calc-i., calc-p., canth., carb-v., carc., Caul.,
caust., cham., Chin., chinin-s., Cimic., cocc., CON., crot-h., CYCL., ferr., Graph., Ham., hed.,
Hep., hydr., ign., Kali-bi., kali-c., kali-m., Kali-s., lac-c., lac-d., lach., Lyc., mag-c., malar.,
mang., med., merc., morb., mut., nat-s., nux-m., nux-v., pen., Ph-ac., Phos., phyt., Plat., plb.,
pot-a., raph., Rhus-t., sabad., sabin., sal-ac., sanic., sanic-eu., senec., Sep., sieg., SIL., spong.,
stann., Staph., stel., sul-ac., sulph., sumb., syph., thiosin., thuj., thyr., tub., Verat., xanth.,
zinc.
Pyrarara (pyrar.)
Complementary remedies : bry., sulph.
Pyrogenium (pyrog.)
Complementary remedies : anthraci., Ars., bell., bry., canth., hep., lach., nat-m., nit-ac., psor.,
rhus-t., sil., sul-ac., sulph., thuj.
Antidoted by : bell., calc-s.
Followed well by : Hep., mag-c., psor., sulph.
Similars : achy., am-c., ant-t., arn., Ars., Bapt., carb-ac., Carb-v., chinin-ar., crot-h., Echi.,
eup-per., lach., lil-t., mag-c., naja, phos., phyt., psor., Rhus-t., sal-ac., sec., sieg., staph.,
staphycoc., sulph., verat-v.
Q
Quassia amara (quas.)
Followed well by : aq-mar., ars., cean., phos., querc.
Similars : berb., card-m., chel., chin., lept., lyc., mag-m., myric., ptel., sulph., tarax., yuc.
Quebracho (queb.)
Similars : berb., Carb-v., Laur., squil., staph.
R
Radium bromatum (rad-br.)
Antidoted by : nux-m., rhus-t., rhus-v., tell.
Followed well by : brom., calc., caust., kali-i., rhus-t., rhus-v., sep., x-ray
Similars : agar., anac., ang., arn., ars., aur., Bar-c., Carb-an., caust., gels., graph., kali-c., lyc.,
ov., Phos., puls., rauw., rhus-r., Rhus-t., rhus-v., sec., sep., Stront-c., sulph., tell., Tub-r.,
uran-met., x-ray
Mag-c., MERC., nat-m., Nat-p., nux-v., ph-ac., Phos., podo., puls., rhus-t., rumx., Sep., sil.,
staph., sul-ac., sulph., Verat.
S
Sabadilla (sabad.)
Complementary remedies : ars., bell., bry., Calc., helon., Merc., nat-m., Nux-v., Phos., plat., puls.,
RHUS-T., SEP., Sil., Sulph., thuj., verat.
Antidoted by : camph., con., lach., lyc., puls.
Followed well by : ars., art-v., bell., bry., calc., merc., nux-v., phos., puls., rhus-t., sep., sil.,
sulph.
Follows well after : bry.
Similars : acon., All-c., alumn., ars., ars-i., arund., Bell., Bry., CALC., chin., cina, colch., coloc.,
cumin., cycl., eup-per., Euph., gels., ign., Lach., lyc., Merc., nat-m., nux-v., PHOS., phyt., poll.,
puls., Rhus-t., Sang., Sep., sil., squil., Staph., stict., succ-ac., sulph., urt-u., Verat.
Sabina (sabin.)
Complementary remedies : ars., bell., puls., rhus-t., Sep., spong., Sulph., Thuj.
Antidoted by : camph., puls.
Followed well by : ars., Bell., cupre-l., puls., rhus-t., sep., spong., Sulph., thuj.
Similars : ambr., arn., Ars., bell., bov., Bry., calc., canth., caul., chin., cocc., croc., dig., erig.,
ip., kali-c., laur., Lyc., Merc., mill., phos., plat., puls., RHUS-T., rosm., ruta, sec., senec., sep.,
Sil., Staph., SULPH., thuj., Ust., vib.
Salolum (salol.)
Antidoted by : bry.
Similars : act-sp., carb-ac., led., nat-sal., sal-ac., ter.
Santoninum (santin.)
Followed well by : cina
Similars : atro., Cina, nat-p., spig., teucr.
Saponinum (sapin.)
Antidoted by : ars., rhus-t.
Similars : cocc., helon., par., sars., verb.
Scarlatinum (scarl.)
Antidoted by : bell., merc.
Complementary remedies : ign.
Followed well by : tell.
Similars : apis, ars., bell., diph., ferr-p., hell., lach., morb., phos., phyt., rhus-t., sulph.
Scirrhinum (scir.)
Similars : bac., hippoz., med., psor., syph.
Senecinum (senecin.)
Complementary remedies : sec.
Similars : arn., chin., phos., sabin., senec.
Senega (seneg.)
Complementary remedies : Bell., Bry., calc., caust., lyc., Phos., Sulph.
Antidoted by : acon., ant-t., arn., ars., bell., bry., camph., caust., nit-s-d.
Followed well by : arum-t., bell., bry., calc., lyc., Phos., sul-ac., sulph.
Similars : acon., all-c., alum., am-br., am-caust., Ant-t., ars., BELL., bry., calc., carb-v.,
carc-lu-ads., caust., chin., coc-c., dros., hed., hep., hydr., hyos., kali-c., LYC., merc., myrt-ch.,
nepet., nux-v., phos., prot., Puls., rhus-t., rumx., ruta, sang., Sep., sil., spong., stict., sulph.
Senna (senn.)
Complementary remedies : ars., phos.
Antidoted by : cham.
Similars : aloe, jal., kali-c., Lyc., phos.
calc., Calc-f., calc-p., CALC-S., cann-s., caps., caust., cina, clem., ferr-p., FL-AC., graph.,
guaj., hecla, HEP., ign., ins., kali-s., Lac-d., Lach., lap-a., Lyc., merc., microc., nat-m., nat-s.,
nit-ac., nux-v., ph-ac., Phos., psor., Puls., pyrog., rhus-t., ruta, sanic., Sep., stann., Sulph.,
symph., thiosin., thuj., tub., vitr-an., x-ray
Follows well after : bell., bry., calc., calc-p., cina, graph., hep., ign., lyc., nit-ac., phos., puls.
Similars : acon., alum., anag., anan., Ang., ant-c., ant-t., arn., ars., arund-d., bar-c., bar-i., Bell.,
berb., Bry., bufo, CALC., calc-ar., Calc-f., calc-i., calc-p., card-m., caust., Cham., chin., cina,
cist., Con., cupr., des-ac., ferr-cy., Fl-ac., gaert., galph., gels., graph., hecla, HEP., hyper.,
ign., kali-ar., kali-c., kali-p., lac-c., led., Lyc., m-aust., mag-m., mand., meny., Merc., mur-ac.,
Myris., nat-m., nat-s., nat-sil., nit-ac., nux-v., ol-an., op., Ph-ac., PHOS., pic-ac., plat-m.,
plb-i., Psor., ptel., Puls., pyrog., RHUS-T., Ruta, sanic., sep., Sieg., sil-mar., staph., Stict., still.,
stront-c., Sulph., syc., syph., tarent-c., thiosin., Thuj., tub., Tub-m., vario., x-ray
Sol (sol)
Similars : elec., lach., luna, m-ambo., nat-c.
Antidoted by : acon., bell., gels., glon.
Staphisagria (staph.)
Complementary remedies : aur., Calc., caust., coloc., con., hydr., Lyc., Merc., ph-ac., puls.,
SULPH., Thuj.
Inimicals : ran-b.
Similars : agn., anac., ant-c., Asaf., aur-m., bar-c., Bell., Bry., calad., calc., calc-f., cann-i.,
Carb-v., carc., caust., cham., Chin., clem., cob., cocc., coff., coloc., con., dros., ferr-p., fl-ac.,
foll., Graph., ign., kali-br., kreos., lyc., merc., mosch., nux-v., orig., ph-ac., phos., plat., puls.,
Rhus-t., sabin., sel., sep., sil., still., SULPH., thuj.
Antidoted by : ambr., camph., merc., ran-b., thuj.
Followed well by : calc., carc., Caust., cocc., coloc., fl-ac., ign., kali-c., lyc., med., merc., nat-m.,
nux-v., puls., rhus-t., sel., Stram., sulph., Thuj.
Follows well after : coloc.
Stramonium (stram.)
Complementary remedies : apis, Ars., bell., Bry., calc-p., cupr., cupr-act., HYOS., Lyc., Op., Puls.,
sulph.
Inimicals : coff.
Similars : Acon., agar., alum., ARS., art-v., bell., BRY., calc., canth., cham., croc., fagu., ferr.,
gal-ac., gels., glon., hell., HYOS., ign., kali-br., kali-c., lach., lyc., lyss., maland., mand., merc.,
Nux-v., op., phos., plat., puls., rhus-t., sec., Sil., sulph., syc., tab., thyr., tub., Verat., zinc.
Antidoted by : acet-ac., bell., camph., CIT-AC., coff., hyos., merc., nux-v., op., plb., puls., senn.,
sul-ac., tab.
Followed well by : acon., ars., Bell., bry., calad., calc., cupr., Hyos., lyc., lyss., nux-v., op., puls.,
pyrog., sec., sulph., verat., zinc.
Follows well after : bell., cupr.
Sulfonalum (sulfon.)
Similars : agar., alum.
Sulphur (sulph.)
Complementary remedies : Acon., Aesc., all-c., Aloe, am-c., aml-ns., anac., ant-c., ant-t., apis,
arg-n., arn., ars., aur., bad., bell., berb., bry., cact., CALC., calc-p., cann-i., caps., carb-v.,
caust., chel., cic., cina, cor-r., croc., crot-t., dros., dulc., equis-h., euphr., glon., graph., ign.,
iod., ip., iris, kreos., lach., led., lept., lyc., mag-s., med., meli., merc., morg., nat-s., Nux-v.,
op., ph-ac., phos., podo., PSOR., Puls., pyrar., pyrog., rat., rheum, Rhus-t., sang., sars., Sep.,
sil., stram., Sul-i., thuj., Tub., tub-d., zinc.
Inimicals : aur-m., nat-c., nux-m., ran-b.
Similars : Acon., aesc., aethyl-s-d., agra., aloe, alum., alumn., am-c., ambr., ant-c., apis,
arg-met., arg-n., arn., Ars., ars-br., ars-s-r., arum-t., aur., aur-i., Bac., bar-c., BELL., berb.,
brom., bry., CALC., calc-f., calen., cann-i., caps., carb-v., Carc., caust., Cham., Chin., cocc.,
con., crot-h., cupr., eos., eucal., fago., fl-ac., foll., form-ac., graph., Hep., hydr-ac., Ign., iod.,
ip., Kali-c., kreos., lach., laur., LYC., Mag-c., mag-f., mag-m., maland., mand., med., Merc.,
morg., mut., myrt-c., nat-ar., nat-c., nat-m., nat-s., nit-ac., nux-v., ost., petr., ph-ac., Phos.,
podo., PSOR., PULS., Rhus-t., rib-ac., rob., rumx., sang., sars., sec., sel., Sep., serot-cs., Sil.,
sol-v., stann., staph., stront-c., sul-ac., sul-h., sul-i., sul-ter., syph., syzyg., tann-ac., thuj.,
thyr., Tub., tub-m., valer., Verat., zinc.
Antidoted by : acon., ars., camph., caust., cham., chin., coff., con., crot-t., ferr., hyper., iod.,
merc., nit-ac., nux-v., puls., rhus-t., sel., sep., sil., thuj.
Followed well by : acon., aesc., alum., ant-c., ant-t., Apis, arg-met., ARS., ars-i., art-v., aster.,
aur., bapt., bar-c., bar-s., bell., bell-p., berb., borx., bry., CALC., calc-p., calc-s., Carb-v.,
carc., Caust., cham., chol., cupr., dros., equis-h., euph., fl-ac., gels., Graph., guaj., hep., ip.,
jug-r., kali-c., kali-sil., lach., Lyc., Mag-c., mag-f., Merc., morg., nat-m., nat-s., nit-ac., Nux-v.,
oxyg., petr., phos., phyt., podo., PSOR., puls., ran-b., rat., Rhus-t., rumx., ruta, samb., Sang.,
sars., Sep., sil., spong., stann., sul-ac., sul-i., syph., tarent., ther., thuj., TUB., wies., zinc.
Follows well after : acon., merc., nux-v., puls.
Syphilinum (syph.)
Complementary remedies : aur., bar-c., calc-f., fl-ac., kali-bi., kreos., lyc., med., merc., nat-m.,
nit-ac., phyt., plat., plb., sil., staph., thuj.
Similars : alum., ang., arg-n., ars., asaf., aur., aur-m., bac., bar-c., calc., calc-f., calc-s., carc.,
cob-n., coff., colch., kali-bi., kali-i., kreos., lac-c., lach., lyc., mag-c., med., merc., mez.,
nit-ac., phos., phyt., psor., sep., stann., still., sulph., thuj., tub.
Followed well by : aur., carc., cinnb., Fl-ac., lyc., phyt., sep., sul-ac.
T
Tabacum (tab.)
Complementary remedies : gels., graph., Op.
Inimicals : ign., nux-v.
Similars : ant-t., arn., ars., aur., bell., berb., calad., camph., chinin-s., Cocc., cyt-l., dig., gels.,
graph., hydr-ac., hyos., lach., lat-m., lob., lyc., mag-c., mand., nicot., nux-v., op., pareir.,
petr., sarcol-ac., sec., sep., spig., thyr., verat.
Antidoted by : acet-ac., alco., arg-n., ars., calad., camph., cic., clem., cocc., coff., conv., gels.,
ign., ip., kalm., lyc., nux-v., op., phos., plan., puls., sep., spig., staph., stram., verat.
Followed well by : ars., carb-v., chin., lyss., stann.
chion., cycl., hydr., Ign., kali-bi., kali-c., LYC., merc., nat-c., Nat-m., nat-s., nux-v., op., Phos.,
podo., puls., ran-s., rhus-t., sabad., SEP., sil., spig., spong., staph., Sulph., tela, zinc.
Antidoted by : camph.
Followed well by : ars., asaf., bell., chin., lyc., nux-v., puls., rhus-t., sep., staph., sulph.
Thiosinaminum (thiosin.)
Complementary remedies : tub.
Similars : graph., iris, iris-t., methys., rhus-t.
Followed well by : coloc.
Thymolum (thymol.)
Thyreoidinum (thyr.)
Complementary remedies : Calc-p., fuc., kalm., Nat-m., Sulph., tub.
Similars : abrot., aur-m-n., bar-c., calc., calc-f., calc-i., calc-p., con., crat., equis-h., fuc., hepat.,
iod., kali-i., lap-a., lil-t., lycps-v., phos., psor., puls., sep., spong., sym-r., thym-gl., tub.
Antidoted by : ars.
Followed well by : brom., Calc., gels., kali-m., kalm., lac-d., sulph., tub.
Thyro-iodinum (thyroiod.)
Antidoted by : ars.
U
Upas tieut (upa.)
Similars : ox-ac., upa-a.
Uzara (uza.)
Similars : ars., coloc., op.
V
Vaccininum (vac.)
Complementary remedies : nat-m.
Similars : Kali-m., Maland., psor., sil., sulph., Thuj., vario.
Antidoted by : ant-t., apis, maland., sil., sulph., thuj.
Followed well by : sulph.
Variolinum (vario.)
Complementary remedies : bell., nat-m., rhus-t.
Similars : ant-t., Kali-m., Maland., Sarr., sil., sulph., Thuj., vac.
Antidoted by : ant-t., apis, maland., med., sarr., sym-r., thuj., vac.
SEP., Sil., Staph., stram., sulph., Tab., tarent., thyr., trych-t., tub., Verin., visc.
Antidoted by : acon., all-c., ars., camph., chin., chinin-pur., coff., cupr., ferr., ip., merc., op.,
puls., rhus-t., staph.
Followed well by : acon., am-c., arg-n., arn., Ars., bell., bov., bry., calc., Carb-v., cham., chin.,
cupr., dros., dulc., grat., ip., lyc., meny., merc., nux-v., phos., puls., rhus-t., samb., saroth.,
sep., sil., spig., stann., staph., Sulph., tab.
Follows well after : am-c., arn., ars., bov., camph., carb-v., chin., cupr., ign., ip., lyc., nux-v.
Veratrinum (verin.)
Similars : acon., Canna, sabad.
W
Wyethia helenoides (wye.)
Similars : alum., arg-n., arn., bell-p., card-m., eup-per., kali-bi., lach., mag-f., mand., sabad.,
sang., senec., tarax.
X
X-ray (x-ray)
Similars : elec., graph., med., phos., plat., rad-br., rhod., sep., sulph., Syph., thuj., tub.
Antidoted by : nux-v., sulph.
Y
Serum yersiniae (yers.)
Complementary remedies : v-a-b.
Similars : v-a-b.
Z
Zea italica (zea-i.)
Complementary remedies : psor.
Similars : bism., ust.
Collaborators List
Argentina
Alfonso Masi Elizalde, Carlos Nstor Campora, Federico Fisch, Jorge Santiago Muoz, Luis Detinis,
Luis Pedro De Lellis
Australia
Alastair Gray, Philip Robbins, Rod and Lorrain Casperson
Austria
Franz von Swoboda, Friedrich Dellmour, Helmut Retzek, Michael Fischer, Peter Knig, Reinhard
Flick
Bangladesh
Mir Mostafa Kamal
Belgium
Alfons Geukens, An Aerts, Anne Vervarcke, Annemie Vanormelingen, Antje Rohde, Caroline Vande
Schoor, Dale Emerson, Deborah Stevenson, Dominique Adriaens, Elisabeth Nys, Eric De Ceuster,
Eric Delens, Eric Metz, Eric Van den Eynden, Filip Degroote, Gerd Van Brandt, Guy Desmet,
Jacques Imberechts, Jean-Claude Spelte, Jean-Louis Smout, Jrgen Holst Christensen, Katelijne
Vanhoutte, Luc Vertenten, Majin de Froidmont, Manuel Schroyens, Marc Brunson, Mark Cortens,
Mehran Faez, Michel Paulus, Michel Van Wassenhove, Pascal Debuisson, Patrick Detand, Paul
Debruyn, Paul Dessart, Paul Kelchtermans, Peter Callebaut, Philippe Eeman, Philippe Santantonio,
Valrie Dubois, Valrie Lenaerts, Walter Verraes
Brazil
Ademar Fonseca, Angela Vieira, Carlos Lima Melo, Claudio Araujo, Elias Zoby, Francis Mourao,
Hylton Luz Sarcinelli, Jos Mirilli, Luiz Cesar Rossetti, Marcos Zulian, Matheus Marim, Regina Vale,
Rodrigues Rogerio Rita, Salvador Javier Gamarra
Canada
Andr Saine, Lou Klein, Monica Frohmann, Natasha Pelech
Denmark
Per Neesgaard
Ecuador
Fernando Flores Villalva
England
Alan Ribot-Smith, Andrew Ward, Annette Bond, Bob Lawrence, Christopher Day, Clayton Collyer,
Ebrahimi Soroush, Francis Treuherz, Frank Meredith, Gill Dransfield, Gill Scott Zukovskis, Jackie
Davis, Janet Snowdon, Jeremy Sherr, John Saxton, Joseph Zarfaty, Kate Clarke, Lise Hansen,
Louise Deacon, Mary English, Michael Bonnet, Michael Cannell, Nick Churchill, Pete Gregory,
Peter Fraser, Phil Edmonds, Rafi Neu, Richard Boocock
France
Alain Horvilleur, Andr Dieudonn, Bernard Long, Christian Ozanon, Didier Lustig, Jacqueline
Ozanon, Jacques Lamothe, Jacques Ray, Jean-Claude Grgoire, Jean-Marie Tribouillart, Michel
Zala, Philippe Servais, Phou Souk-Aloun, Pierre Salan, Simone Fayeton
Germany
Achim Schtte, Angelika Bolte, Angelika Gutge-Wickert, Anne Schadde, Bea Klein, Bernd Schuster,
Bernhard Bloesy, Bernhard Hornig, Eilsabeth Schulz, Friedrich Ritzer, Friedrich Witzig, Hans
Eberle, Jochen Krahnefeld, Jrg Wachsmuth, Jrgen Hansel, Karl-Josef Mller, Manfred Braig,
Martin Bomhardt, Ollie Leucht, Peter and Edeltraud Friedrich, Peter Dori, Peter Vint, Rainer
Dierken, Reinhard Hickmann, Reinhard Ros, Sabine Niederle, Stefan Reis, Thomas Blasig-Jger,
Thomas Lowes, Thomas von Reumont, Tjado Galic, Ulrich Kohler, Uwe Garbers, Walter Glueck,
Wilhelm Schmidt, Wolfgang Hettich, Wolfgang Schmelzer
Greece
George Papaphilippou, George Vithoulkas, Peter Garzonis, Zafiriou Vangelis
India
Arun Prasad, Chhabra Dyvia, Farokh J. Master, Jayesh Shah, Jugal Kishore, K. S. Srinivasan, Kuldeep
Jain, Nandita Shah, P. Sivaraman, Prakash Vakil, Rajan Sankaran
Ireland
Anne Irwin, Declan Hamond, Michael Thompson, Nuala Eising
Israel
Chaim Rosenthal
Italy
Carlo Cenerelli, Carlo Rezzani, Carlo Solerio, Elio Rossi, Gaetano Arena, Mariella Di Stefano,
Massimo Mangalavori, Sergio Segantini, Vincenzo Fabrocini
Mexico
David Flores Toledo, Fernando Dominguez, Fernando Ochoa, Jos Matuk, Proceso Ortega
Netherlands
Antonie van den Bos, Arjen Pasma, Arjen Psaman, Bert Lemmen, Edith Meinders, Ellinger Elisabeth,
Emiel Van Galen, Erik Van Woensel, Gerard Megens, Henk van Munster, Jan Scholten, Jean-Pierre
Jansen, Lex Rutten, Marijke Creveld, Ren Otter, Rob Willemse, Tits Jansen, Ton Nicolai
New-Zealand
John Briggs Derek, Julian Winston
Norway
Pakistan
Abdur Rehman
Romania
Calin Andron, Carmen Nuta, Carmen Sturza, Dana Ionita, Dorin Dragos, Ecaterina Floroiu, Gheorghe
Jurj, Ilinca Gyurcsik, Marina Theodorescu, Mirela Sara, Miruna, Radu Sarandaran, Roxana
Mateescu, Sinziana Pres Nia, Valeria Moldovan, Vasile Nuta
South Africa
Catherine Morris, Craig Wright, Werner Kerschbaumer
Spain
Andreu Forteza, Enrique Gonzalez, Isidre Lara, Joaquim Peleteiro, Jos Ramn Torre, Jos-Marie
Queralt, Manuel Mateu, Marie-Jolle Cuesta Briand, Patrick Carton, Salvador Cabr
Sweden
Gunnar Janson
Switserland
Andreas Schmidt, Georg Kissling, Guy Loutan, Marc Br, Marco Riefer, Martina Frei
United Kingdom
Anthony Bickley, Nick Thompson, Sue and Thomas Armstrong, Vilma Bharatan
USA
Ahmed Currim, Ananda Zaren, Andrew Lange, Christiane Chambreau, Christopher Jayne, Cornelia
Richardson-Boedler, David Riley, Dean Crothers, Edward Kondrot, Gregory Pais, Jacquelin Wilson,
Jonathan Shore, Kim Elia, Larry Bruk, Linda Johnston, Melanie Grimes, Nancy Herrick, Nick
Nossaman, Pat Thode, Patti Mount, Paul Bahder, Paul Herscu, Paul Masci, Philip Kendall, Randall
Neustaedter, Robert Schore, Robert Stewart, Robin Murphy, Roger Morrison, Steve Olsen, Susan
Sonz, Todd Rowe, Will Taylor, William Shevin
Remedies
Number of remedy occurrences
Remedy occurrences in degree 1
Remedy occurrences in degree 2
Remedy occurrences in degree 3
Remedy occurrences in degree 4
:
:
:
:
:
878.141
651.214
181.400
45.055
472
Authors
Number of author references
1.536.930
Symptoms
Number of rubrics
Number of rubrics with remedies
:
:
148.396
114.362
Linguistic tools
Number of cross-references
Number of referring rubrics
:
:
18.092
10.719
Endnotes
1 (Popup - Popup)
1 Fourth edition: printed in 1935; fifth edition printed in 1945 and sixth edition printed in 1957. After this
several Indian editions have been printed which contain an unacceptable amount of mistakes.
2 (Popup - Popup)
2 One Megabyte (MB) corresponds to one million characters.
3 (Popup - Popup)
3 The corresponding computer version was only released in December 1992, as programming time was needed
4 (Popup - Popup)
4
5 (Popup - Popup)
5
The symptoms from chapters mind and dreams of course do not need any localization. Complaints like
"palpitation are also not a real exception here, because the term implicates the information about the localization
"heart" already.
6 (Popup - Popup)
6 For those who use the Radar-program an ingenious technology has been designed allowing you to select or
deselect the authors you want to work with. Any combination of authors, more precisely: of sources, can be
selected or unselected!
7 (Popup - Popup)
7 Words fly, writings remain
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8 Jeremy Sherr and his colleagues (Northhampton, England) made very well organized provings of scorpion,
9 (Popup - Popup)
9 As "classical authors" are considered: A (Allen Timothy); AL (Allen Henry); ALJ (Allen James Henry); B
10 (Popup - Popup)
10 Dean Crothers: "A Semi-Automated Method for Making Additions to Kent's Repertory" in "Proceedings of
11 (Popup - Popup)
11
Only visible in the software: if you click on the 'down arrow' behind the remedy you see the rubric where the
remedy has been copied from (in "Full Synthesis View").
12 (Popup - Popup)
12 The terminology "root" and "extension" refers respectively to the first and following parts of a remedy
abbreviation: for "nat-m." "nat-" is the root and "-m." is the extension.
13 (Popup - Popup)
13 The subrubrics of night indicating times are: "midnight before / at / after". All hours are subrubrics of these
14 (Popup - Popup)
14 The rubric "midnight" is always an empty rubric: the remedies with an aggravation at midnight should be
placed in the rubric "midnight - at". The subrubrics indicating times and depending from "midnight" are "before,
at and after", they come first and precede modalities depending from "midnight".
15 (Popup - Popup)
15 Here the remedies and subrubrics of aggravation at midnight follow.
16 (Popup - Popup)
16 The subrubrics of "midnight -after" indicating times precede the modalities.
17 (Popup - Popup)
17 The subrubrics indicating a time period are subrubrics of the precise beginning hour and precede the
modalities of 2 h.
18 (Popup - Popup)
18 Following the hours the other time modalities (until, before, after) precede any other modality of 2 h.
19 (Popup - Popup)
19 The remedies which are aggravated at a precise hour should be written at the rubric "2h" (as opposed to
"midnight - at"). If it exists, the symptom "2h - at" should be merged into "2 h".
20 (Popup - Popup)
20 Periods of time always depend from the precise hour on which they begin.
21 (Popup - Popup)
21 After the times, the modalities of "midnight -after" follow.
22 (Popup - Popup)
22 The rubrics indicating modalities of "night" follow at the same level as "night - midnight", which was the first