Bayberry (MYRICA)
Marked action on the liver, with jaundice and mucous membranes. Persistent sleeplessness. *Jaundice.
Bayberry (MYRICA)
Marked action on the liver, with jaundice and mucous membranes. Persistent sleeplessness. *Jaundice.
According to Hale, though Myrica was known to older botanic practitioners, it
was Samuel Thomson, of Lobelia fame, who established its reputation. Thomson had a crude
pathology of his own which served him to some extent. One of his ideas was that the digestive
tract was liable to become fouled with a copious mucous lining. This he called "canker"; and he
stated of Myrica that it "has the power of disengaging the thick, viscid secretions of the mucous
membrane of the stomach." Myrica, says Hale, formed the chief ingredient in Thomson's famous
"Composition powder." The provings confirm Thomson's observation, in that Myrica produced
abundant secretion of tenacious mucus in the throat, difficult to detach. This may be considered
one of the keynotes of the remedy. Profuse catarrhal discharges of old standing, of all kinds may
require Myrica, especially if offensive, tenacious, and difficult to detach. Leucorrheea,
bronchorrheea, intestinal catarrh, pharyngeal catarrh, stomatitis. Hale says as a local application
in diphtheria it rivals Guaiacum. Perhaps allied to the catarrhal state of the intestinal tract is the
liver disorder setup by the drug. These are the distinctive features: Aching pain in liver, fulness,
drowsiness, despondency, dull, heavy headache, < in morning, dirty, dingy, yellowish white of
eyes, lids abnormally red, weakness, ash-coloured stools, slow pulse, pains under scapulze (<
left), dirty yellow tongue, muscular soreness, aching in limbs, jaundice of all degrees. There is
also the nasal obstruction, post-nasal catarrh which often accompanies disordered liver. It is in
cases attended with jaundice that Myrica has had the greatest success, cases of black jaundice
having been cured with it, and it meets the itching of jaundice as well. Urticaria is not
unfrequently found associated with liver affections, and Douglass cured with it this case
on face, neck, right forearm and leg. Sensation as if insects crawling on face, must brush them
Myrica 6x every two hours improved at once and cured in ten days. Burnett has used Myrica
with excellent effect in cancerous and other grave diseases of the liver, especially when attended
with jaundice. He has given material doses. It has generally been given in the lower attenuations.
Myrica has also an action on the heart, and is thus closely related to Digitalis in several points.
There are sharp pains about the heart with increased, audible pulsations, but slow pulse. The
heart pains are < lying on left side. Pains in left chest and under scapulz (especially left), and
pain in middle lobe of right lung. The symptoms are: < By warmth of bed; < after sleep; < in
morning; by motion. > After breakfast; > in open air.
Despondent, irritable, indifferent. Gloomy.
Great despondency; dejected; irritable-——Cannot concentrate mind on any
subject.—Dull, drowsy state-—Exhilaration, then depression and pressure about head;
exhilaration, then excitement preventing sleep, with restlessness.
Pain in whole body as before ague, at 10 p.m.; shifting pain ——Languor: in
morning on waking, with pain in back; with soreness of muscles of thighs, as if he had taken
cold. < From warmth of bed at night, disturbing sleep; > after breakfast; > in open air.—Slight
nervous excitement and restlessness; soon followed by a sick, debilitated sensation.—General
muscular lameness and soreness; lassitude; depression of spirits.
Vertigo, with dulness and drowsiness, (during lectures) with rush of blood to head and
face, on stooping; with nausea.—Awakens with pain in forehead, temples, and small of back, > in
open air.—Dull, heavy feeling over and in eyes.—Throbbing: of arteries in the head; and in face
with fulness; in superficial veins on waking.—Empty feeling in head.
Eyes congested and yellow.—Eyes feel dull and heavy; also on awaking.—Eyes burn
and tire easily when reading; lids heavy.—Dirty, dingy, yellowish sclerotics; lids abnormally
Pain in nose; in |. side of nose, shifting to 1. axilla, where it was sharp and
lancinating.—Coryza.—Post-nasal catarrh.
Yellow, Itching and stinging. Creeping sensation.
Yellow colour of face and neck; jaundice.—Fulness, with heat and throbbing, esp. after
being out in open air—Pressure in malar bones.—Sharp, darting pain in r. articulation of jaw.
Tongue furred, with bad taste in mouth, and nausea. Tenacious, thick, nauseous secretion. Tender, spongy and bleeding gums (Merc).
Breath offensive —Sweetish taste about palate —Thick, yellowish, dark, dry, and
crusty coating on tongue, rendering it almost immovable.—Tongue dirty yellow.—Foul, bad taste;
cannot eat because of it; bitter, nauseous taste—Adhesive coating over, buccal membrane; dry,
scaly crusts on roof of mouth, that water scarcely moistens or dissolves.—Mouth dry; thirst;
water relieves only partially for awhile.
Semi-lancinating pain near r. tonsil in afternoon.—Excruciating feeling in posterior
nares, as from a fresh cold.—Constriction; causing constant need to swallow.—Swollen feeling
inside in morning.—Stringy mucus in throat; detached with difficulty.—Throat and nasal organs
filled with an offensive, tenacious mucus, detached with difficulty.—Pharynx dry; sore, as if it
would crack, impeding and finally obstructing, deglutition.—Slimy, glutinous frothy mucus in
pharynx; even gargling scarcely detaches it; causes disgusting taste, prevents eating.
Constricted and rough feeling, with a constant desire to swallow. Stringy mucus; detached with difficulty.
Hunger, yet full feeling, as after a hasty meal—Unnatural hunger; then
indigestion; then jaundice.—Loss of appetite; loathing of food, but desire for acids —Fulness and
nauseous sensation in fauces, the burning changing into griping from |. epigastrium in a straight
line to 1. of navel—Heartburn, with increase of saliva, which had to be expectorated frequently.
Dull pain in region of liver; fulness; drowsiness; debility; mushy, clay-coloured
stools; jaundice.—Griping pains; rumbling; urging to stool; passing only flatus.—Weak, faint
feeling, as if diarrhoea would ensue.—Offensive flatus when walking.—Pain in umbilical region:
after breakfast; in a spot in umbilical region an hour after dinner, with accumulation of flatus;
heavy.—Rumbling above umbilicus.—Rumbling in umbilical region, with griping.
Constant discharge of flatus when walking. Urging to stool, with no other results than the expulsion of a great amount of flatus. Loose, light-colored stool; ash-colored and destitute of bile.
Passing of much offensive flatus.—Loose stools, mushy, with tenesmus and cramp-
like sensation in umbilical region.—Stools light yellow, mushy, clay-coloured;
jaundice.—Constipation.
Urine beer-coloured, with yellowish froth; pinkish-brown sediment,
scanty.—Micturition difficult, bladder seemed to lack contractive, expelling power.—Urine
increased; and limpid.
Dark, frothy, scanty, high-colored, biliary.
Smarting in larynx and trachea.—Tickling cough which had troubled
him on lying down at night was > in morning.
at night when lying on 1. side, with audible beating of heart.
Sharp pain in region of heart—Stinging, cramp-like sensation to |. of
preecordia and under ribs.—Heart's impulse increased, but pulse sixty.—Impulse increased,
pulsation audible, with constriction in chest on lying on 1. side.—Pulse feeble, irregular.
scapula and arm, extending to end of little finger —Sharp, plunging pain in region of 1.
kidney.—Pain in lumbar region with general chilliness on going outdoors; heavy; dragging. in
morning on waking, also till afternoon.
Sharp lancinations in |. axilla—Tearing in |. arm, < upper arm, sometimes
extending to forearm, with darting pain in middle and ring fingers.—Lame feeling in r. arm, <
a.m.
Pain at 7 a.m.; centring in muscular parts above knees, also soreness and
shoulder.—Drawing pain in muscles above knee at night.—Piercing pain in inner side of I.
of leg, a little outside of outer edge of tibia, < motion, occasionally changing to burning pain,
with soreness to touch.—Pain in calves, with trembling, so that walking is unpleasant, pain <
pain in I. heel.
Staggering gait. Pain under shoulder-blades and back of neck, in all muscles, in hollow of right foot.
Yellow and itching. Jaundice. Creeping sensation, as of insects.
Yellow jaundiced appearance; itching as from flea-bites.—Pimples in different parts, a
painful one on nose.—Itching: near insertion of deltoid in both arms; of face, then creeping
sensation; and stinging-like flea-bites, on r. side of face, then on neck, shoulder, forearm,
midway between r. knee and ankle.
Disturbed, bad dreams and frequent waking; insomnia.
Drowsiness; vertigo; semi-stupor.—Restless, or sleeps soundly until toward morning;
awakens generally feeling worse.—Unrefreshing sleep, with frequent wakings and bad
dreams.—Amorous dreams, with emission.—Ugly dreams, at one time that his head was attacked
by enormous, bugs, which he felt obliged to kill with difficulty.
Chilliness on going out of doors; slight aching in lumbar region.—Excited, feverish
feeling, alternating with chilliness; warm sensation along spine, then chill and gentle
sweat.—Face hot and flushed.
chest to scapula, Therid., Illic., Pix.
Compare: Ptel; Cornus cir; Chelid; Lept; Fagop.
Antidote: Digit (jaundice).
Tincture, to third potency.
Open the workspace. Type a real case from this week — one you're still chewing on. Watch Repertify rank Myrica against the totality, cite the rubrics, and surface the §246-correct posology with the rule inline. You'll know by the third turn.
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