BRYONIA.
The root of Bryonia dioica, Jacquin, and
Bryonia alba, Linné (Nat. Ord. Cucurbitaceae.) Europe.
Common Names: Bryony, Bastard Turnip, Devil's Turnip, etc.
Principal Constituents.—Probably a colorless,
very bitter glucoside, bryonin is the chief active body in
bryonia.
Preparation.—Specific Medicine Bryonia. Dose, 1/20 to 5
drops. Usual method of administration: Rx Specific Medicine Bryonia,
5-10 drops; Water, 4 fluidounces. Mix. Sig.: One teaspoonful every 1 to
3 hours. The smaller doses are preferred for specific medication.
Specific Indications.—Sharp cutting pain, or
tearing pain from serous inflammation; tenderness on pressure; tearing
pain with sore feeling in any part of the body and always aggravated by
motion; moderately full or hard wiry vibratile pulse; headache from
frontal region to occiput; soreness in eyeballs upon movement;
hyperesthesia of scalp or face; irritating, hacking or racking cough or
provoked by changes of air; lethargy short of dullness; tired, weary or
apathetic feeling, too tired to think; perspiring on slight movement.
Action.—The fresh root of bryonia is a strong
irritant, and when bruised and kept in contact with the skin blisters
it. When taken internally in overdoses it causes severe
gastro-enteritis, and has caused death. The chief symptoms are
uncontrollable diarrhea and vomiting, dizziness, lowered temperature,
dilated pupils, cold perspiration, thread-like pulse, colic, and
collapse. Large but less than fatal doses sometimes cause bronchial
irritation with cough, hepatic tenderness, increased urination with
vesical tenesmus, cerebral fullness and congestion, jaundice and
depressed action of the heart. These effects are never experienced from
the small medicinal doses. Tannin is said to counteract the untoward
effects of bryonia.
Therapy.—Bryonia, practically unused in the
dominant school, and much employed by Homeopathists, is regarded by
Eclectic physicians as an indispensable agent. Personally, we use few
agents more frequently than bryonia. It is a remedy for debility and the
long train of miseries accompanying it, and in acute diseases it is of
first importance as a remedy for pain and inflammation in serous
membranes. The bryonia patient is weak and perspires readily upon the
slightest movement. The stereotyped assertion, "aggravated by motion,"
and learned by us from the Homeopaths, is a true dictum when applied to
bryonia cases. Though not necessarily dull, the patient is lethargic in
the sense that he does not wish to move lest he aggravate his condition.
There is no dullness or hebetude as with belladonna, but the patient is
tired, languid, and torpid, and though much awake has little inclination
to move about.
Bryonia patients, except in the acute infections,
often display a deficiency of nervous balance and with this may or may
not be associated the bryonia headache pain from the frontal region to
the occipital base; thinking is an effort and the patient is irritable
if disturbed. Temperature may be slightly increased, and the tissues
contracted. Pressure elicits extreme tenderness and soreness, especially
when the viscera are involved.
Bryonia is of especial value in fevers, and is
decidedly a remedy for the typhoid. state. Many cases of severe typhoid
fever may be carried through with no other medication than bryonia in
very small doses. In fact, it is a medicine that gives the best results
from minute doses. In fevers the patient is decidedly apathetic, the
secretions are scant and vitiated, the nervous system markedly
depressed, and the tendency is toward sepsis and delirium. The victim
cares little whether he recovers or dies. There is a dry tongue, sordes,
a deepened hue of the tissues, capillary circulation is sluggish, and
there may be frontal headache. Chilliness is not uncommon, and there is
a tendency to sweat easily. In such cases it proves a mainstay during
the prolonged fever, and never does the patient harm.
In diseases of the respiratory tract and pleura,
bryonia heads the list of useful remedies. The well-known indications
given by the founder of specific medication hold good, to-wit: "A hard,
vibratile pulse, flushed right cheek, frontal pain extending to the
basilar region, and irritative cough." It is a splendid agent for cold
in the chest. It is the most decidedly efficient remedy we possess for
acute pleurisy, being usually given with, or in alternation with, the
indicated special sedative-aconite (quick, small pulse), or veratrum
(full, bounding pulse). It promptly meets the sharp, lance-like pain, or
the cutting or tearing pain, all made worse upon movement. Not only does
it subdue pain, but the temperature is lowered and capillary obstruction
is overcome, thus freeing the disordered circulation. After the acute
symptoms have subsided, it may be continued alone for a long period, to
prevent, or to absorb, effusion. In these cases the apathy observed in
the febrile diseases is absent, the pain and circulatory excitation
throwing the patient into a condition of nervous excitement, which is
quite readily controlled by bryonia. While of great value in all forms
of pleurisy, it is particularly valuable in that form that comes on
insidiously. In pleuro-pneumonia, it should be given to promote
absorption of exuded serum. In la grippe, it is one of the best of
remedies, both for the cough and the debility. We use it confidently in
pneumonia to control pain, when present; but above all, to allay the
harsh, harassing cough. Bryonia is an excellent agent for cough brought
on by use of the voice, or by motion of any kind, as walking, swallowing
food, entering a warm room, and for that form of cough induced by
tickling sensations in the throat, or when excited by vomiting. The
cough which bryonia relieves is laryngotracheal; it is most frequently
dry, hacking, rasping or explosive, showing its origin in irritation or
erethism. Tensive or sharp pains are almost always present, and the
secretion, if there is any, is small in quantity and of whitish or
brown, frothy mucus, sometimes streaked or clotted with blood. It is one
of the most efficient remedies in la grippe, for the cough, pain, and
the headache, and in bronchitis, bronchopneumonia, and even phthisis,
all with blood-streaked expectoration, it is a great aid in relieving
the distressing, hacking cough.
Bryonia is an invaluable agent in the treatment of
peritonitis. In peritonitis, from septic causes, as in puerperal
peritonitis, it will only aid; a surgical or cleansing process will
prepare the way for its use. The pain indicating it is colic-like,
attended with marked tensive tenderness. Similar conditions indicate its
employment in cholera infantum and typhomalarial fever. In synovitis it
is one of the most certain drugs to relieve pain and remove effusion.
Nor should bryonia be neglected in the treatment of pericarditis, in
which it will help to control inflammation and to prevent and absorb
effusion. Recent reports confirm its earlier reputation as a remedy of
the first value in cerebro-spinal meningitis.
Disorders of the liver and gall apparatus frequently
call for the small doses of bryonia. It is especially serviceable when
there is jaundice, deep orange-colored urine, and soreness upon
pressure. There may or may not be an accompanying headache. A
peculiarity of the tongue that we have seen bryonia clear up in these
cases is a semi-transparent coating of the organ, appearing like a wash
of buttermilk. When the liver capsule is involved, with sticking or
cutting pain, bryonia will materially help to bring about a healthy
condition. The prolonged use of bryonia and aconite in small doses has
given us better results in cholecystitis than anything we have ever
used, and we believe it has often warded off surgical intervention.
Bryonia is a strong aid in the medicinal treatment of appendicitis. In
indigestion, where the food lies heavily like a stone, bryonia is often
very effective. Scudder valued it for relief of abdominal pain and
tenderness in typhomalarial and zymotic fevers, and with ipecac or
euphorbia in similar conditions in cholera infantum.
For mammitis, aconite, bryonia and phytolacca are our
three best remedies. The first two are to be employed when the
inflammation is marked, and the glands are swollen and tender and feel
knotted. Phytolacca is always indicated in this trouble. Both bryonia
and phytolacca are equally effective in orchitis and ovaritis, with
tenderness upon pressure.
Bryonia is a remedy of much value in the treatment of
acute rheumatism, being best adapted to those cases where the joints are
stiff and swollen. Locke declared it the most certain remedy for
rheumatic swelling of the finger joints. As a remedy for headache,
bryonia has long enjoyed a well earned reputation. There is frontal pain
(some claim on the right side chiefly), sometimes rheumatoidal; again,
it may be from a disordered stomach, or a hemicrania, with sharp,
tearing pains and a tender scalp. Occasionally it relieves facial
neuralgia, but ordinarily it can not be relied on in that complaint. All
bryonia headaches are made worse by motion. Bryonia is sometimes useful
in rheumatic iritis, and in partial deafness from pressure of swollen
glands after scarlet fever, or from colds. A very true indication for it
is soreness of the eyeballs, upon movement, occurring in any acute
disorder. The best bryonia preparation is specific medicine bryonia. For
all the uses mentioned above, from one to ten drops may be added to a
half-glass of water, and of this mixture a teaspoonful may be given
every one to two hours.
Finally, but in larger doses than are required for
the preceding uses, bryonia (up to drop doses) is one of the best agents
to overcome infantile constipation due to difficult digestion of cow's
milk and in other forms of constipation, where the stools are dry and
scybalous.
In former years, when it was the prevailing belief
that insanity was caused by indwelling evil spirits, drastic cathartics
were invoked for their removal. In England large doses of a syrup of the
fresh juice of bryonia were given. Hence the oft-recurring reference to
bryonia in literature as a cathartic—a use to which it is never put in
Eclectic Therapy. |