Secale Cornutum

by H. C. Allen

Spurred Rye; Ergot. (A Fungus; a Nosode.)

Secale Cornutum Adapted to women of thin, scrawny, feeble, cachectic appearance; irritable, nervous temperament; pale, sunken countenance.

Very old, decrepit, feeble persons.

Women of very lax muscular fibre; everything seems loose and open; no action; vessels flabby; passive haemorrhages, copious flow of thin, black, watery blood; the corpuscles are destroyed.

Haemorrhagic diathesis; the slightest wound causes bleeding for weeks ( Lachesis, Phosphorus ); discharge of sanious liquid blood with a strong tendency to putrescence; tingling in the limbs and great debility, especially when the weakness is not caused by previous loss of fluids.

Leucorrhoea; green, brown, offensive.

Boils: small, painful with green contents, mature very slowly and heal in the same manner; very debilitating.

Face: pale, pinched, ashy, sunken, hippocratic; drawn, with sunken eyes; blue rings around eyes.

Unnatural, ravenous appetite; even with exhausting diarrhoea; craves acids, lemonade.

Secale Cornutum Diarrhoea: profuse, watery, putrid, brown; discharged with great force ([Gambogia], Crot. ); very exhausting; painless, involuntary; anus wide open ( Apis, Phosphorus ).

Enuresis: of old people; urine pale, watery, or bloody; urine suppressed.

Burning; in all parts of the body, as if sparks of fire were falling on the patient ( Arsenicum ).

Gangrene; dry, senile, < from external heat.

Large ecchymosis; blood blisters; often commencement of gangrene.

Collapse in cholera diseases; skin cold, yet cannot bear to be covered ( Camph. ).

Unnatural, ravenous appetite; even with exhausting diarrhoea; craves acids, lemonade.

Secale Cornutum Diarrhoea: profuse, watery, putrid, brown; discharged with great force ([Gambogia], Crot. ); very exhausting; painless, involuntary; anus wide open ( Apis, Phosphorus ).

Enuresis: of old people; urine pale, watery, or bloody; urine suppressed.

Burning; in all parts of the body, as if sparks of fire were falling on the patient ( Arsenicum ).

Gangrene; dry, senile, < from external heat.

Large ecchymosis; blood blisters; often commencement of gangrene.

Collapse in cholera diseases; skin cold, yet cannot bear to be covered ( Camph. ).

The skin feels cold to the touch, yet the patient cannot tolerate covering; icy coldness of extremities.

Secale Cornutum Menses: irregular; copious, dark, fluid; with pressing, labor-like pains in abdomen; continuous discharge of watery blood until next period.

Threatened abortion especially at third month ( Sabina ); prolonged, bearing down, forcing pains.

During labor: pains irregular; too weak; feeble or ceasing; everything seems loose and open but no expulsive action; fainting.

After pains: too long; too painful; hour-glass contraction.

Suppression of milk; in thin, scrawny, exhausted women; the breasts do not properly fill.

Pulse small, rapid, contracted and often intermittent.

Secale Cornutum Relations. – Compare: Cinnamon in post-partum haemorrhage; it increases labor-pains, controls profuse or dangerous flooding, is always safe, while Ergot is always dangerous.

Similar: to, Arsenicum, but cold and heat are opposite.

Resembles Colchicum in cholera morbus.

Aggravation. – Heat; warmth from covering, of all affected parts; in all diseases worse from heat.

Amelioration. – In the cold air; getting cold; uncovering affected parts; rubbing.