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| TRIOS IN HOMEOPATHY. Presented BY;-Dr.Mubashar Ahmad Khan, (M.A) (DHMS) Phones:-0300-4872403 / 0321-4419201 /7523522. ------------------------------------------------------------------ Puls – Sil – Fl-Ac Ign – Nat – Sep Sulph – Sars – Sep Coloc – Caust – Staph Ars – Thuja – Tarent All-c – Phos – Sulph Carb-v – Ars – Mur-ac (the corpse revivers) Sulph – Calc – Lyc (Anti-psoric trio) Lyc – Carb-v – Chin (flatulent trio) Acon – Ars - Rhus-t (restless trio) Bell – Hyos – Stram (mania trio) Thuj – Staph – Nit-ac (warty trio) Nit-ac – Benz-ac – Sep (foul odor of urine trio) Camph – Cupr – Verat-a (cholera trio) Sep – Caust – Gels (drooping of eyelids trio) Caust – Rhus – Sulph (rheumatic and paralysis trio) Carb-an – Con – Brom (glandular affections trio) Acon – Spong – Hep (croup trio) Bacilinum - Psorinum - Calcarea Belladonna - Puls - Nat mur Bell - Tub - Nat mur Calc - Nat mur - Aurum Calc - puls- rhus tox calc - rhus tox - thuja caust - kali carb - nat mur/lyc lach - lyc - ars mag phos - bell - calc med - calc - phos med - thuja - ars med - thuja - nat sulph phos - sulphur - tub puls - graph - sil puls - sulph - tub/thuga sepia - lach - lyc sep - nat mur - lach sep - nat mur - phos sil - puls - fluoric acid staph - caust - coloc staph - ignatia - plat sulphur - calc lyc tub - med - calc/nat mur tub - med - thuga calc - puls - thuja coloc - mag phos - stannum nat mur - aurum - carc plat - ip - staph plat - lil tig - nux vom staph - sil - sepia syph - aurum - nit ac thuja - sabina - puls Kent's Triads Sulphur, Calc Carb, Lycopodium - Skin (Anti-psoric). Sulphur, Merc Sol, Thuja - Anti-Miasmatic. Carbo Veg, China, Lycopodium - Flatulence. Arsenicum alb, Phos, Sulphur - Burning Sensation. Aconite, Ars Alb, Rhus tox - Restlessness. Aconite, Chamomilla, Coffea - Pain Sensitivity. Belladonna, Hyoscyamus, Stramonium - Deliriu m. Lachesis, Naja, Crotalus - Snake Remedy Trio. Kali iod, Sanguinaria, Stannum - Cough after pneumonia. Aconite, Ignatia, Opium - Fear. Ant tart, Opium, Nux Mosch - Drowsiness. Ipecac, Cuprum Met. Veratrum Alb - Collapse in cholera. Ignatia, Nat Mur, Acid Phos - Gr ief. Causticum, Rhus tox, Sulphur - Rheumatism. Belladonna, Calc Carb, Nat Mur - Upper Lips. Glonine, Belladonna, Mellilotus - Headaches. Gelsemium, Causticum, Sepia - Droopy Eyelids. | ||||
I think you have combined two types of lists. For example.. Glonine, Belladonna, Mellilotus - Headaches. These are more or less a group of medicines with similar symtoms, but having finer distinctions. I can't do any better than Nash. The remedies that stand nearest Glonoine in their effect on the head I believe to be Belladonna and Melilotus. Belladonna and Glonoine both have the fullness, pain and throbbing, but that of Glonoine is more intense and sudden in its onset, and, on the other hand, subsides more rapidly when relieved. Again, Glonoine is better adapted to the first or congestive stage of inflammatory diseases of the brain, while Belladonna goes further and may still be the appropriate remedy after the inflammatory stage is fully initiated. Belladonna is better by bending the head backward; Glonoine worse. Belladonna is made worse by having the head uncovered, and suffers from having the hair cut; Glonoine must have the head uncovered, can't bear to wear his hat, or wants the hair cut. Belladonna is worse lying down, even if he keeps still; Glonoine, though sometimes worse after lying down, is also sometimes better when lying still. One symptom very characteristic of Glonoine is, that the patient carries the head very carefully, for the least jar or shaking of it greatly aggravates the pain. Another peculiar symptom is, it seems to the patient that there is not only throbbing, but there is an undulating sensation as if the brain were moving in waves synchronous with the pulse. There is more disturbance of the heart action with Glonoine than with Belladonna, though both have it strongly. Glonoine has a sensation of rush of blood to the heart or chest. Melilotus also has great congestion to the head, with pain and sense of fullness. Not being so thoroughly proven as Belladonna and Glonoine, we cannot so clearly indicate the exact place for it, but there is one very prominent symptom which always makes one think of it, viz.: "Glowing redness of the face." No remedy that I know of has it more strongly. Glonoine and Belladonna may both have very red face; on the other hand, a pale face, with the other congestive symptoms, does not contraindicate them, but does Melilotus. Then, again, with Melilotus the head symptoms are often relieved by a profuse epistaxis, which is also another very prominent symptom of this remedy. I cured a very bad case of typhus cerebralis, and also a case of insanity of long standing, with this remedy, being guided to it by these symptoms. In a strict sense they are just probablities for a similar condition. But when we talk about trios, they are very likely to follow each other. The patient is very likely to pass one stage to another, and he may need the medicines in that sequence. Such an example is All-c – Phos – Sulph The colds of All.cepa are likely to go down to the chest, and then you may need Phosphorous, and if Phosphorous also doesn't relieve completely, and to remove the lingering after effects, you may need Sulphur. Here it is not a question of alternatives. You can't mistalke an all-c from Phosphorous. In the case of Bell and Melilotus you can have a doubt about your remedy. This or that..You keep thinking.... But in case of All-c and Phosphorous ,it is not a question of choice. It is a possibility of disease progression. So, there are two types of lists. The word Trios is normally used to denote the medicines that may be required in a sequence, one after the other. The other list can also be called trios or triads ..if we go by the dictionary meaning. But one need to be very clear about the difference between these two types of "Trios."Murthy. (hpathy.com) |
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