Compare with Cadmium sulph & Hydrastis can in GIT.
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ICadmium sulphuratum vs Hydrastis canadensis in Gastrointestinal Disorders Cadmium sulphuratum (Cadm. sulph.) Core GI picture — "low forms of disease" with profound prostration, severe vomiting, and offensive black/bloody discharges (Boericke 1927). Best suited to devastating, often acute or toxic sRead more
ICadmium sulphuratum vs Hydrastis canadensis in Gastrointestinal Disorders
Cadmium sulphuratum (Cadm. sulph.)
Core GI picture — “low forms of disease” with profound prostration, severe vomiting, and offensive black/bloody discharges (Boericke 1927). Best suited to devastating, often acute or toxic states such as yellow fever, cholera infantum, persistent vomiting in carcinoma, gastric flu, and the GI effects of alcoholism (Boericke 1927; Clarke 1900; Hering 1879).
Keynotes & pathogenesis
– Stomach. Burning and cutting pains; intense nausea — patient must lie still; black / coffee-ground vomit; vomiting of mucus, green slime, or blood with marked prostration and epigastric tenderness; salty or rancid eructations; cold perspiration on the face (Boericke 1927; Clarke 1900).
– Abdomen. Sore, tender, tympanitic; region of liver sore; sensation of coldness in stomach and hypochondria; cutting pains in bowels and kidneys; pain in abdomen accompanying every bout of vomiting (Hering 1879; Boericke 1927).
– Stool / Rectum. Gelatinous, yellowish-green, semi-fluid stools (a classic cholera infantum image); black, offensive clots of blood from the bowels; urinary suppression may co-occur (Boericke 1927; Clarke 1900).
– Modalities / causation. Symptoms aggravated after drinking beer, in the forenoon, during pregnancy, in drunkards, and after stomach cramps (Hering 1879). Clarke (1900) makes the causation explicit: it acts well in **drunkards** with gastric derangement.
– Concomitants. Great exhaustion / collapse; cold sweat; constricted oesophagus with difficult swallowing; “stringy, offensive exudation on mucous membrane” (Boericke 1927).
Hydrastis canadensis (Hydr.)
Core GI picture — a chronic, atonic, catarrhal mucosal remedy centred on thick, yellow, viscid / ropy secretions, weak digestion, and obstinate constipation (Boericke 1927; Nash 1899; Mann n.d.). The pace is slow and the patient is wasted, not collapsed.
Keynotes & pathogenesis
– Mouth / Tongue. Tongue large, flabby, white, slimy; shows imprint of teeth; feels scalded; stomatitis and fissures (Boericke 1927).
– Stomach. Constant sore feeling; weak digestion; bitter taste; pain “as from a hard-cornered substance”; gone feeling in epigastrium; pulsation; cannot eat bread or vegetables; atonic dyspepsia, gastritis, ulceration and carcinoma of stomach (Boericke 1927; Nash 1899).
– Liver & abdomen. Gastro-duodenal catarrh; liver torpid and tender; jaundice; tendency to gallstones; dull dragging in the right groin radiating to the right testicle (Boericke 1927; Hering 1879).
– Rectum / Stool. Chronic constipation as a leading indication — “Hydrastis is a good remedy for chronic constipation” (Nash 1899). Sinking feeling in stomach and dull headache accompany the stool. Smarting in the rectum during and long after stool; prolapsed, fissured anus; haemorrhoids that exhaust even with a light flow (Boericke 1927; Hering 1879).
– General character. “Thick, yellowish, tenacious and notably ropy or stringy discharges from any mucous outlet” (Mann n.d.; Nash 1899). Marked emaciation and prostration, weak muscular power, action on the liver pronounced (Mann n.d.; Boericke 1927).
– Posology note. Nash (1899) observed that constipation usually requires the tincture or low dilutions, not the high potencies.
Side-by-side comparison
1. Pace / acuity: Acute, devastating, often toxic (yellow fever, cholera, carcinoma, alcohol) (1,2,3) Cadmium sulphuratum | Chronic, atonic, slowly progressive (1,4) Hydrastis canadensis
2. Pace of weakness: Sudden collapse with cold sweat (1,2) Cadmium sulphuratum | Gradual emaciation, weak muscular power (1,5) Hydrastis canadensis
3. Vomiting: Marked — black / coffee-ground, of blood, slime, acid or yellow matter; must lie still (1,2,3) Cadmium sulphuratum | Not a leading feature; “gone” sinking feeling predominates (1,4)Hydrastis canadensis
4. Stool: Gelatinous, yellowish-green, semi-fluid; black offensive clots of blood; possible urinary suppression (1,2) Cadmium sulphuratum | Obstinate constipation, sinking + headache during stool; smarting & prolapse (1,4,5) Hydrastis canadensis
5. Pain character: Burning & cutting in stomach; coldness in stomach / hypochondria (1,2,3) Cadmium sulphuratum | Sore, weak, heavy; “pain as from a hard-cornered substance” (1) Hydrastis canadensis
6. Discharges: Black, offensive, bloody — destructive (1,2) Cadmium sulphuratum | Thick, yellow, viscid / ropy, tenacious catarrhal mucus (1,4,5) Hydrastis canadensis
7. Liver region: Soreness, tympanites, coldness, pulsation (1,3) Cadmium sulphuratum | Torpid, tender, jaundice, gallstone tendency (1,4) Hydrastis canadensis
8. Rectum: Cramping & urging with vomiting (1,3) Cadmium sulphuratum | Fissure, prolapse, exhausting haemorrhoids (1,4) Hydrastis canadensis
9. Causation / aetiology: Alcohol, pregnancy, beer, forenoon aggravation (2,3) Cadmium sulphuratum | Weakened digestion, mucosal catarrh, biliary stasis (4,5) Hydrastis canadensis
10. Patient type: Prostrated drunkard; patient in a “low” toxic state (1,2) Cadmium sulphuratum | Worn, weak, catarrhal patient; cancer / ulcer diathesis (1,4) Hydrastis canadensis
11. Modalities: Worse: beer, morning, pregnancy, carrying burdens (2,3) Cadmium sulphuratum | Worse: bread / vegetables; better: rest, warm drinks (typical of atonic dyspepsia) (1,4) Hydrastis canadensis
Differentiating hints
1. Vomiting present and destructive → think Cadm. sulph.; vomiting minimal but catarrh and constipation dominate → Hydr. (1,2,4)
2. Discharge is stringy / ropy / yellow → Hydr. (Kali-bi. is the closest differential, but with more marked ulceration and tenacious mucus elsewhere) (5,4)
– Discharge is black / bloody / gelatinous-green, with collapse and cold sweat → Cadm. sulph. (1,2)
3. Liver is the epicentre — torpid, tender, with jaundice / gallstones and right-groin dragging → Hydr.1,4)
– Stomach burns and cuts, patient must lie still, face cold and sweaty → Cadm. sulph. (1,2,3)
References
1. Boericke W. *Pocket manual of homœopathic materia medica*. 9th ed. New York: Boericke & Runyon; 1927. Cadmium sulphuratum; Hydrastis canadensis.
See less2. Clarke JH. *A dictionary of practical materia medica*. Vol. 1. London: Homœopathic Publishing Co.; 1900. Cadmium sulphuratum, p. 401–6.
3. Hering C. *The guiding symptoms of our materia medica*. Vol. 2. Philadelphia: Hahnemann Publishing House; 1879. Cadmium sulphuratum, p. 379–88.
4. Hering C. *The guiding symptoms of our materia medica*. Vol. 6. Philadelphia: Hahnemann Publishing House; 1879. Hydrastis canadensis, p. 533–60.
5. Nash EB. *Leaders in homœopathic therapeutics*. 4th ed. Philadelphia: Boericke & Tafel; 1899. Hydrastis canadensis, p. 257–65.