What do you mean by Hydrogenoid constitution? what types of disease is prone to develop by this type of patient's constitution & why?
What do you mean by Hydrogenoid constitution? what types of disease is prone to develop by this type of patient's constitution & why?
ZannatBegginer
Hydrogenoid Constitution in Homoeopathy What It Means The Hydrogenoid constitution is one of three constitutional types introduced by the Bavarian physician Dr. Eduard von Grauvogl (1811–1877) in his 1865 Lehrbuch der Homoeopathie (Textbook of Homoeopathy), which he later expanded in 1870 (1,2). TheRead more
Hydrogenoid Constitution in Homoeopathy
What It Means
The Hydrogenoid constitution is one of three constitutional types introduced by the Bavarian physician Dr. Eduard von Grauvogl (1811–1877) in his 1865 Lehrbuch der Homoeopathie (Textbook of Homoeopathy), which he later expanded in 1870 (1,2). The other two are the Oxygenoid and the Carbo-nitrogenoid constitutions (2,3).
Grauvogl built the typology on the dominant chemical element supposedly in excess in the body fluids and tissues:
So, a hydrogenoid person is one whose blood and tissues hold an excess of hydrogen and therefore of water (1,2,4,5). The constitutional “label” is recognised clinically not by a blood test but by a characteristic pattern of modalities — the patient feels worse in cold, damp, rainy, foggy or thundery weather, from bathing, living near water (rivers, ponds, sea), and after aquatic foods such as fish, cucumbers, mushrooms, milk and sour things; they also tend to have periodic, intermittent complaints (2,3,4,5).
It is worth noting that Hahnemann’s concept of constitution (beschaffenheit) in the Organon (aphorisms 5, 102, 117, 138) refers to the sum of a person’s mental and physical characteristics that determine how they react to environmental stressors — Grauvogl’s hydrogenoid type is one operationalisation of this broader idea (3,6).
Why These Patients Are Prone to Certain Diseases — and Which
The classical explanation links susceptibility to the underlying biochemical bias (reductive metabolism, water-retention, poor resistance to damp), the dominant miasm (Sycosis in the hydrogenoid), and the modalities (worse from moisture, periodicity). The diseases most often cited in the homeopathic literature as typical of this constitution are:
1. Dropsy / oedematous conditions and lymphatic swelling. Excess water in blood and tissues, plus lymphatic (lymphatic) diathesis, makes hydrogenoid patients prone to fluid-retention states — dropsy, hydrocele, glandular enlargements (1,2,5,7).
2. Gonorrhoeal (sycotic) manifestations. Grauvogl and later writers such as H. C. Allen and Clarke identified the hydrogenoid type with the sycotic miasm — the chronic after-effects of suppressed or inherited gonorrhoea: wart-like growths, mucous discharges, figs/condylomata, chronic urethral or prostatic catarrh, and similar “moist, proliferative” complaints (1,8,9).
3. Catarrhal and mucous-membrane disorders of damp, changeable weather. Because symptoms flare in cold, damp or foggy conditions, hydrogenoid patients are said to be susceptible to catarrh, chronic sinusitis, bronchitis with profuse expectoration, asthma worse in damp, and intermittent fevers (1,3,4,5).
4. Intermittent / periodic fevers and periodic complaints (malaria-like periodicity), classically linked to Natrum sulphuricum and the sycotic miasm (3,4,5).
5. Vaccinosis and post-vaccination chronic illness are also absorbed into this type by later authors (3).
6. Rheumatic and cold-damp aggravated joint complaints, including gonococcal (sycotic) rheumatism (1,8).
7. Genito-urinary catarrhs and prostatic / vaginal discharges of a sycotic character (8,9).
The classic homeopathic materia medica (Clarke, Allen) and modern summaries list Thuja occidentalis, Natrum sulphuricum, Dulcamara, Antimonium tartaricum, Ipecacuanha, Pulsatilla, Calcarea carbonica, Rhus toxicodendron, and Arsenicum album as the remedies with the strongest hydrogenoid affinity, with Thuja described as the typical antisycotic for the hydrogenoid constitution and Natrum sulphuricum as the leading anti-intermittent (periodic) remedy (3,4,8,9).
Reference List (Vancouver style)
1. Grauvogl EV. *Lehrbuch der Homoeopathie*. Nürnberg: Verlag von Julius Spring; 1866.
2. Malcolm R, Rieberer G. Constitution and typology in homeopathy. In: Foundation Course in Medical Homeopathy, Part 3.4. London: Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine; 1996. p. 1–9.
3. Thakor H. Study of concept of constitution utilising homeopathic medical repertory by Robin Murphy. *Int J Homoeopath Sci*. 2025;9(4):171–173. doi:10.33545/26164485.2025.v9.i4.C.1908.
4. Campbell A. The concept of constitution in homoeopathy. *Homeopathy*. 2011;100(1–2):79–82. doi:10.1016/j.homp.2011.02.011.
5. Manhas SS, Singh LB. Constitutional treatment in homoeopathy: a narrative review. *Sustainability Agri Food Environ Res*. 2023;11(X):1–10. doi:10.7770/safer-V13N2-art510.
6. Hahnemann S. *Organon of Medicine*. 6th ed. New Delhi: Indian Books and Periodical Publishers; 2010.
7. National Health Portal of India. Constitution and constitutional approaches in homoeopathy [Internet]. New Delhi: NHP; [cited 2026 Jun 12]. Available from: https://nhp.gov.in/
8. Clarke JH. *A Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica*. London: Homoeopathic Publishing Company; 1900. Thuja occidentalis entry.
9. Allen HC. *Keynotes and Characteristics with Comparisons of Some of the Leading Remedies of the Materia Medica*. Philadelphia: Boericke & Tafel; 1898.
Sources
See less– Manhas SS, Singh LB. Constitutional treatment in homoeopathy: a narrative review. SAFER 2023.
– Thakor H. Study of concept of constitution utilising homeopathic medical repertory. Int J Homoeopath Sci 2025;9(4):171–173.
– Campbell A. The concept of constitution in homoeopathy. Homeopathy 2011;100(1–2):79–82.
– Malcolm R, Rieberer G. Constitution and Typology in Homeopathy. RLHH Foundation Course 1996.