Ipecac - Gerry
Ipecac - Gerry
Ipecac - Gerry
I’m extraordinarily patient provided I get my own way in the end. [Margaret Thatcher]
Cephaelis ipecacuanha – Ipecacuanha, Ipec Root.
Family Rubiaceae – other members include Cinchona (Quinine Bark), Coffea (Coffee), Galium-
Aparine (Cleavers), Uncaria (Cat’s Claw), Yohimbe.
Causations – Ill effects of vexation, reserved displeasure. Injuries, loss of blood, suppressed
eruptions. Morphine, opium and heroin addictions. Quinine. Indigestible food, rich food, pork,
pastry, fruits, candy, ice cream.
MODALITIES:
Worse: Better:
WARMTH; damp warmth; warm room; warm Open air
moist, south winds.
Generally warm-blooded.
Overeating [ice cream; pork; veal; mixed or
rich foods; fruits; salad; fats]. Fasting.
Periodically. Quinine. Heat and cold.
Recession of eruptions. Slightest motion.
Winter and dry weather. Autumn. Cold nights
after hot days.
Stooping [vomiting].
OVERVIEW:
Morrison: Whenever nausea and vomiting are a prominent element of a case we must think of
Ipecac. Virtually any organ system may be affected in this remedy and yet there is nearly always a
concomitant action on the stomach. Despite this almost universal tendency for vomiting, there is
no amelioration and often a general aggravation from emesis. There are two special areas of
MAIN SYMPTOMS:
Murphy: “The stomachic disgust of the remedy is depicted on the countenance, which expresses
nausea. The corners of the mouth are drawn down. Blue rings round the eyes. Sometimes the
mental state corresponds: "Moroseness and contempt for everything,” “Disdainful humour”. The
irritability of the elders becomes in children crying and screaming.”
Ailments, PAINS and CONSTANT NAUSEA and vomiting. Nausea
not amel. by vomiting. “Adapted to cases where the gastric symptoms
predominate” [Allen]
Constant nausea which is incapacitating; stomach seems to
hang loose inside; nausea unrelieved by vomiting. Stomach
feels relaxed, as if hanging down.
VOMITING worse STOOPING
Diarrhoea of a dysenteric nature. Autumnal dysentery; cold nights,
after hot days. Nausea and vomiting of pregnancy.
NO THIRST.
RESPIRATORY AILMENTS and NAUSEA and CLEAN TONGUE – “Constant nausea with a
clean tongue is the watchword” [Dewey]
Gastric ailments [NAUSEA] and constant SALIVATION.
Troubles arising from fat food, pork, pastry, candy, etc
HAEMORRHAGES [epistaxis, haemorrhoids, menstruation, hematemesis] of bright red colour and
sudden [haemorrhage and vomiting both represent loss of body fluids]
Uterine haemorrhage which starts suddenly with bright red uncoagulated blood, coming
in gushes, often with nausea and faintness.
Metrorrhagia, < motion, < during labour or postpartum. Severe dysmenorrhea with nausea
Homeopathy 2 2009. Gerry Dendrinos. CIT. Ipecac Page 2 of 7
Weakness AFTER MENSES.
Asthmatic bronchitis and coughs especially of children.
COLDS in children; starting with stoppage of the nose at night, followed by hoarseness and
suffocative, spasmodic cough; and retching and vomiting. DRY, SPASMODIC COUGH,
ENDING IN CHOKING AND GAGGING
RATTLING, great accumulation of mucus in chest, but NO EXPECTORATION. Child
stiffens and becomes pale or blue; gasps for breath [Ant-Tart.]. Comes on in warm humid
weather. Respiration arrested from severity of cough. Hemoptysis.
Pertussis or other severe coughs with retching, vomiting, stiffness, and cyanosis.
Bronchiolitis. Croup. Bronchiolitis, bronchitis or asthma with spasmodic, suffocative cough
and retching and VOMITING.
CLINICAL:
Asthma. Bronchitis. Epistaxis. Haemorrhage. Hematuria. Hemoptysis. Metrorrhagia. Migraine.
Miscarriage. Pertussis. Recurring fevers.
NUCLEUS:
1. Ailments or pains attended with constant nausea and clean tongue.
2. No thirst.
3. Worse Heat.
4. Profuse salivation during nausea.
5. Spasmodic respiratory ailments.
DIFFERENTIAL:
Complementary: Cuprum. Arnica. Ant-Tart.
Compare: Tabac. Kali-C. Kali-S. Sang. Ant-Tart. Puls. Lobelia. Squilla. Ars-Alb.
NOTES:
In whooping cough a characteristic is the spasmodic rigidity of the patient. “Child loses breath, turns pale,
stiff and blue, strangling with gagging and vomiting of mucus, bleeding from nose or mouth.”
Guernsey thus describes the effect of Ip. in the female sexual sphere in which the hemorrhagic power of the
remedy is of the highest importance: “Threatened miscarriage often with a sharp pain around the umbilicus,
which runs downward to the uterus with constant nausea and discharge of blood before the proper period,
metrorrhagia often after confinement, which is heralded by a low pulse, nausea, etc., there is a steady flow of
bright red blood, which may soak through the bed to the floor or may run over the foot of the bed.” Where
there is this steady flow of bright red blood give Ipecac, run from above down, some from left to right
(cutting pain in abdomen).
From Ellingwood (1919), American Materia Medica (a classic Eclectic herbal materia medica):
PREPARATIONS—
Extractum Ipecac Fluidum, Fluid Extract of Ipecac; dose, from one
to forty minims.
Syrupus Ipecac, Syrup of Ipecac; dose, from ten to sixty minims. Pulv. Ipecac et Opii, Powder of
Ipecac and Opium, composed of Ipecac and opium of each ten parts, Sugar of Milk, eighty parts;
dose, from three to ten grains.
Specific Medicine Ipecac; dose, for gastric, intestinal or bronchial irritation, five drops in four
ounces of water; a tablespoonful every hour. As an emetic, from five to twenty minims in hot water.
Alcresta Ipecac is prepared by the action of Lloyd's reagent on the solution of the alkaloids of
ipecac. It represents the medicinal properties of the ipecac, but will not produce nausea or emesis.
It is superior to emetine in its general use because it is not hypodermic. One tablet represents ten
grains of the powdered ipecac. It may be given in doses of one, two or three tablets three times per
day, before meals,
Physiological Action of Ipecac, (J. U. Lloyd, Ph.D., LL.D., Ph. M., Western Druggist).—
Ipecacuanha root, from its first appearance in our materia medica, has been prized as an emetic
and anti-dysenteric remedy.
The peculiar effect that the dust of ipecacuanha powder exerts upon the respiratory organs of
some persons has been noted by early observers. Lewis, in 1761, makes the following statement:
“Geoffroy observed that in pulverizing considerable quantities, the finer powder that flies off, unless
great care be taken to avoid it, is apt to afflict the operator with difficulty of breathing, spitting of
blood and bleeding at the nose, or swelling and inflammation of the eyes and face, and sometimes
of the throat, adding that these symptoms disappear in a few days, usually spontaneously.
Poisoning in this manner may be treated by blood-letting and the taking of a decoction of uva ursi
and extract of rhatany; in another more recent instance, relief was afforded by a dose of extract of
quebracho.” Powdered ipecac applied to the skin produces irritation and redness, followed finally
by small isolated pustules, which increase in size to small ulcers. The powdered ipecac in one-sixth
of a grain doses is a stomachic tonic, stimulating the salivary and gastric secretions. In doses of