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Jasminum officinale

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Sources: Allen, Clarke, Кларк
  1. Pharmacological Group
  2. Description
  3. Nosology
  4. Typical features
  5. Dif. diagnostics
  6. Psyche and consciousness
  7. Head, face, and ears
  8. Gastrointestinal tract
  9. Chest organs
  10. Cardiovascular system
  11. Common symptoms
  12. Analogs by action

Other names and synonyms

jasm.

Description Source

Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica - J.H. Clarke

Pharmacological Group

Homeopathic classical monopreparations

Description

 Jasminum officinale. White Jessamine. N. O. Jasminaceae. Lindley. Some botanists include the jasmines in the Oleaceae. Tincture of red berries.

Nosology

 Convulsions. Tetanus.

Typical features

 The only observation on this plant is one made by W. H. Hull on a boy who ate the red berries. They produced a comatose state, vomiting and convulsions ending in tetanus. Jasminum must not be confounded with Gelsemium, the Yellow jessamine, or Carolina jessamine, which belongs to a different order of plants. Gelsomino is the Italian for jessamine, and it is probably from this that the word Gelsemium is derived; and this will also account for the spelling Gelseminum, which has sometimes been used. The Treasury of вotany states that the bitter leaves of J. floribundum are used in Abyssinia against tapeworm; and the bitter root of J. angustifolium, powdered and mixed with the powdered root of Acorus calamus, is considered in India an excellent application in ringworm. Jasmin. offic. has not been used in medicine, but the poisoning case shows that it is a very powerful drug. The convulsive symptoms were by a bath. Symptoms go from above downwards and from left to right.

Dif. diagnostics

 Compare: Nyctanthes (bot.

Psyche and consciousness

 Comatose condition. Perfect insensibility.

Head, face, and ears

 Pupils immoderately dilated.
 Face pallid. Muscular movements first about eyes and face, especially left side, towards which eyes and facial muscles were directed.

Gastrointestinal tract

 Slight emesis. Slight emesis after a first sleep.

Chest organs

 Respiration somewhat rhonchial but of unusual frequency.

Cardiovascular system

 Pulse slow and feeble.

Common symptoms

 Muscular movements observed first about eyes and face, especially on left side, towards which eyes and facial muscles were directed, becoming generally more severe, going from head to left arm, then to left lower extremities, till finally the whole body was thrown into most violent convulsions. At one time the spasms were chiefly opisthotonus, when the whole surface was congested almost to a blackened hue; most marked about the muscles of the head and throat; jaws locked, trismus complete; by a bath. Weak and almost helpless for a few days. Lying on the floor in a fainting fit. Perfect insensibility. Surface cool.

Analogs by action

42a96bb5c8a2acfb07fc866444b97bf1
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