MANDRAGORA.
By Timothy F. Allen тАФ The Encyclopedia of Pure Materia Medica
Mandragora officinarum, Mill. (Also M. vernalis, Berthol.) Atropa mandragora, Linn.
Natural Order , Solanace├ж.
Common name , Mandrake.
Preparation , Tincture of plant without the root (Dufresne).
Authorities.
1 , Dr. L. C. Dufresne, Bib. Hom. de Gen├иve, 2, 498, 1834, effects on self and another from smelling repeatedly at short intervals of the expressed juice of the plant (which has a nauseating odor like reptiles' (adders') flesh); 2 , Dr. Benjamin W. Richardson, Brit. and For. Med.-Chir. Rev., 1874, p. 242, vol. 53; also vol. 51, effects of the tincture to 20 minims.
HEAD
EYE
EAR
- Exaggeration of sounds, 2.
NOSE
- Coryza, 1.
MOUTH
- The tincture benumbs the tongue when a little is placed upon it, 2.
- Singular taste, and sensation of acidity and dryness, which last for several days, 2.
STOOL
- Inaction of the bowels, with white had f├жces when the bowels are induced to act, 2.
RESPIRATORY ORGANS. [10.]
GENERAL SYMPTOMS
- A curious restless excitability, akin to hysteria, perhaps we might say essentially hysterical, 2.
- Lingering uneasiness and coldness after the removal of other symptoms, 2.
- Bodily weariness, 1.
- All the unpleasant symptoms go off night in bed, and are succeeded by a gentle perspiration, 1.
- Great irregularities in diet, such as the use of wine, coffee, and cigars, caused all the symptoms to disappear in three days in one prover; with a careful diet they lasted eight days, and were then removed by
Nux vom . and Belladonna , followed by Camphor, 1.
SLEEP
- Desire for sleep, 2.