Sepia is adapted to persons of dark hair, rigid
fibre, but mild and easy disposition ( Puls. ).
Diseases of women: especially those occurring during pregnancy,
child-bed and lactation; or diseases attended with sudden prostration
and sinking faintness ( Murex , Nux m. ); "the washer woman's
remedy." complaints that are brought on by or aggravated after
laundry work.
Pains in Sepia extend from other parts to the back (rev. of Sab.
); are attended with shuddering (with chilliness, Puls. ).
Particularly sensitive to cold air, "chills so easily;"
lack of vital heat, especially in chronic diseases (in acute diseases,
Led. ).
Sensation of a ball in inner parts; during menses, pregnancy, lactation;
with constipation, diarrhoea, haemorrhoids, leucorrhoea and all
uterine affections.
Faints easily: after getting wet; from extremes of heat or cold;
riding in a carriage; while kneeling at church.
Coldness of the vertex with headache ( Ver. - heat of vertex, Calc.
, Graph. , Sulph. ).
Anxiety: with fear, flushes of heat over face and head; about real
or imaginary friends; with uterine troubles.
Great sadness and weeping. Dread of being alone; of men; of meeting
friends; with uterine troubles.
Indifferent: even to one's family; to one's occupation ( Fl. ac.
, Phos. ac. ); to those whom she loves best.
Greedy, miserly ( Lyc. ).
Indolent: does not want to do anything, either work or play; even
an exertion to think.
Headache: in terrific shocks; at menstrual nisus, with scanty flow;
in delicate, sensitive, hysterical women; pressing, bursting <
motion, stooping, mental labor, > by external pressure, continued
hard motion.
Great falling of the hair, after chronic headaches or at the climacteric.
Yellowness: of the face; conjunctiva; yellow spots on the chest;
a yellow saddle across the upper part of the cheeks and nose; a
"tell tale face" of uterine ailments.
All the coverings of the neck felt too tight and were constantly
loosened ( Lach. ).
Herpes circinatus in isolated spots on upper part of body (in intersecting
rings over whole body, [Tell.]).
Pot-belliness of mothers (of children, Sulph. ).
Painful sensation of emptiness, "all-gone" feeling in
the epigastrium, relieved by eating ( Chel. , Mur. , Phos. ).
Tongue foul, but becomes clear at each menstrual nisus, returns
when flow ceases; swelling and cracking of lower lip.
Constipation: during pregnancy ( Alum. ); stool hard, knotty, in
balls, insufficient, difficult; pain in rectum during and long after
stool ( Nit. ac. , Sulph. ); sense of weight or ball in anus, not
> by stool.
Urine: deposits in a reddish clay-colored sediment which adheres
to the vessel as if it has been burned on; fetid, so offensive must
be removed from the room (horribly offensive after standing, [Indium])..
Enuresis: bed is wet almost as soon as the child goes to sleep
( Kreos. ); always during the first sleep.
Gleet: painless, yellowish, staining linen; meatus glued together
in morning; obstinate, of long standing ( Kali iod. ); sexual organs,
weak and exhausted.
Violent stitches upward in the vagina; lancinating pains from the
uterus to the umbilicus.
Prolapsus of uterus and vagina; pressure and bearing down as if
everything would protrude from pelvis; must cross limbs tightly
to "sit close" to prevent it; with oppression of breathing
(compare Agar. , Bell. , Lil. , Murex , Sanic. ).
Irregular menses of nearly every form - early, late, scanty, profuse,
amenorrhoea or menorrhagia - when associated with the above named
symptoms.
Morning sickness of pregnancy: the sight or thought of food sickens
( Nux ); the smell of cooking food nauseates ( Ars. , Colch. ).
Dyspnoea: < sitting, after sleep, in room, > dancing or walking
rapidly.
Erythism; flushes of heat from least motion; with anxiety and faintness;
followed by perspiration over whole body; climacteric ( Lach. ,
Sang. , Sulph. , Tub. ); ascends, from pelvic organs.
Itching of skin; of various parts; of external genitalia; is >
scratching; and is apt to change to burning ( Sulph. ).
Relations. - Complementary: Natrum mur.
Inimical: to, Lach. , should not be used before or after; to, Puls
, with which it should never be alternated.
Similar: to, Lach. , Sang. , Ustil. , in climacteric irregularities
of the circulation.
Frequently indicated after: Sil. , Sulph.
A single dose often acts curatively for many weeks.
Aggravation. - In afternoon or evening; from cold air or dry east
wind; sexual excesses; at rest; sultry moist weather; before a thunderstorm
( Psor. ).
Amelioration. - Warmth of bed, hot applications; violent exercise.
Many symptoms of Sepia, especially those of head, heart and pelvis,
are both < and > by rest and exercise.
Sepia antidotes mental effects of overuse of tobacco, in patients
of sedentary habits who suffer from over-mental exertion.
Sepia
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