A comparative analysis of the proving symptomatology of Malus domestica with existing remedies from the Rosacea family
Date
2021-05-27
Authors
Zuma, Minenhle Goodenough
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Abstract
Introduction
Over the years there has been an increase in the number of homoeopathic drug
provings. This has in turn, led to an increase in the number of available homoeopathic
remedies and, consequently, an expansion of the materia medica. The increase in the
number of available homoeopathic remedies is a massive milestone in the field of
homoeopathy. However, some practitioners acknowledge that finding a homoeopathic
similimum is rather daunting due to the excessive volume of data. A system of
prescribing that would make the process of finding a similimum logical is necessary.
Numerous homoeopaths have developed methods to analyse and classify remedies.
The Doctrine of Signatures, miasmatic theory developed by Samuel Hahnemann, the
homoeopathic repertories and group analysis are but some of the developments that
have been implemented to assist homoeopathic practitioners and students grasp the
excessive content that exists in the materia medicae and the field of homoeopathy as
a whole. These methods have also made prescribing for both students and
homoeopaths logical and much easier. Innovative homoeopathic authors like
Sankaran (2005a), Scholten (1993) and Mangialavori (2010) have developed systems
of studying remedies in groups or kingdoms, now famously known as group analysis.
Group analysis offers a valuable tool for studying and prescribing homoeopathic
remedies with accuracy.
Aim
This is a non-empirical correlational, theoretical study with the aim of studying and
comparing the proving symptomatology of Malus domestica with the following selected
plant remedies within the Rosaceae plant family: Crataegus oxyacantha,
Hydrocyanicum acidum, Laurocerasus, Prunus spinosa and Rosa damascene. This
study also aimed to expand the knowledge of the Rosaceae family and by so doing
improve the application of the remedies in a clinical context.
A MacRepertory® search was conducted to choose remedies belonging to the
Rosaceae family with the greatest number of rubrics hence the above-mentioned
remedies were selected as the sample for this study. A good representation of the remedy in the materia medica and the number of successful clinical cases available
were other factors that were considered on selecting sample remedies.
Objectives
1. Describe and organise symptomatology of selected remedies of the Rosaceae
plant family and tabulate their respective symptomatology in order to derive
homoeopathic themes.
2. Determine homoeopathic symptomatology, rubrics and themes of Malus
domestica in order to enable family contextualisation.
3. Compare the themes and sensations that emerge with existing themes and
sensations of Malus domestica and the selected Rosaceae plant family
remedies.
Methodology
To fulfil the purposes of this study the proving symptomatology of Malus domestica
was thoroughly studied and interrogated. A computer repertory search was conducted
using MacRepertory® to extract all the rubrics of the study remedies. The sources that
were used included the documented proving of Malus domestica 30CH, materia
medicae and MacRepertory®, which is an electronic database consisting of
repertories, materia medica, books and journal articles. The symptomatology, themes,
sensations, and rubrics were visually analysed and compared with each other in the
form of tables for easy reference and to identify existing commonalities and
differences. The collected themes and sensations were subsequently analysed. The
emerging sensations were then compared with those proposed by Sankaran.
Results
The Rosaceae remedies yielded numerous themes and sensations, especially those
relating to the mental sphere, chest, respiratory, heart and circulation, extremities and
the head. The following sensations were noted: tightness, spasms, oppression,
suffocation, paralysis, constriction, disconnection and pressure (inwards and
outwards). A few polarities were noted in the mental themes. The polarity that exists
between some of the themes are:
• Calmness and quietness vs Nervousness, anxiety, restlessness, and fear; • Increased memory and concentration levels vs Mental weakness, mental
dullness, loss of memory and mental exhaustion.
The comparative analysis of the proving symptomatology of Malus domestica and
existing Rosaceae plant remedies namely, Crataegus oxyacantha, Hydrocyanicum
acidum, Laurocerasus, Prunus spinosa and Rosa damascene exhibited numerous
commonalities.
Conclusion
The study established clearly discernable commonalities between Malus domestica
30CH and existing Rosaceae plant remedies, with the majority of these commonalities
relating to the mind, head, chest, respiratory, extremities, heart and circulation and the
abdomen. This study demonstrated that group analysis can validate and expand
provings, hence expanding knowledge and clinical application of these remedies.
Description
Dissertation submitted in partial compliance with the requirements for the Master’s Degree in
Health Sciences: Homoeopathy, Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2021.
Keywords
Homeopathy, Malus domestica, Rosaceae remedies, Alternative medicine
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4020