Chenopodium is prepared from oak trees grown in Jerusalem.
It is a fairly broad-spectrum remedy. It is related to the nerves
and paralysis related to them. According to most physicians, there is no
curativetreatment for the deafness
resulting from the paralysis of the auditory
nerve. Once the nerves are dead there is no hope of reviving them,
but recent research has shown that when a nerve has been damaged, the ends of
the adjoining nerves spread out to compensate for the loss. In particular,
modern scientific research has proved that when the nerves inside the eye
degenerate, new ones start developing. Sometimes when an eye has been lost,
nerve fibres develop from the healthy eye to connect with the dying and dead nerve
fibres of the affected eye. More experiments are being done. No doubt, the dead nerves do not vitalise,
but other nerves spread out to substitute them. If the nerve endings are not
completely dead, Chenopodium may revive the dying nerve fibres.
Most Chenopodium patients can hear only some sounds. For example, they may not be able to appreciate the voice of men
but can appreciate the voices of women and children. Because they
cannot hear so-called low-pitched (heavy) sounds, they can perceive
ones that are high-pitched. Many such patients who had limited hearing
got significantly better with the use of Chenopodium. Sometimes,
the patient feels vertigo
due to the ear problem. The hearing
decreases and there are noises in the ears. In this situation,
Chenopodium will restore the hearing. Chenopodium will restore the functions of
the auditory as well as vestibular nerves. If the voice is suddenly lost, Chenopodium
benefits this condition too. Chenopodium is also
useful in the treatment of right-sided paralysis of the
body (hemiplegia). It is also useful in the treatment of shoulder pain. Lycopodium is also useful in the treatment of right
shoulder pain, but in Chenopodium the pain is on both sides. In
Chenopodium, as in Opium, there is a tendency of developing apoplexy that
is more.pronounced in the case of Opium, but the Chenopodium
apoplexy can also resemble that of Opium. Suddenly, the face of such a
patient becomes red and congested.
The Chenopodium patient also
suffers.from sudden vertigo. The inborn tendency to develop
vertigo is also a symptom of Chenopodium. This condition is called Meniere’s disease.
In this disease, there is repeated vertigo associated with severe vomiting.
Chenopodium is also effective in treating lethargy, insensitivity,
unconsciousness, partial paralysis of the nerves, and in the enlargement of the
tonsils and neck glands. The
Chenopodium patient suffers from severe
pain in the backbone that spreads out over the shoulders and chest. Urination is very frequent,
the urine being yellowish in colour and frothy. There is an associated tingling
sensation at the urethra. Yellowish material deposits on the walls of the
container. This sign is also present in Chelidonium.
Some doctors have prescribed Chenopodium for the treatment
of roundworms and hookworm infestation. When Chenopodium oil is given in
repeated small doses, after some time the patient becomes free of these worms.
I however, have not practised using Chenopodium for this purpose.