China officinalis

Materia Medica Monograph · One remedy focus

China officinalis

Overview

China officinalis is among the most frequently encountered remedies in clinical and educational settings. This monograph summarises classical keynotes for study and peer discussion — not as a substitute for materia medica texts or supervised training.

Keynotes

  • Indifference to loved ones; worn-out caregivers
  • Keynote cluster for China officinalis (study monograph)

Mentals

  • Irritable, averse to sex and duties
  • Apply mentals only when confirmed in case

Physicals

  • Hormonal shifts, prolapse sensation, ringworm
  • Cross-check with repertory rubrics

Modalities

  • Worse before menses; better vigorous exercise

Relationships

  • Complementary Nat-m, Phos; follows Nat-m

Clinical uses

  • Individualised prescribing when the totality matches.
  • Useful teaching remedy for repertory and comparison exercises.
  • Often revisited in follow-up when initial partial simillimum was close.

Compare with

  • Similar Nat-m, Lyc; contrast Puls

Discussion question

Which rubric would you repertorise first for this remedy in a mixed case — mental generals, peculiar physicals, or modalities?


Remedy tag: china-officinalis · ~8 min read

Thank you for this write-up on China officinalis.

In my clinic I often wonder: how long do you personally wait before intervening when the main complaint flares briefly but generals improve?

Would you treat a pediatric case differently here?

Curious to hear how others apply this in busy OPD settings.

Clinical opinion (Materia Medica)

I agree with the emphasis on totality over local labels. In similar situations I document:

  • Sleep and thermal state first
  • Mood/energy before skin or pain scores
  • Any new symptom with timing after the dose

One caution: polypharmacy in elderly fictional cases can mimic remedy failure. Always check maintaining causes.

Well-structured article — sharing with interns.

Learning comment

This helped me revise follow-up questions I use in teaching clinic:

  1. “What improved first?”
  2. “What is worse, if anything?”
  3. “Any new symptom since the dose?”

For China officinalis, I would add a rubric-level discussion in class. Students often jump to pathology too early.

Grateful for community resources like this.

Alternative viewpoint

I teach students to read compare with sections aloud during case conference. For polychrests, temperament often breaks ties when physicals overlap.

Some colleagues prefer Boenninghausen’s location/modality layers here — both are legitimate teaching paths.