Alstonia Sch.

Sonia Khatun
3 Min Read

1) Source Origin & Identity

  • Botanical name: Alstonia scholaris
  • Family: Apocynaceae
  • Common names: Devil’s Tree, Blackboard Tree
  • Natural habitat: Tropical regions of India, Southeast Asia, and Australia
  • Part used: Fresh bark

Materia Medica Significance

Alstonia scholaris is a potent tonic and antimalarial remedy, chiefly acting on the digestive system and overall vitality. It is particularly valuable in cases of chronic diarrhea, malarial debility, anemia, and severe weakness, especially when the patient is exhausted and emaciated.

2.Extraction & Homeopathic Preparation

  • Mother tincture (Q): Made by macerating the fresh bark in alcohol and then filtering.
  • Potentization: Involves serial dilution and succussion, typically on the C scale.

Safety note: Crude bark is medicinally strong. Homeopathic potencies are highly diluted and used according to pharmacopeial standards.

3.Core Remedy Picture (Keynotes)

Essence:

  • Profound weakness and debility
  • Marked loss of appetite
  • Chronic diarrhea with exhaustion
  • Malarial cachexia

Mental–Emotional:

  • Mental dullness due to weakness
  • Indifference and apathy
  • Lack of motivation from exhaustion

Physical Tendencies:

  • Chronic loose stools
  • Progressive weight loss
  • Anemia
  • Poor assimilation of food
  1. Uses in Homeopathy

A) Common Ailments

  • General debility after illness
  • Loss of appetite with weakness
  • Diarrhea with fatigue
  • Recovery after fevers

B) Chronic Ailments

  • Chronic diarrhea
  • Post-malarial weakness
  • Anemia with poor digestion
  • Chronic wasting disorders

C) Severe Presentations

  • Severe malarial cachexia (adjunctive use only; medical care essential)
  • Profound dehydration and exhaustion (supportive role only)
  1. Constitutional Profile — Who Benefits Most?
  • Thin, emaciated individuals
  • Patients recovering from malaria or prolonged fevers
  • Those with poor digestion and assimilation

How it affects them:


Chronic infection and digestive failure lead to wasting and loss of strength.

4.Potencies & Practical Use

PotencyPack SizePractical Clinical Use
6C100 mlChronic diarrhea, malarial debility, anemia

    Repetition:

    • Repeat cautiously
    • Reduce frequency as strength returns
    • Stop once vitality is restored
    1. Effects in Children & Seniors

    Children:

    • Chronic diarrhea with weight loss
    • Poor appetite, failure to thrive (medical supervision needed)

    Seniors:

    • Weakness after fevers
    • Chronic digestive exhaustion (rule out malignancy or systemic disease)

    5.Documented Clinical Use & References

    Classical sources (Boericke, Clarke, Hale) describe Alstonia scholaris for:

    • Chronic diarrhea
    • Malaria-related debility
    • Anemia and wasting

    Often compared with China officinalis, Arsenicum album, and Ferrum phosphoricum.

    6. Key Repertory Rubrics

    • Stomach: Poor appetite, weak digestion
    • Rectum: Chronic diarrhea
    • Generalities: Emaciation, weakness after fever

    7. Sample Repertorization Chart

    RubricAlstonia SchChinaArs albFerr-p
    Diarrhea – chronic3221
    Weakness after fever3321
    Emaciation3221
    Appetite – poor3111
    Anemia2213

      Clinical Insight:
      Choose Alstonia scholaris when chronic diarrhea and post-malarial debility with wasting are the dominant features in a case.

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