Arum Triphyllum

Sonia Khatun
5 Min Read

1. Plant Origin (Source & Identity)

  • Botanical name: Arum triphyllum
  • Family: Araceae
  • Common names: Jack-in-the-Pulpit, Indian Turnip
  • Natural habitat: Moist woodlands of North America
  • Part used: Fresh root (corm)

Source Confirmation:
Arum triphyllum is a plant-derived homeopathic remedy, prepared from the fresh underground corm. Botanical and floral images are accurate representations.


2. Extraction & Preparation (Homeopathic Methodology)

  • The fresh corm is harvested before flowering and macerated in alcohol to create the mother tincture (Q).
  • This tincture undergoes serial dilution and succussion, following classical homeopathic pharmacopeial standards, to produce centesimal potencies.

Safety Note:
The raw plant is highly acrid and irritating. Only homeopathically prepared potencies are used therapeutically.


3. Core Sphere of Action


Arum triphyllum primarily acts on:

  • Mucous membranes of the mouth, nose, and throat
  • Upper respiratory tract
  • Skin around the mouth and nostrils
  • Nervous system (notably restless or compulsive behaviors)

Central Theme:
Intense acridity with constant irritation, rawness, and compulsive picking or destructive habits.


4. Key Clinical Features & Repertory Rubrics


Mouth & Nose

  • Cracked, bleeding lips
  • Raw, excoriated nostrils
  • Burning, acrid nasal discharge

Mind / Behavior

  • Restlessness
  • Constant picking at the nose, lips, or fingers
  • Inability to stop destructive movements

Throat & Respiration

  • Hoarseness
  • Croupy, harsh cough
  • Raw, burning sensation in the throat

5. Comparative Remedies (Differentiation Table)

FeatureArum TriphyMercuriusNat murHepar sulph
DischargeAcrid, corrosiveThick, offensiveWateryPurulent
Skin around noseRaw, bleedingUlceratedCrackedInflamed
BehaviorConstant pickingIrritableReservedSensitive
CoughCroupyLooseDrySuppurative

6. Clinical Insights


Arum triphyllum is especially valuable in pediatric ENT cases where nasal discharge is so acrid it causes raw, cracked, and bleeding lips and nostrils. A distinguishing sign is relentless picking or rubbing of the nose, lips, or face-even during sleep. In croup, select this remedy when hoarseness, throat rawness, and compulsive facial picking are present. Its indication is less about infection severity and more about the chemical-like tissue irritation it produces.

  • If discharge is notably offensive and accompanied by profuse salivation – consider Mercurius.
  • If suppuration with chilliness is prominent – consider Hepar sulphuris.

7. Homeopathic Uses


Common (Acute) Indications

  • Acute coryza with excoriation
  • Cracked lips, bleeding nostrils
  • Croup with hoarseness
  • Raw, sore throat

Chronic Indications

  • Recurrent ENT infections
  • Chronic nasal excoriation
  • Habitual picking disorders
  • Persistent hoarseness

Extreme/Adjunctive Indications

  • Severe laryngeal inflammation
  • Advanced croup

Note: Emergency airway management is critical in severe cases.


8. Constitutional Portrait

  • Most frequently indicated in children
  • Restless, irritable, and prone to repetitive destructive habits
  • Sensitive mucous membranes
  • Local irritation triggers compulsive movements and tissue breakdown

9. Potency & Practical Usage

PotencyPack SizeClinical Role
6C100 mlAcute ENT irritation, excoriation
200C100 mlRecurrent or chronic mucosal disorders

Dosage Guidance:

  • Lower potencies may be repeated cautiously in acute scenarios.
  • Higher potency is generally reserved for recurrent patterns and used less frequently.

10. Special Considerations: Pediatrics & Seniors


Children:

  • Coryza with raw nostrils
  • Croup with hoarseness

Seniors:

  • Chronic nasal irritation
  • Persistent hoarseness

Always rule out malignancy or medication-induced dryness in elderly patients.


11. Documented Clinical Applications


Authoritative references (Clarke, Boericke) highlight Arum triphyllum for:

  • Acrid nasal discharge
  • Excoriated nostrils
  • Habitual picking in children
  • Croup with raw throat

12. High-Yield Repertory Rubrics

  • Nose – discharge, acrid
  • Lips – cracked, bleeding
  • Face – picking, constant
  • Larynx – hoarseness
  • Cough – croupy

13. Main Differentials

  • Mercurius: Offensive discharge, prominent salivation
  • Natrum muriaticum: Dry cracks without acridity
  • Hepar sulphuris: Suppuration and chilliness

14. Clinical Decision Tips


Select Arum triphyllum when:

  • Nasal discharge excoriates skin
  • Lips and nostrils are cracked or bleeding
  • Child constantly picks at the face
  • Hoarseness and croup symptoms coexist

15. Sample Repertorization Chart

RubricArum TriphyMercNat murHepar
Acrid nasal discharge3211
Excoriated nostrils3221
Constant picking3110
Hoarseness2211
Croup2102

This revised summary provides a clear, structured, and professional overview of Arum triphyllum’s homeopathic profile, clinical indications, and differentiation points.

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