# Blatta Orientalis

## Remedy Classification
- **Type:** Homeopathic Remedy
- **Miasm:** Tubercular Miasm
- **Temperament:** Chilly
- **Aggravation Time:** Morning

## Keynote Indications
Blattaorientalis was found accidentally to relieve asthma in a patient who took tea in which 
a cockroach had been infused. More effective in low potencies for acute attacks, the higher potencies being 
given in the more chronic stages. 
Asthma, especially when associated with bronc hitis (after Ars., when it is insufficient). Acts best in stout and 
corpulent patients. Much pus-like yellow mucus. Threatened suffocation threatened by great accumulation 
of mucus. 
Asthmatic fits at night, coughs during the day with slight expectoration and hurried breathing. 
Bronchitis and tuberculosis, with short - nessofbreath. Cough withdyspnea  in bron chitis and tuberculosis. 
Chronic bronchitis. Colds that bring on bronchitis with fever, may develop into asthma. Emaciation.

## Modalities (Aggravations / Ameliorations)
Worse from dust. Worse during the rain. Worse winter  
COMMENTS - Asthma with a lot of mu cus and rattling, yellow brown phlegm (Nat -s.). Bronchitis with yellow 
mucus, difficulty breathing. Keynote wor se dust (Sil.), sensitivity to dust (Poth.), especially in dry climates. 
Great oppression of the chest, “as if a weight or a heaviness on the chest,” with asthma. “Feeble lungs,” totally 
inability to expectorate the thick, yellow mucus (Hydr.). 
Easier breathing with head bend forward or supporting head with elbows while sitting. Must sit up in bed. Loud, 
coarse wheezing, like a saw through pinewood. Spasmodic, debilitatingcoughs.Greatfearof suffocation and 
dying. Lack of ambition to live, great weariness in this remedy. 
Clammy, cold sweat. General swelling of the body. Tends to stooped shoulders, bar rel-chest. Bronchial 
spasms. Locked jaws. Unconsciousness. 
Used in tuberculosis epidemics, especially the last stages. Characteristic lung weakness, the doctor would 
have to put their ear next to the person's mouth to hear the case (Stann.).  
Aggravated at 9:00 p.m. (Cham., Bell.). 
Dr. Ray recorded a case, one of the first for this remedy, in which a man had a 25 -year history of severe 
asthma cured with Blatta. He was emaciated, had nightly attacks, troublesome cough and very frothy mucus. 
Worse lying down. Stooped shoulders and a stiff neck. Despaired, feeble, could not expectorate, speechless, 
so weak he could not talk (Stann.). 
Anshutz recorded 4 cases concernin g the use of Blatta. The first, “A young man, aged thirty -four, had been 
suffering from asthma for some years. He was invariably worse during the rains and the winter and chronic 
bronchitis was almost a constant accompani ment. He tried allopathic and lots  of patent drugs with only 
temporary amelioration of the trouble. At last in November, 1888, he came to my office.  
“On examination of his chest I found there was a chronic bronchitis. He said that slight difficulty of breathing 
with hacking cough used to t rouble him every night, besides a cold would be followed by a severe attack of 
asthma, so its periodicity of recurrence was irregular. 1 treated him with Ipecac, Arsenicum alb., etc. The first-
named medicine did him the most good, but he never got entirely well. 
“In July, 1889 I put him under tincture Blatta orientalis 3x, drop doses, three or four times daily. Under its use 
he began to improve steadily and had only two or three attacks of asthmatic fits since he used this drug, which 
were promptly relieved by the same drug in lx potency. 
“Euphrasia off. was prescribed for his cold whenever he had it. He is free from all trouble for the last year and 
 
 
a half. His general condition is so much changed that there is no apprehension of the recurrence of his former 
illness.” 
The second case, “A shoemaker, aged forty-two, robust constitution, has been suffering with asthma for three 
or four years. He came to my office on the 6th of November, 1890. He had been getting asthmatic fits almost 
every night since October  last. Dur ing the day a troublesome cough comes with slight expectoration and 
hurried breathing, 
made him unable to attend his business. 
“Tincture Blatta orientalis lx, one drop doses, six times daily, was given. The very first day he perceived the 
good effect of the medicine and continued the same for a month, when he got well and discontinued the 
medicine. He has been keeping well ever since.” 
Anshutz's third case concerned “A gentle man, the keeper of a common shop, aged forty -four, belonging to a 
village, had been suffering from asthma for the last eight years and had always been under treatment of native 
kabiraj (medical men). In June, he came to the city and I was called to see him on the 14th of June to treat him 
for his asthma. The day previous he had an attack, for which he took no medicine. Each of his attacks usually 
lasted four or five days. 
“I gave him Blatta orientalis 1 x trituration., one grain every two hours and left him six such powders to be taken 
during the day. He took them and felt bet ter the next day. He stayed here two or three days more and when 
well he wanted to proceed home, which was some couple of hundred miles. 
“He took with him two drachm phials of Blatta orientalis, one of lx and the other of 3x trituration. He continued 
the 3x, one grain doses, two or three times daily, for a month and discontinued afterward. He had no more 
asthmatic fits. 
“In January last, 1891,1 had a letter from him, thanking me for his recovery and asking for some of the same 
medicine for a friend of his, who had been suffering from asthma. The friend of his who used the same drug, 
Blatta orientalis, was equally benefited.” 
The fourth case, “Mrs. Datta, a thin lady, aged thirty -eight, mother of several children, had been exposed to 
cold, which brought on an  attack of bronchitis with fever. This in the course of a fortnight, developed into a 
regular fit of asthma. 
“She was all this time treated by an old school physician, but when the husband of the lady saw that she was 
daily getting worse and a new disease crept in, he made up his mind to change the treatment, I was called to 
see her in the morning of the 8th of June, 1890. 
“She became very much emaciated, could not take any food, had fever with acute bronchitis, hurried 
respiration, difficulty of breathing,  this she was complaining of bit terly, owing to which she could not lie down 
in bed, but had to sit up day and night. There was a prolonged fit of spasmodic cough at short intervals with 
slight expectoration, but these coughing fits would make her almost breathless. 
“This was the first time I prescribed Blatta orientalis lx in a case of asthma with fever and acute bronchitis. It 
answered my purpose well. She had only ten powders during the day and passed a comparatively better night. 
“Next morning when I saw her she was better except the coughing fits, which were continuing as before. The 
same medicine was repeated. On the 10th of June she had no asthmatic trouble at night, but there was not 
much improvement in her cough, Ant-t. and Bry. were needed to complete the cure.”

## Symptoms by System

### Mind
- Anxiety about health.
- Anxiety about health.

### Chest
- Chronic inflammation of bronchial tubes.
- Constitutions - Obesity, suited to corpulent people.
- Malarial cases and cases worse in rainy weather.
- Asthmatic constitutions.
- Severe chronic asthma.
- Shortness of breath.
- Difficult breathing, better from expectoration.
- Suffocation from great ac cumulation of mucus.
- Purulent tough, vis cid, yellow mucus.
- Cough with 
dyspnea.
- Pneumonia.
- Bronchitis and tuberculosis.
- Spasmodic cough at  short intervals with slight 
expectoration.

### Extremities
- Weakness in hollow of knee.

