Homeopathic Remedy List
At roots & wings Homeopathy we have a full homeopathic dispensary, and in Ireland professional homeopaths can buy homeopathic remedies online, but it is necessary to register first.
Once you are registered you can buy homeopathic remedies online or write a prescription for your client which they can then pick up or have sent to them.
If you need a remedy immediately, or you are not a professional homeopath do, please, give us a ring in the shop where there is always a qualified homeopath available to advise and send you out your remedy today.
Shop hours for orders: 11 am to 3pm Monday to Saturday
Phone: 00353 (0)1 2859142
Aethusa cynapium. Fool’s Parsley. (Europe.) N.O. Umbelliferae. Tincture of whole flowering plant.
Potassic- Aluminic Sulphate. Potash Alum. K2 SO4 AI2 SO4 24H2 O. Trituration of the pure crystals.
Tartar Emetic. Tartrate of Antimony and Potash. Trituration and solutions.
Androctonus amoreuxii hebraeus. Scorpion. Trituration of whole scorpion. Proving J Sherr 1982. (12c, 30c, 100c, 200c, 1m)
Semecarpus anacardium. Marking Nut. N.O. Anacardiaceae. (East Indies.) Trituration of layer of nut between shell and kernel.
Anthopleura Xanthogrammica. Giant Green Sea Anemone. N.O. Actiniidae. A small section of the body column and several tentacles triturated. Proving; Cynthia A. Shepard. Canada. 2005
Anhalonium Lewinii. Mescal Buttons.N.O. Cactaceae. Tincture, extract or infusion.
Apocynum Cannabinum. Indian (American) Hemp. N.O. Apocynaceae. Tincture of whole fresh plant including root
Artemisia Vulgaris. Wormwood. Mugwort. N.O. Compostae. Tincture of fresh root.
Aurum Muriaticum Natronatum. Double Chloride of Gold and Sodium.
Arsenicum Sulphuratum Flavum. Arsenious Sulphide. Trituration.
Asafoetida. Narthax Asafoetida. N.O. Umbrlliferae. Tincture of the gum resin from the living root.
Arnica Montana. Leopard's bane. Fallkruat. N.O. Compositae. Tincture of whole, fresh plant. Tincture of root.
Aspidosperma Quebracho. Whito Quebracho. N.O. Apocynaceae. Tincture and Trituration of the bark.
Remedy made from bowel flora. So named because it was the seventh group of NFLB to be identified. Bacillus No. 10 was named because it was the tenth group to be identified but is otherwise not related to Bacillus No. 7. (30c)
The original homeopathic preparation of tuberculosis brought into use by Dr Burnett. Prepared from the sputum of tuberculosis patients. (30c, 200c)
Ficus indica. Ficus bengalensis. Banyan tree. Mulberry tree. A large Indian tree which has many aerial roots growing down from the branches into the soil, forming prop roots. N.O. Moraceae. Also known as the sacred fig tree, it is considered spiritual by Hindus and Buddhists. (200c, 10m)
Buddhists name it the Bodhi tree under which Buddha attained enlightenment. The homeopathic remedy Ficus religiosa is made from the Bodhi tree. There is a recent proving of The Morten Bay Fig tree Ficus macrophylla, completed by Alistair Gray in 2005.
The Daisy. N. O. Compositae. Tincture of whole fresh plant. (6c, 12c, 30c, 200c, 10m)
Berberis vulgaris. Barberry. N.O. Berberidaceae. Tincture of the bark of the root. (3x, 12c, 30c, 200c, 10m)
Bothrops Lanceolatus. Yellow viper. Solution of the poison in glycerine; attenuations in rectified spirit. (30c, 200c)
Oil seed rape. Cole seed. Brassica campestris. N.O. Cruciferae. Stem leaves and flower. Proving J.Sherr, Dynamis 1991. (30c, 200c, 1m)
Remedy made from a toad with a broken back found on the road in Raasay 2013. Dynamis. (12c, 100c, 200c)
Buddleja davidii. Butterfly bush. N.O. Buddleiaceae. Leaf, flower and stem. Medative proving. Guild. 1998. (see: The New Materia Medica, Colin Griffith, Watkins, 2007) (30c, 200c, 1m, 10m)
The Toad. Poison expressed from the cutaneous glands. Solution in rectified spirit. (30c, 200c)
White Bryony. N.O. Cucurbitaceae. Tincture of root procured before flowering. (6c, 12c, 30c, 200c, 1m, cm)
Blatta Orientalis. Indian cockroach. Tincture of live insect. (12c, 30c)
Baptisia tinctoria. Wild Indigo. N.O. Leguminosae. Tincture of fresh root and its bark. (12c, 30c)
Atropa Belladonna. Deadly Nightshade. N.O. Solanaceae. Tincture of whole fresh plant when beginning to flower. (3c, 6c,1 2c, 30c, 200c, 1m, 10m, cm)
Borax veneta. Natrum biboracicum. Sodium biborate. Na2 B4 O7 10H2O. Trituration and solution. (6x, 6c, 12c, 30c)
Indian Frankincense. Shallaki. A traditional Ayurvedic medicine. Resin of the Boswellia tree. (30c, 200c)
A bacterial species of the spirochete class. One of the causative agents of Lyme disease in humans. (30c)
Benzoic Acid. C6 H5 CO OH. Obtained, by sublimation from Gum benzoin, or artificially from several aromatic hydrocarbons. Tincture or trituration. (12c, 30c)
Berlin Wall. Remedy made from a chunk of the wall after reduced to rubble. Medative proving. Guild. 1993. (see: The New Materia Medica, Colin Griffith, Watkins, 2007) (30c, 200c, 1m, 10m)
Bambusa arundinacea. Bamboo. Tall, thorny tree. N.O. Gramineae. Found throughout India, moist parts of India and South East Asia. Parts used: roots, leaves, young shoots, seeds and juice. Proved by Guillaume 1966 and by German physician Bernd Schuster in 1996. (200c, 1m, 10m)
Bacopa monniera. An Ayurvedic medicine. Indian pennywort. Brahmi. Waterhyssop. Herb of Grace. Thyme leaved Gratiola. (30c, 200c, 1m)
Ayahuasca. Two plants indiginoue to the Amazonian Rainforest, Banisteriopsis caapi (vine) and Psychotria viridis (bush) most often make up this psychoactive compound.
Asclepias Tuberosa. Pleurisy-root. Butterfly-weed. Orange milkweed. N.O. Apocynaceae. Tincture of fresh root.
Arsenicum Album. White oxide of Metallic Arsenic. Solution and Trituration.
Arundo Mauritanica. An Italian Grass. N.O. Gramineae. Tincture of the root sprouts.
Asterias Rubens. Star-fish. N.O.Radiata. Tincture of fish. (Sea Remedies, Jo Evans 2009)
Aistolochia Clematitis. Birthwort. N.O. Aristolochiaceae. Whole plant. Trituration and dilution
Argentum Nitricum. Nitrate of Silver. Lunar Caustic. Trituration and solution.
Argentum Metallicum. Silver Leaf and Precipitated Silver. Row 5 on the periodic table. Ag. 47. Trituration.
Amonium Carbonicum. Sal Volatile. Smelling Salts. Solution in distilled water
Agaricus muscarius. Aminita muscaria. Fly Agaric. (Europe, Asia and America; in dry places especially dry pine woods.) N.O. Fungi. Trituration of the carefully dried up cap; or tincture of the fresh fungus.
Allium cepa. Common Red Onion. N.O. Liliaceae.Tincture of the whole fresh plant gathered from July to August.
Achyranthes aspera. Chaff flower. Prickly Chaff flower. Amaranthaceae Family.
Aconitum napellus. Common Aconite. Monkshood. Woflsbane. (Moist pastures and waste places in mountainous districts, Central and Southern Europe, Russia,Scandinavia and Central Asia.) N.O. Ranunculaceae. Tincture of whole plant with root when beginning to flower.
Alfalfa. Medicago Sativa, Linn. Lucerne Chilean Clover. Tincture of plant without root.
Aconitum lycotonum, Linn. Wolfsbane. N.O. Ranunculaceae. Tincture of fresh plant when coming into bloom. (The only aconite that does not contain aconitine.)
Artemisia abrotanum. Lady’s Love. Southernwood. (Southern Europe.) N.O. Compositae. Tincture of fresh leaves and stems.
Hippocastanum vulgaris. Horse Chestnut. (Northern India and North America.) N.O. Sapindaceae. Tincture of ripe kernel, trituration of dry kernel. Tincture of fruit with capsule (according to Hering, this is the best.)
Aletris Farinosa. Star Grass. Blazing Grass. Colic Root. Unicorn Root. (United States.) N.O. Haemodoraceae. Tincture of root.
Ambergris. Found in the Sperm Whale or floating in the sea. Trituration and Tincture. (Sea Remedies, Jo Evans 2009)
Adamas. Diamond. Diamond dust triturated to the third centesimal potency. Proving; J Sherr 1994 Dynamis South Africa. (12c, 30c, 200c, 1m)
Verbena verticillata. Vitex agnus castus. The Chaste Tree. (Shores of Mediterranean, Provence and Greece.) N.O. Verbenaceae. Tincture of ripe berries.
Aloe socotrina. Common Aloes. N.O. Liliaceae. Trituration of solution in spirit of gum.
Alumina silicata is made from rock known as andalusite and composed of aluminum sixty-three and silica thirty-seven parts. Prepared by trituration.
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Artemisia absinthium, Linn. Common Wormwood. (Europe.) Not to be confounded with Artemisia vulgaris, which is also called Wormwood. N.O. Compositae. Tincture of fresh young leaves and flowers.