Remedy

Allium cepa

Allium cepa is a traditional homoeopathic remedy associated with watery eyes and streaming nose allergy pictures. This page explains the remedy picture, modalities, common potency context, and safety boundaries.

Latin name: Allium cepa · Also known as: Red onion

In short

What is Allium cepa used for in homoeopathy?

In traditional homoeopathy, Allium cepa is considered when the whole symptom picture points toward watery eyes and streaming nose allergy pictures. It is selected by matching modalities, general state, and characteristic symptoms rather than by diagnosis alone. This page is educational and is not a prescription.

  • Streaming watery nasal discharge
  • Bland tearing from eyes
  • Worse: Warm room, Evening, Spring pollen.
  • Better: Open air, Cool room.

Traditional picture at a glance

Homoeopathic prescribing leans heavily on modalities — what makes symptoms worse or better — and on the potencies typically used in practice.

Traditionally indicated

  • Streaming watery nasal discharge
  • Bland tearing from eyes
  • Hay-fever type pictures
  • Worse warm room

Worse

  • Warm room
  • Evening
  • Spring pollen

Better

  • Open air
  • Cool room

Typical potencies

  • 6C or 12C for simple short-course self-care contexts
  • 30C commonly discussed for acute pictures
  • 200C and above only with practitioner guidance

Safety notes

  • Homoeopathic Allium cepa preparations are highly diluted and are not the same as crude plant material.
  • Do not use a remedy page to delay diagnosis, urgent care, or prescribed treatment.
  • Pregnancy, babies, complex chronic illness, and worsening symptoms call for individual practitioner guidance.

When is Allium cepa traditionally considered?

Practitioners consider Allium cepa when the overall case has the recognisable pattern of watery eyes and streaming nose allergy pictures. The name of a condition can start the conversation, but the remedy is chosen from the individual details: onset, modalities, emotional state, physical generals, and what makes the person distinctly better or worse.

Commonly associated remedy picture

  • Streaming watery nasal discharge
  • Bland tearing from eyes
  • Hay-fever type pictures
  • Worse warm room

Modalities that guide selection

The traditional Allium cepa picture is usually worse from warm room, evening, spring pollen and better from open air, cool room. These details matter because two people with the same complaint may need different remedies.

Potency and use context

Low and medium potencies are often discussed for short-course situations, while higher potencies are better reserved for qualified practitioner prescribing. Repeating doses without reassessment is not a quality homoeopathic approach.

Evidence context

This page reflects traditional homoeopathic materia medica and practitioner convention. Clinical evidence for homoeopathy is limited and contested; read alongside the editorial policy and use appropriate medical care when needed.

Allium cepa — common questions

Is Allium cepa safe?

Homoeopathic Allium cepa is highly diluted and is generally considered well-tolerated when used appropriately. Safety still depends on the situation: serious symptoms, pregnancy, infants, and chronic illness should be handled with professional guidance.

How do I know if Allium cepa is the right remedy?

A good match depends on the whole symptom picture, especially modalities and characteristic details. If the match is unclear or symptoms are persistent, a practitioner consultation is more appropriate than guessing from a list.

Can Allium cepa replace medical treatment?

No. Homoeopathic remedies should not replace diagnosis, urgent care, or prescribed treatment for serious or worsening conditions.

Want to match a remedy to your situation?

The Circle helps turn remedy reading into guided learning, practical resources, and clear boundaries around individualised care.