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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2241

eyelid, large enough to impair vision; after a dose of Dulcamara CM it began to dry out, and the patient rubbed it completely away in the course of a fortnight.
Pale face, with circumscribed redness of cheeks.
Face puffy, burning hot.
Mouth
Paralysis of the tongue from exposure to cold and damp is a guiding symptom of Dulcamara. Clarke succeeded in completely relieving the stabbing pain extending from a sarcoma of the bones at the base of the skull to the front of the head. This was connected with a partial paralysis of the tongue, and it was the latter symptom which determined the choice of the remedy.
Swelling and paralysis of the tongue, quickly increasing; indistinct artic- ulation, even unable to articulate a word; tries to talk incessantly all the same. Swelling of the tongue, hindering speech and impeding breathing.
Itching crawling on the tip of the tongue.
Dry, rough tongue and violent thirst for cold drinks, yet also increased salivation.
Tough and soapy saliva, flowing out in great quantity; with loose and spongy gums.
Teeth as if blunt and insensitive. Bitter taste in the mouth.
Thrush (candida albicans), especially after catching a cold. In the years 1838-39, Ehrhardt treated many cases of an epidemic stomatitis, where Dulcamara corresponded to the genus epidemicus. From his observations:
‘The fever was remittent, exacerbating in the morning and relieved when the buccal exanthema erupted; but this exanthema was severe, very prostrating, and convalescence was protracted. The inhabitants of whole towns and regions was affected at the same time. The mucous membrane of the mouth was greatly swollen throughout its whole extent, here and there it was raw, excoriated, and very red; the spots denuded from epithelium were extremely painful, speaking, chewing, and swallowing were greatly impeded, the teeth were thickly coated with tough and dirty mucus, and deeply imprinted the cheeks and the edges of the tongue. Breath and discharges smelling like carrion, constant salivation’.