DULCAMARA
Solanum Dulcamara.
Bitter-sweet. Woody Nightshade, a relative of the potato. N.O. Solanaceae.
Tincture of fresh stems and leaves, gathered just before flowering.
Not to be confused with ‘Deadly Nightshade’ (Belladonna), nor ‘Climbing
Bitter-sweet’ (Celastrus).
THE ESSENTIAL FEATURES
When you find an individual who is suffering from a combination of rheumatic or arthritic affections, and at the same time chronic skin problems, this should start to suggest the idea of Dulcamara. To prescribe reliably in such a case, you must also have a severe reaction to cold and wet weather. When it is cold and wet, Dulcamara suffers greatly. In the days before electric refrigeration, ice blocks were delivered in large containers, and the people who handled these, opening and closing the doors, picking them up and delivering them, would suffer acutely, and this is the worst situation for Dulcamara; after such an exposure Dulcamara symp-toms may develop. They do not like ice or anything cold, and especially they do not like the combination of cold and wetness.
Another interesting attribute is that it has paralysis of single parts, and this paralysis may have its origin in exposure to the cold and wet. So exposure to cold and wet with paralysis of single parts is a keynote of Dulcamara. Exposure to cold and dryness with paralysis of single parts points to Causticum. For example, if you cycle fast on a spring night and the cold, dry night air hits you in the face and you contract full or one-sided paralysis of the face, the remedy will be Aconitum or Causticum, not Dulcamara. But in cold and wet situations in the winter, most probably the remedy will be Dulcamara. Cases of Guillen Barre syndrome, of paralysis that