A proving symptom: ‘At the inside of the upper lip, at the forepart of the palate, but also externally around the mouth, pimples and little ulcers, with a tearing pain on moving the parts’.
Throat
From every cold change of the weather inflammation of the throat with tonsillitis.
Colds often begin in the nose and extend to the nasopharynx and further downward.
Hyperaemia of the uvula; pressure in the throat as if the uvula were too long. Very much mucus in the pharynx, with scraping in the throat, and the patient is compelled to constantly hawk up very tenacious mucus.
Respiration
Hoarseness and rough voice, because of much mucus in the trachea, especially after a cold. If these complaints are coupled with skin reactions, this is an additional hint for Dulcamara. Braun reports a case where hoarseness and cough were accompanied by warts on the fingers, and sensitivity of the skin of the upper part of the body to touch (AHZ, 2/1995).
Aphonia because of paralysis of vocal cords, from sleeping over a damp cellar (Clarke); a remarkable paralytic affection after exposure to cold and damp.
Bronchitis of infants and old people, with lack of vital heat and diminished resistance.
Asthma with profuse secretion of mucus, especially in wet weather; this may be preceded by eruptions in the face, and as soon as the eruptions disappear, the asthmatic complaints begin.
Oppression of chest from mucus; laboured respiration. Severe oppres- sive pain in the whole chest, worse on inspiration and expiration.
Cough when the weather is cold and damp, or from becoming wet (e.g. falling into water); profuse secretion of mucus, but has to cough for a long