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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2252

Cold damp air may also cause the retrocession of an exanthema which may be followed by severe symptoms. This is a situation that is very characteristic of Dulcamara, and so the remedy will act curatively in many cases of this kind. Some examples: Dulcamara cured excessively violent pain in the extremities and generalised oedema after retrocession of a scarlatina exanthema; it cured paralysis of an arm or of the tongue after suppression of herpetic eruptions; and it cured asthma or trigeminal neuralgia after suppression of an eruption in the face.
Forms of skin eruptions that occur rather frequently:
Urticaria over whole body, with or without fever and other symptoms. Herpetic crusts all over body; thick, yellowish-brown crusts, as in crusta lactea, in face.
Red spots, like flea-bites.
Herpes labialis and genitalis; ‘cold sores’.
Warts, especially in the face and upon the hands.
In his Codex of Symptoms, Jahr is already able to enumerate a sizeable list of cured skin affections, among which are: ‘Herpetic eruptions: moist, suppurat- ing; dry, desquamating like bran; pale, discharging water when scratched; reddish, with a red aureola, or small, round, yellow-brownish, bleeding when scratched, with a reddish margin, aching from application of cold water; herpetic eruptions with swollen glands; tetters in the bends of the joints. Itching pustules, developing into ulcers, then covering with crusts, especially at the lower limbs and posterior side of the body. Thickening of skin in certain areas, with desquamation’.
The Dulcamara skin symptoms are very similar to pemphigus and pem- phigoid, and for this reason it is not surprising that Dulcamara effected many cures in this disease. A ‘classic’ case with striking mental symptoms: ‘A kind of vesicular eruption. Blisters of the size of peas appear, containing a yellow, watery, transparent fluid. They are sitting on a red base and itching violently. Beneath them they form eating ulcers which discharge a slightly reddish ichor. After some days they become dry, producing a thick, brownish-red crust, painful to touch, which falls off after some days and again leaves a bright-red spot for some days. The whole body was covered with this eruption, but especially its posterior half and the extremities; only the face was free’. The patient, a 13-month-old infant, also had these symptoms: