Rhus Diversiloba


Rhus Diversiloba signs and symptoms of the homeopathy medicine from the Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica by J.H. Clarke. Find out for which conditions and symptoms Rhus Diversiloba is used…


      R. Diversiloba. Californian Poison Oak. *N.O. Anacardiaceae. Tincture of fresh leaves.

Clinical

Chicken pox. Eczema. Erysipelas. Skin, sensitive.

Characteristics

Murray Moore observed the effect of *Rh.d. on three persons: (i) Miss M., 25, of brown hair and fair complexion, walked up a hill one warm morning, and while perspiring gathered ferns which grew among the *Rh.d. trees, the leaves of which she must have touched, though she did not pull any. The result was a very severe poisoning, which provided the majority of the symptoms of the Schema. (2) J. W., light-haired, robust Englishman, 23, lay down while sweating among the bushes and was smartly poisoned. *Verbascum v. O internally and a lotion of *Magnesia sulph. externally checked the spread of the disease. (3) Boy, 10, pure blond type with thin, freckled skin, plucked some of the leaves, and in eighteen hours the poisoning symptoms came on, facial erysipelas with extreme oedema, closing both eyes, itching and burning. The symptoms became general. M. Moore relates also the case of a man who was poisoned in California in September and returned to the Eastern States and there has an annual eruption for six successive years. During the seventh attack he was carried off with pneumonia, which Moore thinks would not have been the case but for the *Rhus complication. (**C.D.P.).

Head

Dull frontal headache. Head hot.

Eyes

L. eye closed entirely by swelling, right partially.

Face

Vesicular erysipelatous rash with great oedema and swelling of glands in neck, vesicles dried into a crust so dense that movements of mouth and face were painful.

Stomach

Loss of appetite, nausea, vomiting. Whole digestive system deranged for three weeks.

Stool

Bowels costive.

Urinary Organs

Urine scanty, high-coloured, felt hot when passed.

Male Sexual Organs

Heat and itching of scrotum and adjacent surfaces of thigh, worse on hairy parts.

Limbs

Stiffness of limbs, of all joints on first moving them.

Generalities

Extreme languor. On rising from bed fainted, again later in day.

Skin

Eruption very like chicken-pox. After the erysipelatous condition of the skin subsided extreme irritability (to flannel) remained, and hypersensitiveness to cold air. Five months after the poisoning there was a recurrence (without fresh exposure) shortly after taking a bath rather too hot. The day after he had been among the bushes heat and itching commenced on scrotum and adjacent surfaces of thighs, worse on hairy parts, next day papules on red oedematous base appeared on forehead and neck, rapidly spreading in all directions, with heat, itching, and burning, but very little pyrexia, itching better by cold, worse by heat, warmth, rubbing, or scratching.

Fever

In afternoon chills and feverishness by turns, and general malaise. Slight pyrexia.

John Henry Clarke
John Henry Clarke MD (1853 – November 24, 1931 was a prominent English classical homeopath. Dr. Clarke was a busy practitioner. As a physician he not only had his own clinic in Piccadilly, London, but he also was a consultant at the London Homeopathic Hospital and researched into new remedies — nosodes. For many years, he was the editor of The Homeopathic World. He wrote many books, his best known were Dictionary of Practical Materia Medica and Repertory of Materia Medica