DULCAMARA



ARMS.

Dull, violent pain in the arm, as from a blow, with sense of weight, as of lead, immobility, stiffness of the muscles, and coldness of the whole arm, as if paralyzed. Twitching in the upper arm. Paralytic contusive pain in the left arm, as during rest. Herpes on the arm. Lame feeling in the upper arm, going off

by violent motion. Corrosive gnawing in the outer side of the elbow. Drawing pain in the fore arm. Want of power of the fore arm, with a paralytic sensation. Tremor of the hands. Herpetic eruption, especially on the hands.

LEGS.

The lower limbs feel weak. Twitchings of the lower limbs. Pain in the things. Lancinating laceration in the whole things. Drawing in the muscles of the thigh, with sensitiveness to the touch. Burning itching in the outer parts of the thighs. Weariness of the knees. Bloatedness and swelling of he leg. Painful weariness in the tibia. Numb feeling of the calf. Burning in the feet. Stinging burning of the toes. Erysipelatous peeling off and itching of the feet. Formication in the feet.

Charles Julius Hempel
Charles Julius Hempel (5 September 1811 Solingen, Prussia - 25 September 1879 Grand Rapids, Michigan) was a German-born translator and homeopathic physician who worked in the United States. While attending medical lectures at the University of New York, where he graduated in 1845, he became associated with several eminent homeopathic practitioners, and soon after his graduation he began to translate some of the more important works relating to homeopathy. He was appointed professor of materia medica and therapeutics in the Hahnemann Medical College of Philadelphia in 1857.