CALADIUM
Caladium seguinum. Arum seguinum. Dumb Cane. (South America.) N.O. Araceae.
Tincture of the whole fresh plant.
THE ESSENTIAL FEATURES
Caladium has come down to us as a remedy mainly for disorders of the sexual sphere and, more specifically, for impotence and the problems that arise from it. This is described very graphically by Kent who states:
‘It is indicated in old debauches who are unable to perform the marital act. He has the most tantalising craving for the opposite sex with no ability to perform coitus. Lascivious ideas. Such men stand on the street corner and feast upon the forms of passing girls and their semen dribbles away; a state also found in Picricum acidum and Selenium. ’
My experience is that if you wait for a case to present itself whereby the patient tells you that his semen dribbles while looking at a woman, you will, rarely, if ever, have occasion to prescribe this remedy. Kent’s description is solely of the advanced stage of the remedy, the idea of Caladium at this stage being one of sexual deterioration. He does not describe earlier stages or the develop¬ment of the pathology. It would be a mistake, however, to expect to see this deteriorated state in all Caladium cases. I used to make this error myself, in the beginning of my work, and, therefore, missed the remedy for many years.
There are a number of misunderstandings regarding Caladium. One of them, an aetiology emphasised by certain writers, is that the