from a cellar. In spite of this coldness there is a desire for icy cold water, and the thirst can be so tremendous as to be virtually unquenchable.
The peculiar symptom that indicates this remedy is a state of sudden collapse where the body is icy cold and yet the patient is averse to being covered. If he is covered all the same, he often suffers from the heat and sweats copiously. Kent describes this for cases of menopausal heat waves: ‘The limbs and abdomen are very cold and she suffers from cold when uncovered and sweats copiously when covered. She cannot endure covering to warm her limbs though she suffers from cold.’
On the other hand, there may be a state of internal burning heat with great anxiety and sweat, and then the patient is averse to being uncovered. He feels either too warm or too cold: if inside, the patient wants the windows open, wants to feel something cold; if outside, he feels too cold. The circulation seems to have gone haywire. It is as if the natural contraction and relaxation of the arteries during temperature changes cannot take place.
Kent impressively describes how this unique characteristic may look: ‘The patient is a most troublesome patient to nurse; nobody and nothing suits. If an inflammation of the bladder comes on, there is intense pain and tenderness, and from the shock of the suffering the mind is in a state of frenzy. Coldness then comes on and the patient wants to be uncovered, wants cold air, wants the windows open, but before all this can be done, a flash of heat comes on and then he wants the covers on, and the register turned on, and wants a hot iron and hot bottles; but this stage now passes off, and while the nurse is bringing the hot irons he wants her to open the windows and have everything cool. You will see at once that these are serious cases…’
We can imagine that Camphora allows the arterioles suddenly to relax, allowing a surplus of blood to reach the periphery, and then