unconsciousness, from time to time being aroused from it by an internal shaking, which she calls a shivering as from a chill.’
The remedy includes spasmodic and epileptiform symptoms, but also others such as vertigo, headache, and fainting, which have often been present for a long time since an injury to the head. Consequences of a blow to the head, or of a concussion of the brain, also maybe of mechanical pressure by a tumour, are very characteristic of Cicuta. If this causation is revealed during the interview, one should not only think of Arnica, but also of Cicuta. Tyler managed to effect some really impressive cures of epilepsy with much mental retardation, since the time of a blow to the head (see also above, Immaturity).
Another symptom in the case history that points to Cicuta is a pustular eruption, usually on the head and/or the face, often with yellow exudation that forms massive honey-like crusts. The suppression of such an eruption can also be part of the causation of an epileptic state or another cerebral pathology. Cicuta is one of the remedies that have a special affinity to the brain, nerves and skin. Moreover, emotional excitement of any kind may be a causative factor.
A key-note: great desire to eat coal and other indigestible things, such as raw potatoes; children crunch and swallow them with obvious relish. Kent remarks that this feature, in Cicuta persons, is due to a mental cause, i.e., ‘because he is unable to distinguish between things edible and things unfit to be eaten.’
Convulsive Extremes
The convulsive tendency of Cicuta, its most prominent general feature, has been referred to in ‘The Essential Features.’ Therefore, in this section only some descriptions of poisonings or of cured cases