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Materia Medica Viva Volume 3 – page 617

the left side. Burning pain on the lips. Sore and bruised parotid gland on the left side. Swelling of the whole face during scarlet fever.
Mouth
Strawberry tongue. Aphthae. Bleeding in scarlet fever. Cracked, fissured, bleeding, swollen and red tongue. Tip of tongue painful. Papillae of the tongue are erect. Excoriation of the mucous membrane, from which blood oozes. Dryness at night. Dryness at centre of tongue. False membrane. Viscid mucus. Odorous, putrid breath. Painful tongue. Smarting, raw and burning pain in the palate and in the tongue. More during the morning. Burning in the root of the tongue. Sensation of swelling in palate. Painful tongue at the sides and near the tip.
Salivation.
Throat
Kent writes: "The voice comes in for an extensive part of the trouble. It has been found especially to relate to singers and public speakers. At times when a lawyer has had a long case and he is making a final effort, and has been speaking three or four hours, and while in a sweat has got into a draft or gone out, he finds himself hoarse and cannot finish his speech, a dose of Arum triphyllum will enable him to go on with his speech in a clear voice. It clears up the hoarseness. In public speakers and singers who have been compelled to strain the voice and have taken a little cold and the voice is hoarse after prolonged exercise; this is the most striking feature of the Arum triphyllum voice. "Voice uncertain, uncontrollable, changing continually, now deep, now hoarse, etc." It manifests itself in this way. Burning of pharynx and glottis."
Farrington relates :"In regard to Arum triphyllum one remembers a clergyman, long ago, among our Missionary Students, who at "out-patients" asked for a remedy for his "clergyman’s sore throat" _ a huskiness and cough most troublesome and annoying at early Communion. Without a thought one said, Arum triphyllum. It promptly cured him, and he was duly grateful to be rid of one of life’s minor miseries". Membranous croup. Membranes, exudation, diphtheria, etc. Inflammation of the larynx in speakers. Oedema glottidis. Soreness of the larynx in singers. Hoarseness from singing, from talking. Paralytic feeling of the throat and oesophagus and difficulty to swallow due to that. Voice hoarse; from over-exertion in speaking or singing. Hollow voice, voice lost. Voice lost after exposure to north-west wind. Shrieking voice. Choking, constriction. Liquids taken are forced into nose. Pain on coughing, on inspiration, on swallowing. Pain with a feeling of rawness.