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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1280

Caladium symptomatology is due to sexual excesses or to masturbation. This is only partially true. Exhaustion is prominent in the remedy, but this exhaustion need not derive solely from sexual excess. It can come from other causes as well: from suppression of sexual passion, from mental or physical overwork, from suppressed eruptions, and/or from excessive tobacco smoking.
There is a further misunderstanding concerning tobacco and Caladium. Kent, along with other authors of our materia medica, tell us that Caladium can stop or temper the craving for tobacco. This is not true, or if it happens, it most probably is a suppression. Caladium does not affect the desire for tobacco. What it does is create a special sensitivity to tobacco smoking.
Smoking cigars or cigarettes is disastrous for the organism and the organism is greatly aggravated by it. The organism reacts with a kind of tobacco poisoning — coughing, aggravation during sleep, palpitations, etc. If the person continues to smoke despite these warnings permanent damage will ensue, most probably in the lungs or elsewhere, affecting his memory, heart, and circulatory system. A burning sensation may remain in the lungs for years after heavy smoking. It feels as if the lungs were raw, exposed to the air inhaled almost without protection.
Caladium can help in those cases where smoking has brought about a deterioration in the smoker’s health, i.e., in his lungs, memory, vascular system and in his sexual ability. Actually, if the person starts to smoke again, after the administration of Caladium, he or she will not have as severe a reaction as before. Caladium should, therefore, not be prescribed for excessive desire, but rather for cases where there is an aggravation from smoking.
Another misunderstanding about the remedy is the impression that persons needing Caladium always have an psychotic craving for sex. This is true of the state described by Kent, which is a rather