swabbing for years. There was an accumulation of thick, yellow phlegm that had to be removed mechanically. The patient comp¬lained about a ‘spongy feeling in the throat’, and that led Clarke to Cistus. Kent mentions that with Cistus ‘all the mucous membranes throw out a thick, yellowish, offensive mucus and hence it is suitable in old and troublesome catarrh’.
There is yet another keynote of Cistus which has often been decisive for the selection of the remedy, namely an extraordinary desire for cheese. There are a few remedies which have this symptom; among others, Chelidonium, Nitricum acidum and Phosphorus share this desire. But the combination of ‘catching colds easily, cold aggravation, cold sensations, cheese desire’ will usually indicate Cistus, as Margaret Tyler saw in many cases.
For instance, she succeeded in curing a colleague who ‘ate cheese with every meal’, from a chronic coryza with violent and uncon¬trollable paroxysms of sneezing. Some time later he developed rheumatic pains in the right shoulder that remained constant for several weeks and could not be relieved by anything. Cistus removed them in one hour! A proving symptom is: ‘Pain in the anterior part of the right shoulder’.
Even in pre-homeopathic times, Cistus was well known as a remedy in swelling, inflammation, induration and suppuration of glands and lymph nodes. It is especially indicated when the parotids and cervical lymph nodes are affected and a great sensitivity to cold is present. Hering describes severe cases of tuberculous changes, scrofulosis, also coupled with haemoptysis, which were greatly ameliorated by Cistus.
The remedy should be thought of in parotitis, mumps, mono¬nucleosis, and even in malignant lymphoma (Hodgkin’s disease). There are also case reports about mastitis and cancer of the lips where Cistus acted favourably, and Lippe mentions that it produced