Whooping-cough with violent paroxysms which follow each other rapidly,
is scarcely able to get breath (wakes at 6-7 a. m. and does not
cease coughing until a large quantity of tenacious mucus is raised,
Coc. c. - profuse epistaxis during every paroxysm, [Ind.]; "minute
gun" during the day, whooping at night, Cor. r. ).
Deep sounding, hoarse barking cough (Verb.), < after midnight,
during or after measles; spasmodic, with gagging, retching and vomiting
( Bry. , Kali c. ).
Constant, titillating cough in children, begins as soon as head
touches pillow at night ( Bell. , Hyos , Rum. ).
Nocturnal cough of young persons in phthisis; bloody or purulent
sputa.
Cough: < by warmth, drinking, singing, laughing, weeping, lying
down, after midnight.
During cough; vomiting of water, mucus, and often bleeding at the
nose and mouth ( Cup. ).
Sensation of feather in larynx, exciting cough.
Diseases prevailing during epidemic pertussis.
Clergyman's sore throat; with rough, scraping, dry sensation deep
in the fauces; voice hoarse, deep, toneless, cracked, requires exertion
to speak ( Arum. ).
Constriction and crawling in larynx; hoarseness, and yellow or
green sputa.
Laryngeal phthisis following whooping-cough (bronchial catarrh
following, Coc. c.).
Relations. - Complementary: to, Nux vomica.
Follows well: after, Samb. , Sulph. , Ver.
Is followed: by, Cal. , Puls. , Sulph.
Compare: Cina , Coral , Cup. , Ipec. , Samb. in spasmodic coughs.
Often relieves the constant, distressing night-cough in tuberculosis.
Hahnemann says (Mat. Med. Pura.): "One single dose of the
30th potency is sufficient to cure entirely epidemic whooping cough.
The cure takes place surely between seven and eight days. Never
give a second dose immediately after the first; it would not only
prevent the good effect of the former, but would be injurious."
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