Persons of sanguine temperament;; pettish, quarrelsome, disputative,
easily excited, least contradiction angers ( Anac. , Coc. , Ign.
); > mental exertion.
Irritability: slight noises like crackling of paper drive him to
despair ( Asar. , Tar. ).
Women who are weak, delicate, chlorotic, yet have a fiery red face.
Extreme paleness of the face, lips and mucous membranes which becomes
red and flushed on the least pain, emotion or exertion. Blushing
( Amyl. , Coca. ).
Erethitic chlorosis, worse in winter.
Red parts become white; face, lips, tongue and mucous membrane
of mouth.
Vertigo: with balancing sensation,, as if on water; on seeing flowing
water; when walking over water, as when crossing a bridge ( Lys.
); on descending ( Bor. , Sanic. ).
Headache: hammering, beating, pulsating pains, must lie down; with
aversion to eating or drinking. For two, three or four days every
two or three weeks.
Menses: too early, too profuse, too long lasting, with fiery red
face; ringing in the ears; intermit two or three days and then return;
flow pale, watery, debilitating.
Haemorrhagic diathesis; blood bright red, coagulates easily ( Fer.
p. , Ipec. , Phos. ).
Regurgitation and eructation of food in mouthfuls ( Alum. ). without
nausea.
Canine hunger, or loss of appetite, with extreme dislike for all
food.
Vomiting: immediately after midnight; of ingesta, as soon as food
is eaten; leaves table suddenly and with one effort vomits everything
eaten, can sit down and eat again; sour, acid ( Lyc. , Sul. ac.
).
Diarrhoea: undigested stools at night, or while eating or drinking
( Crot. t. ); painless with a good appetite; of consumptives [Compare
Kent's Lectures].
Constipation: from intestinal atony; ineffectual urging; stools
hard, difficult, followed by backache or cramping pain in rectum;
prolapsus recti of children; itching on anus at night.
Always feels better by walking slowly about, although weakness
obliges the patient to lie down.
Cough only in the day time ( Euphr. ); relieved by lying down;
> by eating ( Spong. ).
Dropsy; after loss of vital fluids; abuse of quinine; suppressed
intermittent ( Carbo v. , Cinch. ).
Relations. - Complementary: to, Alum. , Cinch.
Cinch. : the vegetable analogue follows well in nearly all diseases,
acute or chronic.
Should never be given in syphilis; always aggravates the condition.
Aggravation. - At night; at rest, especially while sitting still.
Amelioration. - Walking slowly about; in summer.
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