ACONITUM NAPELLUS
(Monkshood.)
(The
freshly expressed juice of the plant at the time of the commencement
of flowering mixed with equal parts of spirits of wine.)
Although
the following symptoms do not express the whole significance of
this most valuable plant, still they reveal to the thoughtful homoeopathic
physician a prospect of relieving morbid conditions in which traditional
medicine has hitherto employed its most dangerous methods, e.
g. copious blood-letting and all its complex would-be
antiphlogistic treatments, often ineffectually, and almost always
with disastrous consequences. I allude to the so-called pure inflammatory
fevers in which the smallest dose of aconite enables us to dispense
with all the traditional antipathic treatments, and relieves rapidly
and without evil effects. In measles, in purpura miliaris, and in
the acute pleuritic fevers, &c., its curative power is marvellous,
when, the patient being kept rather cool, it is given alone,
all other medicinal substances, even vegetable acids, being
avoided, in the dose of a thousandth part (That is, a small
globule the size of a poppy-seed moistened with it, of which more
than a thousand are moistened by one drop of spirits of wine, and
which are so small that 300 of them weigh only one grain.) of
a drop of the decillionth development of power. It is seldom that
a second similar dose is required thirty-six or forty-eight hours
after the first.
But
in order to remove from out conscientious treatment all that routine
practice which is only too apt to regulate its treatment in accordance
with delusive names of diseases, it is indispensable that, in all
morbid conditions in which aconite is given, the chief symptoms
of the malady, therefore also of the acute disease, should be found
accurately reproduced among the symptoms of aconite.
The
effect is then astonishing.
It is
precisely in the great acute inflammatory fevers in which allopathy
chiefly plumes itself as alone able to save life by means of bold,
frequent venesections, and imagines that here it is superior in
curative efficacy to all homoeopathic treatment-it is precisely
here that it is most mistaken. It is precisely here that the infinite
superiority of homoeopathy is manifest, that it needs not to shed
a single drop of blood, that precious vital fluid (which the allopath
recklessly draws off in streams, to the often irremediable disadvantage
of the patient), in order to transform this dangerous fever into
health in as many hours as the allopathic vitality-diminishing treatment
often requires months for the perfect restoration of those who are
not carried off during the process by death, or, at all events,
in the chronic after-affections artificially caused by the means
employed.
In these
acute cases of disease sometimes a homoeopathic intermediate remedy
is required for the morbid symptoms remaining after twelve or sixteen
hours' action of the first dose of aconite; but it is very rarely
that a second dose of aconite is needed after this intermediate
remedy.
By means
of aconite carefully administered in this way in a disease of the
above mentioned character all danger is removed even in four hours,
and the excited circulation resumes its tranquil vital course from
hour to hour.
Although
aconite, on account of the short duration of its action (which in
such small doses does not exceed forty-eight hours), might seem
to be useful only in acute diseases, yet it is an indispensable
accessory remedy in even the most obstinate chronic affections,
when the system requires a diminution of the so-called tension
of the bloodvessels (the strictum of the ancients). On
this subject, however, I cannot enter more fully in this place.
Its utility in such cases is shown by the symptoms it produces in
the healthy subject, which are partially recorded in the following
pages.
Aconite
is also the first and main remedy, in the minute dose indicated
above, in inflammation of the wind-pipe (croup, membranous laryngitis),
in various kinds of inflammation of the throat and fauces, as also
in the local acute inflammations of all other parts, particularly
where in addition to thirst and quick pulse, there are present anxious
impatience, an unappeasable mental agitation, and agonizing tossing
about.
It produces
all the morbid states similar to those seen in persons who have
had a fright combined with vexation, and is also the surest and
quickest remedy for them.
In the
selection of aconite as a homoeopathic remedy particular attention
should be paid to the symptoms of the disposition, so that they
should be very similar.
Hence
it is indispensable after fright or vexation in women during the
catamenia, which without this excellent soothing remedy are only
too easily, often instantaneously, suppressed by such emotional
disturbances. For this purpose a single momentary olfaction at a
phial containing a globule the size of a mustard-seed, moistened
with the decillionth potency of aconite (which may be kept for this
use for years in a wellcorked phial without losing its curative
power) is quite sufficient.
Most
of the apparently opposite aconite symptoms recorded below are merely
alternating states, and it may be curative by means of both; but
it is most so in respect of those which have a tonic character.
Vegetable
acids and wine antidote its effects, and so do other medicines which
correspond palliatively or homoeopathically to some of it's troublesome
symptoms (produced by too large a dose or unhomoeopathic selection).
[The
names of Hahnemann's disciples. who assisted him in this proving
are: AHNER, GROSS, FRIEDRICH HAHNEMANN, HORNBURG, RUCKERT senior,
STAPF, WAHLE
The
authorities of traditional medicine quoted by him far some of the
records effects of aconite are:
ABANO, PET. DE, De Venenis, cap.
30, 1496.
BACON, VINC., Philosoph. Transactions,
xxxviii.
DURR, Hufel Journ., ix, 4.
GMELIN. EBERH., Nov. Acta Nat.
Cur., vi.
GREDING, Vermischte Schriften.
HELMONT, J. B. VAN, Demens Idea,
§ 12. (Orteus Medicinae 1652.)
MATTHIOLUS, Comment in Diosc,
io. iv, cap. 73.
MORAEUS, Konigl. Vetensk. Acad.
Handl., 1739.
RICHARD, CLAUD., in P. Schenck's
Obs. Med., lib. vii, obs. 136.
RODDER, in Alberti's Jurisprud.
Med., tom. vi.
STOERCK, ANT, VON , Libellus
de Stram., Hyos. et Acon.
In the Frag, de Vir. the
symptoms of aconite are 213, in the first edition of the R.A.M.L.,
they are 314, in the second 429, and in the third 541.]
ACONITE
Vertigo ; feeling of swaying to
and fro in the brain.
Vertigo, especially when stooping
: she staggered to and fro, especially towards the right side (aft.
36 h.). Stf. Gss., Archiv. f. d. Homoopath. Heilkunst, iv. i.
(In the original this is erroneously printed "V. iii." The
symptoms taken from the Archiv were observed by Drs. Gross and Stapf
on themselves and others. Hahnemann refers to the Journal in which
they were first published after each symptom taken therefrom, but
as Drs. Gross and Stapf were essentially fellow-workers with Hahnemann,
and assisted him to prove many of his medicines, we have considered
it best to give the abbreviations of their names after the symptoms
for which they are responsible, as well to avoid confusion as to
do honour to these able pioneers of homoeopathy.)
She could hardly get into bed for
vertigo, in which all seemed to turn round in a circle with her
(aft. 37 h.). [Stf. Gss.]
She has a whirling in the head,
so that she dare not move it, with a feeling as if the eyes would
close. [Stf. Gss.]
5. As if intoxicated; all goes round
with her, she staggers when walking, as if she would fall, with
nausea, not on sitting, worst on rising from a seat, less when walking
(aft. 1h.). [Stf. Gss.]
Vertigo very much increased on shaking
the head, when it became quite black before her eyes. [Stf. Gss.]
Vertigo and dizziness.
Giddy weight of the head,
especially in the forehead and on stooping, with nausea, and qualmish
feeling in the scrobiculus cordis (aft. 2 h.). [Stf. Gss.]
Vertigo [MATTHIOLI, (Narrative
of two cases in which aconite was administered to criminals (male
adults) to test the efficacy of the bezoar-stone as an antidote.)
Comment. in Diosc., lib. iv, cap. 73-VINC. BACON, (poisoning
of an adult.) in Philosoph. Transact., xxxviii, p.
287.]
10. Vertigo, tightness of chest
and dry cough, with pain in hip. [GREDING, (An account of the
treatment of nine patients, variously afflicted, with increasing
doses of the extract.-The patient in whom these symptoms occurred
had suffered from them before taking the medicine.) Vermischte Schriften.
p.90-113.]
Giddy obscuration of sight, with
unaltered pulse. [ CLAUD. RICHARD, in P. Schenck, (As
Matthiolus (one case), free notes.) lib. vii, obs. 136.]
Vertigo and headache, unaffected
by active exercise (aft. 1/4 h.). [Fr. H-ft.]
Vertigo and headache in sinciput
and occiput, both worst when stooping (aft. 10 m.). [Fr. H-n.]
Distraction of the attention when
reading and writing by a frequent cessation of the thoughts. [Rkt.]
15. Preoccupation of the mind ;
he is unable to complete his description of the thoughts that he
had conceived and half written down, without first making an effort
to recall them (3rd day). [We.]
Stupid feeling of the head ; as
if he had a board before the forehead (aft. 1/4 h.). [Stf. Gss.]
The head in front is as if nailed
up, in the warm room. [Stf. Gss.]
Unsteadiness of the ideas; if
she wants to pursue one train of thought a second chases this away,
a third again displaces this, and so on and on, until she becomes
quite confused. [Stf. Gss.]
Want of memory; he feels as if
what he had just done were a dream, and he can scarcely recall what
it was. [Stf. Gss ]
20. Weakness of memory (aft.
5 and 9 h.).
Lively memory.
Weakened power of thinking. [We.]
He can think of nothing, consider
nothing, knows nothing, and can form no idea of anything in his
head, as he usually could-but he feels as if all these mental operations
took place in the pit of the stomach-after two hours he has two
attacks of vertigo, and then his usual thinking faculty returns
into his head. [J. B. v. HELMONT ,( Effect of putting a piece
of the root on his tongue. Of the state described in this symptom
and E. 502 he writes :-"I had already often had ecstasies, but I
never found myself quite like this. I have, further, repeated the
experiment in. vain ; I have felt nothing similar again.") in
Demens Idea, § 12.]
In the morning vacancy and emptiness
of the head, as after severe intoxication. [Rkt.]
25. Confusion of the head,
as after intoxication, with aching in the temples.
Stupid bruised pair. in the head,
with bruised feeling in all the limbs (aft. 14 h ).
Feeling of fulness and heaviness
in the forehead, as if an outpressing weight lay there, and as if
all would be forced out at the forehead (aft. 1/4h.). [Stf.
Gss.]
Stupifying drawing in-pressing in
the left temple. [Stf. Gss.]
Feeling as if some one drew him
up by the hair. [Stf. Gss. ]
30. Semilateral drawing in the
head. [Stf. Gss.]
Aching pain in the temporal region,
afterwards also in jerks in the occiput, lastly confusion of the
head and contractive pain. [Rkt.]
Contractive pain in the forehead.
[Ar.]
Tension all over the forehead. [Hbg.]
On stooping her forehead feels very
full, as if all would come out (aft. 25 h.). [Stf.
Gss.]
35. Headache, as if the eyes would
fall out of the head (aft. 1/2 h.).
Headache, as if the brain pressed
out.
Headache, as if here and there a
part of the brain were lifted up, which is increased by slight movement,
even by drinking and speaking (aft. 1/2 h.).
Speaking increases the headache.
Shooting, throbbing headache, as
if an ulcer were inside, which sometimes prevents speaking.
40. Sometimes a fine shooting, sometimes
throbbing, sometimes aching headache in the forehead when walking,
relieved by sitting.
A fine throbbing here and there
in the head.
Headache; a throbbing in the
left side of the forehead, whilst strong beats occur in the right
side by fits (aft. 3 h.).
In the left side of the head, pain
as if the head were compressed. [Ar.]
Headache, as if the skull were externally
constricted with a ligature and drawn tightly together. [HELMONT,
1. c.]
45. Very painful, sharp, pressing
headache above the forehead. [We.]
Out-pressing pain in the forehead.
[We.]
Tearing pain in the left temple.
[Ar.]
In the left temple shooting pain
by jerks; stitches pass through the temple into the head. [Stf.
Gss.]
Shooting, beating headache in the
temples. [ Stf. Gss.]
50. Shooting by jerks in the head,
especially in the forehead. [Stf. Gss.]
Tearing pain in the left temple,
with roaring noise in the ears.[Stf. Gss.]
Feeling of contraction of the brain
under the forehead (aft. 20 h.). [Stf. Gss.]
Squeezing, tensive headache close
behind the orbits.
A pinching and squeezing in the
forehead, as if it were in the bones; she feels ill, as though about
to go mad (aft. 12, 24 h.).
55. A squeezing in the forehead,
above the root of the nose, as if she would lose her reason (as
if wrong in the head); aggravated by walking in the open air (aft.
4 h.).
A feeling of crepitation (like bending
gold tinsel to and fro) in the temples, nose, and forehead.
Shooting and somewhat aching headache
above the orbits towards the superior maxilla, which causes nausea,
or as usually occurs during the vomiting caused by an emetic (aft.
2 h.).
Aching, shooting, sick headache
above the orbits and down to the upper jaw.
Feeling as if something were drawn
out of the head, whereby her upper eyelids are drawn upwards (aft.1/2
h.). [Stf. Gss.]
60. Twitching, tearing pain in the
occiput. [Ar.]
Jerking, shooting, drawing, tearing
pain in the upper part of the right side of the head. [Ar.]
A shoot in the occipital bone. [Hbg.]
Creeping on the left side of the
head, as from a brush. [Hbg.]
Feeling as if a ball rose from the
umbilical region and spread a cool air in the vertex and occiput.
[MATTHIOLI 1. c.]
65. Burning headache as if the brain
were moved by boiling water. [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
Heaviness of the head. [V. BACON,
1. c.]
Pain in the occiput and neck. [RICHARD,
1, c.]
Headache, roaring in the ears, coryza
and colic, especially in the morning, as if a chill had been taken
after profuse perspiration.( This was the effect of an actual
chill, not "as from a chill ) [GREDING, 1. C.]
Towards evening she got very hot
in the whole head, after which there occurred tenderness of the
whole head, especially of the forehead, lasting all the evening
(aft. 11 h.). [Stf. Gss.]
70. (Puffy face and forehead).
Bluish face, black lips, [MATTHIOLI,
1. c.]
Distortion of the facial muscles.
[MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
Very widely dilated pupils.
[We.]
Obscuration of the sight. [BACON,
1. c.]
75. Repeated blindness, with undiminished
power of speech. (See S. 539.) [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
Distortion of the eyes. [MATTHIOLI,-BACON,
1. c.]
Distortion of the eyes and grinding
of the teeth (about midnight). (In a demented and epileptic patient,
subject to spasms.) [GREDING, l. c.]
On opening the eyelids pain in the
interior of the eye (as if it would be pressed out),. which pain
spread over the region of the eye-brow into the interior of the
brain (aft. 21 h.). [Stf. Gss.]
Dilated pupils (immediately).
80. His eyes are staring (immediately).
Desire for light, longing to look
into the bright light (aft. 3 h.).
Black spots hovering before the
sight.
Misty before the eyes; she does
not see distinctly, with giddy feeling. [Stf. Gss.]
Photophobia (aft. 6 and 12
h.).( Probably an alternating symptom with 81, so that
both are primary effects.)
87. Acute vision.
Dryness of the upper eyelids, which
causes a sort of aching in the r eyes (aft. 5 h.).
Heaviness of the eyelids ; they
seemed to him too heavy on raising them. [Stf. Gss.]
(The eyes feel cold in the open
air.)
Very painful inflammation of the
eyes (chemosis).
90. Sensation in the eyes as if
they were greatly swollen (aft. 5 h.). [ Stf. Gss.]
The eyes are closed with a jerk,
as in irresistible sleepiness. [Stf. Gss.]
Protruding eyes. [MATTHIOLI, 1,
c.]
Aching of the eyes, most observable
when looking down and when moving the eyes to and fro, at 'the same
time with heat in them.[Rkt. ]
Aching and burning in the left eye
and over the eye-brows. [Hbg.]
95. Hard, red swelling of the right
upper eyelid, with tensive sensation, especially in the morning.
[Fr.H-n.]
Ophthalmia, with discharge, which
is so painful and horrible that he loner for death. [RICHARD, 1.
c.]
Constant, dull, humming before the
ears, followed by fainting. [BACON, 1. c.]
Pain in the zygomatic process, as
from an internal ulcer there.
Ringing in the ears (aft. 10 m.),
[Stf. Gss.]
100. He feels as if something lay
before the left ear. [Ar.]
Tickling sensation in the right
ear, as if a small worm crept in. [Ar.]
Tearing in the left ear. [Hbg.]
Pain behind the left ear, like a
pressure with the thumb. [Hbg.]
Sensation as if the cheeks were
swollen to double their size.[BACON, 1 c.)
105. Pain in the maxillary joint
behind tile zygomatic process, when chewing.
During the perspiration a burning
pain shot several times into .the left ear and upper maxilla.
Perspiration on the cheek on which
she lies in bed.
Creeping pain on the cheeks.
Sensation of stupifying compression
of the root of the nose. [ Stf. Gss. ]
110. Epistaxis.
Perspiration on the upper lip, under
the nose.
Itching pimples on the upper lip
(aft. 24 h.).
Shooting jerks in the lower jaw.
Shooting pain in various teeth (aft.
36 h.). [We.]
115. Aching toothache in the left
upper jaw. [We.]
Very penetrating pain in jaws as
if they would fall off. [MATTHIOLI, l.c]
In the tongue and jaws a creeping
and burning, so that the teeth seem loose. [BACON, 1, c.]
Smarting sensation in the tongue,
chiefly towards its tip. [Stf. Gss.]
Penetrating fine stitches in
the tip of the tongue.
120. In the tongue a burning of
long continuance. [ANT, v. STOERCK, (This and the following symptom
were experienced by Stoerck himself after placing s small quantity
of the root on his tongue. The rest of his symptoms were observed
on patients to whom he gave the drug.) Libellus de Stram.,
Hyos. et Acon. pp. 71, 74, 80, 91, 96, 110.]
Momentary, flying stitches in the
tongue, with flow of saliva.[ STOERCK, 1. c.]
Coolness and dryness of the mouth,
without thirst. [Hbg.]
Dry feeding first of the lips, then
of the interior of the mouth, with heat rising up from the chest
towards the head (without redness of the cheeks). (This parenthesis
refers to a person who, when in good health, had generally great
redness of the cheeks, which was, therefore, homoeopathically removed,
as aconite almost always produces heat of the cheeks.)
Transient paralysis of the tongue.
125. Dryness of the interior of
the mouth (immediately).
On the middle of the tongue, sensation
of dryness and roughness, without thirst (aft. 1 h.).
Feeling of dryness in the fore part
of the mouth.
Feeling of soreness of the orifices
of the salivary glands, as if they were excoriated.
In the throat a scraping with difficult
deglutition. [Stf. Gss.]
130. Drawing from the side of the
throat to behind the ear. [Stf. Gss.]
On the left side of the throat,
internally, on a small spot , shooting choking, when not, but a
especially when, swallowing and speaking. After 1/4 of an hour it
passed to the right side, whilst the painful sensation in the left
side disappeared, it remained there 1/4 of an hour, and went off
entirely. [Stf. Gss.]
Prickling sensation at the back
of the tongue as from pepper, with flow of saliva.
Creeping in the fauces.
Fine shooting sensation at the back
of the throat, as from the prickly hairs of the dog-hip (aft. 1h.).
135. Burning and fine shooting pain
in the back of the throat (fauces).
Contractive feeling in the back
of the throat, as from something astringent.
Pepper-like taste in the mouth.
(Immediate local effect.) [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
Along with deficient appetite, bitter
taste in the mouth, with pains in the chest and under the short
ribs. [GREDING, 1. c.]
Bitter taste.
140. Nasty, fishy taste, as from
stagnant putrid water.
She felt as if the whole mouth filled
with air of the taste of rotten eggs. [Stf. Gss.]
Sourish taste in the mouth, with
loss of appetite. [Stf. Gss.]
What formerly had a good and strong
taste is now tasteless to him. [Stf. Gss. ]
Sweetish water rose up, like water-brash
; at the same time roaring in the ears. [Stf. Gas.]
145. Belching up of sweetish water,
with nausea. [Stf. Gss.]
Scraping from the scrobiculus cordis,
up into the throat, with nausea and qualmishness in the scrobiculus
cordis. as if water would come into her mouth. [Stf. Gss.]
Empty eructation. [Stf.
Gss.]
Ineffectual effort to eructate ;
he wishes to eructate but cannot.
Thirst for beer ;but when she has
drunk it, it oppresses her stomach.
150. (She will not eat anything.)
Nausea, vomiting, thirst, general
heat and profuse sweat with diuresis. [GREDING, 1. c.]
She vomits lumbrici. [GREDING,
1. c.]
Vomiting of green bile (aft. 1 h.).
[MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
Vomiting of mucus mixed with blood
for three of four successive days. [GREDING, 1. c.]
155. Vomiting of blood. [GREDING,
1. c.]
Qualmish, sick in the scrobiculus
cordis, worse when sitting, going off almost when walking (immediately
after taking it). [Stf. Gss..]
Disgust and sinking, qualmish feeling
(aft. 1/4 h.).
Long-continued disgust and-anorexia.
Inclination to vomit on walking
in the open air.
160. Inclination to vomit at first
in the scrobiculus cordis, then beneath the sternum, lastly in the
throat, without flow of saliva.
Inclination to vomit, just as
if he had eaten something disgustingly sweet or greasy (aft.
1 h.).
Profuse sweat after vomiting bloody
mucus. [GREDING, 1. c.]
Vomiting, followed by violent thirst.
[MORAEUS, (Poisoning of two adults.) in Konigl. Vetensk.
dead. Handl., 1739, p. 41]
Vomiting, artificially excited,
only temporarily restored the parent from his state of syncope.
[BACON, 1. c.]
165. Vomiting with anxiety. [RICHARD,
1, c.]
Inclination to vomit with severe
diarrhoea. [GREDING, 1. c.]
Hiccup. (See note to S .77) .
[GREDING, 1. C.]
In the morning, hiccup .(See
note to S .77) [GREDING, 1. c.]
In the morning, long.continued hiccup
.(See note to S .77) [GREDING, 1. c.]
170. (Hiccup after eating and drinking:)
Aching pain in the scrobiculus cordis,
which increased to tightness of the chest (aft. 2.5 h.).
In the scrobiculus cordis pressure
as from a atone lying there, which soon afterwards extended to the
hawk, with a squeezing together sensation, as if she had injured
herself by a strain; as if stiff. [Stf. Gss.]
Cardialgia. [RODDER, (All the
symptoms observed by RODDER were caused by applying the juice to
a wound.) in Alberti's Jurisprud. Med., tom, vi, p. 724.]
Aching pain in the scrobiculus cordis
when sitting, walking, and standing. [Ar.]
175. Pain in the scrobiculus cordis,
as if it were swollen internally, with loss of appetite and attacks
of dyspnoea.
Pressive pain in the stomach,
like a weight (aft. 1.5 h. ).
Pressive pain like a weight in
the hypochondria (aft. 1.5 h.).
Tensive pressive pain, as from
fulness or a weight pressing in the stomach and hypochondria (aft.
1.5 h.).
Contractive sensation in the stomach
as from an astringent.
180. Sensation of violent constriction
in the hypochondria.
Aching pain in the stomach. [Hbg.]
Along with repeated vomiting and
frequent stools he always complains that he feels as if a cold stone
lay in the stomach, [RICHARD, 1. C.]
Drawing-in of the navel, especially
in the morning when fasting.
A burning in the umbilical region.
185. Burning sensation in the umbilical
region, which ran rapidly over her, and extended the scrobiculus
cordis, with a sensation of anxious beating and shooting there;
after some time a rigor ran all over the body, with cessation of
the hot feeling and of the painful sensation in the umbilical region
(aft. 1.5 h.). [Stf. Gss.]
Pinching pain in the umbilical region.
[Sft. Gss.]
Compression of the navel ; immediately
afterwards intermiting aching in the navel, like jerks. [Stf.
Gss.]
Griping and clawing in the umbilical
region. [Stf. Gss.]
Above the navel to the left a painless
sensation, as of something cold (a cold finger) forcing itself from
within outwards. [Stf. Gss.]
190. Aching in the region of the
liver, whereby the respiration is impeded, immediately thereafter
(pinching ?) bellyache in the supraumbilical region.
jaundice.
From both sides towards the navel,
drawing pains in the abdomen, which are also produced by bending
the abdomen together.
The epigastrium and hypochondria
are occupied by a tense, painful swelling. [RICHARD, 1. c.]
Swollen, distended abdomen, like
ascites. [RICHARD,-MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
195. Violent jerks (blows) in the
hepatic region that take away the breath. [Hbg.]
Some hours earlier than usual a
hard stool, for which he must strain much.
Rolling and rumbling in the abdomen,
with feeling of rawness. [Stf. Gss.]
Rolling and rumbling in the abdomen
all night.
A.sort of fermenting rumbling in
the abdomen.
200. In the morning, in bed, he
cries out and does not know how to compose himself for intolerable
(cutting) pain in the belly, and he tosses about in bed (aft. 16
h.).
Colicky, stretching, tensive, and
aching pain in the belly, as from flatulence.
On laughing loud a sharp stitch
in the right side below the ribs. [Stf. Gss.]
On inspiring dull stitches in the
left side below the ribs. [Stf. Gss.]
Drawing from the left side of the
hypochondrium towards the back ; the side of the abdomen is painful
when pressed upon. [Stf. Gss.]
205. Flatulent colic in the
hypogastrium as if he had taken a flatus-producing purgative.
Very hot flatus (aft. 9 h.).
With a feeling as if only flatus
were passing, unexpected discharge of thin faeces (aft. 4 h.).
Hard stool, attended with pressing.[
Hbg ]
Purging. [STOERCK, 1. C.]
210. Sometimes before, sometimes
after the diarrhoea, nausea and perspiration. [GREDING, 1.c.]
Soft, small stool, accompanied with
tenesmus, from three to five per diem.
White stool.
White stool and red urine.
Watery diarrhoea.
215. The hypogastrium is painfully
sensitive to touch.
Weakness of the bowels such as is
apt to arise from abuse of purgatives.
Pain in the rectum (aft.
1 h.).
Shooting and aching in the
anus.
Transient paralysis of the anus,
involuntary evacuation.
220. Fluent hemorrhoids.
During the diarrhoea copious flow
of urine and moderate perspiration. [GREDING, 1. C.]
Pressure on the bladder, with retention
of urine. (This patient's bladder was previously unhealthy See
note to 5. 77.) [GREDING, 1. c.]
Suppression of urine, with needle-pricks
in the renal region. [RICHARD, 1. c.]
Diuresis. [GREDING, 1. c.]
225. Diuresis, with profuse perspiration
and frequent watery diarrhoea, ` with bellyache. [GREDING, 1. c.]
Diuresis and along with it constant
perspiration. [GREDING, 1. C.]
Copious diuresis. [STOERCK, 1. c.]
Diuresis, with distortion of the
eyes and spasmodic contraction of the feet. (See note to S.77)
[GREDING, 1. c.]
On passing urine a slight sensation
(of splashing) in the vesical region. [Stf. Gss.]
230. Painful urging to urinate ;
she must make water very frequently, because the bladder fills rapidly
with a quantity of urine as c lear as water. [Stf. Gss.]
Urging to urinate on touching the
abdomen.
Urine passed with difficulty (dysuria)
(aft. 12, 18 h.).
Anxious urging to urinate
(aft. 4 h.).
Urging to urinate ; the urine passed
in unusually small quantity, not without difficulty, as if it would
not come away properly but, without pain ; at the same time slight
pinching in the umbilical region (from smelling the tincture). [Stf.
Gss.]
235. Copious discharge of urine,
which, on standing, deposits blood.
Transient paralysis of the neck
of the bladder, involuntary discharge of urine.
Burning in the neck of the bladder
when not urinating.
Pain of the bladder when walking
(aft. 4 h.).
Tenesmus of the neck of the bladder
(aft. 4 h.).
240. Brown urine passed with burning,
afterwards depositing brick coloured sediment.
On waking, pains in the loins like
labour-pains.
Itching on the prepuce, relieved
by rubbing, but soon returning (aft. 3 d.). [We.]
Shooting and pinching pain in the
glans penis when urinating.
Simple pain in the testicles, like
that which remains after being squeezed (aft. 2 h.).
245. Slight, not disagreeable creeping
in the genitals. [Stf. Gss.]
He has amorous fits. [Stf. Gss.]
(Very much increased sexual desire,
rapid alternating with relaxation.). [Stf. Gss.]
Diminished sexual desire.
Metrorrhagia.
250. The menses that had ceased
the day before taking the drug, break out again copiously immediately
(aft. 1/4 h.). [Stf. Gss.]
Copious, viscid, yellowish leucorrhoea.(
In a woman treated for "a considerable swelling in the left iliac
region." This discharge coincided with the diminution and disappearance
of the swelling.) [STOERCK, 1. c.]
Fury on the occurrence of the menses.(
In a maniac. ) [GREDING, 1. c.]
Anxiety with fear of suffocation.
[RODDER, l. c.]
Tightness of the chest. [RICHARD,
1. c.]
255. Frequent violent sneezing,
with pain in the abdomen.[Stf. Gss. ]
Cannot sneeze thoroughly on account
of pain in the left costal region. [Stf. Gss.]
Extreme sensitiveness of the olfactory
nerves; disagreeable smells have a great effect on her.
Attacks of catarrh and coryza (between
8 and 12 h.).
Morning hoarseness (aft. 8 h.).
260. Attack of coryza. [GREDING,
1. c.]
Tussiculation from a tickle at the
upper part of the larynx (immediately).
Short cough.
(Cough during the heat of the body.)
Cough after drinking.
265. Severe cough, immediately,
from a little tobacco-smoke (in a person accustomed to tobacco-smoking).
He (a habitual smoker) cannot smoke,
without constantly clearing his throat and coughing, either because
the epiglottis allows the smoke to penetrate into the wind-pipe
or because the larynx has become too sensitive (aft. 6 h.).
After midnight, every half hour,
a short cough (kechekeh) from a tickle in the larynx ; the more
he tries to suppress it, the more frequent and the worse it was.
Haemoptysis.
Dry cough.( The patient had had
this cough previously. )[ GREDING, 1. C.]
270. Short respiration in sleep,
after midnight.
Interrupted respiration through
nose, especially during sleep.
Foetid breath.
Noisy, loud respiration, with open
mouth.
Tightness of the chest, with strong,
loud respiration.
275. Morbid condition (attacks of
paralysis ?) of the epiglottis; food and drink are apt to get into
the wind-pipe when swallowing, so that they threaten suffocation
and excite coughing; he is apt to swallow the wrong way.
He is apt to choke on swallowing
the saliva. [Stf. Gss.]
Anxiety in the thoracic cavity,
and oppression on the right half of the chest, then in the whole
chest. [Stf. Gss.]
Squeezing together of the chest
on the right side near the sternum; a kind of tightness of the chest.
[Stf. Gss.]
He feels as if the chest were contracted.
[Stf. Gss.]
280. Compression of the chest in
the region of the heart. [Stf. Gss.]
Anxiety that impedes respiration,
with warm sweat on the forehead.
Aching pain in the chest, which
is somewhat relieved by bending the upper part of the body backwards,
but returns immediately on resuming the erect position (aft. 12
h.). [ We.]
Contractive pain in the chest, as
if the ribs on both sides were drawn towards one another. [Ar.]
He feels a weight in the chest ;
it is as if the whole chest were compressed from all sides. [We.]
285. Painful stitches in the right
side of the chest, in the region, of the lowest rib, which extended
towards the sacrum (aft. 10 h.). [We.]
Shooting, aching pain on the tight
side of the sternum. [We.]
Pinching, digging pain in the right
side of the chest, between the third and fourth ribs, unaltered
by anything, until it disappears of itself. [Ar.]
In the left side of the chest near
the axilla, oppressive, obtuse stitches. [ Stf. Gss.]
Stitches in the chest (on breathing).
[Stf. Gss.]
290. At every breath, shooting from
the lowest rib on the right side extending to the apex of the scapula,
through the middle of the chest, with complaining disposition.
Shooting in the right side, with
complaining lachrymose disposition.
Single, large stitches in the side
through to the back (aft. 24 h.).
Pain in the chest, like a shooting,
interrupting the breathing.
With anxiety and peevishness, a
shooting in the side of the chest, followed by throbbing in the
side of the chest, then aching headache.
295. A burning, fine shooting pain
in the chest.
Sensation as if the wind-pipe under
the sternum had gone asleep and were numb (aft. 8 h.).
By touching very much increased
pain, as from a bruise in the lowest rib, about which the patient
makes much ado and complains.
On the middle of the sternum, pain
as if bruised (also increased by external touch).
Slow blows in the cardiac region
directed towards the outside of the chest. [Stf. Gss.]
300. Squeezing pain in the chest.
Aching, squeezing pain in the chest,
under the sternum.
Shooting, boring, digging pain in
the left side of the chest between the fourth and sixth ribs, for
ten minutes. [Ar.]
Aching, tightening pain in the side
of the chest.
A creeping pain in the chest.
A crawling in the chest as from
beetles.
(Increase of milk in the breasts.)
Lumbar pain. [GREDING, 1. c.]
Aching pain in the sacrum on the
left side [Hbg.]
Burning, corrosive pains near the
dorsal vertebrae in the right; side. [We.]
310. Violent, shooting, digging
pain all down the left side of the spine to the sacrum, which
was so much increased by inspiration that tears came repeatedly
into the eyes, for four hours. [Ar.]
On moving painful stiffness of the
sacral and hip-joints ; he is as; if paralyzed in the sacrum (aft.
2 h.).
Pain as if bruised in the articulation
of the lowest lumbar vertebra with the sacrum; the sacrum feels
hacked off.
Tensive, aching pain in the lumbar
vertebrae, or as if from a bruise at the same time pain in abdomen
as from flatulent colic.
Pain as if bruised from the sacrum
through the back up to the nape (aft. 4 h.).
315. Crawling pain in the spine
as from beetles.
A cutting round from the spine to
the abdomen, over the left hip in a circle.
On the left side near the sacrum
a painful boring.
A digging, boring pain from the
right scapula forwards to the chest that was increased by inspiring,
but not by expiring, but never ceased for twelve minutes.
In the nape a pain as if the flesh
were detached, with a feeling as if the nape had no firmness, and
as if the head would fall forwards in consequence; on moving the
head shooting in the nape. [Stf. Gss.]
320. Rheumatic pain in the nape
only observed on moving the neck (between the 5th and 9th h.).
Fine shooting externally on the
neck.
Single shoots in the nape on both
sides. [Rkt.]
Aching pain in the left cervical
vertebra. [We.]
A pain in the neck pressing inwards
towards the trachea, like pressure with the point of the finger
into the neck. [Ar ]
325. Pain in the left shoulder-joint.
[Hbg.]
Some flying stitches in the left
shoulder. [Stf. Gss.]
The shoulder hurts her, and tends
to sink down. [Stf. Gss.]
A swelling in the muscles of the
shoulder, with violent pains as if bruised when touched (aft. 4
h.).
Tearing pain from the shoulder down
into the arm as far as the; wrist, and even the fingers, almost
only on every movement ; during the pain the hand is blue (aft.
1, 14 h.).
330. After sleeping, a pain on moving
in the shoulder (and hip) joint as from being crushed, of as if
the bed had been too hard.
Single stitches in the middle of
the right upper arm on its anterior aspect, when at rest, unaffected
by motion and by pressing on it. [Ar.]
Sudden drawing, shooting pain in
the posterior part of the right upper arm. [Ar.]
Trembling of the arms and hands
(immediately). [Hbg.]
Pain in the arm and fingers.(Local
effect. See S. 387.) [RODDER, 1, c.]
335. A numbness and paralysis in
the left arm (and leg), so that he can scarcely move the hand .(With
stupor.) [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
His arms are as if bruised and sink
powerlessly down. [Stf. Gss.]
Chilliness and insensibility of
the arms.
Pain on the forearm, as from a severe
blow. [Stf. Gss.]
Drawing, shooting pain in the bone
of the forearm, excitable by movement.
340. Feeling of heaviness in the
arms, from the elbow to the fingers ; she would like to let them
sink down; with feeling of being asleep in the fingers when she
grasps anything. [Stf. Gss.]
In the elbow-joints drawing pain.
[Stf. Gss.]
Paralytic sensation in the right
forearm and hand (when writing), which went off on stronger movement,
but soon returned when writing and when at rest, but slighter. [Ar.]
Cramp-like pain in the whole left
forearm, not relieved by anything. [Ar.]
Drawing, tearing pain in the external
side of the right forearm. [Ar. ]
345. Undulating, tearing pain in
the upper end of the left forearm. [Ar.]
Twitching, drawing pain in the lower
end of the inner surface of the left forearm over the wrist to the
palm. [Ar.]
Drawing, paralytic pain in the right
wrist-joint. [We.]
Morbid contractive pain in the left
palm, so that he can hardly extend the fingers. [Ar.]
Tearing pain in the wrist.
350. One hand becomes icy cold and
insensible, as if numb (aft. 2 h.).
Cool sweat on the palms.
Cramp-pain in the right hand.
[We.]
Swelling of the hands, with frequent
cough(This is the cough mentioned in note to B. 226). with
good appetite.[GREDING, 1. C.]
On bending the hand up and down
a trembling movement in the wrist-joint. [Rkt.]
355. Cramp-like pain with fine stitches
in the right hand, going off by moving it. [Ar.]
Some pulsating pricks in the tight
palm, as with a sharp needle. [Ar.]
Cutting, aching pain in the side
of the right index towards the middle finger, when moving and when
at rest. [Ar.]
Painful drawing in the left thumb.
[We.]
Twitching pains in the tight thumb.
[Ar .]
360. When she bends the fingers
down to the wrist, immediately violent stitches in the elbow-joints
down to the wrist, on the external aspect of the arm. [Stf. Gss.]
Paralytic pain in the thumbs.
[Stf. Gss.]
Painful movement of the right thumb-joint,
as if sprained.
Creeping pain in the fingers.
Creeping in the fingers, also when
writing. [Hbg.]
365. Tensive pressure in the thighs
as from a tightly-drawn bandage, with great exhaustion, when walking.
[Rkt.]
After sleeping, a pain, on moving,
in the hip (and shoulder) joint as from being crushed, or as if
the bed had been too hard.
In the head of the femur of the
left leg drawing pain, when standing or sitting, still more when
walking.[Stf. Gss.]
Fine needle-pricks in the muscles
of the thigh. [Stf. Gss.]
After sitting, an almost paralytic
weakness in the thighs and legs.
370. Powerlessness in the head of
the femur, or inability to walk, on account of an indescribable,
intolerable pain, almost as if the head of the femur were crushed,
which sometimes declines, sometimes increases, and occurs after
lying and sleep (aft. 5 h.).
Tottering walk, owing to powerlessness
and pain in the head of the femur.
A numbness, like paralysis. in the
left leg (and arm). [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
Tearing pain upwards on the outer
ankle of the left foot (aft. 14 h.). [Ar.]
Want of firmness and unsteadiness
in the knees; the knees totter on standing and walking.
375. Want of firmness of the knees,
especially of one of them ; it gives way when walking (immediately
and aft. 1 h.).
Heaviness of the feet (immediately).
Pains in the ankle-joints, with
despairing thoughts and reflections on death.
The legs in their lower parts and
the feet ate as if numb and gone asleep. [Stf. Gss.]
Deep, slow stitch over the right
knee. [Stf. Gss.]
380. Painful drawing in the leg
from the knee to the heel and back again. (Stf. Gss.)
Twitching tearing on the internal
side of the knees. [Stf. Gss.]
Paralytic drawing in the right leg
and the tendo Achillis to the heel. [Stf. Gss.]
Coldness of the feet up to the ankles,
with perspiration of the toes and soles.
Sensation on the ankles as if they
were constricted by a bandage, in the morning.
385. Horrible pain in the ankles,
relieved by external compression (aft. 7 h.).
Coldness of the feet, especially
of the toes. [Rkt.]
Swelling of the past (to which.
the juice has been applied) and acute inflammation, followed by
excessive suppuration.[ RODDER, 1. c.]
Sensation of tingling and burning
goes gradually through the whole body, especially through the arms
and legs. [BACON, 1.,c.]
Itching all over the body, especially
on the genitals.( In cases of neuralgic pain in the extremities.
As these cutaneous symptoms appeared the pains subsided. ) [STOERCK,
1. c. ]
390. Fine needle-pricks here and
there on the body. [Stf. Gss.]
Single, long-continued stitches
here and there, mingled with sore feeling, at length ending in pure
sore pain.
Formication, itching, and desquamation
of the skin, especially on the affected parts.
Flea-bite-like spots on the hands,
face, &c.
Reddish pustules filled with acrid
fluid.( In cases of neuralgic pain in the extremities. As these
cutaneous symptoms appeared the pains subsided.)[ STOERCK,
1. c.]
395. Broad, red, itching pimples
all over the body.( In cases of neuralgic pain in the extremities.
As these cutaneous symptoms appeared the pains subsided. ) [STOERCK,
1. c.]
The whole body is painful to the
touch ; the child will not allow itself to be taken hold of ; it
whines.
Feeling as if she was just recovering
from a serious disease, and had risen from a sick-bed (aft. 6, 12
h.).
Paralytic sensation and bruisedness
in the arms and legs, with violent trembling all over the body,
especially of the extremities, owing to which he can hardly walk
or step; at the same time excessively pale face, dilated pupils,
faintness, palpitation of the heart, cold sweat on the back and
bursting headache in the temples-soon followed by burning heat in
the face, with a feeling of tension and redness of face, sleepiness
(after dinner)(aft. 46 h.) (secondary effect?). [Stf. Gss.]
The paralysis on the left side soon
disappeared, and quickly went into the right side. (See S. 335
and note.) [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
400. After the cessation of the
madness, pain in the stomach, head, jaws, chest, and now in one
now in another joint. [RICHARD, 1, c.]
Shaking of the limbs. (See note
to S. 77.) [GREDING. 1. c.]
In the evening sudden cry, grinding
of the teeth, then through long hiccup stiff immobility like a statue
(catalepsy) .(See note to S. 77.) [GREDING. 1. c.]
Gradually all parts of the body
become black, the whole trunk swells, the eyes protrude from the
head, the tongue hangs out of the mouth. [PET. DE ABANO,( General
statement of effects of poisoning by A.) de Venenis Cap. 30.]
All the joints are painful (aft.
7 h.). (See S. 400) [RICHARD, 1. c.]
405. Great weakness of the joints,
especially of the knee- and anklejoints, with twitching in the tendons,
so that he can scarcely walk.[BACON, 1. C.]
Painfulness all over the body, with
increased weakness. (Ending in death) [GREDING,1.
c.]
Weakness and laxity of the ligaments
of all the joints. (aft. 46 h.).
Painless cracking of all the joints,
particularly of the knees.
Weariness in the limbs, especially
in the feet, with constant sleepiness and crossness.
410. In the morning, on waking,
such great weariness, that he did not like to get out of bed, which,
however, went off after getting up.
He complains of weariness of the
whole body, great weakness an pain in the heart (aft. 3 h.). [MATTHIOLI,1,c.]
Sinking of the strength. [BACON,
1. c.]
Progressive sinking of the strength.
(EBERH. GMELIN, (Effect of 4,. when given to patients for a long
time.) Nov. Acta Nat. Cur., vi, p. 394.]
Fainting. [PET. DH ABANO, 1. C.-RODDER,
1. c.]
415. Pulse intermitting and irregular,
two or three beats followed rapidly in succession, and then came
a pause of no long duration [BACON, 1. c.]
Syncope.
In the open air the head is free
and all the symptoms ameliorate[Stf. Gss.]
Disinclined for movement, she prefers
to sit. [Stf, Gss.]
Urgent desire to lie down. [BACON,
1. c.]
420. She must lie down (between
the 3rd and 5th h.).
Irresistible inclination to lie
down (from 2 to 5 h.).
Sleepiness and laziness; even when
walking uncommon sleepiness.[Hbg.]
(Interrupted yawning; she cannot
yawn perfectly.)
Yawns, often without being sleepy.
[Stf. Gss.]
425. Yawning and stretching. [Stf.
Gss.]
Sleepiness, sleep (aft. 2 h.).
In the afternoon great sleepiness,
the eyes close, but he easily wakes at a slight noise, but always
fails asleep again. [Stf. Gss.]
After eating unusual sleepiness.
[Stf. Gss.]
Light sleep (from 1 to 5
h.).
430. Sleeplessness (in the 4th h.).
Sleep full of dreams; confused,
vivid dreams.. [Stf. Gss.]
He cannot lie on the right
side, nor on the back; he turns about in bed with pains, from one
side to the other.
In the morning he lies in sleep
on his back, the left hand opener laid under his occiput.
He sleeps sitting with head bent
forward.
435. Slow respiration in sleep.
(Inspiration with double jerk, like
the butting of a goat, in sleep.)
Long dreams, with anxiety in the
chest, that impeded breathing so that he woke up lit consequence
(nightmare).
Dreams during which he talked much.
She has vexatious dreams.
440. He starts in affright, makes
many movements, and speaks in hi sleep.
She starts up in sleep and says
some one is seizing hold of her.
He is delirious while awake, jumps
out of bed, and thinks he is driving sheep (aft. 14 h.).
In the evening after lying down,
and by day when sitting he has waking dreams, and has delusions
as though he were far away from home.
Towards morning he has a very vivid
dream, which gives him a correct explanation of a circumstance that
was an inexplicable riddle to him when awake (aft. 20 h.).
445. He dreams half the night about
a singly subject, and is also occupied with it alone several hours
after waking, so that nothing beside this subject possesses his
mind (like the fixed idea of an insane person), which is very annoying
to him and bothers him.
Restless night. [GREDING, 1. c.]
At night anxious dreams, and frequent
waking in a fright. [Rkt.]
Inability to keep awake. [MORAEUS,
l, c.]
Quiet sleep for 4 or 5 hours.(
Symptom of convalescence.) [Bacon, 1. c.]
450. Desire for cold water. [MATTHIOLI,
1. c.]
Feverish pulse, frequently intermitting.
[RICHARD, 1. c.]
Sensation as if all the blood-vessels
grew cold. [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
Sensation as if the circulation
in all the blood-vessels was impeded.[BACON, l. c.]
He lies quiet, but is cold and shivers,
and wishes to be coveted with much bed-clothes. (BACON, 1 c.]
455. In the morning on waking dizzy
in the head.
In the morning on waking, he feels
as if he had fetid breath.
In the evening on lying down, shivering.
Rigor and frequent yawning, in the
morning after rising [Stf. Gss.]
Anxious chilliness (aft. 3 h.).
460. Chill on the slightest movement
(aft. 10 h.).
Chilliness in the abdomen. [Stf.
Gss.]
A coldness runs continually up her
.arms find legs ; in her face also she has a chill. [Stf. Gss.]
A shiver runs through her from below
up into the chest. [Stf. Gss. ]
She is chilly and shivers. [
Stf. Gss. ]
465. Rigor over back and arms. [Stf.
Gss. ]
Attack of faintness with chilliness.
At first coldness, rigor and paleness
of the finger-tips, then in the fingers, afterwards sensation of
cramp in the soles and calves, finally chill in the forehead (aft.
1/4h.)
Coldness all over the body.
Fever : Chill of the whole body,
with hot forehead, hot ear-lobes, and internal dry heat.
470. Fever : coldness with stiffness
of the whole body, redness and heat of one cheek, coldness and paleness
of the other, with open, staring eyes, and contracted pupils, which
only dilate slightly and slowly in the dark.
Towards evening, chill and coldness
of hands and feet, then sickness in the middle of the sternum, which
continues even when taking food that tastes well, though there is
neither appetite nor dislike for it ; after eating the sickness
goes off, followed by heat of face, accompanied by sad despairing
thoughts.
Frequent attacks (about every other
hour), for a quarter of an hour at time, of the most extreme weakness
and insensibility, so that he can move neither hands nor feet, nor
sit up in bed, nor yet feel his former pain, nor see, hear, or speak
aloud ; the legs at the same time are extended (aft. a few h.).
Alternate attacks (aft. 3, 4, 6
h.) : either along with redness of the cheeks, silly gaiety with
sensation of heat all over the body, and headache on moving the
eyes upwards and sideways; Or, along with redness of cheeks and
heat of head, shuddering all over the body, with proper taste in
mouth.
475. Or, along with redness of cheeks,
shivering, with weeping, accompanied by aching headache ;
Or, along with redness of cheeks,
an obstinate, contrary disposition, burning in the umbilical region,
and aching pain in head.
Extreme redness of cheeks, with
a peevish, complaining, lachrymose disposition (aft 3 h.).
Towards evening burning heat in
head and face, with redness of cheeks and outpressing headache;
at the same time rigor all over the body with thirst (aft. 14 h.).
[Stf. Gss.]
Towards evening, dry heat in face
with anxiety.
480. Hot on the head, with forehead
hot to the touch, and rigor of the rest of the body, on the slightest
movement.
Feeling of heat, first in the hands,
then in the whole body, even in the chest, without perceptible external
heat (aft. 4 h.).
Several times heat ran over his
back. [Stf. Gss.]
(Heat with throwing off the clothes.)
General heat with thirst.
485. During the heat moderate thirst
for beer.
(She drinks little in the heat and
yet has dry lips.)
(In the heat the cough is troublesome
)
(Great heat from 10 p .m. until
after midnight, with short breath ; she wished to cough but could
not, speaking also was difficult for her ; at the same time extreme
restlessness and crying out from pains in the hands, feet, abdomen,
and sacrum ; she stamped her feet and would not allow any one to
touch her.)
Perspiration with febrile rigor
(aft. 3 h.).
490. Slight perspiration all
over the body.
Sour-smelling perspiration all over
the body.
Perspiration of weakness.
Slight warmth with moderate perspiration.(
Reaction from S. 454.) [BACON, 1. c.]
Along with profuse perspiration
frequent micturition. [GREDING,1. c.]
495. Along with profuse perspiration,
diarrhoea and increased flow of urine. [GRADING, 1 .c.]
Great internal heat with thirst.
[RODDER, 1. c.]
Transpiration and sweat all over
the body. [STOERCK, 1. c.]
(Towards noon) perspiration. [GREDING,
1. c.]
Profuse perspiration without exhaustion.
[GRADING, 1. c.]
500. Along with bold speech and
sparkling eyes, cold sweat stands on the forehead, and the pulse
is almost imperceptible. [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
Nocturnal furious delirium ; he
cannot be kept in bed. ; in the morning very profuse sweat. [DURR,
( Effects of a mixture of A. and antimonial wine. ) in Hufel.
Journ., ix, 4, p. 108. ]
He does everything in a hurry, and
runs about the house. [HELMONT, 1. c.]
Transient insanity.( Not found
in Moraeus, narrative.) [MORAEUS, 1. c.]
Morose, inclined for nothing, depressed
spirits, even when walking.[Hbg.]
505. Morose, as though she had no
life in her (aft. 2 h.). [Stf. Gss.]
Becomes gay and inclined to sing
and dance (aft. 1/2 h.). [Stf.Gss]
More gay and excited than usual
(the first h.).
Alternate attacks of opposite states
of humour.( The two following symptoms, and S. 536, are given
as instances of this .) [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
Sometimes he is quite rational,
sometimes he talks nonsense. [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
510. Sometimes he despairs of his
recovery, sometimes he is full of hope. [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
After vomiting, immediate revival
of hope.( Mental effect of vomiting after the antidote had been
given.)
[RICHARD, 1. c.]
Trembling and tendency to palpitation
of the heart.
Palpitation of the heart and
anxiety, and increased heat of the body, especially in the face.
[Stf. Gss.]
Palpitation of the heart with
great anxiety ; oppression of the breathing and great weariness
in all the limbs ; it rises from thence into the head, and she is
as if stupified from flying redness in the face. [Stf. Gss.
]
515. Anxiety and peevishness, with
fine shooting in the side of the chest ; then beating in the scrobiculus
cordis and then aching pain in the head.
Inconsolable anxiety and piteous
howling, with complaints and reproaches about (often trifling)
evils (aft. 5 h.).
Piteous, anxious complaints, with
cowardly fears, despair, loud whining weeping, bitter complaints
and reproaches.
Fear lest he should fall.
Anthropophobia (aft. 3 h.).
520. He is in a reverie, and sits
buried in thought.
Lucid vision : he says, now my beloved
(70 miles away) must have sung the difficult passage (The passage
from Beethoven : "Ah' perfido !" she, although previously dangerously
ill, had this day sung at, a concert, particularly well, only five
hours before her betrothal, who was particularly susceptible to
mesmerism.) that I was just singing.
Solicitude, grief.
The slightest noise is intolerable
to him (aft. 1/2 h.).
Music is intolerable to her ; it
goes through every limb; she becomes quite melancholy (aft. 24 h.).
525. Excessive tendency to be
startled (aft. 1/4 h.).
He takes every joke in bad part
(aft. 3 h.).
She is extremely disposed to
be cross (aft.1/2 h.).
She becomes quarrelsome.
She makes reproaches.
530. Quarrelsomeness, alternating
from hour to hour with silly insanity he chatters childish nonsense,
and is extravagantly merry.
Angry disposition.
Obstinacy.
Misanthropy.
Composed, staid, although not cheerful
humour (secondary and curative action) (aft. 8 h.).
535. Lively power of imagination.
Sometimes he appears to weep, sometimes
he trills. [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
Insane tricks: [RICHARD, 1. c.]
Dread of impending death. [RICHARD,
1. c.]
Mortal anxiety recurring from time
to time. [MATTHIOLI, 1. c.]
540. Lamentable fears of impending
death (from 2 to 12 h.).
Fear of some misfortune happening
to him. |