SCILLA
(Squill)
(From vol. iii, 2nd
edit., 1825.)
In order to make the solution
of squill in alcohol the simplest and best mode is to cut out a
fresh piece of 100 grains weight from a very fresh squill-bulb,
to pound it in a mortar, gradually adding 100 drops of alcohol,
till it becomes a fine uniform pap, then to dilute and thoroughly
mix it with 500 drops of alcohol; to allow it to stand for some
days, to decant the clear supernatant brownish tincture, and to
mix 6 drops of this 94 drops of alcohol by means of ten succussions,
so as to form the first dilution (1/100).
The observations recorded below
may be much added to; but they already suffice to enable us to estimate
and correct the employment that has hitherto been made of this root;
this I have partly done in some notes.
In large doses the action of
squill lasts fourteen days in small doses its action is proportionally
shorter.
MURRAY and TISSOT tell us that
camphor is an antidote to squill, and this agrees with my own observations.
{HAHNEMANN’s fellow provers were,
BECHER, HARTMANN, HORNBURG, MOSSDORF, STAPF, TEUTHORN, WALTHER,
WISLICENUS.]
The following old-school authors
are cited:
BERGIUS, Mat. Med.
CASPARI, Diss. de Scilla.
COHAUSEN, Commerc. lit. Norimb.,
vol. xii, sect. ii.
CRANZ, Mat. Med., ii.
HOME, Clinical Exper.
LANGE, Medicana dom., Brunsvic.
LUDWIG, Adversaria Med., vol.
ii.
MUZELL, Wahrnehm., ii.
SCHULZE, J. H., et. SCHOETER,
Diss. Asthma rad. Scilloe usu sublatum, Halae 1735.
TISSOT, Epist. Med. Pract.
Edit. Bald.
VALENTINI, Hist. Simpl. Reform.,
lib. ii.
WAGNER, J. G., Observ. Clin.,
Lub.. 1737.
WEIKARD, Vermischte Schriften,
i.
ZWELFER, Pharmac. Regia.
The 1st edit. Has
286 symptoms, this 2nd edit, only two more.]
SCILLA
In the morning on rising from
bed, a vertigo as though he would fall sideways (aft. 48 h.).
Sick-vertigo as if he had been
turning round in a circle for a long time. [Hbg.]
Weak in the head and dreamy (aft.
6 – 12 h.).
Confusion of the sinciput and
occiput, as after intoxication, with an aching in the front and
back of the head. [Htn.]
5. Cloudy dizziness in the
head (aft. 2 m.).
In the morning after rising dull
humming headache. [Bch.]
In the morning after waking heaviness
in the whole of the top of the head. [Bch.]
An extraordinary heaviness in
the whole head, as if he could not hold it still, only when sitting.
[Htn.]
(Aching tearing pain in the head,
which does not permit mental work)(aft. 12 h.).
10. Flat pressure all over the
head as from a weight (aft. 12 h.). [Bch.]
Transient aching in the occiput.
[Bch.]
Pressive pain in the frontal
protuberance on a small spot. [Htn.]
Aching drawing pain in the forehead.
[Htn.]
A transient pain in the occiput
spreading from the left to the right side. [Htn.]
15. Single painful stitches combined
with drawing in the forehead from the left to the right side. [Htn.]
A drawing ending in a stitch
in the right temple (aft. ½ h.). [Htn.]
Contractive pain in both temples.
Twitching stitch in the right
temple to the forehead.
Violent drawing stitches in the
right temple; they drew half of the brain together.
20. Squeezing headache in the
lateral parts of the head (aft. ½ h.).
A drawing shooting, long continued
pain in the occiput, when sitting. [Htn.]
Rather slow stitches into
the right side of the forehead. [Htn.]
A painful penetrating blow in
the left frontal protuberance (aft. 1 h.). [Htn.]
Tearing pain in the occiput.
[Htn.]
25. A digging pain in their occiput.
[Htn.]
Painful sensitiveness of the
top of the head. [Ws.]
Every morning painful sensitiveness
on the top of the head, and stupefaction in the interior of it.
[Ws.]
A splashing in the head when
shaking it.
(Eroding) itching on the forehead
and chin, as if an eruption would break out, going off on scratching,
but returning immediately. [Bch.]
30. Stitches in the right frontal
protuberance down to the nose. [Htn.]
The appearance of the countenance
varies, and is sometimes very much dejected, sometimes animated,
without heat or chill feeling. [Stf.]
Distorted, strained features,
large wide open eyes and staring look, with redness of the cheeks,
without thirst. [Htn.]
Staring look. [Htn.]
The left eye looks smaller than
the right; the upper left eyelid is as if swollen, and hangs perceptibly
down, making the eye seem smaller. [Stf.]
35. The eyes appeared to swim
in cool water for some minutes. [Stf.]
The pupils contract (aft. 5 h.).
Great contraction of the pupils
(immediately). [Trn.]
Contraction of the pupils (aft.
½ h.). [Bch.]
Contracted pupils (aft. 1 h.).
[Htn.]
40. Great dilatation of the pupils
(aft. 2 m.).
(Very dilated pupils.) [Stf.]
Tickling in the outer canthus
of the left eye.
Fine burning in the outer canthi.
[Hbg.]
Swarming pricking in the outer
canthus of the left eye. [Bch.]
45. Itching in the left eye (aft.
24 h.).
A contractive sensation in the
right eye.
Violent tearing in both eyes
at once, as it were behind the eyeballs. [Bch.]
Drawing stitch from the forehead
into the right ear.
(Tearing pains in the interior
of both ears.)
50. A tearing pain behind
the left ear. [Htn.]
Acrid nasal mucus.
Sore feeling on the borders of
the nostrils.
Stiffness in the left cervical
muscles. [Hbg.]
A pricking itching in the neck
and jaws, as from a flea, which was removed only for an instant
by scratching, and returned immediately afterwards. [Htn.]
55. Daily, until the seventh
day, increasing pimples on the neck, which are only painful when
rubbed (aft. 4 d.). [Ws.]
Drawing and squeezing in the
cervical muscles, also when not moving. [Hbg.]
The skin on the neck is outwardly
painfully sensitive on being slightly rubbed by the neckcloth, and
exhibits red, almost excoriating, spots (aft. 24 h.). [Ws.]
(Pain in the submaxillary glands)(aft.
3 h.).
Above the middle of the upper
lip an eruption, which exudes moisture and erodes about it, like
am ulcer, with pricking itching.
60. Stickiness and sliminess
in the mouth. [Stf.]
Vesicles on the tongue.
Stitches darting upwards in both
upper canine teeth, as when a sharp cold air comes into the teeth,
when eating and drinking either cold or warm things.
Far back on the palate a rough
and scrapy feeling. [Stf.]
Burnt taste in the palate, even
when chewing food, which remained also after eating, and is only
not felt when swallowing the food. [Bch.]
65. Burning in the palate and
throat. [Hbg.]
Scratching burning in the palate,
like heartburn (aft. 5, 6 d.). [Ws.]
Ravenous hunger (aft. some h.).
[Trn.]
Insatiability in eating food
which tastes well; his stomach felt full and yet he had appetite.
[Htn.]
Complete anorexia; he cannot
eat anything and yet his taste is unimpaired.
70. Complete anorexia. [J. H.
SCHULZE et SCHROETER, (Observation, on a case of anasarca.
– This symptom not found.) Diss. Asthma rad. Scilloe usu Sublatum,
Halae, 1735.]
Anorexia, partly on account of
feeling of fulness, partly because the food tasted burnt, partly
because some food had not taste a all, e.g. meat and soup,
whilst other food tasted disagreeably sweet, such as bread and butter.
[Bch.]
Spoils the appetite. [BERGIUS,(
Statements. – “Spoils”. Literally, “prostrates.”) Mat. Med.,
p. 278.]
(Everything tastes sour and bitter
to him.)
The taste for food is diminished
and as if blunted. [Ws.]
75. Weak appetite. [Ws.]
Tastelessness of tobacco when
smoked. [Hbg.]
Disagreeable sweetish taste of
all food, especially meat and soup (aft. 48 h.). [Bch.]
Empty eructation, for several
hours (aft. 1 h.).
Empty eructation. [Stf. – Htn.]
80. Short eructation. [Stf.]
Frequent eructation of a sour
taste, up into the mouth.
Eructation of a disagreeable
taste. [Stf.]
After dinner, eructation with
the taste of the food and nausea. [Bch.]
Nausea with eructation. [Wth.]
85. Irritation to vomit in the
gastric region. [Hbg.]
Nausea at the back of the throat
and almost constant flow of saliva into the mouth (aft. 48 h.).
[Bch.]
Constant alteration of inclination
to vomit in the scrobiculus cordis and diarrhoeic feeling in the
hypogastrium; when one is present the other is absent, but the diarrhoeic
feeling is greatest. [Stf.]
Extremretching to vomit. [TISSOT,
(Statements.) Epist. Med. Pract., edit. Bald., p. 207. –
MUZELL, (Observations.) Wahrnem., ii, p. 34. (Observations
in patients.) ]
Excessive nausea. [MUZELL,- BERGIUS,
l. c. – COHAUSEN, Commerc. lit. Norimb., vol. xii, sect.
ii, cap. 34.]
90. Vomiting. [MUZELL, - COHAUSEN,
l. c.]
Weakness of stomach. (Literally,
“enervates the forces of the stomach.”) [TISSOT, l. c.]
Spoils the digestive power of
the stomach. [BERGIUS, l. c.]
Painful squeezing below the chest
in the scrobiculus cordis. [Hbg.]
Fine pricks in the left side
of the scrobiculus cordis (aft. 32 h.). [Ws.]
95. Cardialgia. [ZWELFER, (Statements.)
Pharm. Regia., p. 146.]
Intermittent aching in the scrobiculus
cordis (aft. ½ h.). [Bch.]
Pressure like a stone in the
stomach. (Not found.) [SCHULZE et SCHROETER, l. c.]
Excessive pain in the stomach.
[LANGE, (Effects of a spoonful of powdered squill.)Medicina dom.,
Brunsvic., p. 167.]
Inflammation of the bowels. [ZWELFER,
l. c.]
100. Painless rumbling and grumbling
in the abdomen. [Hbg.]
Pinching in the abdomen. [Wth.]
Pinching and rumbling in the
abdomen, as from flatus, which was discharged (aft. 14 h.). [Htn.]
Incarceration of flatulence and
cutting in the hypogastrium, without discharge of flatus. [Bch.]
Rumbling and rattling in a jerky
manner in the hypogastrium above the pubic region, like flatus,
which, however, is not discharged (more frequently when walking
and standing than when sitting), which went off quickly and permanently
after eating. [Stf.]
105. Feeling of emptiness in
the abdomen, as if fasting. [Htn.]
Drawing pain in the abdomen,
increased by walking, and not relieved by compression (aft. 28 h.).
[Bch.]
Tearing through the abdomen below
the navel (aft. 4 h.). [Ws.]
In the hypogastrium, betwixt
the navel and pubes, an acute pain (as from flatulence, or from
a purgative, or as if diarrhoea were about to come on)(aft. 2 h.).
[Stf.]
Tension of the abdomen, which,
however, felt soft to the touch. [Stf.]
110. Cutting pinching in the
hypgastrium. [Htn.]
Aching shooting pain in the left
side of the abdominal muscles (aft. 24 h.).
Gurgling bubbling in the muscles
of the right side of the abdomen.
Painful tenderness of the abdomen,
which is considerably distended though soft. [Stf.]
Pinching in the hypogastrium
(aft. 14 h.), which recurred the following day at the same hour,
and was relieved and removed by discharge of flatus.
115. Every time and however often
he touched the abdomen a loud discharge of flatus took place. [Stf.]
Frequent discharge of flatus
(aft. 24 h.). [Bch.]
Discharge of flatus broken off
short. [Stf.]
Frequent discharge of very foetid
flatus (aft. 1 h.). [Trn.]
Incessant discharge of very noisy,
foetid, strong flatus, whereby the abdomen is relieved, but only
momentarily. [Stf.]
120. Hard, scanty stool, in the
evening (aft. 12 h.). [Bch.]
Very hard, but daily stool. [Ws.]
Pappy stool, without pain in
the belly. [Bch.]
Diarrhoeic evacuation of a quantity
of brown, quite thin, slimy, very foetid excrement, without pain
or tenesmus, with spulttering flatus, and mixed with thread-worms
and a quantity of shapeless white shreds. [Stf.]
Diarrhoea from 1 till 7 a.m.,
at last quite watery, almost without flatus. [Stf.]
125. Constipation for several
days. [Stf.]
Itching at the anus.
Shooting at the anus when walking
(aft. 8 d.). [Ws.]
Stool coloured with blood. [TISSOT,
l. c.]
Great urging to urinate and stool;
on first making water a thin stool without pain in the belly (aft.
10 m.). [Htn.]
130. On the second call to make
water there occurred simultaneously loose stool without pain in
the belly. [Htn.]
Constant but ineffectual urging
to urinate (aft. ¼ h.). [Wth.]
Less urine than usual seems to
pass (aft. 48 h.). [Ws.]
Scanty discharge of watery urine
(aft. ½ h.). [Ws.]
Violent urging to urinate; he
passed an uncommonly large quantity of urine, which had the appearance
of water (aft. 7 h.). [Bch.]
135. On a slight call to urinate,
reddish urine 9of the usual quantity) with reddish sediment, for
three days (aft. 20 h.). [Bch.]
He cannot retain his urine
because the quantity is so great; it
would have escaped had he not been quick to discharge it (aft. ¼
h.) – a state that lasted twelve hours. [Htn.]
Great urging to pass very little
water (aft. 40 h.0.
Great urging to urinate (Statements.) (aft. ¼ h.). [Htn.]
Micturition not more frequent,
but less urine is passed (for three days).
140. Rare call to urinate and
scantier secretion of urine (aft. 20 h.).
Rarer micturition than ordinary,
and scanter secretion of urine which is not dark coloured (aft.
24 h.). [Htn.]
(Urine hot, and stool with undigested
portions and very foetid.)
Bloody urine. [TISSOT, l. c.
– CASPARI, (Statements.) Diss. de Scilla, p. 11.]
Brownish yellow, transparent
urine, which is secreted in small quantity, and after standing forms
flakes (Seemed to be a kind of curative action, as the prover
had previously too copious a secretion and discharge of urine.)
(the first 8 h.). [Trn.]
(Frequent micturition, (The
primary actions of squill on the urinary passages is at first a
great urging to urinate, 145, with copious discharge of urine, 136,
especially of colourless urine, 134, 146; at least, when it is not
copious, it is watery, 141. After the expiry of this primary and
positive action of squill, there occurs after several hours the
reaction (secondary action) of the organism, as the opposite of
the primary medicinal action, namely, slight call to urinate, scanty
secretion of the urine and rarer discharge of it, 139, 140, sometimes
of the usual colour, 141, but more frequently of darker colour,
135, 144, and also with great urging to pass it, but only scanty,
137, or even wit no evacuation of urine, 148. Now, as hitherto all
this was known, not ascertained, the very way to do so not being
known, it was impossible that any true cures of dropsical diseases
could be made with squill during all those thousands of years (very
long before the Greeks, this drug was considered in Egypt as the
only remedy for these diseases), hence most of these so affected
were all the more certainly hurried to their graves by its employment.
There was always great rejoicing because at first it brought away
so much urine, and a speedy cure was joyfully anticipated but it
was not known that this was only the primary action of squill, and
in such cases the opposite of the actual morbid state, consequently
only palliative. With sorrow it was perceived that notwithstanding
an increase of the doses, nothing but the contrary effect (secondary
action) could be maintened, to wit, a scanty quantity of dark urine,
becoming ever rarer and rarer. Only the few dropsical diseases (for
they are extremely numerous, and the dropsy is only a single symptoms
of them; hence the general term dropsy, which should include then
all, as though they are but one unvarying disease, is an unpardonable
falsehood of the pathologists)(only those few dropsical affections
whose symptoms can be found in tolerable similarity among the positive
effects of squill, whose symptoms relating to the urinary discharge
particularly correspond to those primary symptoms of squill recorded
above (and such cases are rare), can be really and permanently cured
by squill. Those kind of wasting diseases (diabetes) will be much
more likely to find an efficacious, specific remedy in squill, which
in its primary action causes increased secretion of urine, the more
so as it is homoeopathically suitable in respect to the similarity
of the other symptoms of these maladies.) Without increase of
the urine (in the first hours).
Frequent discharge of urine as
limpid as water; he has a quick call to urinate (aft. 1 h.).[Stf.]
He woke up at night to urinate
(aft. 18 h.).
After urinating strangury, there
is no water in the bladder (aft. 5 h., for 3 d.).
Shooting at the orifice of the
urethra and somewhat farther back (aft. 2.1/4 h.). [Ws.]
150. Shooting pain in the urethra
when pressing at stool (aft. 8 d.). [Ws.]
Anxious obtuse stitches in the
glans penis.
Compressive pain in the testicles.
Metrorrhagia. [J. G. WAGNER,
(Observation,- Thsymptoms not found.) Observ. clin., Lub.,
1737.]
(She sneezes several times at
night.)
155. Violent persistent sneezing
and fluent coryza (immediately). [Mss. – Ws.]
(Flow of mucus from the nose.)
Stuffed coryza.
Smarting coryza with frequent
sneezing (aft. 48 h.). [Bch.]
In the morning outbreak of severe,
fluent coryza (aft. 6 d.). [Ws.]
160. Very violent coryza; the
eyes have a dim dull look and fill with water (in the forenoon)(aft.
7 d.). [Ws.]
Coryza with ulcerated nostrils.
Difficult, slower inspiration
and expiration. [Bch.]
Tightness of the chest with frequent,
quicker breathing and anxiety as long as the tightness of chest
lasts. [Bch.]
Tightness of, and shooting in
the chest, which is most troublesome on inspiration. [Wth.]
165. Oppression over the chest,
as if it were too narrow. [Wth.]
A tickle inwardly in the region
of the thyroid cartilage that excited coughing, whereby, however,
the tickle was increased.
Frequent irritation to dry, short
cough of four or five impulses, caused by a tickle under the thyroid
cartilage.
Slight irritation to dry, short
cough of four or five impulses, caused by a tickle under the thyroid
cartilage.
Slight irritation to cough in
the pit of the throat, in the upper part of the trachea; he coughs
several times (aft. 1 h.). [Stf.]
He is forced to breathe deeply,
and this deep breathing excites him to cough.
170. Dry violent cough which
causes pain like as shock in the abdomen and dryness of the throat.
Cough with diminished expectoration
(aft. 9 d.); at every cough impulse painful pressure outwards in
the thoracic cavity and painful contraction of the abdominal muscles.
[Ws.]
A cough, at first accompanied
by expectoration. (All my observations show that squill excites
the mucous glands of the trachea and bronchial tubes, so that the
phlegm, rendered more movable and thinner, can be expelled by coughing,
only in its primary action. [See 172, 173, 174, 178, 180.) Hence
its employment as a so-called expectorant can be only palliative,
that is to say, its continued employment must certainly increase
the malady if the fulness of the chest from tough adherent mucus
was a chronic complaint, for after this primary expectorant action
the organism produces the opposite state as its secondary action;
the mucus of the bronchial glands becomes ever tougher, and the
cough drier. (See 166, 167, 170, 171.) This root will therefore
rather prove curative in too copious and too frequent mucous secretion
on the chest, as was formerly insisted on by WEIKARD. )
In the morning cough with copious
mucous expectoration (aft. 7 d.). [Ws.]
A continual expectoration of
mucus (aft. 2 h.).
175. When coughing and when walking
pain on the slightest movement, an intolerable feeling of heat without
outwardly the perceptible heat (aft. 20 h.).
(Before the cough rattling which
went away after the cough.)
Peripenuemonia. (If we consult
the observations of practitioners of all ages, we shall occasionally
find that the best of them – the empirical discovery being confirmed
by experience – made use of squill with excellents result in the
stitches in the side accompanying some imflammation of the thoracic
organs, though they knew very well the great acridity of this root
on the tongue and in the internal parts, when administered in large
doses, It was inevitable that they should find it so useful as if
proved in their hands, on account of the many homoeopathic primary
effects primary effects of this root on the chest of healthy persons
(See 164, 179 – 190, 194, 195.). They did vastly more good than
the ordinary practitioners, who, as has again become the fashion,
acting on theoretical views, only employ so-called antiphlogistics
and merciless bleedings (venesections), and thereby do an immensity
of harm. Yet the former would have been still more successful in
curing acute pleurisy had they made a more accurate homoeopathic
selection of the cases for which squill is suitable in accordance
with its now ascertained symptoms, and if they had preserved their
patients from all heterogeneous influences, and refrained from mixing
with this medicine any other drugs, and had understood how to give
the squill in the most appropriate cases, not merely alone, but
also in a sufficiently small dos. In most cases I have found the
most servicable dos to be a small portion of a drop of the quintillion-fold
dilution of squill, indeed, often only of the sextillion-fold, or
a still smaller quantity.) [ZWELFER, l. c.]
180. In the morning, suddenly
a violent cough with stitches in the side at every cough, with expectoration
(aft. 6 d.); the preceding days there was hardly a trace of cough.
[Ws.]
Stitches on the left and right
true ribs, simultaneously. [Htn.]
A kind of stitch in the side.
(From squill mixed with vincaetoxicum. The patient (a dropsical
woman) had first “muscular rheumatism” of left arm and neck (to
which she was subject), and then, on the same side, a “Pleuritis
sicca exquisitissima.” She died soon after.) [WAGNER, l. c.]
During expiration pressive broad
stitches under the last rib on both sides (for two days).
Obtuse, broad stitches in the
lowest left rib, in the morning in bed, causing him to awake.
185. In the left side, just below
the last rib, a constrictive stitch, excited by quick walking. [Trn.]
Shooting in the left side (aft.
¼ h.). [Hbg.]
Stitches in the middle of the
ensiform cartilage, almost like a continued stitch. [Htn.]
On the left and right side of
the chest not far from the sternum, twitching stitches during inspiration
(aft. 24 h.).
Recurring stitch in the side.
[Hbg.]
190. A compressive pain ending
in a stitch, in the right side of the chest.
(In the right side of the chest,
under the arm, an aching and when he stoops, a throbbing pain; wen
touched, however, the pain was as if the flesh were detached there.)
A drawing pain in the chest (aft.
8 – 12 h.).
Drawing stitch form the last
true rib to the shoulder (aft. 46 h.).
Sharp stitches at the end of
the clavicle, towards the shoulder, during inspiration and expiration.
195. Extremely violent shooting
downwards near the sternum, so that he can only draw his breath
with difficulty. [Hbg.]
A pressure (tension?) on both
sides from the axillae to the hypogastrium chiefly on expanding
the thoracic cavity by inspiration (aft. 2 h.). [Ws.]
Stiffness in the nape (aft. 12
h.).
Rheumatic pain in the lateral
cervical muscles.
Painful sensitiveness of the
skin from one hip to the other over across the back (aft. 6 d.).
[Ws.]
200. Painless drawing on the
left scapula. [Bch.]
Painful twitching over the left
scapula (aft. 8 d.). [Ws.]
Under the scapula, in the back
and left upper arm a gurgling like bubbling up.
Eruption of very red pimples,
their apices filled with a little pus, on the back, with pricking
itching and after scratching burning pricking itching; the following
day each pimples was covered with a small scab. [Htn.]
Betwixt the scapulae a spot the
size of a dollar made up of papulaes or pimples thickly set but
not confluent, with tickling (crawling) itching, as from a flea,
which after scratching changed into a burning pricking itching,
but after some time again became a crawling itching. [Htn.]
205. On the chest, under the
right arm a crawling itching which is removed for a short time only
by scratching. [Htn.]
Perspiration in the axilla.
Convulsive twitching of the left
arm (when standing).
Painless twitching and palpitation
in the muscles of the upper arm. [Hbg.]
Slow needle-prick along the skin
from the shoulder to the middle of the upper arm. [Hbg.]
210. During the day the hands
often go to sleep when supporting the head, and the lower limbs
when the legs are crossed. [Bch.]
In the middle of the left metacarpus
an occasional pain like a needle-prick. [htn.]
Twitching pain across in the
wrist-joints. [Wth.]
(When handling squill in its
fresh state it causes blisters on the hands.) [VALENTINI, Hist.
Simpl. Reform., lib. ii, sect. 2. Cap. 34.]
A stitch-like drawing pain from
the left wrist into the fingers. [Htn.]
215. Acute shooting in both the
wrist joints, even when not moving (aft. 3 d.). [Ws.]
Small spots on the hands, feet,
chest and whole body, which develop into scabious pustules, like
the scabies humida that appears in the hands, betwixt the fingers,
on the feet and the whole body, with burning itching (aft. some
d.). (The word here rendered “body” is in the original “leibe,”
which was most probably meant for “abdomen.”)
Pricking in both thighs as with
needles. [Hbg.]
Convulsive twitching of the thighs
and legs, when sitting (aft. 24 h.).
Drawing pain in the muscles of
both thighs (aft. 7 h.). [Bch.]
220. Bruised feeling of the thighs.
Weariness of the thighs.
A gurgling extending in a line
from the upper part of the thigh to the toes.
In the left hough a contractive
pain, which compelled him to bend the knee, when standing.
Intermittent drawing pain on
the thighs, when sitting and walking. [Bch.]
225. Drawing pain in the leg.
Burning pain in the ball of the
right foot, as after frost-bite.
Sweat on the toes.
Burning and itching in the skin.
(From handling squill.) [ZWELFER, l. c.]
Excoriation betwixt the limbs.
230. Cold mortification. (Not
found unless it represents the viscerum lethales inflammationes”
already seen in S. 99.) [ZWELFER, l. c.]
Causes scirrhus. (By scirrhus”
any hard swelling is meant.) [BERGIUS, l. c.]
Scirrhus accompanied by pain
and inflammation, causes a fear that cancer may be produced by squill.
[CRANZ, (Observations – The “krebs” in the original is “ulceration,”
not cancer.” Maler. Medic. Ii, p. 83.]
Pains all over the body. [TISSOT,
l. c.]
Restlessness in the upper and
lower extremities, he must move them incessantly, in order to get
relief (aft. 2.1/2 h.). [Htn.]
235. Severe pains in the limbs.
[WEIKARD, (Observations. – This symptom occurred in a sensitive
nervous woman. Vermishte Schriften, I, p. 245.]
Constant, dull, rheumatic pains
on the whole body, which are alleviated when at rest and increased
by movement (aft. 6- 24 h.).
A shooting sometimes in one,
sometimes in another part of the body. [Ws.]
It often causes twitchings in
nervous debility. [CRANZ, l. c.]
Spasmodic movements. (Not
found in Zwelfer.) [WEIKARD, ZWELFER, l. c.]
240. Convulsions. (“In nervous
subjects,” Tissot says.) [TISSOT,- LANGE, l. c.]
Weariness (aft. 6 h.).
Feeling of heaviness in the whole
body, as from exhaustion (aft. 8-12 h.).
Exhaustion of the whole body,
very noticeable during a long walk. [Ws.]
Frequent yawning, without drowsiness
(aft. 2 h.). [Htn.]
245. Stretching or extension
of the upper extremities, with yawning, without drowsiness (aft.
1.1/2 h.). [Htn.]
He feels more exhausted by the
sleepless night than by the diarrhoea, is dazed in the head and
yet in tolerable good spirits and cheerful. [Stf.]
Sleeplessness without obvious
cause.
Sleepiness in the evening some
hours before bedtime. [Htn.]
Sleep with funny dreams. [Trn.]
250. After dinner exhaustion
and sleepiness. [Htn.]
Restless sleep. [Hbg.]
Frequent waking from sleep and
turning about in bed. [Bch.]
Tossing about in bed. [Hbg.]
Dream, that his body is swollen
to an enormous size, so vivid that on awaking he felt himself, to
see if it were true. [Bch.]
255. After midnight (1 o’clock)
he wakes up with inclination to vomit and anxiety and draws a deep
breath several times. [Stf.]
In the morning after awaking
and getting up, exhaustion, especially in the thighs in the region
of the hip. [Bch.]
After a quiet sleep without dreams,
in the morning a dazed feeling and heaviness in the head (aft. 72
h.). [Bch.]
Very small hard pulse, like a
tense string. [Stf.]
When vomiting the pulse falls
to 40 beats. [HOME, (Observations.) Clinical Exper., p. 394.]
260. Shivering all over the body
with some coldness of the skin (aft. 6 h.). [Ws.]
When walking even in the heated
room, he feels cold and chilly in the back and arms, not when sitting.
[Stf.]
Icy cold hands in the warm room
(aft. 1.1/2 h.). [Htn.]
Icy cold hands and feet, the
rest of the body being warm (aft. ¼ h.). [Htn.]
Icy cold feet. [Htn.]
265.Thirst during the evening
chill, without inward or outward heat.
At night inward chill, with outward
heat, without thirst (aft. 6 d.). [Ws.]
More inward than outward heat
in the face, without thirst, which is increased by moving the body,
with chilliness of the rest of the body on the slightest exposure.
Heat and redness especially in
the face on the slightest movement and when talking (aft. 10 h.).
(Dry outward and inward heat,
without thirst for three hours (aft. ½ h.), thereafter only inward
dry heat, without thirst.)
270. Heat in the head with cold
feet.
Every afternoon heat of the body,
without thirst, with cold feet.
(In the afternoon) great feeling
of heat in the whole body , but without outward redness and without
thirst, for some hours (aft. 6 d.). [Ws.]
In the evening, immediately after
lying down, outward heat with inward chill (aft. 7 d.). [Ws.]
Chilliness and soon afterwards
heat all over the body. [Wth.]
275. Heat all over the body,
as from heating drinks, with icy cold feet, without shivering, thirst
or sweat. [Htn.]
Feeling of heat in the whole
body without thirst or sweat (aft. 2 h.). [Bch.]
In the morning laziness, with
repugnance to all kinds of head work. [Hbg.]
Crossness at everything, and
disinclination to mental activity. [Ws.]
Crossness at all occupations;
he was cold towards others ad did not answer. [Bch.]
280. Vexation about trifles.
Disinclined to think, with dejection
(aft. 1 h.). [Wth.]
Disinclination of writing and
thinking. [Bch.]
Disinclination for writing and
thinking. [Bch.]
Anxiety of disposition, fear
of death. [Stf.]
Anxiety. [LUDWIG, (Observations.)
Adversaria Med., vol. ii, p. 713- COHAUSEN, l. c.]
285. Great anxiety. [TISSOT,
l. c.]
Whining. (On account of pain
of S. 98.) [LANGE, l. c.]
Cheerful, happy humour. (Probably
curative action.) [Trn.]
Courage, sedateness.
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