CHINA
(Cinchona Bark.)
(From vol. iii, 2nd
edit., 1825.)
(The alcoholic tincture of the
thin tubular as well as the royal
bark, Cinchona officinalis.)
Excepting opium I know no medicine
that has been more and oftener misused in diseases, and employed
to the injury of mankind, than cinchona bark. It was regarded not
only as perfectly innocuous, but as a wholesome and universally
beneficial medicine in almost all morbid states particularly where
debility was observed, and was often prescribed in large doses several
times a day for many weeks, and even months, together.
In so acting the ordinary physicians
were guided by an utterly false principle, and they confirmed the
reproach I have already frequently made against them to the more
sensible portion of the public, that they have hitherto sought in
traditional opinions, in guesses prompted by false lights in theoretical
maxims and chance ideas what they could and should find only by
impartial observation, clear experience, and pure experiment, in
a pure science of experience such as medicine from its nature must
only be.
Setting aside all guess-work
and all traditional unproved opinions, I adopted the latter method,
and I found, as with the other medicines, so especially with cinchona
bark, by testing its dynamical powers on the healthy human being,
that has certainly as it extremely curative in some cases of disease,
so surely can it also develop the most morbid symptoms of a special
kind in the healthy human body; symptoms often of great intensity
and long duration, as shown by the following true observations and
experiments.
Thereby, first of all, the prevailing
delusion as to the harmlessness, the child-like mildness and the
all-wholesome character of cinchona bark is refuted. (As
long ago as the year 1790 (See W. CULLEN’s Materia Medica, Leipzig,
bei Schwickert, ii, p. 109, note) I made the first pure trial with
cinchona bark upon myself, in reference to its power of exciting
intermittent fever. With this first trial broke upon me the dawn
that has since brightened into the most brilliant day of the medical
art; that it is only in virtue of their power to make the healthy
human being ill that medicines can cure morbid states, and indeed,
only such morbid states are composed of symptoms which the drug
to be selected for them can itself produce in similarity on the
healthy. This is a truth so incontrovertible, so absolutely without
exception, that all the venom poured out on it by the members of
the medical guild, blinded by their thousand-years old prejudices,
is powerless to extinguish it; as powerless as were the vituperations
launched against HARVEY’s immortal discovery of the greater circulation
in the human body by RIOLAN and his crew to destroy the truth revealed
by HARVEY. These opponents of an inextinguishable truth fought with
the same despicable weapons as do to-day the adversaries of the
homoeopathic medical doctrine. Like their modern congeners they
also refrained from repeating his experiments in a true, careful
manner, (for fear lest they might be confused by facts), and confined
themselves to abuse, appealing to the great antiquity of their error
(for GALEN’s predecessors and GALEN himself had arbitrarily decided
that the arteries contained only spiritual air, and that the source
of the blood was not in the heart but in the liver), and they cried
out: Malo cum Galeno errare cum Harveyo esse circulator! This blindness,
this obstinate appeal to the extreme antiquity of their delusion
(it was only after thirty years and more that HARVEY had the satisfaction
of seeing his true doctrine universally adopted), was in those days
not more stupid than the blindness of to-day, and the present aimless
rancour against homoeopathy which exposes the pernicious rubbish
talked about ancient and modern arbitrary maxims and unjustifiable
practices, and teaches that it is only by the responses given by
nature when questioned that we can with sure perscience change diseases
into health rapidly, gently, and permanently. )
But equally evident is it, from
the symptoms of disease produced by cinchona bark in healthy observers
recorded below, that the numerous unhappy results of the treatment
by this bark occurring in the practice of ordinary physicians, and
the frequently incurable aggravations of disease developed where
bark in long continued and large doses was the main remedy in the
prescriptions were owing solely to the noxious character of this
drug when employed in unsuitable cases, and in too frequent
and too large doses. This noxious character is demonstrated by the
medicinal symptoms recorded below, which physicians till now were
not aware of, and which they made no effort to ascertain. On the
contrary, they innocently ascribed these aggravations to the natural
course of the disease itself.
But I refrain from blaming these
physicians, whose judgement is biassed by the prejudices of their
schools, on this account, (their conscience will doubtless reproach
them for it) I will content myself with expressing my own convictions
in a few remarks.
1.Cinchona bark is one of the
most powerful vegetable medicines. When it is accurately indicated
as a remedy, and when the patient is seriously and intensely affected
by a disease that china is capable of removing, I find that one
drop of a diluted tincture of cinchona bark, which contains a quadrillionth
(1/ 1000000,000000,000000,000000,th) of a grain of china-power,
is a strong (often a too strong) dose, (Compare this with the
large doses of this drug given in ordinary practice!) , which
can accomplish and cure all alone all that china is capable of doing
in the case before us; generally without it being necessary to repeat
this dose in order to effect a cure; a second dose being rarely,
very rarely, required. In the case neither of this nor of any other
medicine did a preconcieved opinion or an eccentric fancy lead me
to this minuteness of dose. No, multiplied experience and faithful
observation led me to reduce the dose to such an extent. Led by
experience and observations I clearly saw that larger doses, even
where they did good, acted much more powerfully than was needed
for the cure. Hence the smaller doses; and as I repeatedly observed
from these the same effects though in a less degree, I gave still
smaller, and the very smallest doses. These proved sufficient to
effect a complete cure, and they did not display the violence of
larger doses, which tends to delay the cure.
2. A very small dose of china
acts for but a short time, hardly a couple of days, but a large
dose, such as is employed in the practice of every day, often acts
for several weeks if it be not got rid of by vomiting or diarrhoea,
and thus ejected from the organism. From this we may judge how excellent
the ordinary practice is of giving every day several and moreover
large doses of bark!
3. If the homoeopathic law be
right – as it incontestably is right without any exception, and
its derived from a pure observation of nature – that medicines can
easily rapidly, and permanently cure cases of disease only when
the latter are made up of symptoms similar to the medicinal symptoms
observed from the administration of the former to healthy persons;
then we find, on a consideration of the symptoms of china, that
this medicine is adapted for but few diseases, but that where it
is accurately indicated, owing to the immense power of its action,
one single very small dose will often effect a marvellous its action,
one single very small dose will often effect a marvellous cure.
I say cure, and by this I mean
a “recovery undisturbed by after-sufferings”. Or have practitioners
of this ordinary stamp another, to me unknown, idea of what constitutes
a cure? Will they, for instance, call cures the suppression by this
drug of agues for which bark is unsuited? I know full well that
almost all periodic diseases, and almost all agus, even such as
are not suited for china, must be suppressed and lose their periodic
character by this powerful drug, administered as it usually is in
enormous and oft-repeated doses; but are the poor sufferers thereby
really cured? Has nottheir pervious disease only undergone a transformation
into another and worse disease, though it may no longer manifest
itself in intermittent attacks recurring periodically, but has become
a continued and, we may say, a more insidious disease by this very
powerful and, in this case, insuitable medicine? True, they can
no longer complain that the paroxysm of their original disease reappears
on certain days and at certain hours; but note the earthy complexion
of their puffy faces, the dulness of their eyes! See how oppressed
is their breathing, how hard and distented is their epigastrium,
how tensely swollen their loins, how miserable their appetite, how
perverted their taste, how oppressed and painful their stomachs
by all food, how indigested and abnormal their faecal evacuations,
how anxious, dreamful, and unrefreshing their sleep! Look how weary,
how joyless, how dejected, how irritably sensitive or stupid they
are as they drag themselves about, tormented by a much greater number
of ailments than afflicted them in their ague! And how long does
not such a china-cachexy often last, in comparison with which death
itself were often preferable!
Is this health? It is not ague,
that I readily, that I readily admit; but confess – and no one can
deny it – it is certainly not health. It is rather another, but
a worse, disease than ague. It is the china-disease, which must
be more severe than the ague otherwise it could not overcome and
suppress (suspend) the latter.
Should the organism, as it sometimes
will, recover from this china disease after many weeks, then the
ague, which has till now remained suspended by the superior force
of the dissimilar china-disease, returns in an aggravated form,
because the organism has been so much deteriorated by the improper
treatment.
If the attack be now renewed
in a still more energetic manner with cinchona bark, and continued
for a longer time in order, as it is said, to ward off the fits,
there then occurs a chronic china-cachexy, a faint picture of which
will be found in the symptoms recorded below.
Such are most of the bark treatments
of our physicians, because they know not what are the cases for
which bark is suited. They are suppressions of the original affection
by the production of a stronger china-disease, which is mistaken
for a manifestation of the obstinacy of the original disease, the
development of new symptoms being attributed to its peculiar malignity;
because it is not known that these ailments are due to china, because
it is not recognised what they are, namely, artificially induced
china-disease.
The following symptoms caused
solely by bark acting on the healthy body, will open the eyes of
physicians on this subject, those of them at least who have not
yet acquired the faculty of silencing their consciences, and in
whose bosoms a warm heart for the welfare of their fellow creatures
still beats.
Most intolerable and unjustifiable,
however, is the monstrous abuse made by the dominant school of medicine,
which plumes itself on being the only rational school, of this powerful
drug in all kinds of debility.
There is no disease which is
attended by weakness (as almost every one is naturally), or which
physicians by their unsuitable allopathic medicinal mixtures have
reduced to exhaustion of vital powers – where they did not consider
it necessary to give this bark in large doses in order to strengthen
as they call it; no patient prostrated, ruined and enfeebled
by improper drugs to a condition of complicated cachexy whom they
have not endevoured to set up and restore to a healthy condition
by tonic potions of infusion, decoction, extract, electuary of china,
or by the same drug in powder. He is stuffed and tortured with it
for weeks and months under the pretence that it will do him good.
Of the consequence of such treatment I would prefer to say nothing.
If the death-rolls could speak, they would most eloquently speak
the praises of this abuse of bark; and so also would the crowds
of the living victims of asthmatic, dropsical, and icteric diseases,
and those other unfortunates who remain affected with neuralgic
os spasmodic maladie, or with malignant growths, abdominal sufferings
or lingering fever, if they but knew what mischief had been done
to them.
I would appeal to the common
sense of these practitioners and ask them how, without being guilty
of the most unpardonable slipshod practice, they can venture to
administer bark in all those infinitely various diseases, which
of themselves, as also especially in consequence of the traditional
medical treatment, must necessarily medical be attended by weakness?
How can they ever imagine that they can strengthen a sick person
whilst he is still suffering from his disease, the source of his
weakness? Have they ever seen a patient rapidly cured of his disease
by appropriate remedies who failed to recover his strength in the
very process of the removal of his disease? If, however, as is natural,
it is only by the cure of the disease that the weakness of the patient
can cease and give place to strength and activity, and if, on the
other hand, there can be no question of a removal of the weakness
as long as its source is not dried up, that is to say, as long as
the disease on which it depends is not cured, what a perverse treatment
must not that be, which seeks to make strong and active by the administration
of china (and wine) a patient at whose vitals the disease is still
gnawing! These practitioners cannot cure diseases, but they can
attempt to strengthen these uncured patients with cinchona-bark.
How can such a stupid idea ever enter their heads? If bark is to
make all sick persons strong, active and cheerful, it must needs
be the universal panacea which shall at once deliver all patients
from all their maladies, from all morbid sensations and abnormal
functions, that is to say, make them in all their ailments in every
respect well and free from disease! For so long as the plague of
disease deranges the whole man, consumes his forces and robs him
of every feeling of well-being, it is a childish, foolish, self-contradictory
undertaking to attempt to give such an uncured person strength and
activity.
That cinchona-bark is no panacea
for all diseases, we are taught by the sad experience of the ordinary
practice; but its symptoms show that it can be an appropriate, real
remedy for only a few cases of disease.
It is no doubt true that by
the first doses of bark the strength of the patient, be he ever
so ill, is increased for a few hours; he is able to raise himself
up in bed all alone, as if by a miracle; he wants to get out of
bed and put on his clothes; all at once he speaks in a stronger
more resolute manner, venturing to walk alone, and grows animated,
eagerly desires to eat this or that,- but a careful accurate observer
easily sees that this excitation is only an unnatural tension (see
below the note to § 895). A few hours pass and the patient sinks
back, sinks deeper down into his disease, and the fatal result is
often accelerated.
Do not these gentlemen perceive
that no one can become well (truly strong and active) as long as
his disease lasts?
No! the always suspicious semblance
of strength communicated to the patient for a few hours by bark
is invariably attended by the saddest results, and this will ever
be so, except in those rare cases where cinchona-bark is
at the same time the right remedy for the disease on which the weakness
depends. In such cases the patient’s weakness ceases immediately
with the disease. But, as I have said, such cases are rare, for
cinchona-bark is the true remedy (which relieves rapidly, permanently,
and without after-ailments) for but few diseases. In all the many
other cases bark, as a medicine and so-called tonic, must to harm,
and the more so the stronger its medicinal power (injuring when
given improperly) is. For all medicines, without exception , can
do no good when unsuitable for the case of disease, and must inflict
so much the more injury the greater their medicinal strength (and
the larger the doses in which they are given).
Hence, physicians should first
learn the peculiar power oaction of cinchona-bark, and exactly what
particular alterations in the health of human beings it is capable
of causing, before they presume to undertake the cure of diseases,
and consequently the morbid weakness, with this powerful medicinal
agent. They should first know the symptoms of china before attempting
to determine for what collection of morbid symptoms, that is, for
what case of disease it may be curative; it can be curative for
none but those whose symptoms are to be found in similarity among
the symptoms of china, he who falls to do this will always commit
mistakes, and do infinitely more harm than good to the patient.
When china has been selected
according to conscientious homoeopathic conviction (but not as hitherto,
according to theoretical views, deceptive names of diseases, or
the misleading authority of equally blind predecessors), and is
consequently the truly appropriate remedy of the case of disease
to be treated, in such a case, and for that very reason, it also
the true strengthening remedy. It strengthens in as much as it removes
the disease, for it is only the organism free from disease that
restores the defective strength; strength cannot be materially poured
into it by a decoction of china (or by wine).
There are no doubt cases where
the disease itself consists of weakness, and in such cases bark
is at once the most appropriate curative and strengthening remedy.
Such a case is that where the sufferings of the patient are solely
or chiefly owing to weakness from loss of humours, from great
loss of blood (also from repeated venesections), great loss of milk
in nursing women, loss of saliva, frequent seminal losses, profuse
suppurations (profuse sweats), and weakening by frequent purgatives,
where almost all the other ailments of the patient are wont to correspond
in similarity with the china symptoms (see notes to 837 and 860).
If, then, there is here no other disease in the background to produce
dynamically or to keep up the loss of humours, then for the cure
of this peculiar weakness (from loss of humours), which has here
become the disease, one or two doses as small as those above mentioned,
(Here as elsewhere I insist on the sufficiency and efficiency
of such small doses. And yet the vulgar herd can never understand
me, for they know nothing of the pure treatment with one single
simple medicinal substance to the exclusion of all other sorts of
medicinal irritants, and their thoughts are enchained in the mazes
of their old routine. Even when the ordinary physicians now and
then constrain themselves to give in some (acute) disease one single
medicine, they never have the heart to refrain from using at the
same time several other things possessing medicinal power, which,
however, they regard as of no consequence, and to which they apply
the trivial name of domestic remedies.) They must always use simultaneously
either a poultice of so-called aromatic or solvent herbs applied
to the most painful part(just as though these could have no effect
on the patient through his olfactory nerves, nor act as a heterogeneous
medicine through the skin!), or they must rub in some medicinal
ointment, or give a medicinal vapour-bath, or a medicinal gargle,
or apply a blister or sinapism, or prescribe several half, whole
or foot-baths, or order clysters of valerian, camomile, &c.
(just as though all these were a mere nothing and did not act on
the human system as heterogeneous powerful medicine through the
skin, the mouth, the rectum, the colon, &c.!), or they must
administer simultaneously a tea of mint camomile, elder-flower,
so-called pectoral herbs, &c. (Just as though a handful of such
herbs or flowers infused in boiling water counted for nothing!).
In such an onslaught with heterogeneous drugs, which, although ignorance
looks upon them as innocuous domestic remedies, are to all intents
and purposes medicines, and some of them very powerful medicines,
in this accessory quackery, I say, even a large dose of medicine
of another kind can, of a truth, never display its peculiar action,
and such an uncommonly small dose as homoeopathy requires is completely
powerless; it will be instaneously overpowered and aniihilated.
No! in the language of rational men that alone can be called giving
a single medicine in a disease, when, excepting this one, all other
medicinal influences aer excluded from the patient and carefully
kept away from the patient and carefully kept away from him. But
he who will do this must know what things brought in contact with
the human body act medicinally on it. So long as he does not know
this it must be ascribed to his ignorance that he considers as nothing,
as not at all medicinal, such things as herb-teas and clysters,
poultices and baths of herbs and salts, and the other things just
mentioned, and continues to use them thoughtlessly under the name
of domestic remedies during the employment of medicine internally.
Still more heedlessly in this respect is the treatment of chronic
maladies conducted; for, in addition to what the patient takes from
medicine chests and bottles, and the external applications and so-called
domestic remedies that are usually administered to the patient,
lots of superfluous hurtful things are allowed, and even prescribed,
which are also regarded as indifferent matters in spite of the disturbing
effects they may exercise on the patient’s health, and of the confusion
they may cause in the treatment. Besides the internal and external
use of medicines the patient is allowed, for example, to take (fro
breakfast) mulled beer, vanilla chocolate, also (even several times
a day) strong coffee or black and green tea, not unfrequently –
to strengthen the stomach (?) – claret-cup, liqueurs containing
strong spices, seasonings of all sorts in the food, and especially
in sauces (made of soy, cayenne pepper, mustard, &c.) – these
things are supposed merely to increase the appetite and promote
digestion, but to possess no hurtful medicinal quality! – moreover,
quantities of uncooked herbs cut small and sprinkled over the soup
– which are regarded as supremely wholesome, but are really medicinal
– also various sorts of wine – one of the main reliances of ordinary
practice – must not be forgotten. Besides all these there are tooth-powders,
tooth-tinctures, and tooth-washes - also composed of medicinal ingredients,
and yet considered innocuous because for-sooth they are not swallowed;
just as though medicines only taken into the mouth or their exhalations
drawn into the nose did not as surely act on the whole organism
through its living sensitive fibres as when they are swallowed!
And then the various kinds of perfumes and washes (musk, ambergris
peppermint drops, oil of bergamot and cedar, neroli, eau-de-Cologne,
eau-de-luce, lavender water, &c.), besides perfumed sachets,
smelling bottles, scented soaps, powders and pomades, pot-pouri,
and any other noxious articles de luxe the patient may desire. In
such an ocean of medicinal influences the otherwise adequate homoeopathic
dose of medicine would be drowned and extinguished. But is such
a medley of medicinal luxury necessary and useful for the life and
well-being or compatible with the recovery of the patient? It is
injurious; and yet, perhaps, it has been invented by physicians
themselves for the upper classes in order to please, to stimulate
and to keep them ill.but even though physicians may not directly
recommend it, it is sufficiently sad that they not know the medicinal
noxiousness of all this luxury, and that they do not prohibit it
to their chronic patients, This hotch-potch of noxious influences,
due partly to the luxurious habits of the patient himself, partly
to the simultaneous use of domestic remedies ordered or permitted
by the doctor, is so much the rule, so universally pervalent, that
the ordinary practitioner cannot think of treatment without such
a simultaneous medical confusion, and hence, under these circumstances,
he is unable to promise any decided effect from the internal administration
of a single medicinal substance in a disease, even when it is given
in a large dose, far less from a very small dose of medihomeopathically
employed! CONRADI was acquainted with no other treatment than such
as is constructed amid such a confused medley of medicinal influences,
as is evident when he says (Grunariss der Pathologie and therapie,
Marburg, 1801, p. 335), that the action ascribed by me to such small
doses is beyond all belief. Here, not to dwell upon the trifling
circumstance that the determination of the action of medicinal doses
is hardly a matter of belief, but rather of experience, he seems
no more than other ordinary practitioners to have either the slightest
conception or the slightest experience of the action of a small
dose of appropriate medicine in a patient completely excluded from
the simultaneous irritation of all other kinds of medicinal substances,
otherwise he would have spoken in a different manner. A pure treatment
with a single homoeopathic medicine, all counter-acting medicinal
contaminations being removed (for it is only of such I speak and
only such I teach), never is seen or dreamt os in routine practice.
But the difference is enormous and incredible.
So the glutten just risen
from his luxurious meal of highly-spiced food is incapable of perceiving
the taste of a grain of sugar placed upon his over-stimulated tongue;
whereas a person contented with simple fare will, when fasting in
the morning, experience an intense sweet taste from a much smaller
quantity of the same sugar. Similarly amid the multifarious noises
in the most crowded part of a large town we can often not comprehend
the loudly spoken words of a friend at the distance of five or six
paces, whereas in the dead of night, when all the sounds of day
are hushed and perfect stillness prevails, the undisturbed ear distinctly
perceives the softest tone of a distant flute, because this gentle
sound is now the only one present, and therefore it exercises its
full action on the undisturbed organ of hearing.
So certain is it, that when
all accessory medicinal influences are withheld from the patient
(as should be done in all rational treatment), even the very minute
doses of a simple medicinal substance, especially of one chosen
according to similarity of symptoms , can and must exercise its
adequate and complete action, as a thousand-fold experience will
teach any one whom prejudice does not deter from repeating the experiment
accurately.
Quite small doses of medicine
are all the less likely to fail to exercise their peculiar action,
in as much as their very smallness cannot excite the organism to
revolutionary evacuations (what is morbid in the organism is altered
by the small dose), whereas a large dose, by the antagonism it excites
in the system, will often be rapidly expelled and bodily ejected
and washed away by vomiting, purging, diuresis, perspiration, &c.
Will the ordinary physicians
at last understand that the small and smallest doses of homoeopathically
selected medicines can only effect great results in a pure genuine
treatment, but are quite unsuitable in routine treatment?) together with appropriate treatment in other respects, by nourishing
diet, open air, cheerful surroundings, &c, are as efficacious
to effect recovery as larger and repeated doses are to cause secondary
and injurious effects, as is the case with every nimium, every excess
even of the best thing in the world.
This suitableness of cinchona-bark
in diseases of debility from loss of humours led physicians of the
ordinary sort, as it were instinctively, to a mode of treatment
of many diseases which has been, and still continues to be, the
most prevalent of all modes of treatment – the weakening treatment
by means of squandering the humours (under pretence of loosening
the morbid matter and expelling it from the body) by means of frequently
repeated so-called solvents (that is, drugs of various kinds that
purge the bowels), by means of exciting an increased flow of urine
and copious perspirations (by many tepid and warm drinks and quantities
of tepid and warm-bath), by means of blood-letting by venesection
and leeches, by means of salivation, by means of drawing off imaginary
impure humours by open blisters, issues, setons, &c. If such
a treatment, especially that by mild purgatives the use of which
is so general, be long enough continued, then, by means of irritation
of the intestinal canal, not only is the greater disease of the
abdomen that keeps in suspense the acute disease, so long kept up
until the natural termination of the acute disease is reached, but
also a disease of debility from loss of humours is induced, for
which, then, after months of treatment, when the strength and humours
are much exhausted, cinchona-bark will assuredly restore the health
in the only remaining malady (the artificially produced disease
of debility from loss of humours). But none perceived by what a
circuitous round-about way such a cure was affected. Thus, inter
alia, the spring tertian fevers, and most other diseases of
an acute character, having of themselves a duration of only a few
weeks, are spun out into (rational?) treatments of many months’
duration; and the ignorent patient is happy in having escaped with
his life, whereas a real cure of the original disease ought only
to have occupied in a few days.
Hence the everlastingly repeated
warnings in so-called practical works, not to administer cinchona-bark
in agues, until all the (imaginary)impurities and morbid matters
have been energetically and repeatedly evacuated upwards and downwards,
or, according to the euphemistic expressions of the moderns (though
the same thing is meant), until the solvent treatment (i.e. laxatives
and purgatives to produce many liquid stools) has been employed
to a sufficient extent and long enough; in reality, until the artificially
produced abdominal disease has lasted longer than the normal duration
of the ague, and so the disease of debility from loss of humours
which alone remains can be transformed into health by cinchona-bark,
as of course it will be.
This is what was and is still
called methodical and rational treatment, in many, many cases of
disease.
With equal justice might we rob
widows and orphans in order to establish as asylum for the poor.
As cinchona-bark in its primary
action is a powerful laxative (see the symptoms, 497 et seq.)
it will be found to be very efficacious as a remedy in some
cases of diarrhoea when the other symptoms of china are not inappropriate
to the rest of the morbid symptoms.
So also in those cases where
we have to do with so-called moist gangrene in the external parts,
we shall generally notice in the remainder of the patient’s ailments,
morbid symptoms similar to the symptoms peculiar to cinchona-bark;
hence it is so useful in such cases.
The too easy and too frequent
morbid excitation to seminal discharges of the genitals, caused
sometimes by slight irritation in the hypogastrium, is very permanently
removed by the smallest dose of bark (in conformity with its peculiar
symptoms of this character).
Those attacks of pain which can
be excited by merely touching (or slightly moving) the part and
which then gradually increase to the most frightful degree are to
judge by the patient’s expressions, very similar to those caused
by china. I have sometimes permanently removed them by a single
dose of the diluted tincture, even when the attacks had been frequently
repeated. The malady was homoeopathically (see note to 685), as
it were, charmed away, and health substituted for it. No other known
remedy in the world could have done this, as none other is capable
of causing a similar symptom in its primary action.
Bark will hardly ever be found
curative when there are not present disturbances of the night’s
rest similar to those the medicine causes in the healthy (which
will be found recorded below).
There are some, though but few,
suppurations of the lungs (especially accompanied by stitches in
the chest, almost always only aggravated or excited by external
pressure), that may be cured by bark. But in these cases the other
symptoms and ailments of the patient must be found similarity among
the symptoms of china. In such cases only a few, sometimes but a
couple of doses of above minuteness, at long intervals, suffice
for the cure.
So also there are a few icteric
diseases, of such a character that they resemble the symptoms of
china ; when this is the case the disease is removed as if by magic
by one, or at most two, small doses, and perfect health takes its
place.
An intermittent fever must be
very similar to that which china can cause in the healthy, if that
medicine is to be the suitable, true remedy for it, and then a single
dose of the above indicated minuteness relieves – but this it does
best when given immediately after the termination of the paroxysm,
before the operations of nature are accumulated in the body for
the next fit. The usual method of suppressing an ague not curable
by cinchona bark, by means of large doses of this powerful substance,
is to give it shortly before the paroxysml it is then most certain
to produce this act of violence, but its consequence are very injurious.
Cinchona-bark can only permanently
cure a patient affected with intermittent fever in marshy districts
of his disease resembling the symptoms of china, when the patient
is able to be removed from the atmosphere that causes the fever
during his treatment, and until his forces are completely restored.
For if he remain in such an atmosphere he is constantly liable to
the reproduction of his disease from the same source; and the remedy,
even though frequently repeated, is unable to do any further good;
just as the morbid state induced by over-indulgence is coffee is
rapidly relieved by its appropriate remedy, but while the hurtful
beverage is continued to be taken, it will recur from time to time.
But how could physicians act
so stupidly as to think of substituting other things for cinchona-bark,
which in its dynamic action on the human health, and in its power
to derange that health in a peculiar manner, differs so immensely
from every other medicinal substance in the world? (See the peculiar
symptoms it causes, recorded below.) How could they dream of
finding a surrogate for china, that is to say, a medicinal
substance of identical and precisely the same medicinal power among
other extremely different substances? Is not every kind of animal,
every species of plant, and every mineral something peculiar, as
entity never to be confounded, not even in external appearance,
with any other? Could any one be so short-sighted as from their
external appearance to mistake a cinchona tree for a willow tree,
an ash or a horse- chesnut? And if we find these plants differ so
much in their external characters, though nature cannot offer so
much difference to a single sense – that of vision – as she can,
and actually does, to all the senses of the practised observer in
the dynamic action of these various plants on the health of the
living healthy human organism, shall no attention be paid to these
latter, the multiform peculiar symptoms which each single one of
these plants elicits in a manner so different from those of the
second and third, and whereon alone depends the specific medicinal
power of each medicinal plant with which only we are concerned in
curing disease? Shall we fail to perceive their high significance,
shall we fail to recognise them as the highest criterion of the
difference of drugs among one another? Or shall we consider all
things that have a bitter and astringent taste as identical in medicinal
effects, as a kind of cinchonabark.(As W. CULLEN amongst others
does (See Abh. uber die Matria Medica, ii, p. 110, Leipz., 1790.)
and thus constitute the coarse sense of taste in man (which
power) the supreme and sole judge for determining the medicinal
significance of the various plants? I should think it were possible
to act in a more short-sighted and foolish manner in matters of
such extreme importance for the welfare of humanity!
I grant that all the medicinal
substances that have been proposed as substitutes for cinchona-bark,
from the lofty ash down to camomile and lichen on the wall, as also
from arsenic down to Jame’s powder and sal-ammoniac, I grant, I
say, that every one of those medicinal substances I have named,
and others I have not named, has of itself cured particular cases
of ague (their reputation proves they have done this now and then).
But from the very circumstance that observers state of one or other
that it was efficacious even when cinchona bark did no good or was
hurtful, they prove clearly that the ague which the one medicine
cured was of a different kind from that other cured! For had it
been an ague suited for china, this medicine must have removed it,
and none other could have been of use. Or else there must be foolishly
attributed to the china in this case a peculiar malignity and spitefulness,
making it refuse to be helpful, or to the other vaunted medicine,
which was efficacious, a peculiar amiability and obligingness, causing
it to do as the doctor wished! It would almost appear as if some
such foolish notion was entertained!
No! the truth of the matter,
which has not been perceived, is as follows: It is not the bitterness,
the astringent taste, and the so-called aroma of the cinchona bark,
but in its whole intimate nature, that resides the invisible dynamical
working spirit, that can never be exhibited in a material separated
condition (just as little as can that of other medicinal substances),
whereby it differentiates itself from all other medicines in the
derangements of the human health it causes. See the observations
recorded below.
Everyone one of the medicinal
substances recommended in agues has its own peculiar action on the
human health, differing from the medicinal power of every other
drug, in conformity with eternal immutable laws of nature. Every
particular medicinal substance, by the will of the Creator, differs
from every other one in its externals (appearance, taste, and smell),
and even much more so in its internal dynamic properties, in order
that we may be enabled by means of these differences to fulfil all
possible curative intentions in the innumerable and various cases
of disease. Is it to be supposed that the all-good and omnipotent
Creator of thew infinite varieties of nature could, would, or should
have done less?
Now, if everyone of the vaunted
ague remedies, whilst leaving other agues uncured, has really cured
some cases – which I will not deny as far as regards those cases
where the observers have given the remedy by itself – and if every
single one of these remedies has affected its cure, not as a matter
of especial favour towards the doctor who prescribed it, but, as
it is more rational to suppose, owing to a peculiar power bestowed
on it in conformity with eternal laws of nature, then it must necessarily
be that the case in which this remedy, and not another, did good,
was a peculiar form of ague, adapted for this medicine only, and
different from that other ague which could only be cured by some
other remedy. And so all agues, each of which requires a different
medicine for its cure, must be agues absolutely dissimilar to one
another.
Again, when two agues betray
their difference, not only by symptoms palpably different from one
another, but also , as I have said, by this, that the one can only
be cured by one remedy and the other by another remedy, it plainly
follows from this, that these two remedies must differ from one
another in their nature and action, (Otherwise theone medicine
must have been able to cure just as well that ague which yielded
to the other medicine, if the action of both was the same.) and
cannot be identical, consequently cannot be considered as the same
thing, and therefore cannot reasonably be substituted for one another;
in other words, the one ought not to be represented as a surrogate
for the other.
Or have those gentlemen, who
do not see this, some mode of thinking peculiar to themselves and
unknown to me, some logic of their own that stands in direct contradiction
to that of the rest of mankind?
Infinite nature in much more
multiform in her dynamic endowment of medicinal substances than
the compilers of medicinal virtues, called teachers of Materia Medica,
have any idea of, and immeasurably more multiformin the production
of innumerable deviations in human health (diseases) than the bungling
pathologist enamoured of his natty classification is aware of, who,
by his couple of dozen, not even correctly (What physician, except
HIPPOCRATES, have ever described the pure course of any disease
where no medicine has been given from the beginning to the end?
Consequently, do not the recorded histories of diseases contain
the symptoms of the diseases mixed up with those of the domestic
remedies and drugs given during their course? ) designated,
forms of disease, seems only to give expression to the wish that
dear nature might be so good as to limit the host of diseases to
a small number, so that his brother therapeutist and practitioner
– his head stuffed full of traditional prescriptions – may the more
easily deal with the little collection.
That the ordinary physicians,
by mingling iron in the same prescription with bark, often dish
up for the patient a repulsive-looking and unsavoury ink, may be
overlooked, but they must be told that a compound results from this
mixture that possesses neither the virtues of cinchona bark nor
those of iron.
The truth of this assertion is
manifest from the fact when cinchona bark has done harm iron is
often its antidote and the remedy for its injurious action, as cinchona
bark is for iron, when indicated by the symptoms caused by the unsuitable
medicine.
Still iron can only remove some
of the untoward symptoms, those, namely, which it can produce in
similarity in healthy persons.
After long-continued treatments
with large doses of china many symptoms often remain for which other
medicines are required; for we frequently meet with china-cachexia
of such a severe character that is only with great difficulty that
the patient can be freed from them and rescued from dearth. In those
cases, Ipecacuanha in small doses, more frequently Arnica,
and in some few Belladona, is of use, the indication
for the antidote being determined by the symptoms of the china-disease.
Veratrum is useful when coldness of the body and cold sweats have
been caused by bark, if the other symptoms of this drug correspond
homoeopathically.
[HAHNEMAN was assisted in this
proving by ANTON, BAEHR, BECHER, CLAUSS, FRANZ, GROSS, HARNISCH,
HARTMANN, HARTUNG, HERRMANN, HORNBURG, CH. LEHMANN, J. G. LEHMANN,
MICHLER, MEYER, STAPF, TEUTHORN, WAGNER, WALTHER, WISLICENUS.
The following old-school authoritues
are quoted:
ALPINI, Hist, Febr. epid.
BALGIVI, Praxis, Lib.
ii.
BAKER, in Medical Transactions,
vol. iii. Lond., 1785.
BAUER, J. Fr., in Acta Nat.
Cur., iii.
BERGER, JOH. GOTTFR., Diss.
de Chinchina ab uniquis judiciis vindicata. Viteb., 1711.
BRESLAUER Samml., 1728.
CARTHEUSER, J. F., Diss. de
Febre intermitt. Epid. Francoff ad V., 1749.
CLEGORN, Diseases of Minorca.
CRUGER, DAN., in Misc. Nat.
Cur., Dec. iii, ann. 3.
ETTMULLER, B, M., Diss. de
usu et abusu praecepit.
FISCHER,C. E., in Hufel. Journal
f. pr. A., iv.
FORMEY, Med. Ephem., i,
2.
FOTHERGILL, Essays, tom. ii.
FRIBORG, Diss. de usu cort.
Peruv., 1773.
GESNER, J. A. PH., Sammlung,
v. Beob.,i. Nordlingen, 1789.
GREDING, in Ludw. Advers., tom.
i.
HILDENBRAND, J,V. VON, in Hufel.
Journ., xiii.
JUNCKER et FRITZE, Diss. de
usu cort. Peruv. Discreto. Halae, 1756.
KOKER, JOH, DE (work not given).
KREYSIG, Diss. Obs. de Febr.
Quart. Viteb., 1797.
LIMPRECHT, J.A., in Acta Nat.
Cur., ii.
MAY , W., in Lond. Med. Journ.,
1788.
MORTON, Opera, ii.
MURRAY, Apparat. Medicam,
2nd edit., i.
PELARGUS, Obs., ii.
PELARGUS, Obs., ii.
PERCIVAL, Essays. vol.
i.
QUARIN, Method. Med. Febr.
RAULIN, J., Observat. De Med.
Paris, 1754.
RICHARD, Recueil d’ Observ. De Med., ii.
ROMBERG, j. W., Misc. Nat.
Cur., Dec. iii, Ann. 9, 10.
ROSCHIN, in Annalen der Heilkunde,
1811, Feb.
SCHLEGEL, in Hufel. Journ.,
vii.
STAHL, J. E., Diss. Problem.
De Febrobus, - Obs. Clin.
SYDENHAM, Opusc. Lips., 1695.
THOMPSON, AL., in Med. Inqu.
And Observ., iv, No. 24.
THOMSON, THOM., Med. Rathpfleg.
Leipzig, 1779.
In the Frag. De Vir. China
has 221 symptoms, in the 1st Edit. 1082, and in this
2nd Edit. 1143.]
CHINA
Vertigo. [J. F. CARTHEUSER, (Results
of suppression of intemittents by china) Diss. de Febre intermitt,
epid. Francof. Ad. V., 1749.]
First vertigo and giddy nausea,
then general feeling of heat. (Comp. with 1, 3, 4, 5.)
Vertigo in the occiput, when
sitting. [Fz.]
Vertigo; the head tends to
sink backwards, worse when moving and walking, diminished by lying
down (aft. a few m.). [Hrr.]
5. Constant vertigo, the head
tends to sink backwards, in every position, but worse when walking
and moving the head (aft. 6 h.). [Hrr.]
Stupidity. [CARTHEUSER, l. c.]
He is long in collecting his
thoughts, is much disinclined for movement, and more disposed to
sit and to lie.
Confusion of the head. [C. E.
Fischer, (Effects of china in agues.) in Hufel Journal,
iv, pp. 652, 653. 657.]
Confusion of the head, like vertigo
from dancing and as in catarrh. (Comp.
with 11 and 49.)
10. Confusion and emptiness in
the head and laziness of the body as from watching at night and
sleeplessness. (10, 15, 21, comp. with 6, 8, 11, 12, 13, 14,
16 and 23.) (aft. 1 h.).
Confusion of the head, like a
catarrh. § (aft. 9 d.). [Ws.]
Confusion of the head in the
forehead. [Hbg.]
Confusion of the head, as after
a debauch, with aching in the temples. [Hbg.]
A cloudiness spread all over
the head, for half an hour. (aft. ¾ h.). [Htg.]
15. Stupefaction of the head,
with aching in the forehead (aft. ¼ h.).
A dull feeling in the lower part
of the head behind, as from awaking from sleep. [Bch.]
Heaviness of the head (at noon
vertigo rises up into the head, without pain). (17, 20, comp.
with 6, 8, 11, 12, 13, `4, 16 and 23.)
Heaviness of the head (18,
19, 22, see 17, 20) [J. E. STAHL. (As) in various works,
particularly in his Diss. Problem. De febribus.]
Heaviness in the head, which
tends to sink backwards, when sitting. [Hrr.]
20. Headache, like heaviness
and heat in it, worst when turning the eyes, at the same time with
twitching pains in the temples.
In the morning, on awaking from
sleep, dull, stupefying headache.
In the morning, on awaking from
sleep, heaviness of the head and weariness in all the limbs. [Lhm.]
In the morning, quite dazed in
the head, as after a debauch, with dryness in the mouth. [Fz.]
Headache in the frontal region.
[Fz.- Css.]
25. Aching shooting pain in the
forehead and temple of one side (aft. 4 h.).
Headache in the temples. [Hbg.]
Headache, exhaustion, then some
coldness. [Fz.]
Aching pain in the occiput. (28,
29, 30, 31, 33, 34, 36, see 35 and 39.) (aft. 3 h.). [Myr.]
Pressure on the left temple.
[Hrr.]
30. Compression in the temples
(aft. 5 h.). [Fz.]
In the evening, aching pain in
the temple. [Fz.]
Headache from afternoon till
evening, an aching in the middle of the forehead.
Aching pain in the right side
of the forehead. [Gss.]
Aching pain in the forehead;
on bending backwards it came with increased intensity in both temples;
when sitting it remained confined to the forehead. [Bch.]
35. Aching pain when walking,
first over the forehead, then in the temples. (Comp. with 28,
29, 30, 31, 33, 34, 26, 39.) (aft. 6 h.).
Headache, first an aching in
the forehead, which then spreads all over the head. [Bch.]
Headache as if the brain was
compressed from both sides and pressed out at the forehead, very
much increased by walking in the open air.
Violent aching pains deep in
the brain, and like constriction, especially in the right side of
the forehead and in the occiput, very much increased by walking.
(See 37, 40 – 46, 48, 50, 51, 53- 63, 65-67, 69, 70.) [An.]
Aching pain, especially in the
occiput. [An.]
40. Aching, pressing headache,
which is aggravated by open air (aft. 9 h.). [Htn.]
Hard pressure in the occiput,
as if the cerebellum were pressed out (aft. 5.1/2 h.). [Myr.]
Painful aching and pressing in
the head, towards the forehead, as if all were too heavy and would
be pressed out, relieved by pressing strongly on it with the hand
(aft. 8 h.). [Htn.]
Aching pressing headache in the
side towards which he leans. [Htn.]
A kind of aching, as if oppressed
ithe head, with frontal sweat (aft. ½ h.). [Wr.]
45. An aching, like fulness,
in the head just over the eyes(aft. 2 h.). [Wr.]
The brain feels as if pressed
by excess of blood. (37, 46, comp. with 38 and 40-45, 48 and
70.)
Headache over the orbits, which
comes on in the forenoon hours, is increased by walking, but is
removed by the mid-day meal (aft. 18 h.).
Headache as if the brain were
kneaded together, with too great excitement of the mind, restlessness,
inordinate and too rapid attentiveness and over-strainedness of
the imagination. [Fz.]
Headache in the temples like
stuffed coryza. (Comp. with 9 and 11.).
50. Pressive tearing in the
temporal region as if it would press out the bone. (Tearing
(drawing) pressure, and pressive tearing (drawing), seems to be
a chief character of pain with china, see also, 686, 687, 739, 746,
779, 780.) [Hrr.]
Tearing pain in the left temple.
[Lr.]
Headache now in one part then
in another part of the brain.
Tearing on several spots in the
head, aggravated by walking and by moving the head. [Hrr.]
Tearing headache from the right
occiputal bone to the right frontal protuberance. [Hrr.]
55.Drawing headache from the
occiput to the forehead, as if the whole forehead were contracted,
which ended in the temples like a beating; it was alleviated by
walking, increased by sitting and standing, and ceased by pressing
on it with the hand. [Trn.]
Drawing headache in the occiput,
when sitting. [Fz.]
Drawing pain in the head behind
the ears to the mastoid process. [Htg.]
Drawing pain in the left side
of the occiput; that goes off on bending back the head. [Fz.]
Drawing pain in the forehead.
[Hbg.]
60. When he places his hand on
his forehead there occurs there a to-and-fro drawing pain. [Fz.]
Violent twitching tearing
on several spots in the head, which is increased by movement and
by walking, diminished when lying (aft.
1 h.). [Hrr.]
Twitching tearing on the frontal
protuberances. [Gss.]
Twitching tearing in the right
temporal region, for three days. [Hrr.]
Twitching headache in the temple
to the upper jaw. (Comp. with 65, 66, also partlywith 61, 62,
63.)
65. Twitching from both parietal
bones of the head along the neck. (63, 65, see 64.). [Hbg.]
Headache, like a twitching towards
the forehead, increasing in severity till evening, when it went
off. [Ln.]
Digging headache in the left
side of the forehead, when he sits doing nothing, or occupies himself
with something for which he has no inclination. [Gss.]
Headache, first spasmodic in
the vertex, then on the side of the head as if bruised, increased
by the slightest movement.
Headache, a digging in the left
side of the head, when sitting (aft. 9.1/4 h.). [Htn.]
70. Headache so painful, as if
the skull would burst asunder; the brain beats in an undulating
manner against the skull. [Trn.]
Violent hammering in the head
towards the temples. [Ln.]
Headache in the left parietal
bone, like beating. [Hbg.]
An uninterrupted, dull, cutting
pain from both temples and occiput up into the orbits, more acute
and severe when moving and when stooping. [Lhm.]
Shooting headache, especially
in the left frontal region (aft. 1.1/2 h.). [Htg.]
75. Shooting betwixt forehead
and temple on the left side; on touching the temple he felt a strong
throbbing of the artery, and the shooting went off by this touching.
(Comp. especially with 80, also with 74, 76, 77, 78.)
Betwixt forehead and vertex burning,
severe stitches. [Htg.]
Continued shooting sensation
in the right temple. [Wth.]
Shooting headache in the forehead
(when sitting). [Lr.]
Fine shooting in the temple.
[Fz.]
80. Shooting headache between
the right temple and forehead, with strong pulsation of the temporal
artery. (See 76.) (aft. ½ h.). [An.]
Single stitches, which darted
from the internal ear upwards through the brain. [Trn.]
Shooting tearing on several parts
in the head, increased by moving the head. [Hrr.]
Headache when walking in the
wind, compounded of bruised and sore pain.
Headache, as if the brain were
sore, which is increased by the slightest touching of the head or
any part of it, but especially by strained attention and profound
reflection, indeed, even by speaking.
85. The integuments of the whole
head are so sensitive to touch that all thereon is painful, and
the roots of the hair in especial seem to suffer (aft. 36 h.). [Gss.]
Painful drawing on the right
side of the occiput. [Fz.]
Drawing pain in the occiput joint
when touched, so that he must bend the head backwards. [Fz.]
Painful drawing in the occiputal
bone. [Fz.]
Contractive pain on the left
side of the occiput in the skin. [Gss.]
90. Contractive, external
pain on the left side of the occiput; it feels as if the skin were
drawn together on one point; not increased by touching. [Hrr.]
Pain as if the skin on the upper
part of the head was grasped by a whole hand. [Gss.]
A pain drawing together in a
circle on the middle of the head superiorly (aft. ½ h.). [Hrr.]
Sweat among the hair of the head.
Profuse sweat among the hair
of the head.
Profuse sweat among the hair
of the head when walking in the open air.
95. Sharp stitches on the left
side of the hairy scalp. [Fz.]
Shooting itching in the hairy
scalp (aft. 1 h.). [Fz.]
(A crawling in the skin of the
forehead.)
Shooting aching externally on
the left frontal protuberance, accompanied by vertigo and some nausea
in the throat. [Hrr.]
Shooting aching on the right
from protuberance, more violent when touched (aft.
10 m.). [Hrr.]
100. Frequent alteration of the
colour of the face.
Paleness of the face. (101 to 104, comp. with 105.)
Bad, earthy complexion.
Pinched, pale face.
Hippoctratic face (pointed nose,
hollow eyes with blue rings), indifference, insensibility ; he wants
to know nothing about those around him, nothing about things that
he most liked (aft. 1 h.).
105. Pinched sharpened features,
pale, unhealthy-looking complexion, as after debauches. (See
101 to 104.) (Stf.)
Redness of the cheeks and
of the ear-lobes.
Puffy, red face. [FISCHER, l.
c.]
Heat of the face. [J. RAULIN.
(Not accessible.) Observed. De Med, Paris, 1754, pp. 243,
248.]
On coming from the open air into
the not warm room, there occurred burning heat in the face, [Stf.]
110. Alternate heat and redness
in the face. [STAHL, l. c.]
Momentary contraction of the
skin of the forehead, as if the skin in the middle of the forehead
were drawn together on one point (aft. ½ h.). [Ws.]
Burning pain on the forehead
and hot frontal perspiration. [Lhm.]
Aching over the face, especially
near the nose and cheeks, together with a contraction of the eyelids,
as if the upper and lower lids were drawn towards one another (aft.
3 h.). [Ws.]
Shooting pressure on the forehead,
above the nose and on the cheeks (aft. 32 h.). [Fz.]
115. A pecking pain in the zygomatic
process and in a right molar tooth. [Htg.]
Fine stitches in the right malar
bone, which go off by pressure. [Htn.]
A boil on the cheek.
Soft pressure going upwards over
the root of the nose and on the eye-brow, which goes off on touching,
with tension of the skin of the left al nasi. [Fz.]
Aching in both eye-brows, more
externally, aggravated by moving the frontal muscles (aft. 3 h.).
[Myr.]
120. Pain above the left orbit.
Tearing on the outer canthus
of the left eye. [Lr.]
Fine itching pain above the orbits.
[Hbg.]
Itching on the left eye-lid.
[Fz.]
A tickling sensation on the eye-lids
(aft. 5 h.). [Htg.]
125. Violent pain in the eye-lids.
Dry feeling betwixt the eye-lids
and eye-ball, causing rubbing pain on moving the eyelids, without
alteration in the appearance of the eye. [Htg.]
Eye gum in the outer canthus
(after sleep.).
Aching pain in the outer canthi.
[Fz.]
Smarting first in one, then in
other eye, accompanied by watering of them.
130. Aching smarting pain in
the eyes as from salt, she must always rub them. (From the exhalation,
compare with 137.) (aft. ½ h.).
Painless pressure in the eyes,
such as is apt to occur from fatigue and want of sleep (aft. ½ h.).
Painless pressure in the eyes,
such as is apt to occur from fatigue and want of sleep (Aft. 10.1/2,
12 h.). [Htn.]
On awaking, at night, the righteye
felt as if it were swimming in water (aft. 19 h.). [Stf.]
In the eyes a sensation, as in
general weakness, as if they were much sunk, which they are not
(aft. ¼ h.). [Fz.]
A quivering, winking, trembling
in both eyes (aft. 2.1/4 h.). [Lhn.]
135. Twitching to and fro to
the left lower eye-lid (aft. 6 h.). [Ws.]
Lachrymation of the eyes,
with creeping pains in them on the inner surface of the eye-lids.
[Bch.]
The eyes are somewhat red, with
aching burning pain in them, and much heat (in the afternoon) (aft.
6 h.). [Stf.]
Contracted pupils.
Contracted pupils (immediately and aft. 3.1/2 h.). [Bch.]
140. Contracted pupils (aft.
1 h.). [Stf.]
Pupils mobile, but more disposed
to contraction than dilation (aft. 20 h.).
Dilated pupils (aft. 1.1/2h.).
[Htn.]
Very dilated pupils 9aft. ¼ h.).
[Htn.]
145. Extreme dilatation and almost
immobility of pupils, with weakness of vision, so that he cannot
see distant things distinctly (myopa), with high complexion and
liveliness (aft. g h.). [Fz.]
Black points fly before the sight.
(Comp. with 147-149.) (aft. 4 h.).
Darkness before the eyes. (147
– 149, see 146) [Lhm.]
Dimness of vision. [CARTHEUSER,
l. c.]
Amauriosis. [Breslauer Samml.,
(Results of suppression of intemittents by china.) 1728. p.
1066.]
150. A ticking noise in the ear,
as from a distant watch.
First a beating sensation in
the ear, then a loud ringing. (151. 152, comp. with 153-155.)
Ringing in the ears.
Frequent ringing in the right
ear, an at the same time a tickling crawling in it, as if an insect
had crept in. (153 – 155, comp. with 151, 152.) [Bch.]
Ringing in the ears with headache
in the temples. [Fz.]
155. Ringing in the ears with
headache in the temples. [Lr.]
Roaring in the ears. (Comp.
with 157.)
Roaring in the ears. (Comp.
with 156.) [Css.]
Something seems to come before
the hearing internally (as from deafness) (Comp. with 159.) (aft.
1 h.).
Hardness of hearing. (See
158.) [MORTON, (Observed effects of overdosing.) Opera,
ii, pp. 76. 81.]
160. Tearing in the lobes of
the ears. (Comp. with 165.)
Heat if the external ear.
A tickling in the ear. [Hbg.]
Vesicles behind the ears.
Eruption in the concha.
165. Tearing on the cartilage
of the ear and in the external meatus auditorious. (See 160.)
[Hrr.]
(Aching pain in the internal
ear, like ear-ache) (aft. 3 h.).
Pain in the left ear only when
touched (aft. 6 d.). [Ws.]
Aching pain in the root of the
nose (after the heat of the cheek has gone) that spreads on to the
side of the nose (aft. 5 h.).
Tearing pain on the back of the
nose.
170. Smarting deep in the left
nostril, every inspiration causing a sudden stitch-like pain; on
compressing the nose the smarting becomes worse, and then it also
itches externally on the back of the nose, in the evening (aft.
½ h.). [Fz.]
Fine needle-pricks on the cartilage
of the septum narium. [Hrr.]
Redness and heat only on the
nose (aft. 12 h.).
(He fancies he smells a corpse-like
odour.)
Epistaxis, in the morning between
6 and 7 o’clock, after rising from bed, for several successive days.
[Htg.]
175. Frequent profuse epistaxis.
[RAULIN, l. c.]
Epistaxis after blowing the nose
strongly. [Ws.]
On the upper lip, on the right
side near the commissure of the mouth, sore feeling as after much
wiping in coryza. (177, 178, see 179.) [Fz.]
On the lower lip, near left commissure
of the mouth, pain as if an eroding ulcer were there. [Fz.]
The inner surface of the lower
lip pains as if sore and excoriated. (Comp. wit 177, 178.)
180. Eruption on the lips and
tongue; small ulcers which itch and burn much. [SCHLEGEL, (Effects
of china on agues. This eruption is said to be critical.) Hufel,
Journ. vii, iv. P. 161.]
(Puckered, wrinkled epidermis
of the lips) (aft.5 h.)
The lower lip cracks in the middle
(on sneezing).
(Chapped lips.)
Dry lips, without thirst (aft.
7 h.). [Fz.]
185. Blackish lips. [DAN, CRUGER,
(Results of suppression of intemittents by china) in Misc.
Nat. Cur., Dec. iii, Ann. 3.]
Speechlessness. [RICHARD, (Results
of suppression of intermittents by china) Recueil d’Observ. De Med.,
ii, p. 517.]
Slight rigor, followed by speechlessness.
[A. THOMPSON, (Results of suppression of intemittents by china.
This symptom, with S. 448, 574, 602, 676, 698, occurred in a hysterical
subject instead of a paroxysms of ague.) in Med. Inq. And
Observ. iv, No. 24.]
At night (before 12 o’clock)
tearing pressure in the right upper and lower jaw. (Comp. with
199, 203, 204, partly also with 191, 198, 200, 202, 206.)
On the upper jaw a cutting, burning
pain (when standing) (aft. 7 h.). [Fz.]
190. Twitching, obtuse stitches
in the right lower jaw. (See 195, 207.) [Wth.]
Tearing on the left lower jaw.
[Hrr.]
Swelling of the gums and lips.
[FORMEY, (Not accessible) Med. Ephem., I, 2.]
Drawing toothache readily occurs
in the open air and when exposed to a draught of air.
Toothache; stuffed coryza and
watering eyes.
195. Toothache, a shooting outwards
in the front teeth. (Comp. with 190
and 207.)
Toothache with looseness of the
teeth (aft. 3 h.).
Loose teeth only painful when
chewing.
On biting the teeth together
aching pain in the crowns of the right molars. [Fz.]
Toothache, like an aching drawing
in the left lower jaw. (See 188, 203, 204.) [Fz.]
200. Twitching tearing in
the upper back molars of the left side (aft. 5 h.). [Htn.]
Digging in the upper molars,
diminished momentarily by biting the teeth together and pressing
on them (aft. 40 h.). [Htn.]
(During the accustomed tobacco-smoking)
tearing toothache extending upwards and backwards in the upper jaw
followed by a sort of fainting fit. [Fz.]
Aching, drawing pain in the left
upper row of molars, with sensation as if the gums or the inside
of the cheek were swollen (aft. 1 h.). [Fz.]
In the morning, drawing, aching
toothache in one upper molar, with sensation of numbness in it (aft.
24 h.). [Fz.]
205. The lower incisors are painful,
as if they had been knocked.
In the morning, drawing pain
in the incisor teeth. (For 204 and 206 Rhus toxicodendron seems
to be an antidote.).[Fz.]
Small, fine stitches, with tearing
in the right upper molars, neither diminished nor increased by touching
or drawing in cold air. (See 190, 495)(aft. 2.1/2 h.). [Htn.]
Throbbing toothache. (Comp. with 209.)
Pecking pain in one of the upper
molars. (See 208.) [Htg.]
210. Sore-throat. (In original “angina faucium.)
In the pit of the throat, sensation
as if it would be painful on swallowing, like a sore-throat (and
yet it does not hurt when he swallows).
Painful deglutition, swollen
submaxillary glands, which are painful, especially when he swallows.
A shooting on the right side
in the throat only when he swallows.
Throat internally as if swollen;
shooting pain on the left side of the tongue only when swallowing;
there is only aching pain at this spot when speaking and breathing.
215. In the evening, after lying
down, shooting in the throat, not when swallowing, but when breathing.
Contractive sensation in the
throat. (217, 219, see 224, 225.)
(A choking and contraction in
the gullet without impediment to breathing.)
Deglutition difficult, as if
caused by narrowing of the throat. [An.]
220. On bending back the head,
tension in the gullet, which, however, does not prevent deglutition.
[Fz.]
Scratching on the palate, also
when not swallowing (aft. 8 d.). [Ws.]
Tobacco-smoke seems to him unusually
acrid and stinging at the back of the palate (aft. 24 h.). [Fz.]
Tiresome rough feeling in the
throat. [Stf.]
Painless swelling of the velum
palati and uvula (224, 225, comp. 217, 219.) (aft. 3 h.).
225. Painful swelling on the
side of the tongue posteriorly.
It smarts on the middle of the
tongue as if the part was excoriated or burnt.
A vesicle under the tongue, which
is painful when the tongue is moved.
Fine stitches in the tip of the
tongue. (Comp. 231.)
Sensation on the tongue as if
it were dry and covered with mucus. (Comp. 239 to 241.). (aft.
1 h.).
230. Smarting on the tip of the
tongue as from pepper, then accumulation of saliva at this part.
[Fz.]
Burning stitches on the tongue.
(See 228.). [Hrr.]
Here and there in the parotid
gland flying shopains.
Simply painful submaxillary glands
(under the angle of the lower jaw), especially on touching and on
moving the neck.
A choking or squeezing aching
in one of the right submaxillary glands per se , but more
when moving the neck or touching it.
235. Contractive sensation in
the salivary glands; ptyalism. [Fz.]
Much saliva in the mouth with
nausea (aft. 2 h.). [Ln.]
Collection of saliva, combined
with nausea.[Hbg.]
After an agreeable surprise much
bright blood came rapidly into the mouth (aft. 24 h.). [Stf.]
Dryness in the mouth. (239
to 211, see 229.). [STAHL, Obs. Clin., pp. 144, 171.]
240. Dryness in the mouth with
thirst. [Hbg.]
Great feeling of dryness in the
throat, with cool breath (aft. 1 h.). [Ln.]
(Yellowish tongue, not covered
with dirty fur).
Thickly furred tongue, especially
in the afternoon, especially in the afternoon (aft. 7 h.). [Htg.]
In the morning very white furred
tongue.
245. Tongue covered with a thick,
dirty white crust (aft. ¼ h.). [Gss.]
Yellow furred tongue. [FISCHER, l. c. – Bch.]
Yellowish furred tongue. [Bch.]
Clean tongue, with bitter taste.
[SCHLEGEL, l. c.]
The mouth is slimy, and the taste
watery and insipid.
250. Slimy taste in the mouth,
which makes butter nauseous.
After drinking, flat, qualmish
taste in the mouth.
Bitter taste of food, especially
of flour-cakes (252, 258, 262, comp. with 261, partly also with
258, 263, 266.) (aft. 6 h.).
Though he has no bitter taste
per se in the mouth, yet all he eats tastes bitter; after
swallowing the food there was no longer bitterness in the mouth.
Constant bitter taste in the
mouth. (254, 255, comp. with 256 to
260.)
255. In the morning, bitter taste
in the mouth.
Bitter taste (256 to 260,
see 254, 255.) [FISCHER, l. c.]
Bitterness of the mouth. [QUARIN,
(Physical effects of powder.) Method Med. Feb., p. 23.]
Bitter taste in the mouth; tobacco
tastes bitter when smoking. [Fz.]
Bitter taste in the throat, causing
him to swallow his saliva constantly (immediately) [Htn.]
260. A nasty, sometimes bitter
taste in the mouth, especially in the morning; the food did not
taste nice, but not bitter. [Hrr.]
Bitter taste in the mouth on
drinking coffee. [Css.]
Beer tastes in the mouth on drinking
coffee. [Css.]
Beer tastes bitter and goes to
his head.
Bread when chewed tastes well,
but is bitter when swallowed. [Fz.]
Bitter salt taste of roll and
butter, with dryness in the palate and thirst; when not eating there
is no abnormal taste in the mouth, only dryness and thirst. [Bch.]
265. Salt taste in the mouth.
(Comp. with 660, partly also with 264 and 271.)
All food tasted uncommonly salt,
afterwards bitter. [Myr.]
Sourness in the mouth. (See
268, 272, 275.) [Fz.]
Frequently a sour taste in the
mouth as if his stomach was deranged by fruit.
Black bread tastes sour. (269,
270, comp. with 316, partly also with 315.) (aft. 3 h.).
270. Coffee tastes sourish.
A sweetish then sour taste in
the mouth, much saliva. [Fz.]
Sweetish taste in the mouth.
[Wth.]
Tobacco when smoked tastes sweetish.
[Wth.]
275. A sensation in the mouth
causing collection of saliva, as if he had smelt strong vinegar.
(268, 275, comp. with 267, 272.)
Nasty taste in the mouth as after
cheese. [Hsch.]
Sensation as of a putrid exhalation
out of the mouth.
Towards morning a nauseous, putrid
smell out of the mouth, which goes off as soon as she eats something.
Mucus in the mouth in the morning
after walking and after some prolonged exertion, which he thinks
must smell ill to those about him; he thinks he smells badly out
of the throat.
280. He has no taste when he
smokes. (See 282.) [An.]
He cannot bear his (accustomed)
tobacco smoking, it affects his nerves. (Comp.
with 281, partly also with 274, 280.)
He feels always as if he had
eaten, drunk, and smoked to satiety, and yet he has a proper, good
taste of all those things. (283, 290, comp. with 297.) (aft.
some hours.)
Aversion from coffee, though
food tastes right.
285. Aversion from beer.
Aversion from water and inclination
for beer.
Great longing for wine.
Supper has little taste. (See
256.) [Hbg.]
Supper is relished, but he is
immediately satiated, and hence can eat but little.
290. No desire for food, but
little taste is all right.
Anorexia. [J. W. ROMBERG, (Effects
of china in agues.) Mis. Nat. Cur., Dec. iii, Ann. 9, 10, Obs.
109.]
Little appetite. [Hrr.]
Indifference to food and
drink; it is only when he begins to eat that some appetite and relish
for food comes. (aft. 6 h.).
No desire for food or drink.
(Comp. partly with 299, 300.)
295. Want of appetite as from
slight nausea. (See 298.) [Htg.]
The midday meal is not at all
relished. (Comp. with 288, partly
also with 210.)
Little appetite at noon from
feeling of satiety. (See 285, 290.) [Bch.]
Extreme aversion from and loathing
of not disagreeable food, even when it is not present and he only
hears it mentioned, with dread of work, constant day-drowsiness,
and yellowness of the eye-balls (Comp. with 295.) (aft. 8
h.).
Little thirst. (See 294.)
[An.]
300. No thirst when eating. [Bch.]
Canine hunger, with insipid taste
in the mouth.
She is hungry, but does not relish
her food.
Hunger and yet want of appetite;
the food which tasted right was disagreeable to him in his mouth.
[An.]
Hunger at an unusual time in
the afternoon. [Htn.]
305. Longing appetite; he has
longings, but he knows not for what. (305,
306, 307, comp. with 308.)
He has appetite for many things,
but knows not rightly for what.
Longing often for unknown things.
In the morning (8 o’clock) great
hunger and appetite, he knows not for what. (See 305, 306, 307.)
[Lhm.]
Great desire for sour cherries.
[Bch.]
310. A kind of ravenous hunger,
with nausea and inclination to vomit (aft. 2 h.).
Feeling of emptiness in the fauces
and oesophagus ( aft.11 h.). [Ws.]
First a burning , then an agreeable
warming sensation from the upper part of the chest to the stomach.
[Htg.]
Scraping sensation in the fauces,
especially on the border of the larynx, as after rancid eructation
or heart-burn.
Eructation (314, 317, see 321) (immediately). [Htn.]
315. After bread and butter bitter,
sourish eructation . (See 319.) [Lhm.]
After partaking of milk incomplete,
sourish eructation. (See 269, 270.) (aft. 1.1/2 h.). [Fz.]
Tasteless eructation after eating.
[Stf.]
A nasty slime often rises up.
After a meal bitter erucation.
(Comp. with 134, 317.) (aft. 2 h.).
320. Eructation with the taste
of the food he had eaten.
Empty eructation of nothing but
air (Comp. with 314, 317.) (aft. 2 h.).
A sighing king of movement with
eructation, intermediate between sighing and eructation (aft. ¾
h.).
Eructation, as if caused by loathing,
and pain in the abdomen (aft. ¾ h.). [Wr.]
An eructation, as from inclination
to vomit (aft. 1 h.). [Wr.]
325. Whilst eating and drinking
shooting in the side and back, and constant inclination to vomit
(aft. 5 h.).
Whilst eating drawing twitching
pain in the side of the abdomen (aft. 2 h.).
After a meal, nausea in the region
of the pit of the throat. [Hrr.]
Want of appetite and nausea,
he has always an inclination to vomit without being able to do so
( forenoon and afternoon).
After eating fulness, and yet
good appetite before the meal (329, 330, 339, comp. with 338.).
330. After eating, distension
of the abdomen, like fulness.
After eating, distension of the
abdomen, like fulness.
After eating a motion of the
bowels.
After eating drowsiness.
(332, 333, 334, comp. with 347,
348.)
After the midday meal great desire
to lie down and sleep.
After eating exhaustion, so that
he would like to lie down and sleep.
335. After eating the loathing,
the flying heat and ebullition of blood go off.
Nausea [BAKER, (Effects of
Cinchona rubra. This symptom on both from the powder.) Med. Transact.
Iii, p. 162. – QUARIN, l. c.]
Nausea with good appetite. [SCHLEGEL,
l. c., p. 161.]
He feels as if some remained
up in his throat (aft. 3 h.0. [Stf.]
After a meal he remains for a
long time as full as when he had just eaten; the food seems to stick
high up.
340. Inclination to vomit. [Mch.]
Nausea without vomiting. [Lhm.]
Inclination to vomand vomiting.
Vomiting. [MORTON, l. c. – BAKER,
l. c. – FRIBORG, (Physical effects of the powder.) Diss. de usu
cort. Peruv., 1773.]
Continued vomiting. [J. FR. BAUER,
(Results of suppression of intemittents by china.) Acta Nat.
Cur. iii, obs. 70.]
345. Half an hour after the midday
meal pressing aching headache that lasted till bed-time. [Wr.]
After a moderate meal followed
by walk, while sitting sick anxiety in the stomach, as from over-loading
and derangement of the stomach, and yet at the same time hunger.
(See 364, 366, 367, 368, 369.) [Fz.]
Weariness and laziness after
dinner. (347, 348, see 332, 333.)
[Htn.]
Exhaustion and drowsiness
after supper (aft. 12 h.). [Htn.]
After a meal a hard pressing
pain in both sides below the navel. (See 350.) [Bch.]
350. After a moderate supper,
eaten with appetite, immediately colic, that is: distented abdomen
and here and there sharp aching pains mixed with pinching in all
the bowels. (Comp. with 349.)
Stomachache, spasm of stomach.
(Comp. with 352 – 355 and 359, 360,
362, 363, 365.)
Pressure in the stomach. (352
to 355, see 351.) [ROSCHIN, (Not accessible.) Annalen der
Heilkunde 1811, Febr.]
In the morning in bed, when lying
on the side a pressure in the stomach (as if it were constricted),
which went off on lying on the back. [Stf.]
In the stomach a pressure as
from fullness. [Hbg.]
355. In the stomach violent aching,
which went off while eating (Alternating action with 356.) [Stf.]
After eating any food, however
little, immediately a hard long-continued pressure in the stomach.
(See 357, 358.) [Hrr.]
After every meal hard pressure
in the stomach. (357, 358, comp.
with 356, and, on the other hand, the alternating action 355.) [Hrr.]
With a good appetite, after eating
(vegetables), at first stomachache, then accumulation of flatulence,
then vomiting.
Weight and pressure in the stomach.
(359, 360, 362, 363, 365, see 351.) [PERCIVAL, Physical
effects of powder) Essays, vol. i.]
360. Heavy pressure in the stomach.
[KREYSIG, (Not accessible.) Diss. Obs. de Febr. Quart., Viteb.,
1797, p. 17.]
After aching in the stomach,
a burning rises half way up in the chest.
Oppresses the stomach. [BAKER,
l. c.]
Feeling of fulness in the stomach.
[An.]
The food partaken of at supper
remains undigested in the stomach. (364,
366, 367, partly also 369, comp. with 346 and 368.)
365. Feeling of heaviness in
the stomach. [QUARIN, l. c.]
Milk readily deranges the stomach.
By taking rather too much food,
even of the most innocent kind, the stomach is immediately deranged,
and an insipid taste in the mouth, a fulness in the abdomen, crossness
and headache come on.
Indigestion. [FRIBORG, l. c.]
Feeling of emptiness and qualmishness
in the stomach.
370. Feeling of coldness in the
stomach.
After every mouthful of drink
feeling of internal coldness in the epigastrium, which is renewed
at every breath (aft. 4 h.).
Pain in the region of the stomach,
like aching, which alleviated every time he rises from his seat,
recurs on sitting down and lasts two hours (aft. ¾ h.). [Wr.]
Tearing aching under the last
true ribs, at the left side of the ensiform cartilage. [Gss.]
Sore sensation with pressure
(or pain as if a wound were pressed on) in the region of the scrobiculus
cordis (several mornings). [Gss.]
375. A violent aching under the
scrobiculus cordis, as if all were excoriated there, the same in
all positions, also when touched; soon after this a violent diarrhoea,
whereby the pain in the scrobiculus cordis was not relieved (aft.
7 h.). [Myr.]
Stomachache, which takes away
the breath. [STAHL, l. c.]
A squeezing together in the scrobiculus
cordis, which impedes inspiration (aft. ½ h.). [Htn.]
Sufferings under the short ribs.
[STAHL, l. c.]
Hypochondrial sufferings. [STAHL,
l. c.]
380. Anxiety in the region of
the scrobiculus cordis. [CARTHEUSER, l. c.]
Pain in the abdomen, aching,
pinching (shooting), under the scrobiculus cordis, as if diarrhoea
would ensue, but no stool comes, in the evening. (382, 383, but
especially 390 to 392, comp. with 386, 459.) (aft. 36 h.). [Fz.]
Twitching shooting in the stomach
(aft. 3 h.0. [Wth.]
Under the last rib contractive
pain and as if bruised, only when walking. (See 433, 455, also
446 to 453.) (aft. 24 h.). [Fz.]
Flying stitches here and there
in the stomach and abdomen. (Comp.
with 391, 398, 399, 402, 403, and 464 tp 469.)
After every drink a stitch in
the precordial region. (Comp. with
638.)
After every mouthful of drink
shivering or chillness with goose-skin (aft.
6 h.).
After drinking griping as from
a purgative.
390. Sharp stitches in the scrobiculus
cordis. (See 649.) [Hrr.]
Sharp stitches in front under
the last ribs, without relation to expiration or inspiration. (See 386, 398, 399, 402, 403, and 464 to 469.) [Gss.]
Shooting pain in the scrobiculus
cordis to the sternum. [Lhm.]
Shooting aching in several spots
of the epigastrium, in the morning in bed (for four successive days).
[Hrr.]
After moderate eating, at noon
and in the evening, a pinching aching somewhat above the navel in
the epigastrium, which becomes intolerable on walking, and is only
allayed by perfect rest.
395. In the umbilical region
severe cutting, with cold sweat on the forehead for a quarter of
an hour (aft. a few minutes). [Wr.]
Pains in the abdomen in the
umbilical region, combined with shivering.
In the region of the spleen cutting
aching, as if the spleen were indurated. [Fz.]
Sharp stitches in the left side
of the epigastrium, just beneath the ribs, from within outwards,
increased by inspiring (aft. 7 h.). [Hrr.]
When walking, even slowly, shooting
in the spleen. [Fz.]
400. Pinching stitches in the
left epigastric region (aft. 1.1/2 h.). [Htn.]
Obstruction of the spleen. [MURARY,
(Supposed ill-effects of china, mentioned only to reject them.)
Apparat Medicam., edit., sec., I, pp. 856, 857.]
Continued stitches under the
right ribs in the hepatic region, neither diminished nor increased
by inspiration or expiration 9aft. 4 h.). [Htn.]
Violent stitches from within
outwards in the hepatic region, only during expiration 9aft. 5 h.).
[Htn.]
Several attacks of intermittent
aching in the hepatic region, when standing, which goes off on bending
the body forwards; on touching the region is painful as if gathering
(aft. 5 d.). [Fz.]
405. Swelling of the liver. [KREYSIG,
l. c., p. 27.]
Obstruction of the liver.
[MURRAY, l. c.]
Induration in the abdomen. [STAHL,
l. c.]
Indurations (In the original.
“angustia et firmitas.” All other effects of china referred to this
writer are mentioned by him only to reject them.) of the intestines.
[JOH, GOTTER, BERGER, Diss. de Chinchina ab iniquis judiciis
vindicata, Viteb., 1711.]
The epigastrium feels tightened.
[Hrr.]
410. Fulness of the abdomen.
(410 to 413, see 414, 415.) [KREYSIG, l. c.]
Obstinate and anguishing tension
of the abdomen. [STAHL, l. c.]
Flatulent distension. [FISCHER,
l. c.]
Painful distension of the abdomen,
and especially of the hypogastrium. (414,
415, comp. with 410 to 413, and 419 to 424.)
415. In the morning distension
of the abdomen, without flatulence.
At noon before eating and soon
after eating, cutting in the abdomen, as in incarceration of flatulence.
Fermentation in the abdomen from
eating fruit (cherries).
Flatulence and frequent discharge
of flatus. (See 492.) [Hbg.]
Tympanitis, (419 to 423, see
414, 415.) [STAHL, l. c. – THOM. THOMSON, (Results of suppression
of intermittents) Med. Rathpflege, Leipzig, 1779, p. 117.]
420. Distension of the abdomen
as from drinking much, and partaking of flatulent food. [Hbg.]
Distension of the abdomen, pain
in the abdomen and diarrhoea. [KREYSIG, l. c., p. 25.]
Attacks of hardness, distension,
and pains of the abdomen. (This with S. 740 and 882, occurred
instead of the ague paroxysm, five days after beginning China.)
[AL, THOMPSON, in Med. Inq. And Obs., iv, No. 24.]
Tiresome, tight distension of
the abdomen. [Stf.]
Swelling of the abdomen. [CARTHEUSER,
l. c.]
425. Ascites, encysted dropsy.
[STAHL, l. c.]
Rumbling in the abdomen (aft.
1 h.). [Stf.]
Rumbling in the epigastrium (aft.
2 h.). [Wth.]
Rattling in the left side of
the ab, backwards and downwards, as if in the descending colon.
[Fz.]
Grumbling in the hypogastrium.
[Lr.]
430. Cruel, intolerable colicky
pains. [J. FR. BAUER, l. c.]
Colics. [STAHL, l. c.]
Flatulent colic (aft. 2 h.).
Flatulent colic deep in the hypogastrium;
the lowest bowels are as constricted, and the flatulence vainly
attempts to force its way out with aching and tensive pains, and
even under the short ribs it causes tension and anxiety.
Pain in the abdomen with nausea.
[W. MAY, (Physical effects of powder.) in Lond. Med. Journ.,
1788.]
435. Pain in the abdomen, and
at the same time great thirst (aft. 1 h.).[Bch.]
Scrobutic colic.[CRUGER, l. c.]
Indescribable pains in the abdomen.
[J. A. LIMPRECHT, (Effects of China in agues.) Acta Nat. Cur.,
ii, Obs. 129.]
Ulcers in the abdomen. [STAHL,
l. c.]
Inflammation in the abdomen.
[STAHL, l. c.]
440. Heat in the umbilical region.
[Hbg.]
Aching in the umbilical region.
[Hbg.]
During the aching in the abdomen
some chilliness. [Wr.]
Hard pressure in the left side
of the hypogastrium (aft. 3 m.). [Gss.]
Aching pain in the region of
the caecum (when sitting). [An.]
445. In the evening severe aching
pain in the abdomen, as if diarrhoea would come on, when sitting,
which was dissipated by walking and standing. [Fz.]
Contractive pain in the abdomen,
in the evening when sitting, which goes off on raising himself up,
but still more on standing and walking. (446, to 453, See 385,
433 and 455.)[Fz.]
On the right side, below the
navel, a contractive aching, as if an induration were there, when
sitting. [Fz.]
Contraction of the abdomen and
of the sides with heavings and fallings of the scapulae. (See
note to S. 187.) [AL. THOMPSON, l. c.]
Pain in the abdomen, like pinching
and drawing, mostly when sitting. [Fz.]
450. Sensation of contraction
of intestinal canal, and grumbling in the hypogastrium. [Hrr.]
Cramp pain in the groin coming
in jerks, when standing. [Fz.]
Pinching and colic-like constriction
of the bowels, above the navel, when he rises up after stooping.
[Fz.]
Pinching together, as if it were
externally, under the right side of the navel, when sitting, in
the evening (aft. 13 h.0. [Fz.]
Violent pinching in the epigastrium
(he must crouch together to relieve himself) (aft. 1 h.), alternating
with inclination to vomit and urging to stool, with rigor all over;
after the pinching aching in the epigastrium. [Wth.]
455. Spasmodic pain in the abdomen,
compounded of aching and constriction (aft. 24 h.).
Aching and heaviness in the abdomen.
Pinching, aching pain in the
abdomen when walking, towards evening. [Fz.]
Pinching in the abdomen with
increased hunger and exhaustion. (aft. 3 h.).
Pinching, shooting pains in the
abdomen. (Comp. with 382, 400.) (aft. 1.1/2 h.).
460. Violent pinching in the
abdomen, which went off on rising up from his seat. [Wr.]
In the abdomen above the pubes
pinching going here and there, as if a diarrhoea would occur, with
small discharges of flatus, while sitting (aft. 27 h.). [Fz.]
Beating in the right side of
the abdomen. [Hbg.]
Extremely violent aching
shooting on the left side below the navel, on walking quickly and
afterwards (aft. 2 h.). [Gss.]
Obtuse shooting pain in the
region of the right kidney, worse on bending the body. (464
– 469. See 386, 391.) (aft. 24 h.). [Hrr.]
465. Obtuse shooting on the left
side of the abdomen, round about the navel, and at the same under
the right nipple towards the interior (aft. 1 h.). [Hrr.]
Obtuse shooting above the navel
on the right, worse when touched. [Hrr.]
Obtuse shooting in the left hypogastrium,
in the region of the kidney. [Hrr.]
Obtuse stitches in the lumbar
regions. [Hrr.]
When sitting, during inspiration,
stitches darting downwards in the abdomen. [Fz.]
470. Cutting in the abdomen,
in frequent fits, in the umbilical region. (See 491, 549.)[An.]
When walking, drawing pain in
the right side of the abdomen. [Fz.]
Great discharge of flatus, together
with a drawing in the abdomen during a hard stool, which is evacuated
with difficulty (See 495, 496, also 481 and 516.) (aft. 48
h.). [Ws.]
When flatus is about to be discharged,
the abdomen is pinched together with violent pains. (See 461,
490, 491.).
In the evening, between 6 and
10 o’clock, great grumbling and rolling about of much flatulence
in the abdomen, with aching sensation, whereupon very foetid flatus
is discharged. [Bhr.]
475. Tearing in the navel. [Gss.]
Extremely violent tearing on
the right side near the navel, towards the groin, in the whole inguinal
region, diminished by bending back. [Gss.]
In the abdomen, under the navel,
tearing and rumbling. [Hbg.]
Pain in the abdominal muscles,
as if bruised (aft. 1 h.).
In the inguinal ring excoriation-pain,
and sensation as if a hernia would come out through the sore ring
(aft. 4 h.).
480. Aching tearing pain on the
left, near the pubes. [Hrr.]
Increased peristaltic movement
in the hypogastrium, associated with aching. [Hbg.]
Aching in both sides of the abdomen,
as if a stool ought to come but cannot.
(With urging and straining to
stool, nothing but flatus comes away.)
Call to stool. [Hrr.]
485. During the day a soft stool.
[Bhr.]
Stool thinner than usual. (486,
487, see 497 – 502.)[Bch.]
Looseness of the bowels. [MORTON,
l. c.]
Lumpy, yellow, soft stool, in
the morning. [Fz.]
Bilious stools, [ALPINI, (General
statement from observation.) Hist. Febr. Epid., p. 93.]
490. Pain in the bowels before
a discharge of flatus.
Before a discharge of flatus,
cutting pains dart in all directions through the abdomen. (Comp.
with 470, and 549.) (aft. 1 h.).
Accumulation of and then great
discharge of flatus. (Comp. with 418.) (aft. 1 h.).
Discharge of extremity foetid
flatus (aft. 10 h.).
Much horribly foetid flatus is
discharged. [Stf.]
495. Bellyache before the stool.
(495 – 497, comp. with 472, 481.)
Stool with bellyache.
Three times soft stool with smarting
burning pain in the anus, and with bellyache before and after each
stool. (497, 498, 501, Comp. with 472, 481.)
Looseness of the bowels, like
diarrhoea.
Frequent, diarrhoeic, blackish
stools. (From the extract; the stools looking (says the author)
like the extract itself.) [Quarin, l. c.]
500. Severe purging. [SYDENHAM,
(Observed effects of China. This symptom not found.) Opuscula,
Lips. 1695, p. 382.]
Diarrhoea of undigested faeces;
like a kind of lientery.
Diarrhoea: it is as if the excrement
contained undigested food; it comes away in separate pieces (aft.
12 h.), and when it is passed, there still remains desire to go
to stool, but no more passes. (See 501.) [Hrr.]
He must press out the motion
with the greatest effort, although it is not hard, but pappy, and
it is followed by ineffectual urging to stool, with pain. (503,
507, 509, see 504, 505.)[Fz.]
Costiveness and accumulation
of faeces in the bowels, with heat of head and dizziness. (504,
505, comp. with 503, 507, to 509. The costiveness of china in secondary
action or reaction of the organism to the great tendency of this
medicine to excite diarrhoea in its primary action.)
505. The stool comes after long
urging only, with great pressing, and then it causes much pain.
Stoppage of the evacuation. [MURRAY,
l. c.]
All day long constipation, and
in the evening costive stool. (507, 509, see note to 504, 505.)
[Trn.]
Constipation. [QUARIN, - BAUER,
- FISCHER, l. c.]
Constipation: long-continued
accumulation of hard faeces in the rectum. (No such symptom to
be found.) [FOTHERGILL, Essays, tom. ii, p. 92.]
510. Haemorrhoidal bleeding.
[ALPINI, l. c.]
Sensation in the anus during
the stool, as from an acrid matter.
A burning and burning itching
at the orifice of the anus (immediately).
Diarrhoea with burning pain in
the anus.
Stitches in the anus during an
evacuation mixed with blood (514, 515, 526, comp. with 516.)
(aft. 5 h.).
515. Penetrating stitches in
the anus and rectum, not during evacuation (aft. 5 d.).
Sharp stitches in the lower part
of the rectum, especially in the sphincter ani; also during and
after the stool, shooting drawing for three days. (See 514, 515,
526.) [Hrr.]
After the stool a crawling in
the rectum, as from tworms.
Crawling in the rectum, as from
thread-worms, and evacuation of many of them.
A crawling in the anus.
520. A constant burning pain
in the rectum after the midday sleep (aft. 4 d.).
An aching in the rectum (aft. 2, 6 h.).
Tearing and tearing jerks in
the rectum while lying in bed (aft. 10 h.).
Contractive pain in the rectum,
especially when sitting (aft. 72 h.).
Fine stitches in the inguinal
flexure, on the pubes, almost only when walking. [Fz.]
525. In the inguinal flexure,
especially on the tendon (of the psoas muscle), an aching drawing,
when sitting. [Fz.]
Shooting pain in the perineum,
especially acute when sitting down.
The urine is not passed more
frequently, but is paler, and yet deposits a cloud (aft. 3 h.).
[Fz.]
In the evening, when passing
urine, a burning smarting in the anterior part of the urethra. (Comp.
with 539 and 540.)
A throbbing in the region of
the bulb of the urethra (aft. 6 h.).
530. While urinating a shooting
in the urethra.
Painful sensitiveness in the
urethra, especially when the penis is erect, also observable while
sitting and standing up.
After frequent and almost
ineffectual urging to urinate, a pressing in the bladder.
The first twelve hours scanty
secretion of urine, but thereafter more copious.
The urine flows in a weak stream
and slowly, and there is very frequent call to urinate.
535. Very frequent urination
(aft. 24 h.).
Frequent, and such urgent cal
to urinate that the urine is involuntarily pressed out.
Burning pain in the orifice of
the urethra during and after urination (aft. 3 h.).
A continual burning in the orifice
of the urethra.
Increased discharge of urine,
with burning at the orifice of the urethra. (539. 540, see 528.)
(aft. 2 h.). [Ws.]
540. Continual burning at the
orifice of the urethra, with a feeling of excoriation at the seam
of the prepuce, both especially painful from the friction of the
clothes (Comp. with 754, 819.) (aft. 2 h.). [Ws.]
A twitching pain betwixt glans
and prepuce when walking.
Pressing pain in the glans before
urinating.
Itching on the glans penis, which
makes him rub it, in the evening in bed.
A pain as of fine needle-pricks
on the frenum of the glans; on touching it the pain became more
severe, namely, shooting and tensive; nothing was to be seen externally.
545. Excites urination. [ALPINI,
l. c.]
Whitish cloudy urine with white
sediment. (Comp. with 527.)
Scanty; yellowish-green urine.
[FISCHER, l. c.]
Pale yellow urine, which, the
following morning, deposits a dirty yellow, rather loose sediment.
[Bhr.]
Pressing and cutting in the bowels
during and after the discharge of a white cloudy urine. (See 470 and 491.)
550. White stool and dark urine.
(Comp. with 856, 857.) (aft. 48 h.).
Dark coloured urine with brick-red
sediment (See 552.). (aft. 24 h.). [Trn.]
Scanty urine with brick-red sediment,
and red-spotted, hard prominent swelling of the foot. (Comp.
with 551.)
Spasmodic contractive pain from
the rectum through the urethra to the glans penis, and through the
testicles, in the evening.
A crawling running and itching
in the anus and urethra, with a burning in the glans penis.
555. Increased sexual desire.
Frequent erections of the penis
(aft. 6 h.).
Nocturnal seminal emissions.
(Comp. with 558.)
Great seminal discharge, about
3 a.m. (See 557.) [Bch.]
Swelling of the spermatic cord
and testicle, especially of the epididymis, painful to the touch.
560. Drawing pain in the testicles.
A kind of tearing pain in the
left testicle and the left side of the prepuce, in the evening in
bed.
An itching crawling in the scrotum,
in the evening in bed, compelling him to rub it. (Comp. with
563.)
Shooting itching in the scrotum.
[Fz.]
Hanging down of the scrotum (aft.
1 h.).
565. Increase of the menses that
are present, to the extent of metrorhagia; the discharge passes
in the black clots. (565 seems to be the primary action of china,
and 566 the secondary action or reaction of the organism; for excitement
of the circulation and haemorrhagia from the nose 174 to 176, from
the mouth 238, and from the lung 586, are its not infrequent primary
effects.) (aft. 1 h.).
Suppression of the menses. (See
565.) [RAULIN, l. c.]
Sneezing (aft. ¼, 2, 3 h.).
Sneezing with coryza (aft. 1, 2, h.).
Several times violent, dry sneezing
(aft. 7 h.). [Stf.]
570. Watery discharge from the
nostril, which, nevertheless, is stopped up (aft. 13 h.). [Fz.]
Coryza, with sensitiveness of
the nose and some papules on the border of the nostrils and the
septum nasi painful to the touch (aft. 9 d.). [Ws.]
Coryza, so that there is running
from the nose for two hours. [Fz.]
Symptoms of a stuffed coryza.
[An.]
Noisy breathing through the nose.
(See note to S. 187. “Gerausch” in original is sibilus.”[AL.
THOMPSON, l. c.]
575. Something is adherent
in the throat (the larynx), so that the tones of the voice and of
singing become deeper and deficient in clearness. (575, 576,
577, comp. with 578 to 581.)(aft. 2 h.).
A whistling and wheezing
in the wind-pipe when breathing 9aft.
2 h.).
Tightness on the chest (at night);
whistling, rattling, snoring, and wheezing in the wind-pipe, and
yet the viscid mucus does not excite coughing (aft. 5 h.).
In the larynx stitches and feeling
of roughness. (578 to 581, see 575 to 577.) [An.]
Sensation of accumulation of
mucus in the larynx. [An.]
580. Mucus adheres in the larynx,
which he continually hawks up; and which makes the voice hollow
and hoarse. [Stf.]
Hoarse rough voice. [An.]
A kind of suffocative attack,
as if the larynx were full of mucus, especially towards evening,
and (at night) on awaking from sleep (582,
603, comp. with 595 to 597, 599 to 602, 604 to 606)(aft. 8 h.).
Violent cough immediately after
eating (aft. 4 h.).
In the evening tickling causing
cough, which he could suppress.
585. Cough excited by laughing.
(Coughing up of bloody mucus).
(Comp. with 593.).
At night about 2 and about 4
a.m. suffocative cough lasting half a quarter of an hour
( a kind of whooping-cough);
she screams out from it, but not before she has coughed several
times. (587, 588, comp. with 591, 653.)
He wakes up after midnight with
a cough,; at each cough-impulse he feels a sharp shooting in both
sides of the chest, and yet he could cough in the lying position.
Pain in the trachea and sternum
when coughing.
590. From the cough, pressive
pain in the chest and excoriation feeling in the larynx. (590,
610, 613, comp. with 611, 612, 614, 615, 617, 620, 622.)
(During the chill of an ague)
troublesome cough with stitches in the side. [FISCHER, l. c.]
Continual irritation to hacking
cough, in the morning after rising, as from sulphur fumes, whereby
nothing is expectorated, for several mornings. [Gss.]
Suspicious cough (Comp. with
586.) [JUNCKER et FRITZE, (From China given for gangrene
of foot, with alkermes and syrup of Canella.) Diss. de usu cort.
Peruv. Discrete Halae, 1756, p. 26.]
In the wind-pipe under the larynx,
a kind of drawing, followed by the cough with one impulse. [Fz.]
595. Tightness of the chest.
(595 to 597, 599 to 602, 604, to 606, comp. with 582, 603.).
[BALGIVI, (Results of suppression of intermittents by China.)
Praxis, lib. ii, (590, 610, 613, comp. with 611, 612, 614,
615, 617, 620, 622.) 2, 3. = AL. THOMPSON, l. c.]
Tightness of the chest. [CARTHEUSER,
l. c.]
Oppression on the chest. [Fz.]
Inclination to breathe deeply
before the mid-day meal.
In the evening a feeling of oppression
and uneasiness in the chest; he feels compelled to breathe deeply
and then must expire in a sighing manner, whereby the oppression
is diminished for the moment, with weak, scarcely perceptible pulse
and anxious impatient humour. [Bhr.]
600. Great oppression of the
chest in the region of the scrobiculus cordis, as if something was
digging around therein (aft. 4 h.0. [Gss.]
Tightness of the chest with difficult,
sometimes rattling, expiration (chiefly when walking) and roughness
of the chest (aft. 4 h.). [Htn.]
Impeded respiration, for half
an hour. (See note to S. 187.) [AL. THOMPSON, l. c.]
Heavy, difficult, painful inspiration,
and rapid expiration.
Suffocative asthma. (In the
original, simply “asthma.”) [AL. THOMPSON, l. c.]
605. Fatal oppression of the
chest. (When the cinchona-bark was administered in the cold stage
of ague.) [JOH. DE KOKER, l. c.]
An Agreeable fulness in the chest,
as from satiety, with (sweet) pleasant taste of the saliva (aft.
1 h.). [Fz.]
Tensive pain, especially in the
external pectoral muscles (in the morning).
Some twitching and subtulus here
and there in the pectoral muscles. [An.]
(A creeping in one side of the
chest as if something were running about in it.)
610. A sharp aching combined
with creeping in one side of the chest.)
Pressure on the chest. (See
590, 610, 613, 621.) [Fz.]
Aching pain in the chest. [Css.]
Pressure on the whole anterior
part of the chest, at night when he lay on the back.
Pressure on the left side near
the ensiform cartilage. [Hrr.]
615. External pressure on the
middle of the sternum when the upper part of the body is bent forward,
also when standing, which is removed by pressing upon it (aft. 26
h.). [Fz.]
Pressure outwards in the region
of the lowest ribs (aft. 24 h.). [Ws.]
Great pressure in the sternum
after a meal; worst when he sat in a stooping position and had his
arms elevated.
On inspiring severe stitches
under the last ribs, that take away his breath.
Under the right last rib a small
spot, which causes a shooting pain both by the slightest pressure
and when walking.
620. When sitting in a stooping
attitude, pressure externally on the sternum, which causes anxiety
and does not allow the breath to be drawn in enough, going off when
raising himself up (aft. 6 h.). [Fz.]
In the side of the chest a pressive
pain that impedes respiration.
Hard pressive pain in the right
side of the chest, in the region of the fourth and fifth ribs. (See
590, 610, 621.).
On the right side of the chest
drawing aching when sitting, which is relieved when standing and
walking. [Fz.]
Pain in the side, as if bruised
or as if from a blow.
625. Drawing pain behind the
sternum. [Hrr.]
In the whole chest a burning
inward-pressure.
Inferiorly over the chest aching
drawing pain when sitting, which causes anxiety; it goes off when
standing and walking. [Fz.]
On the right side of the chest,
in the middle, on a not large spot, a contractive pain so that he
must almost involuntarily suddenly jerk out and expel the breath.
[Fz.]
Over the chest, when sitting
in a stooping attitude, an intermitting cutting aching, which goes
off on raising himself up, but still more completely when standing
and walking. [Fz.]
630 Aching, fine shooting on
the left side of chest (aft. 8.1/2 h.). [Htn.]
Stitch in the side. [RICHARD,
l. c.]
Shooting in the chest, in the
morning. [Hsch.]
Shooting in the left side of
the chest. [Lhm.]
Shooting in the side, at night,
but during the day only when moving or touching it (aft. 13 d.).
635. Shooting in the chest on
walking quickly, which went off when at rest. [Lr.]
Some violent stitches in
the chest, immediately above the precordial region, when he was
not moving, especially when reading (aft.
3.1/2, 16, 18 h.). [Lr.]
Stitches in the side when sitting
and reading. [Lr.]
Some stitches from the sternum
through to the back soon after drinking. (Comp. with 387.) (aft.
8 h.).
Sharp stitches in the thoracic
cavity, from within outwards, in the region of the sixth and seventh
true ribs, without relation to expiration or inspiration (aft.
¾ h.). [Hrr.]
640. Regularly recurring obtuse
stitches, from within outwards, in the thoracic cavity, when at
rest and when moving, and without relation to respiration (aft.
1 h.). [Ws.]
In the right side of the chest,
in the region of the fourth rib under the arm, a shooting, as if
it were in the pleura, almost like a persistent stitch, which goes
off by pressing on it and by stooping down (aft. 6 h.). [Fz.]
Sharp stitches between the seventh
and eighth left ribs. [Hrr.]
Pain in the bone in the joints
of the ribs, as if bruised, on inspiration.
Sharp stitches near the right
nipple, from within outwards (aft.
10 h.). [Hrr.]
645. Sharp stitches, from
within outwards, on the sternum where the ribs join on to it on
both sides, without reference to expiration or inspiration (aft.
2 d.). [Hrr.]
Sharp shooting pain on the left,
near the ensiform cartilage and in the scrobiculus cordis, only
when expiring (aft. 60 h.). [Hrr.]
Shooting in the left side of
the chest (during expiration) when sitting (aft. 2 h.). [Lr.]
A tickling shooting in the left
side of the chest towards the region of the heart. [Htg.]
When drawing in the breath severe
stitches in the scrobiculus cordis. (Comp. with 390, 392.). (aft.
3 h.).
650. Obtuse stitches on the chest,
which compel him to expire. [Fz.]
Obtuse shooting on the cartilages
of the third and fourth left false ribs, without relation to inspiration
or expiration. [Hrr.]
Stitches in the side with great
heat, strong, hard pulse, and staring eyes. [J. A. PH. GESNER, (Not
accessible.) Sammlung v, Beob., I, p. 244, Nordlingen, 1789.]
Fever like a kind of false leurisy.
(591, 653, comp. with 587 to 589.) [GREDING, (In an epileptic,
taking Hyoscyamus. After an intermediate dose of China, he had “diarrhoea,
dolores rhematici, febrisque pleuritiden spuriam oemulans.” ) in
Ludw. Advers., tom. I, p. 90.]
A boil on the pectoral muscles.
655. (Throbbing in the sternum,
in the evening and morning.)
Palpitation of the heart.
(Comp. with 657 to 659.)
Palpitation of the heart and
rush of blood to the face, which became hot and red, and at the
same time coldness of the hands (aft. 1 h.). [Bch.]
Violent beating of the heart,
with depressed pulse and coldness of the skin. [Wth.]
Strong beating of the heart combined
with an anxious feeling. [Htg.]
660. Pain as from dislocation
in the scapula (aft. 24 h.).
Tearing in the region of the
left scapula, on inspiration. [Gss.]
Drawing tearing pain in the left
scapula 9aft. 9 h.). [Htn.]
Contractive pain between the
scapulae, when standing (aft. 3 h.). [Fz.]
Needle-pricks over the right
scapula and in the left side of the chest (aft. ¼ h.0. [Ws.]
665. Pain in the back on the
slightest movement, as if bruised (aft. 3 h.).
Throbbing, shooting pain in the
back. (Comp. with 657 to 659.)
Small stitches on the middle
of the spine (667, 668, see 666.) (aft. 5 h.). [Htn.]
Shooting in the left side
of the back (when sitting.) [Lr.]
Intolerable pain in the sacrum,
as from cramp, or as if beaten and crushed, which on the slightest
movement forces out a sudden cry. (Comp. with 674.)
670. A crawling itching on the
coccyx, which goes off for a short time only by rubbing. (aft. 1
h.).
Twitching tearing on the left
side in the sacrum. [Gss.]
Severe shooting, drawing pains
in the middle of the sacrum towards the lumbar vertebrae. [Htg.]
Twitching over the sacrum.(aft.
½ h.). [Wth.]
Painful jerks on the sacrum.
(See 669.) (aft. 21 h.). [Ws.]
675. (Stretching) pain in the
sacrum, as from a heavy weight, or as after long stooping (aft.
23 h.). [Htn.]
The neck drawn obliquely on one
side. (In original, simply “contractions of the neck.” See note
to S. 187. ) [AL. THOMPSON, l. c.]
Several stitches in the nape
(which leave behind a kind of stiffness therein. (See 680, 682,
683.) [Htg.]
Slow drawing stitches in the
anterior cervical muscles, when at rest. [Bhr.]
(Anetriorly on the neck red miliary
eruption, without itching.
680. Movement of the nape is
painful. (Comp. with 677, 682, 683.)
Pain in the nape towards the
neck, on turning the head as if he had swollen cervical glands (though
he has none); on touching the pain is still more severe, as if bruised
(after a walk).
Drawing pain on the right side
of the neck inferiorly, at the commencement of the nape, when standing,
which goes off when stooping. (682, 683, see 677 and 680.) [Fz.]
Drawing pains in the nape. [An.]
On the slightest movement sweat
on the nape and back.
685. Paralytic twitching tearing
on the top of the shoulder, which is acutely painful when touched,
and when the pain is gone it can be excited anew by touching; even
the pressure of the coat on the shoulder excites it. (It
is peculiarly characteristic of China that its pains are aggravated
not only by movement, anespecially by touching the part (See 466,
619, 634, 688, 695, 696, 701, 704, 713, 761, 776, 830), but also
that they are renewed when not present by merely touching the part,
as in this symptom and 749, 772, and then often attain a frightful
intensity, hence this medicine is often the only remedy in cases
of this description.) [Hrr.]
Tearing pressure in the left
axilla an on the anterior and inner border of the scapula. [Hrr.]
Intermittent pressive drawing
pain on the border of the right axilla towards the front (aft. 3
d.). [Hrr.]
Paralytic twitching tearing
which proceeds from the head of the humerus, and extends (in the
muscles and bones) to the phalanges of the fingers, where it becomes
less painful; at the same time the whole arm is weaker; the pain
is increased by touching (aft. 3 h.). [Hrr.]
A weakness in the arms, observable
wen he tightly closes the hands. (Compare partly with 688 and
693, 695, 696.)
690. Shooting pains in the upper
arm which however went off immediately on moving it (aft. ¾ h.).
[Wr.]
Twitching tearing in the humerous
towards the upper and inner part (aft. 2 h.). [Hrr.]
Tearing, first in the left, then
in the right upper arm (aft. ½ h.). [Lr.]
Paralytic pain on the right
upper arm, which begins at the head of the humerus, and becomes
lost in the hand as a fine and feeble tearing, during which the
whole body, and especially the forehead, is warm (aft.
8 h.). [Hrr.]
Tearing and drawing in the arm
when she stands at the window.
695. Paralytic twitching tearing
in the long bones of the upper extremities, more violent when touched
(aft. 1 h.). [Hrr.]
Paralytic tearing in the
upper extremities, which spreads into all their parts, increased
more by touching than by movement. [Hrr.]
A tension in the arms and hands
(aft. 2 h.).
Stretching out the arms with
bent fingers. (See note to S.
187.) [THOMPSON, l. c.]
A tearing darting through the
left elbow-joint, frequently recurring.
700. On the elbow-joint, sensation,
as if blood were extravasated in the skin. [Htg.]
Painful drawing in the coronoid
process of the left elbow (in the bend of elbow), worse when touched.
[Hrr.]
Tearing pain in the left elbow-joint,
worse on movement (aft. 2 h.). [Hrr.]
Shooting in the left elbow-joint.
[Fz.]
Tearing in the shafts of both
ulnae, worse when touched. (704, 707, see 705.) [Hrr.]
705. From the elbow to the fingers
drawing pain in the bones, in the evening. (Comp with 704, 706,
707.) (aft. 24 h.).
Tearing extending hither and
thither, at one time in the right forearm (which went off by rubbing),
at another in the left (aft. 4 h.). [Myr.]
Drawing pain on the bones of
the forearm, as from scraping on the periosteum with a blunt knife.
[Fz.]
The forearm goes to sleep when
flexed (e. g. when writing), with a fine shooting in the
tips of the fingers. (Comp. with 731,
828.)
Sharp drawing shooting across
the left wrist (in the evening) (aft. 13, 14 h.).
710. In the hollow of the hand,
across the roots of the fingers, drawing pain. [Fz.]
The hand is painful (cramp-like
drawing) on grasping. [Fz.]
Trembling of the hands when writing
(aft. 1 h.). [Lr.]
Twitching tearing in the
metacarpal bones and fingers, aggravated by touching. (713,
714, see 722.) [Gss.]
Twitching tearing in the wrist
and metacarpal bones. [Hrr.]
715. Tearing where the metacarpal
bones join the wrist (aft. 5 h.). [Hrr.]
Obtuse shooting on the metacarpal
bone of the right index. [Hrr.]
On moving the left hand a drawing
pain over the back of the hand, which is swollen.
Tearing in the bones of the
distal phalanges of the fingers of the right hand, especially severe
in the joints, without relation to movement (aft.
½ h.). [Hrr.]
A drawing upwards in the left
thumb, index, and middle finger.
720. Fine shooting upwards in
the distal joint of the right thumb. (Shooting tearing and shooting
drawing (which sometimes passes into twitching tearing, seems also
to be one of the characteristic pains of china, see also 709, 738,
798, 799, 800.) [Hrr.]
Twitching tearing on the metacarpal
bone of the right little finger. (721, see 722.) [Gss.]
Twitching pain in the left little
finger (Comp. with 713, 714, 721, 724.)
Knuckle of the middle finger
swollen; he cannot move it on account of stiffness and pain.
Twitching tearing in the phalanges
of the fingers (aft. 24 h.). [Gss.]
725. The hands are sometimes
warm, sometimes cold.
One hand is icy cold, the other
warm.
Blue nails. [CRUGER, l. c.]
Superiorly in the flesh of the
right nates, on the coccyx, aching increasing in a pulsating manner,
while sitting, which goes off on standing up. [Fz.]
Tearing drawing in the left nates
when sitting. (729. 730, see 748.) [Fz.]
730. Drawing in the nates, and
at the same time in the knees, when standing, which leaves off when
seated. (This symptom, though unaccompanied by the name of any authority,
is not among Hahnemann’s own observations.)
The lower extremities go to sleep
when seated. (See 828.)
Pain, like shooting and burning,
in various parts of the lower extremities at the same time. [Gss.]
Exhaustion and relaxation, as
from a long journey on foot, in the thighs and legs. [Hbg.]
Weakness and unsteadiness in
the hip- and knee-joints, for two successive mornings, as if he
had made a long journey on foot the previous day; on prolonged movement
the feeling goes out of the joints, and gives place to a bruised
pain, the first day more in the legs. [Bhr.]
735. Exhaustion in the lower
extremities when walking, all day long (aft. 2 h.). [Wr.]
Exhaustion in the thighs. (Comp. with 733.)
Painful drawing in the long
bones of the lower extremities. (See
748.) (aft. 2 d.). [Hrr.]
Spasmodic (stitch-like) drawing
in the thighs and legs (aft. ½ h.). [Wth.]
In the inguinal and knee-joints
aching drawing when sitting, which goes off on walking and standing.
[Fz.]
740. Pain in the hip-joint, in
the knees and feet, as if they were dislocated or cut to pieces.
(See note to S. 422.) [AL. THOMPSON, l. c.]
Drawing pain on the thigh bones,
as if the periosteum were scraped with a blunt knife. [Fz.]
Slow, painful drawing in the
inside of the left thigh, which seems to be only in the skin. [Fz.]
Pain of the posterior muscles
of the thigh, as if they were beaten when sitting.
In the anterior muscles of both
thighs tension when walking.
745. (A burning anteriorly on
the upper parts of the thighs.)
Spasmodic drawing in the right
thigh from the hough upwards(with sensation of pressure), just as
if it would draw up the leg, in the evening when sitting, which
goes off by standing and walking. [Fz.]
In the middle of the left thigh
a twitching (aft. 5 h.). [Wth.]
A tearing by jerks in the thigh.
Twitching tearing on the
right and left thighs forwards and outwards, excited only by touch,
not by movement. [Hrr.]
750. Twitching tearing on
the anterior aspect of the left thigh. (aft. 2 h.). [Gss.]
Tearing in the thigh bones, from
above downwards, when at rest and when moving, in fits, for several
days (aft. 72 h.). [Ws.]
Tearing that extends from
the knee-joint to the thigh, accompanied by a weakness which renders
walking and standing difficult. [Hrr.]
In the shaft of the thigh-bone
a painful, aching drawing downwards, chiefly when sitting, in the
afternoon.[Fz.]
Painful sensitiveness of the
skin on the thighs, from the friction of the clothes, as if the
skin were rough and covered with papules (aft. 8 d.). [Ws.]
755. In the left thigh, when
standing, a sensation as if there were a hardened node in the flesh,
with drawing pain in it. (See 771.) (aft. 2 h.). [Fz.]
Hard swelling of the thighs,
which sometimes goes down over the knees to the beginning of the
feet, becomes thinner below, is reddish, and is painful when touched.
(Comp. with 785, 792, 793.)
Stitch darting upwards in the
right thigh posteriorly, when standing. [Fz.]
When he rises from a seat, burning
and formication, as of having gone to sleep, in the thigh on which
he was sitting, especially in the hough, particularly observable
when standing. [Fz.]
Cramp-like, paralytic pain in
the right thigh and knee-joint on rising up from a seat when he
has sat for a considerable time, and when walking (aft.5.1/2 h.).
[Htn.]
760. Twitching tearing internally
in the patella. [Gss.]
Paralytic tearing in the
right knee-joint, which spreads now towards the thigh and now towards
the leg, with weakness of the part, and aggravation more by touch
than by movement. [Hrr.]
In the right knee, on rising
up from a seat and when walking, a sharp drawing pain, which went
off again when sitting (in the afternoon). [Stf.]
Shooting in the left knee-joint.
[Fz.]
Slight trembling of the knees
on rising up after sitting, which went off whilst walking. [Bch.]
765. Knucking together of the
knees, especially on going upstairs. [An.]
When walking the knees give way
and knuckle together. [Fz.]
Coldness and chilliness of the
knees (aft. ½ h.).
In the knees twitching pain
(Comp. with 760, and partly with
773.).
Hot swelling of the right knee
with drawing tearing pains, from which he awakes at midnight.
770. Pain in the knee on the
slightest motion, as if bruised (Comp. with 759.) (aft. 3
h.).
(Pain in the knee on bending
it, preventing sleep, with nodes. (Comp. with 755.).[Lumps
in the skin there].)
A pain on the side of the patella
when touched (aft. 2 h.).
On the tendons of the flexor
muscles in the hough jerking drawing , synchornous with the pulse.
(See 768.) [Fz.]
Sensation in the leg as if a
garter were too tightly tied about it, and as if would go to sleep
and become benumed.
775. An internal uneasiness in
the legs compelled him to bend them and draw them up. (See 837
to 840.). [Fz.]
Bruised pain of the bones of
the leg when treading, and still worse on touching; when she touched
them the whole foot shivered and was chilly, as if she immersed
it in cold water.
Drawing pain in the right tibia
inferiorly, near the heel, and then in the whole foot (when sitting).
[Lr.]
Pain in the lower half of both
legs, as if the periosteum were bruised and swollen, only when standing;
on touching it sore pain as if on an excoriated bruised spot.
On extending the left leg, when
sitting, an aching drawing pain superiorly on the inside of the
shaft of the tibia below the patella, which goes off flexing the
leg. [Fz.]
780. Aching drawing on the tibia,
in the evening, when sitting, which goes off when standing and walking.
[Fz.]
When walking shooting in
the tibiae, which went off when at
rest (aft. 5 and more h.). [Lr.]
Painful cramp in the left calf,
at night, on extending and flexing the foot, which prevents sleep.
(aft. 16 h.).
When walking in the open air,
single, sharp, rapidly recurring stitches in the upper part of the
calf. [Fz.]
Tearing in the calf. [Lr.]
785. Hard, dark red swelling
on the calf, which went on to suppuration. (See 756, 792, 796.)
[PELARGUS, Obs. ii, I, p. 72.]
Over the tendo Achillis a severe
burning tension. [Htg.]
Weariness of the feet, as they
were bruised (aft. 4 h.).
Paralysis of the feet. [CRUGER,
l. c.]
Over the tendo Achillis a severe
burning tension. [Htg.]
Weariness of the feet as if they
were bruised. (aft. 4 h.).
Paralysis of the feet. [CRUGER,
l. c.]
Violent shooting burning on the
dorsum of the foot close to the tibia (when sitting). [Gss.]
790. Coldness of the feet, in
the evening.
Shooting in the left foot. [Lr.]
Swelling of the feet. [STAHL, l. c.]
Painful swelling of the feet.
[FISCHER, l. c.]
Very soft swelling of the soles
of the feet.
795. Contractive pinching pain
on the outer side of the foot, on the side of the sole (aft. 6 h.).
[Htn.]
Violent itching on the right
sole when walking and sitting, relieved for a short time by scratching.
[Hrr.]
Pricking formication from the
big toe to the dorsum of the foot, as if the part had been frost-bitten,
in the evening when sitting, which goes off when walking and standing.
(Although the china pains and sufferings are most frequently
(next to touch, see 685.) aggravated and increased by movement of
the pat, yet there is a not altogether rare alternating action,
where they are diminished and allayed by movement, as here and 682,
728, 739, 746, 775, 779, 780, and also where they are especially
produced when at rest, 729, 743, 753, 837, 838, 839.) [Fz.]
Shooting drawing in the heel
(aft. 48 h.). [Gss.]
Shooting tearing in the sole
of the foot in the region of the heel, while sitting and walking.
[Hrr.]
800. Very violent tearing shooting
in the soles, when sitting and walking. [Fz.]
Drawing pain in the metatarsal
bones of the right foot. [Hrr.]
When standing, drawing with sore
pain on the dorsum of the foot, which goes off when sitting. [Fz.]
Cramp-like drawing in the inner
side of the left foot when sitting. [Fz.]
Twitching tearing in the
bones of the foot and metatarsus. [Hrr.]
805. Twitching tearing in
the metatarsal bones and toes. [Gss.]
Twitching tearing, increased
only when touched, not by movement, in the metatarsal bones and
phalanges of the toes, especially in the joints (aft.
31 h.). [Hrr.]
Twitching tearing where the metatarsal
bones unite with the bones of the tarsus (aft. 25 h.). [Hrr.]
Boring stitches in the tips of
the toes. (Comp. with 791.).
Shooting now in the tibiae, now
in the back, now in the chest, when sitting (aft. 14 h.). [Lr.]
810. Excessive, almost painful
sensitiveness of the skin of the whole body, even of the palms of
the hands. (Comp. with 540, 754.). (aft. 10 h.).
In the wound a digging pain.
In the ulcer boring pain.
In the wound (the ulcer) a shooting
itching pain for two hours. (813, 814, comp. with 825.) (aft.
some h.).
(In the ulcer shooting throbbing
pain, even when at rest.)
815. The ulcer becomes painfully
sensitive, and there occurs a boring pain in it.
In the ulcer throbbing pain on
moving the part, but not when at rest.
(In the ulcer there appears foetid-smelling
ichor; there is burning and aching in it, he dares not let the foot
hang down; the foot is painful when standing.)
Itching, particularly in the
evening, on the arms, loins, and chest; after scratching papules
appear.
Smarting itching allays it for
instants only; but if he lies on the unaffected side, so that the
itching parts come uppermost, the itching soon goes off (aft. 8,
9 h.).
820. Smarting itching almost
confined to the parts whereon he does not lie (in the midday sleep),
and which are turned uppermost (aft. 25 h.).
Itching of the skin; after scratching
blisters appear, as from nettle-stings.
Itching of the skin; on scratching
blood exudes.
In the warmth and at night in
bed a burning itching in the hough and on the inner side of the
arms, with an eruption of small vesicles, which contain water, but
dissappear in the cold air.
Fine shooting on various parts
of the skin. [Fz.]
825. (Shooting in a cicatrized
wound in the left foot. (See 813, 814.) [Fz.]
In the skin, especially of the
abdomen, in some parts a tugging as if a hair were pulled. [Fz.]
Spasmodic twitching in various
muscler parts. [An.]
The limbs on which he lies
go to sleep. (See 708, 731.)
Stiffness and numbness of the
limbs.
830. Twitching tearing on
various parts of the limbs, especially of the hands and feet, aggravated
by touching. [Gss.]
Bone pains in the joints of the
ribs, of the limbs, of the shoulders and scapulae, as if they were
beaten, when he stirs or moves in the very least. (831
is alternating action with 837, 838, and 840.)
In the bones he feels like a
drawing. [Fz.]
Stretching, extremely acute
drawing pain in almost all the bones, now in one, now in another,
which at first went off for a few moments on lying down, but then
recurred all the more violently (aft.
14 h.). [Bch.]
Gout. [MURRAY, l. c.]
835. Rheumatic pains. [GREDING,
- RAULIN, l. c.]
Pains in the limbs, especially
in the joints. (See 831, 837 – 840.) [FISCHER, l. c.]
Pain of the joints when sitting
and lying; the limbs will not allow him to lie quietly in one position,
as after excessive fatigue from a long journey, or as after great
debility caused by excessive blood-letting or too frequent seminal
emissions; the limbs must be laid now here, now there, and be sometimes
flexed and at another time extended. (837 to 840 comp. with 775.
The weakness here described, as if proceeding from a great loss
of humours, is in conjunction with the phenomena indicated und,
862, 863, 865, 889, and 893, together with the symptoms of the disposition
of china (1095, 1096, 1103, 1107 to 1110, 1113, 1125, 1126, 1131),
the symptoms of deranged digestive organs (229, 242, 249 to 255,
265, 269, 277 to 279, 283, 289, 290, 293, 294, 296, 298, 301, 302,
305, to 307, 310, 318 to 321, 329, 330, 339), the suffering after
food (332, 333, 350, 351, 357, 358, 364, 366, 367, 369 to 371, 387,
394, 414, 416), the too-easily excited perspiration, especially
in the back on movement and during sleep (684, 1058, 1060, 1064),
and the confusion of the head(6, 8, to 16, 18, 19, 21 to 23), exactly
that for which china is the only suitable remedy, and which almost
without exception occurs in persons who have experienced a very
considerable loss of strength by haemorrhages and frequent blood-letting,
by prolonged escape of milk from the breasts and unduly prolonged
suckling, by excesses in venery and onanism, or frequent involuntary
seminal emissions, by profuse morbid sweats or taking sudorifices
in excess, by diarrhoeas, or frequently repeated purgatives. In
morbid debility of other kinds, when the disease itself is not suitablefor
this remedy, the administration of china is always followed by injurious;
often fatal consequences, although even in such unsuitable cases
a stimulation of the strength is produced by it in the first few
hours; but the unnatural, over strained character of this is easily
percieved, and but too often a premature death is the consequence
of this over-stimulation, and if in such cases its use is long continued,
the patient falls into a cachectic condition hard to cure, and which
is the result of the physician’s maleficient art.)
Pain of all the joints as if
beaten, in the morning slumber; the longer they are left lying still
the more painful are they; - hence it is necessary to turn the limbs
frequently, because the pains are diminished by movement; on awaking
completely they go off.
Pain in all the joints, as from
a great weight pressing on them, in the morning in bed, which goes
off on getting up.
840. While sitting, pain in all
the joints, as from a heavy weight pressing on him; the longer he
sits the more weary he becomes.
On rising from (the noon) sleep
all the joint feel stiff.
On rising from sleep in the morning
and from the midday sleep, a paralytic stiffness of all the limbs,
that causes dejection of mind.
Cracking in the joints.
Everywhere he is in pain, the
joints, the bones, and the periosteum, as if he had sprained himself,
and like a drawing and tearing, especially in the spinal column,
in the sacrum, in the knee and the thighs.
845. Tensive pains. [B. M. ETTMULLER,
(Results of suppression of intemittents by china.) Diss. de usu
et abusu proecipit., cap. 3, 5.]
Oppression of all parts of the
body, as if his clothes were too tight (after a walk in the open
air).
Wandering rheumatism, sometimes
in one part, sometimes in another, without swelling or fever, alternating
with pains in the interior of the body. (From the long-continued.)
[SYDENHAM, Opusc., p. 351.]
A burning. Mingled with some
formication and itching, in various parts of the body, by day. [Gss.]
Consumption. [MURRAY, - BAGLIVI,
l. c.]
850. Cachexiae. [MURRAY, - BERGER,
l. c.]
Lingering fevers. [BAGLIVI, l.
c. – STAHL, Obs., Clin.]
Dropsy. [MURRAY, - BAGLIVI, -
BERGER, - RICHARD, - RAULIN, - ROMBERG, - STAHL, - THOMPSON, l.
c.]
Anasacra. [STAHL, l. c.]
Swelling of the limbs. (854,
855, see 756, 785792, 793, 794.] [CARTHEUSER, l. c.]
855. Erysipelatous swelling of
the whole body. [FORMEY, l. c.]
Yellow colour of the skin. [FISCHER,
l. c.]
JAUNDICE. [BERGER, - STAHL, -
THOMPSON, - RICHARD, l. c.]
He feels ill all over; he is
not at all well.
The sensitiveness of the whole
nervous system is, as it were, morbidly increased, strained and
irritated.
860. Excessive sensitiveness
of all the nerves, with a morbid feeling of general weakness. (860, comp. with the symptoms mentioned in the note to 837. Here
is described the peculiar weakness which china especially excites
in a high degree, and it is especially this form that is permanently
relieved by china, when at the same time the other symptoms resemble
those produced by it. This particular kind of weakness is especially
characteristic of those exhausted by loss of humours.)
Internal feeling, as of an illness
about to come on.
Over-irritation, with pusillanimity
and intolerance of all noises.
Languishing condition of mind
and body, with over-sensitiveness. (Comp. with 888.)
Ailments from a slight draught
of air.
865. Too great delicacy and over-sensitiveness
of the nervous system; all impressions of sight, smell, hearing,
and taste are too strong for him, they offend his inner sensibility
and affect his disposition.
The former pains a great heaviness
in the whole body.
Weariness.
Trembling powerlessness of the
limbs, with dilated pupils. (Comp.
wit 890.)
Inclination to lie down.
870. Exhaustion. [GESNER, l.
c.]
Exhaustion in the limbs. [STAHL,
Obs.]
Chronic weakness. (Not found.)
[THOMPSON, l. c.]
Sinking of the forces. [ROMBERG,
l. c.]
Sunken forces. [CLEGHORN, (Effects
of china in agues.) Diseases of Minorca, pp. 191, 213.]
875. Feeling of exhaustion, especially
when he rises from a seat; he would like to sit down again, and
unless he strains his muscles he sinks back on his chair, whereupon
an agreeable feeling of rest ensues (aft. 3, 4 h.). [Bhr.]
He had a difficulty in walking,
and felt soon exhausted, as from a feeling of weight and paralysis
in the thighs. [Stf.]
Heavy feeling of the body. [RAULIN,
l. c.]
Heaviness in all the limbs, especially
in the thighs, as if lead hung upon them. (Comp. with 733, 736.)
[An.]
Laziness. [Wth.]
880. When he tried to keep himself
erect for some minutes there ensued stiffness, paleness and loss
of consciousness. [GESNER, l. c.]
Unconsciousness and exhaustion
at the same time. [Lhm.]
Slight attacks of (Should
be “as of,” See note to S. 422.) apoplexy and unconsciousness.
[THOMPSON, l. c.]
Exhaustion and relaxation of
the whole body. [Hrr.]
Severe fainting fit. (In a
powerful man, to whom a drachm of best red cinchona-bark had been
given in one dose; the fainting fit was so severe that he could
not be roused from it until an emetic was given to him.) [BAKER,
in Medical Transactions, vol. iii, Lond., 1785.]
885. Syncopes. [MORTON, - MURRAY,
- CRUGER, - GESNER, l. c.]
Syncope – death. (SYDENHAM
also (Opera, Lips., p. 379) mentions two men having died in his
time from cinchona-bark taken a few hours.) [DE KOKER, l. c.]
Asphyxia, apparent death. [CRUGER,
l. c.]
Exhaustion and relaxation of
body and mind (aft. 1 h.). [Hrr.]
Exhaustion: he can scarcely hold
up his head, and falls asleep. [Fz.]
890. Flaccidity in all the limbs
and trembling in the hands. (See 868.) [Lhm.]
Relaxation of the whole body,
felt also seated, but far more, when
walking. [An.]
Sometimes weakness, sometimes
feeling of excessive strength in the joints. (Alternating action
in a healthy person.) [Fz.]
He feels quite weak and faint
in the open air, and as if sinking away about the stomach and chest,
although he has plenty of strength for walking. [Fz.]
Extraordinary facility of all
movements, as if he had no body. (Alternating action after previous
feeling of weakness caused by cinchona-bark.) (aft. 2 to 3 h.).
[Fz.]
895. Liveliness, but with staring
eyes, all the evening. (A kind of unnatural excitement, as in
the so-called strengthening treatment of ordinary practitioners,
when they are unable to remove from the patient his disease, and
yet will hypocritically procure from him strength and liveliness
for a few hours.) [Hsch.]
Comfortable feeling, in the evening.
[Lhm.]
Trembling in all the limbs, felt
not seen, combined with feeling of coolness. [Hbg.]
Twitchings. [GESNER, l. c.]
She cannot sleep all night; she
is occupied with nothing but disagreeable thoughts, one after the
other.
900. He cannot fall asleep on
account of many ideas and reflection, each of which only engages
him for a short time, but is always supplanted by another; hence
almost all night long no sleep comes to his eyes; towards morning
he becquite warm all over yet cannot bear throwing off the bed-clothes,
without thirst (aft. 30 h.).
Sleeplessness after midnight;
but sleepy though he is, his thoughts remain wide awake, he shuts
his eyes and often changes his position in bed.
He fell asleep late; on account
of many thoughts he could not go to sleep; he did not sleep soundly,
and on rising he was in a very exhausted state.
Sleeplessness until midnight,
with aching pain over the whole head. (903, 906, 919, comp. with
889, 900. The aching in the head at night seems to be characteristic
of china; comp. with 920, 936, 951. Also the pressure in the umbilical
region, in the evening in bed; 932, is allied with it.) [Bch.]
When about to fall asleep he
is awakened by horrible fancies. (904,
905, 933, 938, 946. Restlessness sleep at night, with anxious, frightful
dreams, after which on waking consciousness is not quite perfect,
or the anxiety they cause continues (934, 935) are quite peculiar
to china, see 936, 937, 939, to 947.)
905. He starts up when about
to go sleep.
Before midnight till 2 a.m. unusual
wakefulness. [Lhm.]
Drowsiness, with palpitation
of the heart.
Incessant yawning, without sleepiness.
(908, and 955, 958, are alternating
action with 916.)
Drowsiness by day. (909 to 913, comp. with 915, 916.).
910. The eye-lids will close
from weariness and sleepiness (aft. ½ h.).
Constant day-drowsiness; he falls
asleep unexpectedly.
When sitting invincible drowsiness.
As soon as she sits down, by
day, she immediately nods and slumbers; but if she lies down, she
becomes wide awake from the least noise.
Sleepiness and soon thereafter
again wakefulness. [Hbg.]
915. Drowsy lassitude. [STAHL,
l. c.]
Drowsiness all day, with stretching
of the limbs and yawning. [An.]
He wakes in the morning two hours
earlier than usual. [Bhr.]
He starts up at night in sleep.
Sleeps only from 3 till 5 a.m.
[Lhm.]
920. Very deep sleep, like that
of an intoxicated person, without once waking; in the morning his
head is quite dazed, as if he had not slept enough, and he gets
aching in the temples on shaking the head. (Comp. with 951.)
[Fz.]
Snoring and whining in sleep,
in children. (Comp. with 938.)
Snoring inspiration and expiration
in sleep.
Snoring inspiration (through the nose) in sleep (aft. 3 h.).
In sleep there occurs at one
time snoring inspiration, at another blowing (puffing) expiration.
925. In sleep one eye is open,
the other half shut, with eye-balls turned backwards like a dying
person (aft. 1 h.).
In sleep he lies on the back,
the arms stretched out above the head, with slow expiration and
strong quick pulse.
Restlessness, sleeplessness.
[RAULIN, l. c.]
Restless sleep, with tossing
about, without waking. [Htg.]
Restless sleep. [CLEGHORN, l.
c.]
930. Restless sleep; he could
not fall asleep; when he got to sleep he soon woke up again, with
perspiration on the hair of the head and the forehead, and chilliness
over the back. [Wr.]
Restless sleep, and after waking
in the night, slight sweat all over. [Hbg.]
In the evening in bed a pinching
pressure in the umbilical region. [Fz.]
At night a frightful dream (aft.
8 h.).
Heavy dreams in the night
sleep, which make him anxious after waking.
935. Anxious dream: he has to
go perpendicularly down into an abyss, where upon he wakes, but
retains the dangerous place so vividly in his imagination (especially
when he shuts his eyes.) that he remains for a long time in great
fear about it and cannot calm himself.
All night long alternately headache
and dreams, from which he starts up in affright. (936, 937, 939,
to 945, 947, see note to S. 904.) [Lhm.]
At night restless sleep, from
which he started up from time to time, and then every time remained
for some instants without being able to collect himself. [Myr.]
Restless sleep full of dreams
and crying out.
In the evening, on going to sleep,
confused dream pictures, from which he wakes up again (aft. 16 h.).
[Ws.]
940. At night, on awaking out
of frightful dreams, anxiety. [Hrr.]
At night fearful, startling dreams
of falling from a height, with waking up full of restlessness and
inability to collect himself for some instants. [Wth.]
Fearful dreams of misfortunes,
from which he wakes p, but without being able to come to himself.
[Gss.]
Anxious dreams at night, from
which he awoke in a half-conscious state, and for some time continued
afraid. [Wth.]
A sleep disturbed by confused
and disconnected dreams, with repeated awakings; he woke up but
could not quite recollect himself. [Bch.]
945. Confused, nonsensical
dreams after midnight, mingled with semiconscious waking. [Hrr.]
When he wakes at night, he cannot
recollect himself.
Confused, absurd dreams, by which
he is often woke up from sleep. [Hrr.]
At night restless sleep, with
vexatious dreams and tossing about, from which he wakes up every
time. [Fz.]
Voluptuous dreams with pollutions.
[Hbg.]
950. As soon as she closes her
eyes to go to sleep, she dreams about nasty things.
At night, in sleep, he tosses
about hither and thither, throws off the clothes, and has all kinds
of vexatious dreams about things that have occurred long ago; in
the morning he cannot get quite awake on account of emptiness and
confusion of the head; in the morning he is as if broken on the
wheel and not at all refreshed by sleep.[Fz.]
On awaking at night he feels
giddy, so that he could not trust himself to sit upright.
In the morning on awaking, anxious
ideas and thoughts.
Towards morning heat in the head
and oppression of the chest.
955. Inclination to yawn. [Ws.]
Yawning.
Stretching.
Yawning and stretching of
the limbs. [Htn.]
Dread of the open air.
960. In the open air great shuddering,
with rigor and goose-skin. [Wth.]
He gets shuddering and chilliness
in the open air which is not cold, this goes off immediately in
the room. [Fz.]
In the open air of moderate coldness,
trembling of the limbs from chilliness, and shudder passing over
the thighs. [Fz.]
Though the room is cold he does
not feel chilly (aft. 9 h.). [Fz.]
Cold hands and chilliness externally
all over the body, as if he had cold water poured over him, in the
open air, where is went on to chattering of the teeth; in the room
this went off, but the hands remained cold.[Trn.]
965. Coldness of the hands and
feet, even in the warm room. [Fz.]
Cold hands (aft. ¼ h.).
Sensation of icy coldness in
the left hand which, however, is not colder externally to the touch
than the right. (Alternating action
with 975, 976.)
Coldness of the hands, feet,
and nose.
Coldness of the hands. [Lr.]
970. Cold feet in the evening
(aft. 4 h.). [Mch.]
A cold feeling of the left leg
from the knee to the foot. [Hbg.]
A shudder of the same kind over
both elbows and knees. [Fz.]
Icy cold feet with warmth of
the rest of the body (aft. 1 h.). [Hbg.]
Sensation of coldness on the
lower extremities, whilst the face and chest are still warm (aft.
1 h.). [Hrr.]
975. The right hand is warm (while
writing), the left cold. (975, 976, alternating action with 967.)
[Hbg.]
The right hand is perceptibly
colder than the left. [Wth.]
In the morning cold hands and
feet, and rigor over the thighs, which increases when walking (aft.
28 h.). [Fz.]
Shivering (aft. ¼ h.). [An.]
A slight shiver all over the
body. [Htg.]
980. Flying chill, especially
over the back (immediately). [Wr.]
A slight shivering in the back
(aft. 3 h.). [Stf.]
Along with chilliness of the
body, yawning.
Chilliness of the whole body,
with very cold feet (aft. 2 h.). [Fz.]
He is cold all over. (Alternating action with 996, 997, 1000.)
985. Rigor al over the body,
without thirst. [Lr.]
Chilliness all over the body,
with cold hands (aft. ½ h.). [Myr.]
Chilliness in the whole body,
without external coldness. [Lhm.]
Chilliness in the whole body,
more internally (aft. 3.1/2 h.). [Myr.]
Palpitation of the heart, followed
immediately by chilliness. (The china fever often commences with
an accessory symptom, with palpitation of the heart, 989, or with
sneezing, 1083, or great anxiety, 1016, 1093, or nausea, 999, 1017,
or great thirst. 1048, or ravenous hunger, 1053, 1054, or aching
pain in the hypogastrium, 10, or headache, 1015. ) (aft. 20
m.).
990. Chilliness on the body,
as if a cold wind blew on him, especiallywhen walking, seldom with
shivering, which only comes on when he sits down, over the arms,
loins, and thighs (aft. 8 h.). [Fz.]
Shuddering all over the body,
with goose-skin (aft. 1 h.). [Htn.]
Shuddering and rigor all
over the body. [Wth.]
(In the evening, on lying down,
severe rigor.).
Rigor internally and externally
in the whole body, sometimes more in the marrow of the bones of
the feet, which are colder than the hands (aft. ½ h.). [Gss.]
995. Internal coldness, periodically
with shuddering and rigor all over the body (immediately). [Wth.]
Internal chill, without externally
perceptible coldness. (996, 1000, alternating action with 984.)
(aft. 4 h.). [Ws.]
Internal feeling of coldness,
chiefly in the arms and hands. [Bch.]
Rigor on the chest and arms when
walking in the open air.
Chill over the arms, with sickness
about the stomach, then cold limbs, with shuddering and recurring
nausea.
1000. Chilliness, without coldness
of the body, without thirst. (On the second and third day after
taking the drug, in the febrile attacks the interval betwixt chill
and heat became always greater – HERRMANN) (in the internal
betwixt heat and chill, 1,1/2 h.) [Hrr.]
In the morning rigor for half
an hour, without thirst, and without subsequent heat.
(During the febrile chill, thirst
.(This, as also 1046, seems not to have been properly observed,
for in every other observation I found that in the china-fever there
is no thirst during the chill or rigor, 985, 1000, 1001, 1003, to
1005, 1007, 1008, 1040; on the contrary, the thirst only came after
the chill or rigor, as we learn from the observations 1009 to 1011,
or which comes to the same thing, immediately before the heat, as
in 1048. So also the thirst during the china-fever is not met with
even during the fully-developed febrile heat, see 1036, 1038, 1042,
1043, 1054, 1055, 1056, 1093, except some burning of the lips, see
1053, or dryness of them, see 1037 and 1055; which dryness is indicated
by the expression – “Sensation of some thirst during the heat,”
1020, for “Thirst during the flying heat,” 1047, does not refer
to fully-developed febrile heat. The thirst thing, during the perspiration,
1064. But the febrile heat accompanied by stitches all over the
body seems to be exceptional, 1074, 1075.)
Along with internal chill, external
rigor and shivering, during which at first the left hand and left
foot are colder, afterwards both hands and feet are equally cold,
without thirst (aft. ½ - 1 h.). [Wth.]
Shivering all over the body,
but less violent on the limbs, without thirst; the body is not cold,
only the hands (aft. ½ h.). [Hrr.]
1005. Shivering al over the body,
without thirst (aft. 2.1/2 h.). [Hrr.]
Shivering and chill when he comes
from the open air into the warm room. ( A rare alternating action
in comparison with the much more frequent 960 to 964, 998, 1018)
(aft. 5 h.).
Rigor all over the body, with
icy cold hands, without thirst (aft. 1 – 3 h.). [Htn.]
Rigor and internal coldness,
for several hours, without thirst (aft. ½, 1 h.). [Wth.]
After the shivering through the
skin, thirst.
1010. After the chill thirst,
not followed by heat. [Trn.]
All day long, from time to time,
febrile chill over the whole body, especially on the forehead, which
is bedewed with cold sweat; a quarter of an hour after the first
chill, great thirst (aft. 1 h.0. [Bch.]
Febrile chill (aft. ¾ h.), alternately
coming and going off, at the same time weakness of the knees and
tibiae when walking and standing, less when sitting. [Bch.]
In the morning (about 5 o’clock)
severe febrile shivering, with weakness of the feet (aft. 12 h.).
[Css.]
During the febrile chill, aching
pain in the hypogastrium (aft. ½ h.). [Bch.]
1015. Shivering throughout the
body, without coldness, then dull, cutting headache extending into
the orbits. [Lhm.]
Shuddering and rigor through
the whole body, with cold hands and oppression of the mind (aft.
1 h.). [Wth.]
In the morning and forenoon shivering,
with cold hands, feeling of nausea, and quick pulse. [Fz.]
In the evening (about 5 o’clock)
coldness and shivering when walking in the open air, going off in
the room (aft. 10 h.); an hour afterwards great heat, especially
in the face, which is increased by movement and when walking; an
hour after the disappearance of the heat, thirst comes on. [Fz.]
Two attacks of chilliness at
different times before the febrile heat. [FISCHER, l. c.]
1020. Heat alternating with chill;
from half an hour to an hour after the chill the heat comes on;
some thirst for cold water in the heat. [Hrr.]
While walking in the open air,
shivering on the back, then heat in the back, with breaking out
of perspiration, followed immediately by renewed sensation of coldness
and shivering. [Wr.]
Quick and hard pulse, with flying
heat alternating with chilliness in the back, which is covered with
cold sweat, as is also the forehead (aft. a few m.), without thirst
in the chill and heat, for five hours. [Wr.]
All the afternoon chilliness
alternating with heat, at the same time weakness in the lower extremities;
all much worse when walking in the open air. [Wr.]
Heat in the head, with distented
blood-vessels in the hands. (In the china-fever the blood-vessels
are generally distented, even during heat in the head alone, as
here, or during considerably increased temperature of the body,
1042, or during mere feeling of heat without externally perceptible
heat, 1041, and so also during actual external heat, 1056. ) (aft.
4 h.).
1025. The blood mounts to
the head, the forehead is hot and the limbs are cold. (1024, 1025, In the china-fever rush of blood to the head is very
frequent, generally with redness and heat of face, 1030, 1055, often
with chilliness of the rest of the body, 1028, 1029, 1035, also
with external coldness, 1031, 1033, or only internal feeling of
heat on the face, with cheeks cold to the touch, and cold sweat
on the forehead, 1034.)
During the feeling of heat, intermingled
with alternating redness of face, lasting all day, febrile attacks
of chill and perspiration, with but little thirst. [An.]
All over the body sometimes warmth,
sometimes coldness (aft. ½ - 1 h.) [Wth.]
Redness and heat in the cheek
and love of the ear, with chill over the arms and abdomen (aft.
1 h.).
Redness and heat in the cheek
and ear-lobe of one side ot the other, and before this goes off,
chill all over the body, at last on the lower extremities (aft.
4 h.).
1030. Heat on the face, and after
some hours shivering and chilliness, with coldness of the whole
body.
In the evening, cold hands with
hot cheeks. [Fz.]
During the heat he can scarcely
uncover the hands without suffering.
Warmth and redness in the
face, whilst the rest of the body was cold; at the same time a disagreeable
cold feeling (chill) on the warm forehead. [Bch.]
Very great internal heat in the
whole face, the trunk and the thighs, with cold sweat on the forehead,
cold cheeks and cold feet (aft. 10.1/2 h.). [Htm.]
1035. Warmth in the face with
chilliness of the rest of the body, and shortly afterwards coldness
of the forehead, with warm feeling of the rest of the body. [Hbg.]
Very great feeling of heat on
the whole body, with red cheeks, heat on the trunk and arms, moderately
warm thighs, legs, and feet, with damp forehead, without thirst.
[Htn.]
During the heat, immediately
after midnight, no thirst, only dry lips.
Feeling of heat and redness of
the cheeks, without externally perceptible warmth in them, without
thirst, with cold feet (aft. 9 h.). [Fz.]
After previous increased warmth
in the not warm room, whilst walking in the open air, feeling of
coldness about the ankles, and coldness of the rest of the body,
in the forenoon before a meal. [Fz.]
1040. He eats his dinner with
relish and great appetite, and an hour afterwards there occurs chilliness,
without thirst, then feeling of heat. [Fz.]
Sensation of heat throughout
the body, with distented veins and cold feet; no the rest of the
body also there is no perceptible external increase of temperature.
Temperature of the whobody
somewhat elevated and distented blood-vessels, but without thirst,
with readily dilated pupils (aft.
8, 12 h.).
Heat all over the body without
thirst (aft. 3 h.).
Heat and feeling of heat on the
body; at first the limbs are at the same time still cold, and he
has also a feeling of coldness in them (aft. ½ h.0., with slight
thirst for cold water. [Hrr.]
1045. Dry heat, all day
long. [An.]
Unquenchable thirst during the
chill and heat of an ague. [J. V. von HILDERBRAND (Effects of
china in agues.) in Hufel. Journal, xiii, i. p. 142.]
Feeling of flying heat, with
thirst for cold drinks. [Gss.]
Very great thirst, for an hour
(aft. 9.1/2 h.)., and thereafter a burning heat all over the body,
with throbbing in all the blood-vessels, without sweat, and without
thirst, with violently burning ears and burning in the forehead,
but only normally warm cheeks, hands, and feet, not with standing
which all these three parts seem to his inward feeling to be too
hot (aft. 10.1/2 h.). [Htn.]
In the evening, an hour after
the heat, dry palate and thirst. [Fz.]
1050. After the febrile heat,
during the sweat on the back and forehead, thirst. [Wr.]
Fever with anorexia. [FISCHER,
l. c.]
In the evening, an hour after
the heat, thirst and hunger, then, after eating, there ensued coldness
and rumbling in the abdomen. [Fz.]
Heat of the body and redness
and heat of face, for three hours, with great hunger; the lips burn
when he brings them together; in the skin about the lips, also there
is burning shooting pain (afternoon). [Fz.]
Heat of the whole body (in the
afternoon from 5 to 7 o’clock), which on walking in the open air
increases, and sweat breaks out on the forehead, with great hunger
preceding and lasting into the commencement of the heat, returning
also after the fever; when walking he feels in the abdomen as if
hot water ran down it (heat running all over the abdomen and down
the thighs), with red cheeks, without thirst (aft. 12 h.). [Fz.]
1055. Warmth in the face and
redness of the cheeks, with dry, sticky lips, without thirst , in
the afternoon about 3 o’clock).[Fz.]
Heat on the whole body with swollen
blood-vessels on the arms and hands, without perspiration and without
thirst (aft. 4.1/2 h.). [Htn.]
Irregular, acute fever, with
profuse sweat. [STAHL, l. c.]
He perspires incessantly at night,
even under light bed-clothes.
On covering himself up with the
bed-clothes he immediately sweats profusely all over; disagreeable
as this is to him, he is at the same time so drowsy that he cannot
collect himself nor get up.
1060. Sweat during sleep.
Sweat during sleep in the morning.
Greasy sweat ni the morning.
In the morning, as soon as he
gets up, sweat came on his face.
After awaking (about 3 a.m.),
sweat of the body with thirst, but no sweat on the feet, and on
the head only where the cheek lies on the pillow.
1065. Profuse sweat. [MORTON,
l. c.]
Debilitating sweat at the end
of the febrile heat. [SCHLEGEL, l. c.]
General profuse sweat. [ALPINI,
l. c.]
In the morning, after the night
sweat, the skin is not sensitive to the open air, nor apt to be
chilled; he can throw off the clothes without injury.
Profuse sweat all over the body
when walking in the open air.
1070. Cold sweat on the face
with thirst.
Cold sweat all over the body
(aft. ½ h.).
The whole body is very warm,
especially the face and chest (aft. ½ h.). [Hrr.]
Heat through the whole body,
internally and externally, as from drinking wine, with redness of
the face. [Wth.]
Heat all over, and fine needle-pricks
in the skin of the whole body, particularly on the neck, at the
same time great thirst for cold water (aft. 22 h.). [Hrr.]
1075. Over the whole body
a transient feeling of heat and actual heat, and on some parts of
the skin fine weak needle-pricks, with thirst for cold water (aft.
1 h.). [Hrr.]
Great thirst for cold water,
and yet chilliness and heat, especially in the morning immediately
after waking. [Hrr.]
More thirst every morning than
afternoon. [Hrr.]
Towards evening some heat, quite
without chilliness, with quicker pulse (aft. 12 h.). [Bch.]
Quick irregular pulse-beats (aft.
6 h.). [Bch.]
1080. Pulse much slower and weaker
(in the first h.). (From a half-ounce dose.) [DE KOKER, l.
c.]
Slow weak pulse (aft. 1.1/2 h.).
[Htn.]
Slow weaker pulse, which gradually
becomes quicker and stronger (aft. ½ h.). [Htn.]
The febrile attack commences
with sneezing.
(Fever returning earlier (From
its employment in agues.) .) [SCHEGEL, l. c.]
1085. (Decrease of the febrile
chill, and increase of the febrile heat.) [SCHLEGEL, l. c.]
(Increased febrile heat.) (From
its employment in agues.) [FISCHER, l. c.]
(Talking nonsense during the
febrile heat. [SCHEGEL, l. c.]
(Talking nonsense.) (From
its employment in agues.) [SCHLEGEL, l. c.]
(Delirium.) (From its employment
in agues.) [GESNER, l. c.]
1090. Anxiety, anguish. [CLEGORN,
- QUARIN, - ROSCHIN, l .c.]
Extraordinary anguish. [STAHL,
l. c.]
Great anxiety - death. (From
cinchona-bark taken during the chill of ague.) [DE KOKER, l.
c.]
Intolerable anxiety (about 8
p.m. and 2 a.m.); he jumps out of bed and wants to make away himself,
and yet he fears to go near an open window or to approach a knife
– with corporeal heat, without thirst.
Quite besides himself, and in
despair he tosses about in bed. (Comp. with 1091, 1092.)
1095. Too anxious caution.
An over-anxious concern about
trifles (aft. 1.1/2 h.).
Dejection. [GESNER, l. c.]
Gloominess, hopelessness. (1098,
110, see 1094.) [Gss.]
Inconsolableness. (Comp. with 1098, 1100.)
1100. Discouragement. [An.]
Want of the (usual) cheerful
humour; he prefers to be alone. [Htn.]
Piteous, subdued whining and
crying out.
She falls from time to time into
a lachrymose humour, without external cause, from some self-mads,
trivial whim, e.g. from some imaginary want, such as that she cannot
eat enough, & c. (aft. 20 h.).
In the midst of cheerful humour,
sudden , short-lasting crying out and tossing about, without visible
or appreciable cause.
1105. What formerly appeared
to him in a bright light, seems now to be lusterless, unworthy,
and shallow. [Stf.]
Morose, disposed to quarrel.
(1106, 1112, see 1107, 1108, 1110.) [Trn.]
He is cross, angry, and easily
moved to anger. (1107, 1108, 1110, comp. with 1106, 1112.) (aft.
4 h.).
Ill humour, going on to the most
violent anger, so that he could have stabbed someone.
Cross when cause is given, otherwise
stupid, perplexed, embarrased.
1110. Extremely disposed to be
vexed, and to take every occasion to get cross; after wards quarrelsome
and disposed to vex others, and to make reproaches and give annoyance
to others (aft. 2 h.).
He is inwardly very cross. [An.]
Discontented and sensitive, disposed
to quarrel. [Wth.]
Discontented; he thinks himself
unfortunate, and fancies he is opposed and tormented by everybody
(aft. 5 h.).
Disobedience.
1115. Indisposed to think, alternately
gay and gloomy for three hours (aft. 2 h.). [Wth.]
Distaste for mental and serious
occupations. [Bch.]
No desire for work; he is idle.
Serious humour. [Htg.]
Humour gloomy, no wish to live.
1120. Contempt for everything.(Comp.
with 1121.) (aft. 1 h.).
Indifference to all external
impressions, and disinclination to speak.(See 1120.) [Bch.]
Tranquillity of mind.(Curative
action, apparently.) [Lr.]
Ill – humour, but neither sad
nor quarrelsome, yet not at all disposed for rapid thinking. (Comp. with 1115, 1116, 1123, 1140, to 1142.)
Quiet ill humour, and not disposed
to speak (the first day). [Hrr.]
1125. Complaining ill-humour.
Sighing ill-humour. (1126,
1128, 1129, comp. with 1124, 1127.)
Ill-humoured, laconic, disposed
to reverie. [Stf.]
He is silent and will not answer.
Obstinate silence; he will not
answer at all.
1130. Caresses increase his ill-humour.
Ill humoured irresolution; she
can never come to the point ,and is disobliging at the same time.
Dislike to mental work and
drowsiness. [Hrr.]
Dislike to bodily and mental
exertion. [An.]
Liking for work, reading, writing,
and thinking; particularly well-disposed and industrious.(Curative
action.)
1135. He makes a number of grand
plans for the fu.((1135 to 1138, see 1139, 1143.) [Htn.]
He makes many plans, and thinks
over their accomplishment; many ideas force themselves upon him
at once. [Hrr.]
He has many ideas, undertakes
to carry out all sorts of things, builds castles in the air (aft.
some h.). [Wth.]
He has a number of plans in his
head which he greatly desires to carry to execution, in the evening.[Gss.]
A quantity of scheming ideas.(1139,
1143, together with 1135 to 1138 are alternating actions with 7,
1140, 1141, and 1142.)
1140. Slow flow of ideas.
Periodical cessation of thoughts.
[Lhm.]
He is lost in thought (as if
the flow of ideas stood still) (aft. 3 h.).
He cannot keep his ideas in order,
and commits mistakes in writing and speaking, inasmuch as he puts
words first that should come afterwards; the taking of others distracts
him much (aft. 2 h.).
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