Sunday, January 17, 2016

LYCOPODIUM

LYCOPODIUM.

Lycopodium clavatum. Muscus terrestris repens. Pes ursinus. Clubmoss. Wolf's-claw. (Hilly pastures and heaths in Central and Northern Europe, Russian Asia, and North America. Common in Great Britain, especially the North.) N. O. Lycopodiaceæ. Trituration of spores. Tincture of spores. Tincture of fresh plant. Etherial tincture of spores (ether dissolves the spore cases).

Clinical

Abdomen, distended. Abortion. Albuminuria.Aneurism. Angina pectoris. Aphasia. Asthma.Axilla, offensive perspiration of. Biliousness. Borborygmi. Bright's disease. Cancer. Cataract. Constipation. Consumption. Corns. Cough. Cramps. Cystitis. Debility. Diphtheria.Distension. Dropsies. Dysentery. Dysmenorrhœa. Dyspepsia. Ear, eczema behind. Eczema. Ephelis. Epistaxis.Epithelioma. Excoriation. Eye, inflammation of; polypus of canthus. Face, eruption on. Feet, perspiring. Fibroma. Flatulence. Gall-stone colic. Glands, swelling of. Goître. Gout. Gravel. Hæmaturia. Hæmorrhoids. Hair, falling out. Hands, chapped. Heartburn. Heart, diseases of. Hemiopia. Hernia. Hydropericardium. Hypochondriasis. Hysteria. Impotence. Influenza. Intermittents. Intertrigo. Irritation. Labour-pains, abnormal. Lip, cancer of. Liver, derangement of. Liver-spots. Locomotor ataxy. Lungs, affections of. Menstruation, disorders of. Metrorrhagia. Nævus. Nymphomania. Otorrhœa. Panaritium. Paralysis. Paralysis agitans. Peritonitis. Phlegmasia dolens. Physometra. Plica polonica. Pneumonia. Polypus, of eye; of ear; of nose. Proctalgia. Prostatitis. Pylorus, affections of. Quinsy. Renal colic.Rheumatism. Rhagades. Sciatica. Sleep, abnormal. Speech, disordered; stammering. Strains. Sunstroke. Taste, abnormal. Throat, sore. Tongue, coated; cramp in. Typhoid fever.Urine, abnormal. Varicosis. Warts. Water-brash. Whooping-cough. Worms. Yawning.

Characteristics

Lycopodium is one of the pivotal remedies of the materia medica, and an intimate acquaintance with its properties and relations is essential to a proper understanding of the materia medica as a whole. The spores from which the attenuations are made have been called "vegetable sulphur" (probably on account of their use for producing stage-lightning at theatres), and Lyc. ranks withSulphur and Calcarea in the central trio around which all the rest of the materia medica can be grouped. The Lycopodiums stand between the mosses and the ferns, and in past eras occupied a most important place in the world's vegetation as fossils show. In the old school the function of Lyc. has dwindled into its use as an "inert" coating for pills and an "inert" powder for dusting on excoriated surfaces. Earlier practitioners did not consider it as by any means inert. Teste mentions that it is recorded of a decoction of the plant that it has caused vomiting. The use of the powder in intertrigo was not regarded as a physical one but as medicinal. It was praised by Wedel, Lantilius, Gesner, and others in (1) cardialgia and flatulent colic of children and young girls; (2) diseases of children; (3) nephritic colic and calculiwhich is about as much as some homœopathists know about it at the present day. But Mérat and de Lens speak of its internal use in: Rheumatism; retention of urine; nephritis; epilepsy; and pulmonary diseases. In Poland it is used for powdering the hair in "plica polonica," a decoction being used internally and also externally at the same time. The comparative fruitfulness of the two schools of medicine may be accurately measured in the history of this drug: in the old school it has dwindled into an "inert" powder; in homœopathy, by means of the scientific methods of developing and investigating drug action it possesses, all the old virtues of Lyc. have been confirmed and precisionised, and a new world of medicinal action added to them. Teste puts Lyc. at the head of a group containing Nat. m., Viol. tric., and Ant. c. Among the common characters he attributed to them are: Primary action on digestive organs and adjoining glands; on liver and larger intestines rather than stomach. Aversion to bread and < from eating bread and foods made of fermented and fermentable dough. Frequent and painful eructations. Sour eructations; vomiting; distension; alternate diarrhœa and constipation. Pale, whitish, cloudy, mucous urine, often fetid. Premature and profuse menses. Peevishness. Rush of blood to head. Falling of hair; with crusty scalp eruption. Inflammation of eyes and lids. Deficiency of vital heat. Contraction of tendons, especially hamstrings. These are general features common to the group. Lyc. acts profoundly on the entire organism, on solids and fluids. It causes paralysis and paralytic weakness of limbs, of brain, suppurative conditions, even gangrene. It isparticularly suited to: Persons of keen intellect, but feebler muscular development; upper part of body wasted, lower semi-dropsical; lean and predisposed to lung and hepatic conditions; herpetic and scrofulous constitutions; hypochondriacs subject to skin diseases; lithic acid diathesis, much red sediment in urine, urine itself transparent; sallow people with cold extremities, haughty disposition, when sick, mistrustful, slow of comprehension, weak memory; weak children with well-developed heads but puny, sickly bodies, irritable, nervous, and unmanageable when sick, after sleep cross, pushing every one away angrily; old women and children. In my experience it has been more indicated in persons of dry temperament and dark complexion; but this is not by any means exclusive. Undernourished states suggest it. But it is impossible to get the best therapeutic results for this great remedy without an intimate knowledge of certain leading characteristics. Lyc. will cure any case in which the totality of symptoms correspond with symptoms of the remedy; but it will be found that in a large proportion of cases in which this is the case, there will be present some symptoms which are peculiarly characteristic of the remedy, constituting what are called keynotes. Practice on keynote symptoms alone is an absurdity; but the right use of keynote symptoms is an immense saving of labour. The Lyc. keynotes are very pronounced, and though I cannot say that one is more important than another, I give them in this order. (1) < From 4 to 8 p.m. [In one case cured by Lyc. it was: "Bad from 4 to 6; better at 8; gone at 9."] In any case, when the symptoms are < from 4 to 8 p.m., the chances are very great that the rest of the case will correspond to Lyc., no matter what the disease may be. The times may not be accurately at these hours, and still Lyc. may be the remedy. < At 4 p.m. or from 4 to 6; and the condition may continue into the night without the 8 p.m. alleviation. But the grand characteristic is 4 to 8. (2) The second keynote is in direction, right to left. Any affection commencing on the right side and spreading to the left is likely to require Lyc., whether it be headache, sore throat, chest affection, abdominal affection, pains in ovariesif the affection begins on the right side and spreads to the left Lyc. must be studied. Cutting pains shooting from right to left in any part indicate Lyc. In this it is complementary to Lach., which has just as characteristically the opposite direction. Lyc. is a right-side medicine; but right-sidedness is not so characteristic as the direction right to left. These two features are perhaps the most valuable keynotes, in the materia medica. After them in importance, and scarcely less important, come others. (3) > From uncovering. This is general, but it applies to Sufferings in the head more particularly. If a patient complains of headache, no matter of what kind, and if the headache is distinctly >by taking off the hat or other covering, Lyc. will probably be the remedy. This is the great dividing line between this remedy and Sil., another great headache medicine: in Sil. cases the patient must wrap up the head. >From loosening the garments is in the same category. (4) The next characteristic is somewhat of an opposite kind: > From warm drinks; < from cold food and drink. This does not refer to gastric complaints alone, but to headache, sore throat, and any other condition. (5) Fan-like movement of alæ nasi occurring in cerebral, pulmonary, and abdominal complaints. The movements are usually rapid, never slow, and are not synchronous with the breathing. In the same order with this are spasmodic movements of facial muscles: angles of mouth alternately drawn up and relaxed; and spasmodic movements of tongue, it cannot be protruded; rolls from side to side like a pendulum. One prover had a kind of cramp in the tongue when speaking, cutting off the end of every sentence. Nodding and side to side movement of the head. Loosvelt (H. W., xiv. 396) has found that "half-open condition of the eyes during sleep" is a strong indication for Lyc., and has led him to make cures in cases of bronchitis, pneumonia, and typhoid when other remedies have failed. The "fan-like movement" of the alæ nasi led Halbert to the cure of a case of nervous asthma (H. W., xxxiii. 545): Mrs. S., 28, had periodic attacks of spasmodic asthma, always ushered in by unusual excitement and attended by peculiar mental depression. The attack for which Halbert saw her was induced by a violent fit of anger, and persisted longer than usual. Extreme despondency and melancholy, would have nothing to do with her friends. Fan-like motion of alæ nasi. Constriction of throat, like globus, but always induced by regurgitation of food. Excessive appetite easily satisfied. Fulness of abdomen with flatulence. Constipation, dry, hard stools. Dyspnœa. Slight cough with chest constriction; > in open air. All symptoms < 4 to 8 p.m. Lyc. 6x trit. cured. (6) Suddenness; sudden flashes of heat, lightning-like pains; sudden satiety. Pains and symptoms come and go suddenly, as with Bell. (7) Sensation as if a hand were in the body clutching the entrails (also as withBell.). (8) Restlessness > by motion. (9) Right foot hot, left foot cold. (10) Burning pains > by heat; burning like hot coals between scapulæ. Burning stinging in breasts. (11) Dryness of parts: of mucous membranes; of vagina; of skin, especially palms. Prominent among mental symptoms is Fear: of being alone; of men; of his Own shadow. Apprehensiveness: susceptible to natural causes of fear which make a profound impression on bodily organs, as the liver; mental states resulting from fear. Profound sadness and inclination to weep. Peevish. Forgetful. Avaricious. Imperiousness.Lyc. is a remedy for misers. The headaches are in great variety, but the modalities will generally decide: < 4 to 8 p.m.; from eating; from warmth of bed; from becoming heated during a walk; from heat in general; from mental exertion; > in open air; in cool place; by uncovering. Hair falls out. Ophthalmia: conjunctiva looks like red flesh. Lyc. has cured desperate cases of facial neuralgia with the general characteristics of the drug. The facial appearance is pale and yellow; deeply furrowed; looks elongated. Sordes in teeth.Lyc. is in the front rank among flatulent remedies. Incarcerated flatulence; more in intestines than stomach; painful with > by eructations. There is the sinking sensation at epigastrium; and it is < in the night, waking up the patient; or < in afternoon. This sensation becomes translated into canine hunger, but as soon as a morsel of food is swallowed there is distension and fulness to the throat, preventing him eating any more. Sour stomach, sour taste, sour vomiting. Thirst for little and often, but drinking cold water =nausea. Great weakness with the vomiting. Cord-like tension across hypochondria. Flatulence incarcerated, pressing outward, sensation as if something moving up and down in bowels. Great sensitiveness in liver region. [This sensitiveness is a characteristic of Lyc., as it is of its complementary remedies,Lach., Kali iod., and Iod. It has led me to cure many cases of sciatica having this characteristic: cannot bear to lie on painful side it is so sensitive. Especially in case of right-side sciatica of this description. Gums, epigastrium, abdomen, right side of chest, eruption round anus, all soft parts are sensitive. Touch and pressure < all these; only> tearing in head.] The flatulence presses on rectum and bladder. There is out-pushing also in right inguinal ring; and Lyc. has cured many cases of right inguinal hernia, especially in children. Lyc. is one of the great remedies for constipation where purgatives have been abused. Spasmodic constriction of rectum. Constipation of infants. The urinary symptoms present no less important characteristics than the gastric. Renal colic, with stinging, tearing, digging pain in right ureter to bladder, as if some small calculus was tearing its way to bladder. Aching in back before micturition. Child cries before micturating; red sand is found on diaper. Aching in kidneys < before > after urinating. The catamenia are too early and too profuse. Extreme sadness and irritability before, ceasing with the flow. Cutting pain right to left. Left leg colder than right. Borborygmi under left ribs in front. Ill-humour. Bearing-down pains and headache. Intolerance of tight clothing. Sensation as if a hand were in body clutching the entrails. Though a right-side remedy, it must not be supposed that Lyc. is exclusively so. It has cured left ovarian pain, dull aching, < on raising the limb or turning in bed. It is of great service in pregnancy (nausea; varices; excessive fœtal movements); and in labour (unsatisfactory pains). The "burning" of Lyc. is exemplified in the cure of a case of puerperal fever having these symptoms: Feels as though hot balls dropped from each breast through to back, rolling down back, along each leg, and dropping off heels; this alternated with sensation as if balls of ice followed same course. Phlegmasia dolens. Lyc. has a very large range in respiratory affections. Salt sputa; milky; greenish yellow; thick yellow muco-pus. Dry burning catarrh of nose, larynx, throat, chest. A very characteristic cough ofLyc., which I have verified, is this: "Dry teasing cough in emaciated boys". The cough of Lyc. is provoked by: Irritation from deep breathing; stretching out throat; and by empty swallowing. A patient of mine to whom I gaveLyc. 30 developed this symptom: "Pain under sternum as if food lodged there and she could not breathe through it." Cough,< on waking. All the blood-vessels from the heart to the capillaries are affected by Lyc. It has cured both nævus and aneurism, and relieved many conditions of disordered heart. It is also one of the most important remedies in varicosis. Excessive sensitiveness is a note of Lyc.: Cannot bear any strong smells. Cannot endure noise. Sensitiveness to sound has a curious development in this symptom: In the evening she continues to hear the music she has heard during the day. "Heaviness of the arm" is a special feature among the general paralysing effects of Lyc. Skinner cured withLyc. c.m. this case: A lady had burning in right arm with paralysis, preventing her grasping anything with the right hand. Had had much worry. Irritability before menstrual period, > by the flow. < From 6 to 7 p.m. With the burning was a sharp pain shooting up the arm; but it was not the pain which caused the paresis. Nash mentions that the sphere of Lyc. in impotence is considerable. It covers the case of old men who marry again and find themselves impotent; and the case of young men who have become impotent from masturbation or sexual excess. The desire is strong but the power is absent; penis small, cold, relaxed. P. C. Majumdar records (Ind. Hom. Rev., x. 1) the case of a boy, 14, who had general dropsy and anasarca consequent on the subsidence of an enlarged spleen under allopathic medication. There was afternoon fever (< 4 to 8 p.m.), slight chilliness, but no thirst; difficult breathing on lying down, urine scanty and high coloured, bowels constipated, heart's action weak but regular. Apis caused the urine to be more free, but a troublesome diarrhœa set in. Apocy. 6x removed the diarrhœa, but had no effect on the dropsy.Lyc. 30 was now given purely on the symptoms, and quickly cleared up the case. S. A. Jones (Amer. Hom., xx. 283) calls attention to the irritability of Lyc., and instances the cure of a boy of typhoid with excessive tympanites when the case seemed almost hopeless, the guiding symptoms being: "When awake exceedingly cross, irritable, scolding, screaming, behaving disagreeably," which was quite different from his usual nature. Lyc. 30 was given. The same writer (H. R., xi. 351) relates an involuntary proving of Lyc. from inhalation of the fumes in the course of chemical experiment, Lyc. powder being added to a boiling mass. The writer (apparently a medical man) had at times whilst engaged in the experiments: Frightful headaches (occiput, vertex, and through right eye), always > by Mag. phos. In addition he discovered 12.5 per cent. of albumen in his urine, which had been tested a short time previously and found normal. Other characteristic symptoms of Lyc. were present, and all disappeared, including albuminuria, when the experiments were abandoned. H. Goullon (H. R., vi. 155) cured this case of cystitis: A man, 55, subject to attacks of enteralgia, was seized two days after such an attack with a severe cystitis, with fever and palpitation of the heart. The calls to micturate were increased, and he could hardly reach the vessel quick enough to prevent premature escape of the urine, so severe and sudden was the urging. During and sometimes after the passage there was intense burning pain, "as if molten lead were flowing through the urethra." During the height of the pain he grasped the penis to obtain relief. The urine, which was discharged in very scanty quantities, looked turbid, almost loamy, had a dirty brownish-red colour, and a peculiar odour of malt. Lyc. 12 was given, six drops in half a wineglassful of water: a teaspoonful every three hours. Cured in twenty-four hours. J. E. Winans (Med. Adv., xix. 499) points out the appropriateness of Lyc. to the effects of chewing tobacco. Allen records under Tabac. this symptom: Convulsions, head firmly drawn back, with rigidity of muscles of back of neck;constantly recurring rigid tetanic spasms, muscles of back being principally affected, till death a week after he chewed the tobacco." Winans had a very similar case from the same cause-clonic, opisthotonic spasms as of cerebro-spinal meningitiswhich he cured with Lyc. c.m. and m.m. given after each tetanic seizure. Other Lyc. symptoms verified by him are: "Forehead cold, but becomes warm if lightly covered" (Sil.); and, in pernicious intermittents "a long-lasting chill coming on 9 a.m., and generally passing offwithout subsequent heat or sweat." Drysdale has recorded (B. J. H., xlii. 203) the cure of a young woman whose hands were covered with warts. One 2 gr. tablet of Lyc. 6 trituration was given at bedtime. The warts soon began to shrivel, and in less than six weeks were all gone. The sphere of Lyc. in metrorrhagia is illustrated by a case of Waszily's (quoted H. W., xxviii. 320): Mrs. O., 44, menses after being absent eight months had come on and lasted fourteen days. She felt particularly well, and had walked out, when a violent flooding came on, and she had to be taken home in a carriage and put to bed. Dark blood with large clots flowed from her, < every movement; no pain. Previous day had much flatulent distress. Lyc. 30, two globules on the tongue. After that one large clot passed and nothing more. Rapid recovery followed. Among thepeculiar sensations of Lyc. are: As if everything was turning round. As if temples being screwed together. As if brain vacillating to and fro. As if head would burst. As if head opened. Pain in head as if caused by wrong position. As if eyes too large. As if hot blood rushed into ears. As if sulphur vapour in throat. Front teeth as if too long. Vesicles on tip of tongue as if scalded and raw. As if a ball rose up in throat. As if hard body lodged in back of throat. As if everything eaten was rising up. As if œsophagus was being clutched and twisted. As if steam rising from stomach to head. As if something were moving up and down in stomach. As if suspensor ligament of liver would tear. As if stomach would fall down. As if drops of water were falling down. As if heart hung by a thread. As if gimlets were running into spine. As if dogs with sharp teeth were gnawing her. Tension as from a cord in diaphragm. As if chest constricted with tight waistcoat. (Cramps in chest accompanying stomach affections is a strong indication for Lyc.) Burning as of hot coals between scapulæ. As if hot balls dropped from each breast through to back, rolling down back, along each leg and dropping off heels; alternating with balls of ice. As if water spurted on back. As if lying on ice. The symptoms are < by touch, pressure, weight of clothing. Riding in carriage =nausea. < Morning on waking; < afternoon, 3 p.m., 4 p.m., 4 to 6 p.m., 4 to 8 p.m., 5 p.m., 6 p.m.; < evening before midnight. < After eating, even if ever so little. < Wrapping up head, even wearing hat or bonnet. < In warm room. < Getting warm by exercise. Warmth of bed < headache and irritation of skin, but >toothache, rheumatism, and other symptoms. Great desire for open air. > In open air; by uncovering. Must be fanned, especially wants to be fanned on the back (burning between shoulders). > By warm, < by cold food and drink. < By wet weather; by stormy weather; especially by wind. < From moistening diseased parts. Rest <; motion >. Lying down >headache; pain in epigastrium. Lying on back> cough. < Lying on right side in liver affection.< Lying on painful side (sciatica). < Lying on left side. < By rising from a seat; > after. <From lamplight; from looking fixedly at any point. < From eating cabbage; vegetables, beans and peas, with husks; bread, especially rye bread and pastry. < From wine. < From milk. < Before menstruation. < From suppressed menstruation. [Lyc. is very prone to cause aggravations, especially when highly attenuated, and hence it is necessary to give it with caution. Unless the indications are quite clear it is better to start a case on an allied remedy. I gave Miss E. Lyc. 30 for constipation. Soon after taking it she had pains in upper abdomen in all directions; urging to stool without ability to pass it; much flatus which could neither be got up nor down.Lyc. 1m. was now given, a few globules dissolved in water, a teaspoonful at bedtime. All symptoms vanished. On rising a second teaspoonful was taken, and after this the bowels were well relieved. On another occasion she took Lyc. 1m. in the evening, and immediately felt her throat tight and uncomfortable; but this passed off and she went to bed. At 5 a.m. she woke with choking; had the greatest difficulty in getting her breath. She managed to reach a bottle of Bell. 3, and a dose of this relieved her at once.A patient for whom Lyc. 5 had, to her great delight reduced the gouty swellings about her finger-joints, till she could get rings on she had not been able to wear for years, was obliged to discontinue it on account of the distressing headaches it caused.Mr. W. had every Sunday afternoon attacks of pain like biliary colic. They came on at 5 p.m. and lasted till 1 a.m. The pain started from right of gall bladder, travelled to middle line, and then passed downwards. In the attack he was cold and yet sweated. Bowels constipated. Lyc. 1m., one dose every alternate day. A powder of the same was, given to be dissolved in water, of which a teaspoonful was to be taken every twenty minutes in the event of an attack. During the week he felt better, but on the next Sunday he had the worst attack he had ever had, and the Lyc. given to be taken frequently did not relieve at all. Nux 30 was next given night and morning. The next Sunday was passed without any pain, and he felt much better generally. Cases of this kind could be multiplied indefinitely, and I have known some very good prescribers almost abandon this remedy on account of unexpected aggravations.]

Relations

Antidoted by: Aco., Camph., Caust., Cham., Coff., Graph., Nux, Puls., Coffee. It antidotes:Chi. (yellow face, liver and spleen swollen, flatulence, tension under short ribs < right side, pressure in stomach and constipation); Merc.; Chlorine (effects of the fumes when they cause impotence). Compatible: Bell., Bry., Carb. v. (a dose of Carb. v. every eighth day facilitates action of Lyc.); Calc. c. (predisposition to constipation, hard stools evacuated with difficulty, or urging ineffective); Graph., Hyo., Lach., Led., Pho., Puls., Sep., Sil., Stram., Sul., Ver. Follows well:Sul., Calc., Lach. Is followed well by: Graph., Lach., Led., Pho., Sil. Incompatible: Coffee.Complementary: Iod., Chel. (K. iod., Lach., Ign., Puls.); Ipec. in capillary bronchitis, < right side, sputa yellow and thick. "Unless undoubtedly indicated the treatment of chronic diseases should not be commenced with Lyc., it is best to give first another antipsoric remedy."Compare: Desires fresh air, desire to be uncovered, Sul., Pul. Terrible sadness during menses, Nat. m., Nit. ac., Sep. Action on veins, Puls., Sep. Thirst for little and often, Ars. (wants it cold and vomits it immediately); Ant. t. Sinking at epigastrium < at night preventing sleep, Ign.; (Sul. < 11 a.m., also 8-9 a.m. and 1-2 p.m.). Hot flushes in afternoon, Sul. Nausea fasting, Pul., Calc., Sil. Moth spots or liver spots, Thuj. Canine hunger, especially at night, Ign., Chi. Hungry but cannot get food down, Sil. < Every other day, Chi. Fan-like motion of alæ nasi, Chlorof. (slow); Gadus and Kreas. (rapid). Apprehension of losing senses, Calc., Nux, Sul. Acquisitiveness, Ars., Pul. Fear of being alone, K. ca., Lil. (Ars., Bism., fear and forgetfulness when alone; Pho., fears something is going to happen when alone in room, especially at night; Arg. n., fears to remain alone lest he should harm himself; anxiety compels moving about; fears to go on a lofty place lest he should throw himself downAnac. also). Fear of darkness, Calc., Stram. Imperiousness, Plat. (haughtiness). Cursing, Anac., Iod., jug. r. Nervous before undertaking anything, Ars., Arg. n. Shaking head, Ant. t., Ars., Aur. sul., Can. i., Eupion., Nux m., Sep., Tarent. Head drawn to one side, Camph.; spasmodically to right side in diphtheria, Lachn. Burning pains > by heat, Ars., Caps., Alumina. Bloody sweat, Calc., Lach., Lyc., Nux m., Nux, Arn. Hoarseness 4 to 6 or 8 p.m., Hell. (Coloc. and Pul. at 4 p.m., Col. and Mag. p. 4 to 9 p.m., Carb. v. 3 p.m. and 4 to 6 p.m.). Constipation when from home (when on journey, Plat.). Laughs at serious things, Pho., Anac., Nat. m., Plat. Laughs and cries alternately, Aur., Pul., Alm., Stram., Bov., Caps., Graph., Pho., Sep., Sul., Ver. Globus hystericus, Ign., Lach., Pul. <Ascending, Ars., Sul. Restlessness > by motion, Rhus (Rhus generally in recent Lyc. in old cases), Puls. > slow motion. Emaciation from above down, Nat. m. Burning as if hot coals between scapulæ, Glo. (burning as if hot water whole length of spine), Pho. Head symptoms > cold, Ars. (Ars. has general > by warmth, Lyc. < by warmth). Flashes of heat, Lach., Sep., Sul. Feet cold and damp to knees, Calc. Sore throat right to left (Lach. left to right) less sensitive than it looks (Lach. more);< cold drink (Lach. >) Inguinal hernia, Nux (Nux more left, Lyc. more right). Piles, Æsc., Nux, Caust., Alo., Sul. Child screams before passing urine, just as it begins to pass > by flow, red sand (Sarsa. cries before and during flow, grey sand). Sufferings of widowers from unsatisfied desire, &c., Con., Pic. ac., Plat., Calc. Physometra, Bro., Lac c., Nux, Sang. Burning in vagina during coitus, Kre., Sul. Dryness of vagina with painful coitus, Bel., Fer., Nat. m., Sep. Burning and stinging in breasts, Apis, Carb. a., Pho., Lauro. Milk in breasts when it should not be there, Cycl., Pul., Pho.; (unhealthy milk, Cham., Phyt., Acet. ac., Calc., Lach., Pul.) > Fanning (Carb. v. and Sul. in collapse; Lyc. wants the back fanned). Acid dyspepsia, Mag. c., Robin. > By warm drink and food (Pul. and Phos. > by cold food). Catarrh of chest after badly treated pneumonia, Sul. Chest rattling, full of mucus, Ant. t. Child sleeps with eyes half-open, Sul. Black boils, Lach. Distress in stomach immediately after eating (Nux some time after). In labour and threatened miscarriage, pains fly from right to left (Act. r. from side to side; Ip. from left to right with nausea). Ordinary amount of food causes full sensation, Ars. Diphtheria, nose obstructed, excoriating discharge, patient picks and bores nose, Ar. t. (but Lyc. has right to left; < after sleep, even a short nap; irritable and peevish; urine stains red). Large tonsils studded with small indurated ulcers, Bar. c. Aneurism, Bar. c., Carb. an., K. iod. Nævus, Fl. ac., Arn., Thuj., Vacc. Tympanites, Carb. v. (Carb. v. rancid belching; Lyc. sour). Fan-like motion of alæ nasi; one foot hot, one cold, Chel. (Lyc. and Chel. are much alike and complementary; Lyc. favours dark, Chel. fair people; Lyc. pains more dull, Chel. lancinating; Lyc. rumbling of flatus in left hypochondrium, sour taste; Chel. bitter). Distension after eating with great accumulation of flatus, Graph. (Graph. has rancid or putrid eructations, Lyc. has not; Lyc. has constriction, Graph. none). Intermittent fever; syphilis; ulcers; flatulent dyspepsia; <after sleep, Lach. Ulcers on instep (Nat. c. ulcers on heel). Half sight, Nat. m., Titan., Aur., Lith. c. Dyspepsia with thick urine; Sep. (Lyc. repletion after eating, Sep. emptiness of epigastrium); ball in anus, Sep. Yellow-brown spots, Sep., Nux, Curar., Sul. Cough excited by talking, Sil. Impotence, Tab. (Lyc. cured impotence caused by indulgence in tobacco). Ailments from fright, anger, or mortification with reserved displeasure, Staph. Nose stopped at night, Am. c., Nux, Samb. Red sand on child's diaper, Pho. Cries before urinating, Bor. Dryness of vagina, Hdrfb. One foot hot, the other cold, Chi., Dig., Ip. Waking at night hungry, Cin., Pso. Enforced sexual abstinence, Con. Proctalgia, Pho. Craving for sweets, Arg. n., Sul. Pain in head during stool, Indium. Fulness after a meal, Chi. (Chi. after a full meal; Lyc. after ever so little. The Lyc. fulness is full right up into the throat). Colic, &c., >bending over, Coloc. Crampy pains, < night. Nux. After-effects of fevers, Pso.

Causation

Fear. Fright. Chagrin. Anger. Vexation. Anxiety. Fevers. Over-lifting. Masturbation. Riding in carriage. Tobacco-chewing. Wine.

1. Mind

Silent, melancholy, and peevish humour; despair of eternal salvation.Desponding, grieving mood.Sadness when hearing distant music.Anguish, esp. in region of epigastrium, with melancholy and disposition to weep; esp. after a fit of anger, or on the approach of other persons.Sensitive disposition.Dread of men; desires to be alone, or else aversion to solitude.Excitement after a glass of wine, almost mischievous.Must laugh if any one looks at her to say anything serious.Inclined to laugh and cry at same time.Irritability and susceptibility, with tears.Irascibility.Obstinacy.Estrangement and frenzy, which manifest themselves by envy, reproaches, arrogance, and overbearing conduct.Disposition to be very haughty when sick; mistrustful; does not understand anything one says to them; memory weak.Avaricious.Character, mild and submissive.Complete indifference.Aversion to speaking.Fatigue from intellectual exertion, and incapability of devotion to mental labour.Giddiness.Inability to express oneself correctly; misapplication of words and syllables.Confused speech.Confusion about everyday things, but rational talking on abstract subjects.Inability to remember what is read.Stupefaction.Dulness.

2. Head

Dizziness and vertigo, as from intoxication.As soon as she sees anything turning about she feels as if her body were turning about.Whirling vertigo, esp. when stooping, or in a warm room, with inclination to vomit.Headache from vexation.Headache, with disposition to faint, and great uneasiness.Headache with vertigo.Heaviness of the head.Headache when shaking or turning head, and also at every step on walking.Cephalalgia above eyes, immediately after breakfast.Semi-lateral headache in evening, < beyond endurance by intellectual labour.Aching as if head would be forced asunder and as if brain were swashing to and fro, < walking, ascending steps, and rising from stooping; could not work and could scarcely step without vertigo.Throbbing after every paroxysm of cough.Pressive headache sometimes as if a nail were being driven into the head, or with tension, which is < by lying down; < at night when lying in bed, and on getting warm while walking in open air; > when walking slowly in open air, from cold, and when uncovering head.Stitches in temples, mostly on r. side, from within to without; < in evening and at night when lying in bed, from heat and exertion of the mind; > from cold and in open air.Thrust in temples during difficult stool.Pain at vertex during moderate pressure at stool.Headache after breakfast.Tearing, boring, and sensation of scraping on external head, during night.Screwing together in forehead, during menses.Jerking in r. frontal bone extending to root of nose and eyebrows.Tearing headache, esp. in afternoon or at night, principally in the (r.) forehead, but often also in whole head, in eyes and nose, extending to teeth, with inclination to lie down.Stupefying headache, with heat in temples and ears; dryness of mouth and lips; < from 4 to 8 p.m., when rising up, and on lying down.Pressing headache on vertex < from 4 to 8 p.m.; from stooping, lying down, exertion of the mind, and followed by great weakness.Tearing in forehead or in r. side of head, extending down to neck, with tearing in face, eyes, and teeth; <on raising oneself up, > on lying down and in the open air.Shooting headache.Throbbing in brain on leaning head backward.Throbbing in head after lying down in evening.Congestion in head, with heat, sometimes in morning on rising up in bed.Shaking and resonance in brain at every step.Boring, scraping, and tearing in scalp, esp. at night.Involuntary movements and convulsive trembling of head.Head turned involuntarily to l.Involuntary nodding: now to r., now to l.; slow at first then constantly more rapid.Involuntary shaking makes him dizzy.Shaking head on stepping hard.Great tendency to take cold by the head.Eruption on the head, with abundant and fetid suppuration, sometimes with obstruction of the glands of the nape and neck.The hair becomes grey early.Baldness; the hair falls out, first on the vertex, later on the temples (after diseases of the abdominal viscera; after parturition), with violent burning, scalding, itching of the scalp, esp. on getting warm from exercise during the day.Scurf over whole scalp, child scratches it raw in night and then it bleeds.Contracted sensation with feeling as if the hair would be pulled up.Hair falls off scalp, but increases on other parts of body.

3. Eyes

Aching in the eyes.Gnawing, burning, and shooting pains in eyes (and lids), esp. in evening, by candle-light.Smarting in eyes.Sensation of coldness in eyes, evening.Dryness of eyes; and lids; as if dust in them; difficult to open.Smarting and burning.Swelling and painfulness of lids.Inflammation of the eyes and lids.Stye.Styes on the internal canthus.Agglutination of eyelids, esp. at night, and lachrymation, < by day, and in a cold wind.Twitching of the eyelids.Troubled sight, as from feather-down before the eyes.Photophobia.Itching in canthi.Dim, hot eyes.The eyes are wide open, insensible to light, fixed.Dryness of eyes, in evening.Sparks before the eyes, in the dark.Must wipe mucus from eye in order to see clearly.Purulent mucus.Myopia or presbyopia.Hemiopia perpendicularis (sees only l. half of objects, esp. with r. eye).The characters are confused when reading.Obscurity, black spots, glittering, and sparks before eyes.Eyes dazzled and irritated by candle-light in evening.

4. Ears

Otalgia in open air.Congestion in the ears.Ulceration of the ears.Discharge from the ears.Hearing excessively sensitive to least noise; music occasions fatigue.Tinkling and buzzing in ears.Roaring, humming, and whizzing in ears.Sensation as if hot blood rushed into ears.Congestion of blood in ears.Singing in the ears as from boiling water.Ringing in r. ear; every noise has peculiar echo deep in ear.Hears in evening music she heard played during day.Hardness of hearing.Moist scabs on and behind ears.Has improved deaf-mutism (Cooper).

5. Nose

Scurf in nose; crusts and elastic plugs.Nostrils ulcerated, scabby, obstructed by mucus at night.Swelling of nose, with acrid, fetid, and corrosive discharge.The ichorous discharge from the nose begins in r. nostril; scarlatina or diphtheria.(Patient bores and picks nose.Convulsive movements of muscles of nose.Fan-like motion of the nostrils in pneumonia.Bleeding from nose, on blowing it, and epistaxis, principally in afternoon.(Nose-bleed in morning from r. nostril.).Excessive acuteness of smell.Coryza with acrid discharge, making the upper lips sore.Coryza of almost all kinds.Dry coryza, with obstruction of the nose, confusion in head, and burning pain in forehead.Dryness of the posterior nares.Obstruction of nostrils, esp. at night, and which prevents respiration except through the mouth.Stoppage: towards morning; in evening; child's breath often stopped in sleep for fifteen seconds even when mouth is open.

6. Face

Paleness of face, < in evening.Face yellow and earthy, with deep wrinkles, blue circles round eyes, lips bluish.Circumscribed redness of the cheeks.Face red and bloated, with eruptions and red spots.Swelling and tension of face.Tearing in bones of face.Painful sensation of coldness in face.Twitching and convulsive movements in muscles of face.At first l. angle of mouth drawn outward, then r.Muscles of lips and cheeks drawn together making mouth pointed, followed by broad distension of mouth.Frequent attacks of transient heat in face.Eruption on face, sometimes with itching.Ephelis.Tetters on face, which are furfuraceous, and yellow at the base.Lips pale and bluish.Soreness of corners of mouth.Swelling of upper lip.Eruption and excoriations on the lips and their commissures.Eruptions on face, humid and suppurating.The lower jaw hangs down.Ulcers on the red part of the lower lip.Itching eruption round the chin.Swelling of the submaxillary glands.

7. Teeth

Odontalgia only at night, > by hot drinks, and by heat of bed.Dull pains in teeth, with swelling of the cheeks and gums.The teeth ache as if suppurating; are excessively painful on touching them; and when chewing; front teeth loose or too long.Cramp-like drawing, tearing, and jerking, or pulsations in teeth, esp. during or after a meal.Grinding of teeth.Yellowness of the teeth.(Fistula in the gums.).The gums bleed violently on being touched; when cleaning teeth.Gumboils.Swelling of gums, with shocks, tearings, and shootings.Ulcers in the gums.

8. Mouth

Dryness of the mouth, without thirst, with tension of the parts, the tongue heavy, and speech indistinct.Torpor of the interior of mouth and tongue.Exhalation of a putrid odour from the mouth, esp. in morning when awaking.Buccal hæmorrhage.Tongue foul and coated.Involuntary movements of the tongue.In talking, all the words of a sentence were spoken completely and distinctly except the last, which was stammered; it seemed as though the tongue were affected by a peculiar cramp; no amount of attention to this was of any avail; it lasted four weeks and gradually disappeared of itself.Stiffness of the tongue; vesicles on tip of tongue; they feel scalded and raw.Soreness of tongue.Ulcers on and under tongue (from tobacco).Convulsions of the tongue.The tongue is painful and swollen in different places (tubercles on the tongue).The saliva becomes dry on the palate and lips and is converted into tough mucus.The posterior part of the mouth is covered by tough mucus.Dry and bitter mouth (in the morning).Tongue dry; becomes black and cracked.Tongue is darted out and oscillates to and fro; in sore throat.Tongue distended, giving patient silly expression; in angina or diphtheria.

9. Throat

Sensation of constriction in throat, with obstructed deglutition.Dryness of throat.Pain, as from excoriation, in throat.Burning pain in throat, with nocturnal thirst.Sensation in throat, as if a ball were ascending from the pit of the stomach.Feeling on l. side of a lump moving up and down.Inflammation of throat and palate, with shooting pain, which obstructs deglutition.Swelling and suppuration of tonsils.The ulceration of the tonsils begins on r. side.The pharynx feels contracted, nothing can be swallowed.Hawking of hard greenish-yellow masses; granular; of bloody mucus.Sticking in region of r. parotid.Sticking in throat during cough.Sticking preventing sneezing.Sensitiveness of the submaxillary glands.Ulcers, like chancres, in the tonsils.Goître.

10. Appetite

Loss of appetite.Mouth clammy or bitter, esp. in morning, often with nausea.Nausea in pharynx and stomach.Nausea in morning and when riding in a carriage.Sourness in mouth, esp. in morning, or sour taste of food.Absence of thirst, or burning thirst.Nocturnal thirst.Loss of appetite, sometimes with the first mouthful.Sudden satiety.Immoderate hunger.Bulimy.Aversion to: cooked or warm food; rye-bread; meat; coffee; tobacco smoke.Craving for sweet things.Inability to digest heavy food.After a meal: hepatic pains, oppression and fulness in chest and abdomen, nausea, heat in head, redness of face, pulsation and trembling over whole body, hands hot, palpitation of heart, colic, &c.Sourness and diarrhœa after taking milk.

11. Stomach

Violent risings in afternoon.Incomplete eructations, burning, rising only into pharynx, where they cause burning.Sour eructations, the taste of which does not remain in mouth, but the acid gnaws in the stomach.Burning, sour, greasy or bitter risings.Sour regurgitation of food, esp. of milk.Pyrosis, esp. after a meal.Violent hiccough by fits, esp. after a meal.Nausea when in a room, which disappears in open air, and vice versâ.Frequent continued nausea, esp. in morning, with bitter taste in mouth.Nausea, caused by the motion of a carriage.Sensation of nausea in stomach in morning.Heartburn.Cancer of the stomach.Water-brash, sometimes every second day, with flow of bitter water.Vomiting of food and bile, esp. at night, or when fasting in the morning.Vomiting of bitter, greenish matter.Vomiting of blood.Vomiting between the chill and heat in intermittent fever.Vomiting after a meal with salivation; during menses.Gnawing, griping sensation in region of the stomach.Slow digestion.Pains in stomach, with shivering and deadness of the hands after a slight chill.Periodical pains in stomach, > by heat of bed.Aching in stomach, in evening, and after every meal, sometimes with a bitter taste in mouth.Compressive or contractive pains in stomach.The pains in the stomach manifest themselves principally in morning; in open air; after a meal; or after drinking wine; they are sometimes > in evening, and are often accompanied by cramps in chest and difficulty of respiration.Swelling of epigastrium with painful sensibility to the touch.The clothes round the stomach cause uneasiness.Stitches in l. side of pit of stomach, apparently externally.Pain in epigastrium caused by cough.

12. Abdomen

Tension round hypochondria, as from the pressure of a hoop.Pressure and tension in liver; esp. on satisfying one's appetite.Cramp-like pain in diaphragm, and contusive pain in liver, on stooping.Pain when walking in upper part of r. hypochondrium, as if the suspensor ligament of the liver would tear.Pressive pain in r. hypochondrium, at times took away the breath, became a sticking.Pain in liver as from a blow, < by touch.Violent gall-stone colic.Sharp pain in dorsal hepatic region, in r. shoulder and arm.Liver region sensitive.Griping; and rumbling in splenic flexure.Inflammation and induration of the liver.Immediately after a (light) meal the abdomen is bloated, full, distended.Has a great appetite, but a small quantity of food fills him up and he feels bloated.Aching pains in abdomen.Fulness and distension of stomach and abdomen.Weight in the abdomen.Sensation of something heavy lying on l. side of abdomen.Brown spots on abdomen.Hardness in the abdomen.Dropsical swelling of the abdomen.Contractive cramp-like pains in the abdomen, which is distended.Tearing, drawing, tension, and pinching in abdomen and sides of abdomen.Clawing in hypogastrium, with suspended respiration.Cutting pains, esp. above the navel.Pain above the navel, on touching the part.Burning pain in the abdomen.Hernia on the r. side.Tearing shootings, pulsation, and pressure in the inguinal ring, as if hernia were on the point of protruding.Cramp-like pains in abdominal muscles, esp. at night.Incarcerated flatus.Imperfect expulsion of flatus.The flatulence cannot pass and causes much pain.Great deal of noisy flatulence in the abdomen, or particularly in the r. hypochondriac region; there seems to be a constant fermentation in the abdomen, which produces a loud croaking sound.Sometimes much rumbling of wind in l. hypochondriac region.Dyspepsia with loud croaking in the abdomen.Affections of the inner lower belly.Full, distended abdomen with cold feet.Gurgling and borborygmi in abdomen, esp. on l. side.

13. Stool and Anus

Constipation of long standing.Hard stools with ineffectual desire to evacuate.Desire for stool followed by painful constriction of rectum or anus.Small stool, with the sensation as if much remained behind, followed by excessive and painful accumulations of flatulence.Hæmorrhage from rectum, even after a soft stool.Feeling of fulness in rectum continues after a copious stool.Contractive pain in perinæum, after scanty, hard stool.Stitches in the rectum.Diarrhœa (during pregnancy), with earthy colour of the face.During stool: burning and biting at anus; pressure; tenesmus; ringing in ears; headache; pain in back as if broken; hæmorrhage.After stool: flatulent distension.Constriction of the abdomen, sometimes with ineffectual want to evacuate, and difficult evacuation.Constipation or diarrhœa in pregnant women.Fæces: pale and of a putrid odour; thin brown; pale green mixed with hard lumps; thin yellow or reddish-yellow fluid; shaggy reddish mucus (urethral tenesmus, dysentery); green, stringy, odourless mucus.Discharge of mucus, or of blood, during evacuation.Lumbrici.Pains in the anus after a meal and after an evacuation.Itching and tension in the anus.Incisive pains, shootings and pain as from excoriation in the rectum.Spasms in rectum.Contraction of rectum so that it protrudes during a hard stool.Piles swollen, protruding, burning sticking, protruding during soft stool, painful on touch and when sitting.Hæmorrhoidal excrescences in anus and in rectum, with prolapsus recti.Itching eruption in anus.Itching and tension at the anus (evening in bed).Painful closing of anus.Protrusion of the varices.Distension of the varices of the rectum.

14. Urinary Organs

Urgent want to urinate, with too frequent emission, with discharge of large quantities of pale urine.Frequent micturition by night, with scanty and rare discharges by day.Dark urine with diminished discharge.Greasy pellicle on the urine.Involuntary micturition.Discharge of blood from the bladder, painless.Old thickening of bladder with irritable urethra.Foamy urine.Urine deep coloured, with yellow or reddish sediment.Clear, transparent urine, having a heavy, red, crystallised sediment in the bottom of the chamber.In typhus fever, where the patient is in a very low state, and cannot retain the urine, we may see this sediment on the sheets; also in colic of babies, with much sediment of this kind on the diaper.A very severe pain is felt in the back every time before urinating; causing patient to cry out; retention of urine; patients will get into position to urinate, but wait a great while before the water comes, accompanied by the characteristic pain in the back, which ceases when the urine flows; children often cry out with pain before urinating.Turbid, milky urine, with an offensive purulent sediment; dull pressure in region of bladder and abdomen; disposition to calculi; cystitis.Hæmaturia from gravel or chronic catarrh.Renal calculus and gravel.Emission of blood instead of water, sometimes with paralysis of the legs, and constipation.Incontinence of urine.Smarting when urinating.Itching in urethra during and after emission of urine.Shooting pinchings and incisive pains in the bladder and urethra.Stitches in the bladder.Stitches in the neck of the bladder and in the anus at the same time.Burning in urethra and glans.Urine burning hot, like molten lead.

15. Male Sexual Organs

Shooting, drawing, and incisive pain in the glans.Bastard gonorrhœa, with a deep red and smarting pustule behind the glans.Excoriation between scrotum and thighs.Dropsical swelling of genital organs.Immoderate excitement, or absence of sexual desire.Repugnance to coition, or disposition to be too easily excited to it.Impotence of long standing.Weakness or total absence of erections.Penis small, cold, relaxed.Itching of the internal surface of the prepuce.Excessive pollutions, or absence of pollutions.Emission too speedy or too tardy during coition.Falling asleep during coition.Lassitude, after coition or pollutions.Flow of prostatic fluid, without an erection.

16. Female Sexual Organs

Nymphomania with terrible teasing desire in external organs.Itching, burning, and gnawing in vulva.Pressure towards the outside, above the vulva, and extending as far as the vagina, when stooping.Expulsion of wind from the vagina.Chronic dryness of vagina.Shooting pains in labia, when lying down.Excoriation between the thighs, and at the vulva.Burning pain in the vagina, during and after coition.Catamenia (too early) too profuse, and of too long duration.Catamenia suppressed readily, and for a long time, by fright.Before menses: shivering, sadness, melancholy; bloatedness of the abdomen.During menses: delirium, with tears; headache; sourness in the mouth; pain in loins; swelling of feet; fainting; vomiting of sour matter; cuttings, colic; and pains in the back.Menstruation too late; lasts too long; sometimes suppression of; profuse, protracted; flow partly black, clotted, partly bright red or partly serum; with labour-like pains followed by swooning; with sadness; suppressed by fright.May find females at change of life with one side of the body greatly hypertrophied.Fœtus appears to be turning summersaults.Metrorrhagia; at menopause; dark blood with large clots pour from her.A rumbling begins in upper abdomen and descends to lower, when a flow of blood follows, and so on successively.Leucorrhœa: milky, yellowish, reddish, and corrosive; sometimes preceded by cuttings in abdomen.Varices on the genitals.Disposition to miscarriages.Swelling of the breasts with nodosities.Excoriation and moist scabs on nipples.Stinging in nipples.Milk in breasts without being pregnant.

17. Respiratory Organs

Crawling scraping in trachea, at night.Hoarseness, with roughness, and pain as from excoriation in chest, after speaking.(Voice feeble and husky.).Whizzing breathing in daytime, with sensation of too much mucus in chest; loud rattling.Voice weak and dull.Cough after drinking.Obstinate dry cough in morning.Nocturnal cough, < before sunrise, which affects the head, diaphragm, and stomach.Dry cough, day and night.Cough excited by a tickling, or as if produced by the vapour of sulphur, or by taking a deep inspiration, generally with a yellowish grey and saltish expectoration, sometimes with great weakness of stomach, fever, nocturnal sweat, and emaciation.Cough with expectoration through the day and without expectoration during the night.Whooping-cough from irritation in trachea as from fumes of sulphur, in the morning and during the day, with expectoration of fetid pus or of mucus streaked with blood.Cough < from 4 to 6 p.m., frequently on alternate days, from exertion, from stretching the arms out, stooping and lying down, when lying on l. side, from eating and drinking cold things, in the wind, or in warm room.Cough (morning), with copious expectoration of greenish matter.Copious expectoration of pus, when coughing.Cough, with expectoration of blood.When coughing, shocks in the head, shortness of breath, smarting and concussion in chest, or pains in region of stomach.

18. Chest

Short respiration during almost every effort, also in children, esp. during sleep.Continued oppression of the chest, < by walking in open air.Rattling of mucus and stertorous respiration.When breathing, twitching and shooting in chest and sides of chest.Pain as if from a bruise in the chest.Constant pressure in the chest (it feels raw internally).Weight in the chest.Tension in anterior part of chest.Lancinations in the chest, esp. on l. side, and principally when sneezing or coughing, on laughing, or on the slightest movement, sometimes with inability to remain lying on affected side, and difficult respiration.Pain as from excoriation in the chest, esp. after speaking.Stitches in the l. side of chest, also during an inspiration.Typhoid and neglected pneumonias.Hepatisation of the lungs.Paralysis of the lungs.Hydrothorax.Itching on the chest.Stitches in the side, alternately with toothache and pains in the limbs.Painful eruption and maculæ hepaticæ on the chest.

19. Heart

Palpitation of the heart, esp. during digestion, or in bed in evening, sometimes attended with anxiety and trembling.Accelerated pulse, with cold face and feet.Palpitation of the heart with flapping of the wings of the nose; enlargement of the heart; hypertrophy in general.Cramp and constriction, dyspnœa, stitches beneath short ribs, extending to small of back and shoulders; sharp pains shooting into heart, sensation of stoppage of circulation at night, with fright and then sweat, pulse quick and unsteady (angina pectoris).Dyspnœa, cyanosis, hasty eating and drinking (heart disease).Beating of temporal arteries and carotids.Heart sounds heard loudly on lying down at night, keeping patient awake.(Hypertrophy.).(Aneurism.).(Hydropericardium.).

20. Neck and Back

Traction and contraction from the nape of the neck to the occiput.Rigidity of the nape of the neck, sometimes caused by lifting a weight.Maculæ hepaticæ in the nape of the neck.Tetters on nape of neck and under armpits.Furunculi under armpits.Stiffness, swelling, and induration of one side of neck.Painful stiffness of l. side of neck.Burning as of red-hot coals between scapulæ.Swelling of glands of neck and of the shoulder, with shooting pain.Weakness and paralysis of muscles of neck.Painful eruption on neck.Large clusters of red pimples around neck, with violent itching.Soreness of the neck.Goître.Violent sacral pains, which do not permit sitting upright.Pains in the back and loins, esp. when moving, stooping, and lifting anything, often accompanied by constrictive pains in abdomen.Shootings in loins on rising up after stooping.Drawing, tearing, and shooting pains in back and loins, with difficult respiration, chiefly when seated, and also at night.Pain in back and r. side, from congestion of the liver.Stitches in region of kidneys, < from pressure; extending into rectum.Distortion of the spine.

22. Upper Limbs

Tearings and shootings in the joints of shoulder and elbow.Rheumatic tension in r. shoulder-joint.Pain in bones of arms at night.Weakness of arms when at work.Difficulty in moving arms as if rheumatism were creeping on, with nodes on fingers.Pain as from a sprain in r. wrist-joint.Swelling of axillary glands.Nocturnal aching pains, in the arms and elbow.Drawing pain in arms.Jerking in shoulders and arms, also during it siesta.Paralytic weakness of arms.Arms and fingers easily benumbed, even at night, or only when raising them.Biting, itching, and maculæ hepaticæ in the arms.Arthritic stiffness of the elbow and wrist.Tetters on the arms.Erysipelatous inflammation in the forearm, with suppuration.Dryness of the skin of the hands.Burning sensation in the palms.Red and painless swelling of the hands.Warts on the hands and fingers.Deadness of fingers and hands.Involuntary trembling of the hands.Red swelling and arthritic tearing in joints of fingers.Arthritic nodosities and stiffness in fingers.Stiffness of the fingers during labour.Itching pimples between the fingers.Panaritum.Contraction and twitches in the fingers.Chilblains.Gouty contraction of palmar fascia: sudden pain runs down arm (l.?) causing fingers to stiffen and draw away from each other and to draw towards hand, as though palmar fascia were contracting (Cooper).

23. Lower Limbs

Rheumatic tension in l. hip.Pain as from a sprain in hip.Periodical pains, from coxo-femoral joint to foot, every fourth day.Tearing: beneath r. hip; in l. hip-joint.Drawing along sciatic nerves to feet, evening, in bed.Pain in muscles about joints, on pressure, sitting or lying.Pain in r. hip >walking in open air.Pain from r. hip-joint to feet when walking, he must limp.Tearing in legs and knees, extending to tibia and instep, esp. in evening and at night.Soreness in inner side of l. thigh, with biting itching extending to genitals.Brown spots on inner side of thighs, inflamed with burning pain.Uneasiness, shocks, and trembling in legs and feet, esp. in evening and at night.Involuntary shaking in legs, or alternate separation and bringing together again of the thighs.Burning and biting itching in the legs, esp. in the hams.Curvature and stiffness of the knees.Swelling (and stiffness) of the knees.Swelling of the knee, with perspiration.Swelling of the legs, with large, red, burning spots, and pains which prevent walking.Paralysis of the legs, with emission of blood instead of urine, and constipation.Tetters on the legs and calves of the legs.White swelling in the knee.Cramps and cramp-like pains in the calves, esp. when walking, and at night.Burning pain in legs.Ulcers in the legs, with nocturnal tearing, itching, and burning heat.Pain in the soles when walking.Cramps in the feet and toes.Swelling of the feet and of the malleoli, or of the soles (with shooting pain).Coldness of the feet.One foot (r.) hot the other cold.Cold sweat on feet, sometimes copious, and with excoriation of the skin.Stitches in r. big toe (evening).Rhagades in the heel.Cramp in the toes.Bending of the toes when walking.Contraction of the toes.Corns on the feet, sometimes with shooting pain.

24. Generalities

Affections in general of r. eye; r. side of face; r. hypochondrium; r. abdominal ring; l. chest; l. lower extremity; general symptoms r. side (though they may spread to the l.); hair of head; rectum; bladder; hands; fingers; finger-joints; back part in the lumbar region, and ankles.Hard hearing; smell too sensitive.Deep furrows on the face; same on forehead; sensations in the temples.Collection of water in the mouth, i.e., "mouth waters.".Pains in different parts as from flatus: over r. hip; below chest; in lower abdomen, &c.Obstructed evacuation; painless diarrhœa.Anything running from r. to l.Apoplexia; erethism of blood accompanied with flashes of heat; chlorosis.Consumption resulting from badly treated pneumonia.Crooked legs; ankles weak; painless paralysis; old sprains; tension, tightness of the joints.Enlargement of the bones.Drawing and tearing in extremities, <at night and during repose; sometimes also in the afternoon; every second day, and esp. in windy and rainy weather, > by heat.Shooting pains, internal and external.Painful stiffness of muscles and joints, often with torpor and insensibility of the extremities.Numbness of the limbs.Great liability to strain the back, which, when it occurs, is often followed by stiffness in nape of neck.Cramps and contraction of limbs.Alternate spasmodic and involuntary extension and retraction of some of the muscles, or some of the extremities.Shocks and jerks in some of the limbs or throughout the body, during sleep and on waking.Cramps, internal and external, < at night.Attacks of epilepsy, sometimes with cries, foam at the mouth (loss of consciousness, throws the arms and limbs about), and great anguish of heart (imagined he would have to die).Dropsical and inflammatory swellings.Varices.Arthritic nodosities.Swelling of the glands.Inflammation of the bones, with nocturnal pains.Distortion and softening of the bones.Ulceration of the bones.The symptoms are frequently < towards 4 p.m., and begin to abate towards 8 p.m., the weakness excepted.Periodical sufferings.The whole body feels bruised.Ebullition of blood throughout the body, esp. in the evening, with inquietude and trembling.Sensation, as if the circulation of the blood were suspended.Internal weakness.Great nervous excitability.Weakness and lassitude in limbs,< during repose, or on waking in morning.Fatigue, esp. in the legs, after a very short walk, accompanied by a burning sensation in the feet.Fear of movement, with constant desire to remain lying down.Total prostration of strength, with falling of the lower jaw, eyes cloudy and half closed, and slow respiration through the mouth.Great emaciation, also with children.Fainting fits, esp. in evening, and sometimes also on lying down, with loss of consciousness, cloudiness of sight, and great listlessness.Trembling of limbs.Want of vital heat.Great desire for, or marked repugnance to fresh air, with excessive sensitiveness to cool air.Great tendency to take cold.─< From east winds.

25. Skin

Gnawing and itching in daytime, on getting heated, or in evening, before lying down.Tendency of the skin to become chapped.Painful eruptions.Nettle-rash (chronic).Large red spots on skin.Itching maculæ hepaticæ.Abundant ephelis.Insensible tetters, of a yellowish brown, wrinkled or moist, purulent, full of deep cracks and thick scabs.Large furunculi, which return periodically.Mercurial ulcers. Bleeding ulcers, with shooting pain, which burn while being dressed, or with nocturnal tearing and itching.Fistulous ulcers, with callous, red edges, reversed and shining, sometimes with inflammation and swelling of the part affected.Excoriated places on the skin of children; the sore places are humid.Intertrigo; raw places bleeding easily.Skin unhealthy, corrosive vesicles.Nævus maternus.Vascular tumours.Warts.Corns which are very sensitive, or with tearing pains.Exanthema in general, particularly with biting sensation; moist; scurfy; tearing and painful.Want of action of the skin.Itch, burning; creeping.Skin scurfy; sticky; clammy.Brown mortification.Pale swelling.Salt rheum.Varices suppurating.Chilblains.Great dryness of the skin.

26. Sleep

Frequent, and sometimes interrupted, yawning.Inclination to sleep during day and early in evening, with sleep retarded by mental activity and excessive nervous excitement.Disturbed and restless sleep, with anxious and frightful dreams, and frequent waking with fright.Loud coughing during sleep; screaming while asleep.Sopor.Hunger at night when waking.Unrefreshing sleep.Soporous sleep in typhoid and exanthematous fevers.Voluptuous, vivid, mournful dreams; dreams of murder or of the occupations of the day, &c.Anxious dreams of fatal accidents.Jerks, cries, starts with fright, or bursts of laughter, or tears and groans during sleep.(Sleeps with eyes half-opened,).Sleeps with mouth open.At night, jerking and restlessness in the legs, headache, anguish, nightmare, ebullition of blood and palpitation of heart, stomach-ache, colic, asthmatic sufferings, &c.Lying on l. side is difficult on account of the palpitation of heart and stitches.It is impossible to remain lying down at night on account of every position being uneasy.Child sleeps all day and cries all night.

27. Fever

Shivering in evening, sometimes only on one side; or every second day, with heat, or followed by sweat without heat.Chilliness in the afternoon from 4 to 8, with sensation as of numbness in hands and feet.Chilliness in evening in bed, preventing sleep.One-sided chilliness, mostly on the l. side.Chills and heat alternating.Want of vital heat.Tertian fever, with sour vomiting and bloatedness of the face and hands after the shivering.Transient heat.Burning heat, with short respiration.Flashes of heat over whole body, mostly towards evening, with frequent drinking of small quantities at a time; constipation and increased micturition.The perspiration is frequently cold, smelling sour, or offensive, or smelling like onions, or bloody.Intermittent fever.Nausea and vomiting and then chilliness, followed by perspiration (without previous heat).Chilliness in the evening till midnight, this is followed by heat, in the morning sour-smelling perspiration.Great heat and redness of the cheeks, alternating with chilliness.Shaking chill 7 p.m., and great coldness as if lying in ice, with traction through whole body, upon waking up from sleep, which is full of dreams, covered with perspiration, perspiration is followed by violent thirst.Typhus fever (with threatening paralysis of the brain).Malignant fever, with malevolence and ill-humour on waking, or with nervous excitability, without heat of the head or redness of the face, red spots on the cheeks, great weakness, sweat without any mitigation, tongue red and dry, and constipation.Slow fever, with viscid sweat, at night.Fever, with total prostration of strength, lower jaw hanging down, eyes clouded and half-closed, and respiration slow, with the mouth open.Sweat principally in face, easily excited during the day by slight exercise.Febrile sweat by day.Nocturnal sweat, often fetid or viscid, principally on chest and back.Pulse only accelerated in the evening and afternoon.Sensation as if circulation stood still.

MERCURIUS

- MERCURIUS.

(1) MERCURIUS OXYDULATUS NIGER.

Clinical

[The letters s and v indicate the preparationSolubilis or Vivusmentioned in the Prescriber in connection with the malady the name of which they follow; they are not intended to indicate a preference of one over the other.] Abscess (s). Anæmia. Aphthæ. Appendicitis. Balanitis (s). Bone, disease of (s). Brain, inflammation of. Breath, offensive (s). Bronchitis (s). Bubo (s). Cancrum oris.Catarrh (s). Chancre. Chicken-pox (s). Cold (s). Condylomata. Cough (s). Dentition, abnormal (s). Diarrhœa (s). Dysentery.Dyspepsia (s). Ecthyma (s). Eczema. Emaciation. Excoriation (s). Eyes, affections of (s); gouty inflammation of. Fainting. Fevers. Fissures. Glandular swellings (s). Gout (s). Gum-boil (s). Gums, unhealthy (s). Heart, affections of (s). Herpes (s). Hydrophobia.Jaundice (s). Joints, affections of (s). Leucorrhœa; in little girls. Liver, affections of (s). Lumbago (s). Mania. Measles (s). Melancholia (s). Meningitis. Mollities ossium. Mucous patches. Mumps. Noises in the head (s). Odour, of body, offensive (s). Ovaries, affections of. Pancreatitis (s). Parametritis (s). Parotitis. Peritonitis. Perspiration, abnormal (s). Phimosis (s). Pregnancy, affections of (s.). Prostate, disease of (s). Purpura (s) (v). Pyæmia (s). Ranula (s). Rheumatism (s) (v). Rickets. Rigg's disease.Salivation (s). Scurvy (s). Small-pox (s). Stomatitis. Suppuration (s). Surgical fever.Syphilis (s). Taste, disordered (s). Teeth, affections of (v). Throat-deafness (s). Throat, soreness of (v). Tongue, affections of (s) (v); mapped (v). Toothache (s). Tremors (s). Typhus fever (v). Ulcers (s). Vaccination (s). Vomiting (s).

Characteristics

No pains have been taken to keep distinctMerc. sol. and Merc. viv., and I do not find it practicable to attempt to separate them. Though Merc. sol. was the preparation Hahnemann proved, he recommended Merc. viv. as a superior preparation for homœopathic prescribing in his preface to the proving. Mercurius solubilis Hahnemanni was invented by him in his pre-homœopathic days in response to a general desire for a mercurial preparation which should be at once soluble and non-corrosive, and it at once took its place in pharmacy, a place it has never lost. The method of developing the medicinal power of metallic mercury by graduated trituration was a later discovery, though there was a suggestion of it in the well-knownHydrargyrum cum cretâ. To the symptoms of Hahnemann's pathogenesis of Merc. sol. are added observed effects of Mercury in those engaged in working with the metal, in patients taking Mercury, and effects in those applying mercurial inunctions to patientsmany having been severely affected by absorbing it through their hands. There is no difference between these effects and the symptoms of the proving so far as the general characteristics are concerned. In the finer characteristics there must be differences. The symptoms of the proving are in general more particularly characterised than the effects of Merc. viv. For instance, "At night severe toothache, and when that went off great chilliness through the whole body," belongs to the Merc. sol. proving; and so do these: "Vertigo: when sitting at his desk there was whirling in the head, as if he were drunk, he rises up and walks about the room staggering, then anxious heat breaks out over him, with nausea but not to the length of vomiting; at the same time some headache." "From occiput a strong, tearing, continued pain, which went into the forehead and there pressed." The symptoms of nose-bleed and the more finely characterised throat symptoms ("stitches on tonsils"; "stitches into ear on swallowing"; "something hot rises into throat.,"), were produced by Merc. sol., so were the majority of the symptoms in the male and female sexual organs. But this is not to say that Merc. viv. will not answer equally well, or even better, for curing them. The only bit of comparative experience I have in the action of the two is this: in a case of cold in which Merc. seemed indicated, Merc. sol. 30 was given and failed, and Merc. viv. 30 promptly cured.We of the present generation can hardly form a conception of the havoc wrought by Mercuryin the days when it was considered necessary to "touch the gums" in all cases for whichMercury was prescribed before any good could be hoped for. The motto, "Salivation is Salvation," tells its own tale. "It was quite an event," says Teste, "when in the sixteenth century the discovery was made that Mercurywill cure syphilis without the patient being salivated. One error, however, being substituted in place of another, it was supposed that the sweat, the diuresis, or the diarrhœa which followed the exhibition ofMercury, replaced the absent salivation; the gross humoralism which prevailed at that period did not allow of another explanation. For a graphic picture of a practice which was part of the ordinary routine until recent times, I quote the following from Bransby Cooper'sFirst Lines of Surgery, 6th ed., p. 348: "Mercuryacts upon some individuals like a poison [!] they are seized with palpitations of the heart, tremblings of the limbs, oppression of the breathing, and irregular pulse. When such indisposition takes place in a person employing Mercury we conclude that this mineral is actually producing a deleterious impression on the system [!]. It was noticed by the late Mr. Pearson that every year, when it was the custom to salivate freely, a certain number of individuals thus treated died suddenly in the Lock Hospital. They were first affected as I have described, and, on attempting to make the slightest effort they dropped down dead. Mr. Pearson learned from experience [!] that these deaths arose from the deleterious action of Mercury on the constitution, and the derangement of the system thus excited he proposed to call theMercurial erethismus." Homœopathy has filled out this picture in full detail, and turned this deadly blundering to curative account. There was a fitness in naming this metal after the volatile deity. It provides us with weather-glasses and thermometers, and it turns those who are under its influence into weather-glasses and thermometers likewise. [An electrician, who at one time was required to work with his hands frequently in a trough filled with quicksilver, thereafter could not bear the slightest shock of electricity, though before he could stand very strong ones.] And herein lies one of the grand characteristics of the remedy: as the thermometer is sensitive tochanges either to hot or cold, so is the Merc. patient. Other remedies are predominantly one or the other: Merc. is both < by heat and< by cold. This is keynote No. 1. No. 2 is "< at night." This is a strong point of correspondence with syphilis. Especially is this noticeable in the bone pains. No. 3 is: Profuse sweat accompanying nearly all complaints and which does not relieve; it may even aggravate. Guided chiefly by these two indications: "Profuse sweat with no relief" and "< at night," I have cured many cases of rheumatic fever with Merc. viv. 12, without any other remedy. Keynote No. 4 is: The mercurial odour. The mercurial patient is offensive; breath excessively fetid; sweat offensive, mawkish, sweetish. Keynote No. 5 is tremor. This symptom is so pronounced and universal that it renders Merc. the best general remedy in paralysis agitans. There is tremor of head, of hands, of tongue. Tremors commencing in the fingers. It is the tremor of weakness and paralysis; and as described by B. Cooper it may attack the heart and cause sudden death on the smallest effort. Short of this there is great tendency to fainting; extreme exhaustion after a stool. The tremors may become jerkings and even convulsions. Extreme restlessness. The mind is as weak and tremulous as the body; everything is done hastily. Hurried and rapid talking. On the other hand: slow in answering questions; loss of memory; of will power. Embarrassment. Absent-minded. Imbecility. Time seems to pass slowly. Desire to flee. Homesick. Suicidal. Murderous. Merc. is Hahnemann's typical antisyphilitic remedy, as Sul. is the typical antipsoric, and Thuja the typical antisycotic. In selecting Merc. as the remedy for syphilis the old practitioners were so far right, but they did not know how to give it.Merc. so far corresponds to syphilis that many undoubted cases of mercurial poisoning have been diagnosed by experts as syphilis. Bones, glands, and skin are affected. Inflammation leads to induration, induration to ulceration. Merc, corresponds accurately to the true Hunterian chancre. Merc. ulcers have a grey, lardy, ashy, or cheesy base. There are burning or stinging pains in them. Another great feature of Merc., almost constituting a keynote, is the tendency to the formation of pus. In the suppurative stage of small-pox it is specific. Flow of pus, and particularly bloody pus, from any orifice calls for Merc. Pus forms in cavities in abscesses, which burn and sting. Discharges are yellow-green in colour. Gonorrhœa. Fetid ear discharge. Merc. is a great solvent: it dissolves metals out of their ores and it dissolves living tissues, inducing excessive emaciation. Lowly organised tissues as indurations, exostoses, and some tumours are melted first. Œdema and dropsies are absorbed; rheumatic swellings. If the doses of Merc. are large and dropsies disappear rapidly under them, the tissues themselves may disappear also in offensive rapidly decomposing ulcers. The bones soften so that they will bend. Whilst Merc. intensifies the action of the absorbents, it may also paralyse them, hence enlargement of glands, with pricking pains, inflammation, suppuration. Next to syphilis, the liver has been the chief excuse for mercurialism, in the past, and Merc. certainly has a powerful liver action. The liver is congested, enlarged, inflamed, stitches in the liver, sensitiveness in the liver and inability to lie on right side. This "< lying on r. side" is a very characteristic condition of Merc., and when present Merc. should always be considered. Along with the liver the stomach is disordered. Sweets disagree; aversion to meat, wine, brandy, beer, coffee, greasy food, butter. There is the characteristic flabby, coated, teeth-indented tongue, foul breath, and intense thirst. Throat dry and forepart of tongue moist. Merc. is rarely indicated when the tongue is dry. Sliminess is a general characteristic. Slimy stools; stools acrid, knotty, containing pus, viscid. Just before stool a sick, painful, faint feeling comes on. During stool there is tenesmus, or tenesmus and no stool. Dysentery with much straining; never-get-done feeling when there is no more to come. Diarrhœa with slime. "Merc. is rarely indicated in these troubles where there is no slime" (Guernsey). Merc. affects profoundly the generative organs of both sexes. It has stinging, cutting pains in ovaries; cutting pains from l. to r. in lower abdomen. "Stinging" is very frequent in mercurial pains, and "stinging pain in ovaries is just as likely to need Merc. as Apis" (Kent). Almost all kinds of eruptions are produced by Merc. Scurfy, syphilitic, pustular, moist, oozing, offensive eczema. Shingles. Small-pox. They are all < by warmth and at night and < by cold. In olden times it was recognised that a patient under a "course" of Mercury must be very careful not to catch cold. This gives one indication forMerc. in abnormal tendency to catch cold. But for this condition it must not be too frequently repeated, as it will aggravate it. The patient needing Merc. is sensitive to every draught and yet < by warmth the nasal secretion is acrid, and the nose red and excoriated; dirty-nosed children" (Guernsey). Old catarrhal smell in the nose inside nostrils smarting and burning. Aching, tearing, and out-pressing in the bones. "Kali iod. is better for the same bursting in the face, running coryza, and <from heat and warmth of the bed" (Kent). [I find that a much larger percentage of cases of acute cold come under the indications ofCepa and Chlorum than under those of Merc. or any other related remedy. In chronic colds I think first of Psor.] The eyes are very markedly influenced by Merc.; also the bones round the eye: "Whenever cold settles in the eye in gouty and rheumatic patients" (Kent). Every degree and kind of inflammation and ulceration is produced by Merc. and its salts. J. J. Hirsch, of Prague (H. R., vii. 220), relates some striking experiences with a preparation ofMerc. viv. which he learned from an old allopath. Quicksilver is boiled in water for half an hour, two teaspoonfuls being given every two hours. Hirsch's cases were those of acute inflammation of the brain, in which Bell. was indicated, and in one of which Merc. (in the ordinary homœopathic preparation) had already been administered in vain. This is the case: A black-haired girl, 9, had malignant scarlatina, which commenced six days before Hirsch (who came as consultant) saw the case, signs of brain inflammation having set in on the third day. Hirsch found her unconscious, sharply defined redness of cheeks, pulse 120, hot skin. Piercing screams were emitted from time to time; boring head in pillows; chewing motion of jaws; gnashing teeth. Lips brown and dry; not much thirst; water not accepted readily; but milk seemed to be relished. Reddened patches here and there, especially along neck. Under the "decoction," which was given to the girl on Hirsch's suggestion, she slowly but steadily improved, and in a week was convalescent.Among the Sensations ofMerc. are: Vibration in forehead. Head as if in a vice; as if growing larger. As of sparks being emitted from eyes; as of a body underneath lids; as if feathers came from corners of eyes. As if a wedge driven in ear; as if ice in it; as if cold water running out of it. Cracklings in head as from metal plates. As if weight on forehead; as if weight hanging on to nose. As if teeth were loose; were fixed in a mass of pap. As if hot vapours rising into throat; of worm rising into throat, must swallow it down; of apple core sticking in throat. As if mammæ would ulcerate. As if everything in chest was dry.Stabbing pains and stitches, burning, boring, digging, stinging, and dragging pains. Soreness and sensitiveness. Itching; voluptuous itching. Merc. is more particularlysuited to: Light-haired persons with lax skin and muscle; women and children. Scrofulous children. (Merc. has relation to psora and sycosis as well as syphilis.) The symptoms are < by touch or pressure. < At night; before falling asleep. < Blowing nose. < During a catarrh. < From cold air. < From taking cold. <From lamplight; firelight. < During perspiration; on getting warm in bed. < Before stool. <During urination and after. < Lying on right side. < Motion; walking; slightest exertion. <Evening. Rest >. Coitus >. Weeping ><Touching anything cold (= pain in abdomen). <Bending forward (digestion immediately disordered). < After eating (if he eats ever so little it causes a dragging down in stomach).

Relations

It antidotes: Bad effects of sugar; stings of insects; ailments from Arsenic or Copper vapours, Aur., Ant. t, Lach., Bell., Op., Phyt., Val., Chi., Dulc., Mez., Thuj. It is antidoted by:Aur. (suicidal mania; caries of bones, especially of patella and nose); Hep. (mental symptoms-anxiety, distress, suicidal and even homicidal mood-bone pains, sore mouth, ulcers, and gastric symptoms); Nit. ac. (periostitis, bones and fibrous tissues; bone pains < at night; aching in shins in damp weather; ulcers in throat, especially of secondary syphilis); Chi. (chronic ptyalism); Dulc. (ptyalism < by every damp change); K. iod. (syphilis and mercurialism, combined, bones, periosteum, glands; ozæna; thin, watery discharge, upper lip sore and raw; repeated catarrhs after Mercury, every little exposure to damp or wet air = coryza; eyes hot, watery, swollen; neuralgic pains in one or both cheeks; nose stuffed and swollen and at same time profuse watery, scalding coryza; sore throat < every fresh exposure); Kali mur. (scorbutus, fetor); Asaf. (bone affections.Asaf. is distinguished by extreme sensitiveness of diseased parts; extreme soreness of bones round eye); Staph. (depressed system; wasted, sallow, dark rings round eyes, spongy gums, ulcers on tongue); Iod. (glands); Mez. (nervous system; neuralgia in face, eyes, anywhere); Bell., Caps., Carb. v., Fer., Guaiac., Stilling., Sul., Thuj "all symptoms agreeing, Merc., high" (Guernsey).Incompatible: Sil. (Merc. and Sil. should never be given immediately before or after each other). Compatible after: Aco., Bell., Hep., Lach., Sul. Before: Ars., Asaf., Bell., Calc., Chi., Lyc., Nit. ac., Pho., Pul., Rhus, Sep., Sul.Compare: Bell. (very close analogue, often complementary; commencing abscess; difficult swallowing fluids; sharp pain through tonsils; pains come suddenly); Hep. (chilliness; something sticking in fauces); Meny. (coldness in ears); Puls. (thick yellow nasal dischargebut that of Puls. is always bland; otitis); Nux (coryza and sore throatNux has scraped feeling; Merc. is always smarting, raw, or sore.Dysentery: with Nux tenesmus ceases after stool; with Merc. not, there is the never-get-done feeling); Aco. (dysentery of hot days and cold nights; often precedes Merc., and Sul. follows in like conditions); Lept. (bilious troubles, horribly offensive stoolsthe griping of Lept. continues after stool but not tenesmus); Dig. (gonorrhœa); Euphr. (eyes); Ars. (Merc. < by heat of, but > by rest in bedArs. > by heat of, but < by rest in bed); Sul. (itch, pustulous, eczematous eruptions); Spo. (orchitis); Pho. (profuse sweat without >); Ant. c. (dirty tongue; inflammation of eyes < glare of fire or sunshine); Arg. n. (eyes); Kali i. (stitching pains through lungs; Merc. right or left and shooting in different directions; Kal i., from sternum to back < from any motion); Borax (sore mouth); Coloc. (dysenteryCol. > after stool, Merc. <); Chel. (bilious pneumonia); Cham. (diarrhœa; dentition); Caust. (gonorrhœa); Mag. m. (liver pains < touch, <lying right side); Plumb. and Chi. s. (testes); Syph. (syphilis; < heat of stove or bed; < night): Lyc. (hepatitis; tenderness; right to left, wash-leather tongue; sinking immediately after meals); Sul., Puls., and Cham. (< in bed at night); Nit. ac. (dark persons; Merc. fair); Crocus (nose-bleed in tough strings); Sang. (tongue as if burnt); Bry. (wash-leather tongue;< motion; stone in stomach); Apis (stinging pain; fetid breath; ovarian affections); Sabal. (stinging pains in ovaries); Dolichos (itching of gums; jaundice); Magnt. aust. (ulceration of nails); Psor. and Medorrh. (foul body smell); Arn. (foul breath); Mez. (decay of teethMerc. of crowns; Mez. of roots); Led. and Sars. (bloody seminal emissions); Sul. (pruritus vulvæ < night, < from contact with urine, which must be washed off); Lac c. and Con. (breasts painful, as if would ulcerate at every menstrual period); Chel. and Kal. c. (affect lower lobe right lung; stitches through to back); Kal. c. (suppuration of lungs after pneumonic hæmorrhages); Pic. ac. (boils in auditory meatus); Teucr. and Thuj. (polypi); Can. i. (time passes slowly); Dulc. (sensitive to cold and damp; cold settles in the eyes; furfuraceous eruptions); Graph. (coryza during menses; Mag. c. coryza and sore throat before and at menses; Merc., dull pain on forehead, with coldness, especially in women, with coryza < before or at menses).

Causation

Fright. Suppressed gonorrhœa. Suppressed foot-sweat.

1. Mind

Great anguish, restlessness (is constantly changing from place to place), and agitation, with fear of losing the reason, or with excessive internal torment, principally in evening, or in bed at night, as if conscious of having committed some crime.(Post-partum mania; wants to throw child on fire.).Inclined to sopor, coma.Moral dejection, with great listlessness, discouragement, dread of labour, and disgust to life.Great indifference to everything.Does not even care to eat.Apprehensions.Desire to flee with nightly anxiety and apprehensions.Ill-humour, disposition to be angry, and to fly into a passion, great susceptibility, humour quarrelsome, mistrustful, and suspicious.Moroseness and repugnance to conversation.Groans.Continuous moaning and groaning.Excitement, and great moral irritability, with a tendency to be easily frightened.Bad effects from fright, leaving one in a state of great anxiety and < at night.Home-sickness with nightly anxiety and perspiration.Distraction, inadvertence, difficulty of conception.Entire-unfitness for meditation, and tendency to make mistakes while speaking.Answers questions slowly.Weakness of memory; and will-power lost.Instability of ideas, which constantly drive away each other.Raving.Delirium; mental derangement of drunkards.Intellect weak; imbecile.Low muttering delirium.Fits of mania or dementia, with disposition to shed tears.Hurried and rapid speech.Loss of consciousness and of speech.Fury, with dread of liquids.

2. Head

Cloudiness, intoxication, and dizziness, principally in morning, on waking, and on getting up.Vertigo, principally on getting up, or on raising up head, or when seated, or when lying on back (vertigo with headache); as well as during or after a walk in open air, or in evening, and often with nausea, cloudiness of the eyes (everything becomes black before eyes), distressing heat, and want to lie down.Vertigo as if one were on a swing.Dull and stupid feeling with dizziness.Heaviness, fulness, and aching in head, as if forehead were squeezed by a bandage, or as though cranium were on the point of bursting (with fulness of brain).(In the evening) painful sensibility of brain, with fatigue of head by noise, > by resting head upon the arm.Compressive headache, the head feels as if it were in a vice, with nausea;< in open air, from sleeping, eating and drinking; > in room.Violent headache, which forces compression of head between the hands.From occiput a strong, tearing, continued pain which went into forehead and there pressed.Heat and burning, or tearing and drawing pains, or shootings in head, often only semi-lateral, and extending to ears, teeth, and neck.Burning in head, esp. in l. temple, <at night when lying in bed, > on sitting-up.Inflammation of the brain with burning and pulsation in forehead, with sensation as if head were in a hoop; < at night, > after rising.Weakness in head like a dulness, as if there was a vibration in forehead and turning about in a circle.Constant rotary motion of head, even when lying.Ebullition, boring, and digging shocks, and throbbings in head.Pain, as from a bruise, in brain, while in bed, in morning.Nocturnal cephalalgia.Pains in bones of head, and exostosis in the cranium.Sutures open; large head; precocious mental development.Swelling of head; soreness of the scalp; sharp and burning pains in integuments of cranium.Sensation of subcutaneous ulceration in whole head, < at night when becoming warm in bed; > after rising.Tearing in one (l.) side of head and temple, extending from neck, with insupportable heat and perspiration, < at night and in heat of bed, >towards morning and while lying quiet.Tension over forehead as from a tape or hoop, < at night in bed; > after rising and from laying hand on it.Congestion of blood to head with heat in it.Hydrocephalus.Sensation of tension of scalp.Scalp is painful to touch; < when scratching, which is followed by bleeding.Tearing and stinging in bones of skull.Itching on hairy scalp, and forehead and temples; < from scratching, when it bleeds and becomes erysipelatous.Dry, stinging, burning, fetid eruption like yellow crusts, on forepart of head and temples, when scratching inflammation and erysipelas.Exostoses, with sensation of subcutaneous ulceration on touching them, <at night in bed.Open fontanelles with dirty colour of face, restless sleep, and sour-smelling night-sweat.Falling off of hair; mostly on sides of head and temple; with humid eruptions on head or after clammy perspirations of head; with itching at night in bed; < from scratching; with burning, with great tendency to perspiration.Great chilliness with contractive tearing pain of the scalp, extending from forehead to neck.Fetid, sour-smelling, oily perspiration on head, and on icy-cold forehead, with burning in skin: < at night in bed, > after rising.Dry eruption on head; small scabs in hair, sometimes with burning itching; moist scabs, with excoriation of scalp, and destruction of hair.Sweat on head and forehead, sometimes cold and viscid.

3. Eyes

Eyes confused, dull, and surrounded by a livid circle.Pressure in eyes, as from sand, principally when fixing the attention on any object.Shootings, itching, tickling and burning in eyes, principally in open air.Eyes red, inflamed, with redness of conjunctiva or sclerotica, and injection of vessels of sclerotica, or of external canthi.Profuse lachrymation, principally in evening.Blear-eyedness.Amaurotic dimness before l. eye.Twitching of lids.Excessive sensitiveness of eyes to light, and to brightness of the fire.Firelight dazzles eyes greatly.Eyes inflamed, with swollen inverted tarsi.Pupils dilated.Inability to open eyes well, as if agglutinated to balls.Pustules in conjunctiva, and ulcers in cornea.Eyelids red, inflamed, swollen, ulcerated on margins, and covered with scabs.Sensation as if a cutting instrument were under eyelid.Tumour in eyelid, like a stye.Nocturnal agglutination of eyelids.Spasmodic closing of eyelids, with difficulty in opening them.Scabs round the eyes.Amblyopia and confused sight, as in looking through a mist (periodical loss of sight); momentary loss of sight; black points, hovering flies, flames and sparks before eyes.Apparent motion of letters, when reading.

4. Ears

Tearing, shooting and drawing pains in ears, sometimes with a sensation of coldness, as if there were ice in ear, increased by heat of bed.As if ice-cold water running out of ears; comes suddenly, lasts a few minutes and recurs; violent itching in ears in intervals.Ear and auditory tube inflamed, with cramp-like and shooting pains.Soreness of internal ear.Meatus swollen with much earache when chewing.Small ulcers in front of l. membrana tympanis.Discharge of pus from ear, with ulceration of external ear.Excoriation and ulceration of the concha auris.Purulent otorrhœa and fungous excrescences in ear, with tearing in side of head affected, and in face.Flow of blood from ears.Discharge of cerumen.Subcutaneous tumour, and furfuraceous and moist pimples on the lobe.Hardness of hearing, sometimes with obstruction of ears, which ceases when swallowing or blowing nose (or the obstruction is caused by enlargement of tonsils), or with an extraordinary reverberation of all sorts of sounds in ears.Tinkling, roaring, ringing, and buzzing in ears, principally in evening.Obstinate tinnitus.Painful sensitiveness, and inflammatory swelling of parotids.Inflammatory swelling of the r. parotid gland with stinging.

5. Nose

Swelling of the bones of the nose (external nose, as bridge of the nose, may swell up very large on both sides), with painful sensitiveness to touch.Itching in nose.Tension, pressure, and sensation of heaviness in nose.Blackish colour of nose.Inflammatory swelling and shining redness of nose, with itching.Scabs in nostrils (bleeding when cleansed).Discharge of a greenish fetid and corrosive pus from the nostrils."Dirty-nosed children.".Frequent and profuse bleeding from nose, even during sleep, and sometimes when coughing.Obstruction and dryness of nose.Frequent sneezing.Dry coryza, with obstruction in nose, or fluent coryza, with copious discharge of corrosive serum.Putrid smell from nose.Painful pustule in nose.

6. Face

Face, pale or yellowish, or lead-coloured, or earthy (with dull eyes without lustre).Features discomposed and drawn.Circle of bluish red round the eyes.Feverish heat and redness of cheeks.Bloatedness and swelling of face, principally round eyes.Swelling of one (r.) side of face with heat and toothache.Swelling of cheek.Tearing in bones and muscles (of one side) of face.Aching and pricking in zygomatic process.Sensation of tension of skin on face and head.Sweat on face.Red and tettery spots on face.Yellowish scab on face, with discharge of a fetid humour, constant itching day and night, and bleeding of the part after having been scratched.Crusta lactea.Lips rough, dry and blackish, with burning when they are touched.Salt taste on lips.Swelling and ulceration of lips.Yellowish scabs, purulent pustules, and small ulcers on the lips and round the chin.Burning pimples with yellow crusts on lips.Fissures, rhagades, and ulceration in (lips and) corners of mouth.Distortion of mouth and convulsive movements of lips.Masseter muscles contracted so that speech was difficult.Atrophy and exfoliation of alveolar processes.Clenching and immobility of jaws, with inflammatory swelling of lower jaw, and tension in muscles of neck.Lockjaw with stinging pains and engorgement, and inflammatory swelling of submaxillary glands, with shooting or pulsative pains, or without pain.Caries of jaw.Facial paralysis from cold, r. or l. side: almost specific (R. T. C.).

7. Teeth

Tearing, shooting, or pulsative pains in carious teeth, or in roots of teeth, often extending to ears, and over whole cheek of side affected, sometimes also with painful swelling of cheek or of submaxillary glands, salivation, and shivering.The nightly pulsating toothache extends to ear.Appearance or aggravation of toothache, principally in evening, or at night, in heat of the bed, where it is insupportable; renewed by fresh air, as well as by eating, and taking anything hot or cold into mouth.The teeth are set on edge, grow black, loosen (they are painful when touched by tongue), denuded of gum, and fall out.Itching, burning, and redness of gums.Gums are fungous, and bleed easily.Bleeding of gums when touching them ever so little.Retraction and swelling of gums, principally at night, with burning pain and sensation of excoriation, on touching them, and when eating.Gums livid, discoloured, and very sensitive.Upper border of gums looks indented, the indentation being white and ulcerated.The swollen gums have white, elevated, ulcerated, pointed edges.Ulceration of gums.

8. Mouth

[This remedy covers in general, affections of mouth and fauces; r. side of fauces; r. side of neck; nape of neck (i.e., affections appearing in any of the mentioned places); rarely giveMerc. if the tongue is dry.Guernsey].Putrid smell from the mouth.Bluish colour, excoriation, and inflammatory swelling of inside of mouth.Burning pain, vesicles, blisters, aphthæ and ulcers in the mouth.Stomacace.Sensation of dryness in mouth and palate, or accumulation of tenacious mucus.Ulceration of orifice of salivary duct, and profuse discharge of excessively fetid saliva, which is sometimes bloody (or tenacious).Tongue moist, coated with white and thick, or dry, brown, or blackish mucus.(Excoriated patches like islands on tongue in children, with craving for fat,v.).Hardness, inflammatory swelling (suppuration), and ulceration of tongue, with shooting pains.Longitudinal furrow on tongue with pricking pains.Needle pricks in tip of tongue.Tongue swollen, soft flabby, the edges become indented by the impression of teeth.Tongue red and swollen; ulcerated; black, with red edges; moist with intense thirst; grey patches on edges, dirty-yellow coat on upper surface.Aphthæ in the mouth; bluish and spongy; ulcers spread without penetrating the flesh.Inflammation and superficial ulceration of the mucous membranes of mouth.Salivary glands swollen and painful; saliva fœtid or tastes coppery.Rigidity, insensibility, and immobility of tongue.Sensation in tongue as if burnt.Quivering of tongue.Rapid and stammering speech; entire loss of speech.Loss of speech and voice; she hears everything well, but can only reply by signs and grimaces; sunken features, weeping about her condition; cannot sleep, feels very exhausted; good appetite, thirst for beer; fæces and urine passed easily; lasted three days; (almost complete relief byHyo.).Ranula.Ulceration and caries of palate.

9. Throat

Continuous painful dryness of throat; the mouth being full of water.Painful dryness of throat, which impedes speech.Pain, as from excoriation and smarting in throat, or sensation of heat, which ascends into gullet.Shooting pains in throat and in tonsils, principally when swallowing.Elongation and swelling of uvula.Suppuration of tonsils.Pressure and pains as from excoriation and ulceration, in œsophagus.Syphilitic ulcers in mouth and throat.Inflammatory swelling and redness of back parts of mouth and throat.Erysipelatous inflammation of all soft parts of mouth and throat.Inflammation and redness of palate.Angina esp. with stinging pains < by empty deglutition at night and in cold air.Throat and fauces of a coppery red colour and swollen.Accumulation of thick and tenacious mucus in throat.Sensation as if there were a tumour, or some foreign body in throat, which it is necessary to swallow.Constant want to swallow.Sensation as if a worm rose up so that he must always swallow, whereby it goes off somewhat though he does not feel anything go down.When swallowing shooting in tonsils, stitches into ears.Painful, difficult, and sometimes spasmodic deglutition, with danger of suffocation.Burning in throat as if from a hot vapour ascending from stomach, with dryness in throat when swallowing, and continuous desire to swallow, with accumulation of water in mouth.Inability to swallow the least liquid, which escapes through nostrils.The pains in throat commonly extend to ears, parotids, submaxillary, and cervical glands; they are <for the most part by empty deglutition, as well as at night, in fresh air, and when speaking, and they are often accompanied by salivation.

10. Appetite

Putrid, salt, sweetish, or metallic taste.Bitter taste, principally when fasting, in morning.Rye-bread has a bitter or sweetish taste.Acid and mucous taste during a meal, also at other times.Saltish taste on lips.Violent burning thirst, day and night, with desire for cold drinks, and principally for milk and beer.Desire for wine and spirits.Insatiable appetite and craving (or complete loss of appetite), with apparent insipidity of food.Appetite only for bread and butter; aversion to butter.Bulimy, with great weakness.Canine hunger, even after eating.Want of appetite.No wish for food, which, however, is agreeable to the taste when eaten.Thirst more decided than appetite.Speedy satiety when eating.Stomach feels replete and constricted.Dislike to all food, principally solid nutriment, meat, sweetmeats, cooked victuals and coffee.Has no appetite for dry food, likes liquid food.Great weakness of digestion, with continued hunger, and pressure in stomach, frequent risings, pyrosis and many other inconveniences after a meal.Bread is heavy on stomach.

11. Stomach

Excessive nausea and inclination to vomit, often with incisive and pressive pains in stomach, chest, and abdomen, anxiety and inquietude, headache, vertigo, cloudiness of eyes, and transient heat.The nausea often increases after a meal, and is accompanied by a sensation in throat, as if things sweetened with sugar had been eaten.Rising of air.Risings, principally after eating, and often of a putrid or bitter or sour and rancid taste.Violent empty risings.Regurgitation (of ingesta) after eating and drinking.Pyrosis, regurgitation of a rancid liquid, and hiccough during and after a meal.Retching and vomiting of mucous or bitter matters, or of bile.Violent vomiting with convulsive movements.Burning, violent pain, and excessive sensibility (esp. to touch) in the stomach, and in the precordial region.Tension, fulness, and pressure as from a stone in pit of stomach, principally during or after a meal, however little may have been eaten; stomach hangs down heavily.Sharp constrictive pain in precordial region.Cramp-like pains in stomach, even after a very light repast.

12. Abdomen

Painful sensitiveness of hepatic region, with shooting, burning pains, < by every movement of body, or of the parts affected.Region of liver swollen, painfully sensitive to contact; cannot lie on r. side.Chronic atrophy of liver, with emaciation and dessication of the body.Swelling and hardness of liver.Complete icterus.Abdomen hard and inflated, with soreness when touched, principally in umbilical region.Colic which only passes off in a recumbent position.Violent colic (with diarrhœa), with cuttings, lancinations as if by knives, painful contractions and pinchings in abdomen, principally at night or in cool of evening, esp. when he touches or takes hold of anything cold.Tension, distension, and pressure, as by a stone, principally in umbilical region (and painfulness to contact).Burning in abdomen, round the navel.Excessive and insupportable pains in abdomen, which cease only on lying down.Pain in abdomen, as if caused by a chill.Sensation as if intestines were loose, and moving about in abdomen, when walking.Intestines feel bruised if he lies on r. side.The pains in abdomen are often accompanied by shivering, or by heat and redness of cheeks, as well as by great sensitiveness of abdomen, and of precordial region, to all contact, and to least pressure.Sensation of emptiness in the abdomen.Sufferings from flatulency, principally at night, with distension of abdomen, borborygmi, and rumbling.Cutting stitch in lower abdomen r. to l.; <walking.Tension, aching, and lancinations in groins as by knives.Inflammation of peritoneum and of intestines.Boring pain in r. groin.Obstruction and inflammatory swelling of inguinal glands, with redness and painful sensitiveness, when walking and standing.Affections of inner region of liver; external belly, which may be hard and sensitive to touch; inguinal ring, either one (H. N. G.).Painful hard, hot, sensitive swelling in ileo cæcal region.Ulceration and suppuration of inguinal glands.Buboes.Abdomen externally cold to touch.

13. Stool and Anus

Stool: acrid; bloody; knotty; containing pus; viscid.Complaints before stool (a sick, painful, faint feeling comes on just before).Complaints during stool; tenesmus; tenesmus without stool; diarrhœa with slime (Merc. is rarely indicated in these troubles where there is no slime.H. N. G.).Constipation, with hard, tenacious and knotty fæces, which cannot be expelled without straining.Fæces of small shape; ribbon-like.Ineffectual, but frequent want to evacuate, esp. at night, and sometimes with tenesmus, protrusion of hæmorrhoids, and nausea.Loose and dysenteric evacuations, principally at night, with colic and violent cuttings, urgent want to evacuate, tenesmus and burning in anus, pyrosis, nausea and risings, anguish, heat or cold sweat on face, shivering and shuddering, exhaustion and trembling of all limbs.Diarrhœa (preceded by colic), caused by the fresh air of evening.Chilliness between the diarrhœic stools.During a diarrhœic stool nausea and eructations.Scanty evacuations of sanguineous mucus.Evacuations which are mucous, or bilious, or putrid, or acid, or of a greenish or brownish colour, or reddish, or yellow, like sulphur; or a greyish-white.Fæces of consistence of pap, or frothy, or like hash.Evacuation of corrosive and burning fæcal matter.Discharges of bloody mucus accompanied by colic and tenesmus; dysentery.Discharge of blood, or of mucus, from rectum, even with evacuations that are not loose, and when not at stool, sometimes with tenesmus in anus.Protrusion of hæmorrhoids.Ejection of ascarides and lumbrici.Itching, shootings, and excoriation in anus.After stool prolapsus ani; or when pressing and straining to stool.Prolapsus recti, which, when it protrudes, appears black and bloody.Evacuation of substances undigested, or black, and like pitch; blood and mucus, undigested, smelling sour, excoriating anus.

14. Urinary Organs

Urine acrid; turbid; too frequent; complaints while passing, and after.Affections of urethra.Continued want to urinate, day and night, sometimes with abortive efforts, or with scanty emission.The stream of urine is excessively small.Irresistible, sudden desire to urinate.Frequent and copious emission of urine, as in diabetes, with great emaciation.Involuntary emission of urine.Urgent want to urinate, with incontinence of urine.The quantity of urine emitted is greater than the quantity of fluid drunk.Wetting the bed at night.Emission of urine drop by drop.Urine of a deep colour, or red, or brown, or white, as if mixed with flour or chalk, or of the colour of blood.Offensive, turbid urine, which forms a sediment.Sanguineous, pungent, or sour-smelling urine.Corrosive and burning urine.Thick sediment from urine.White and flock-like clouds in urine (or as if containing pus; scanty, fiery red).Emission of hard mucus, or of flocks, and white threads during or after the emission of urine.Discharge of blood from urethra.Incisive and contractive pains in renal region, at night.Pulsation, incisive pains, burning and shooting in urethra, even when not urinating.Inflammation of orifice of urethra, and discharge of thick, yellowish, or serous, whitish matter.Thick greenish (or yellow) discharge from urethra, more at night, (gonorrhœa) with phimosis; chancroids.

15. Male Sexual Organs

Increase of sexual desire, and great lasciviousness, with frequent erections and pollutions.[Erections: little boys may have this, lasting all night, causing emaciation; boys often pull and tear at the prepuce all the time, which may cause great emaciation, and result in death; adults often have this pulling, a kind of itching being the cause, and a feeling as if he "must do so"; collection of smegma behind glans.H. N. G.].Total loss of sexual power.Painful nocturnal erections, and sometimes sanguineous pollutions.The penis is small, cold, and flabby.Glans cold and shrivelled.Voluptuous itching, tingling, tearing, and shooting in glans and prepuce.Puffing, or inflammatory swelling of prepuce, sometimes with burning pain, fissures, rhagades, and eruptions.Burning in urethra during coitus.Purulent secretion between prepuce and glans, sometimes with swelling, heat, and redness of front part of penis.Swelling of the lymphatic vessels along the penis.Vesicles and phagedænic ulcers (chancres) with lard-like, or cheesy, bases, and raised margin, on glans and prepuce.Sensation of coldness in testes.Testes, hard and swollen, with shining redness of scrotum, and dragging pain in testes and spermatic cords.Itching, tingling, and shooting in testes.Profuse perspiration of parts when walking.Excoriation between the parts and thighs.Sloughing of scrotum.

16. Female Sexual Organs

Suppression of catamenia.Catamenia too copious, with uneasiness and colic.Metrorrhagia.Discharge of blood in an old woman, eleven years after menses had ceased.Before catamenia: dry heat, with ebullition of blood, and congestion in head.Congestion of blood to uterus.Inflammation of ovaries and uterus.During catamenia: redness of tongue, with deep-coloured and burning spots, salt taste in mouth, teeth set on edge, and gums blanched.Leucorrhœa in general; complaints concomitant to leucorrhœa.Leucorrhœa always < at night; greenish discharge; smarting, corroding, itching, burning after scratching.Purulent, corrosive leucorrhœa, with itching in the parts, > by washing in cold water.Hard tubercles on labia majora.Itching pimples, and nodosities in labia.Itching of genitals, < from contact of urine.Inflammatory swelling in vagina, with a sensation as if it were raw and excoriated.Swelling of labia, with heat, hardness, shining redness, great sensitiveness to touch, and burning, pulsative, and shooting pains.Prolapsus uteri et vaginæ; feels > after coitus.Sterility with too profuse menstruation.Easy coitus and certain conception.Hard swelling in breasts, with pain as from ulceration (at every menstrual period), or with suppuration and actual ulceration; ulcerated nipples.Milk in breasts instead of menses; in breasts of boys or girls.Excoriation of breasts.The infant rejects the milk.

17. Respiratory Organs

Catarrh, with febrile shivering, hypochondriacal humour, dislike to all food, and constipation.Catarrh with cough, hoarseness, fluent coryza and sore throat.Continual hoarseness and loss of voice.Nasal voice.Burning and tickling in the larynx with hoarseness.Dry cough, sometimes fatiguing and shaking, principally in bed, in evening, or at night, also during sleep, and on waking in morning, excited by a tickling, or a sensation of dryness in chest, and < by speaking.Cough, as if caused by irritation in stomach.Convulsive cough, with retching.Spasmodic cough (whooping-cough); two paroxysms follow one another rapidly, from tickling in larynx and upper part of chest, at night, without cough during day, with expectoration of acrid yellowish mucus, which is sometimes mixed with coagulated blood, tasting putrid or salty.Cough < in night air, at night and when lying on l. side.Dyspnœa (sensation of spasmodic contraction when coughing or sneezing).Pains in head and chest when coughing, as if these parts were about to burst; or shootings in occiput; or pain as from excoriation in chest, and pain in loins.Inclination to vomit and fits of choking, when coughing.Cough with expectoration of pure blood.Bloody sputa in tuberculosis.Hoarse cough, with sensation of dryness and shootings in throat.

18. Chest

Difficult respiration, as from want of breath, or short and loud respiration.Breath having a bad smell.Shortness of breath when going upstairs and when walking quickly.Anxious oppression of chest, and difficulty of respiration, with want to take a deep inspiration, chiefly after a meal, or with attacks of suffocation at night, or in evening in bed, when lying down (on l. side).Sensation of dryness in chest.Want of breath, with squeezing and tension in chest, and sensation, on least movement, or attempt to speak, as if life were coming to an end.Sharp pains, and sensation as if muscles of chest were bruised.Aching in chest, sometimes penetrating to back, with inability to take a full inspiration.Burning in chest, sometimes extending to throat.Soreness and burning in chest.Lancinations (as if caused by knives) in chest and sides, or as far as the back, principally when breathing, sneezing, and coughing.Stitches in r. chest through from scapula; inflammation of lungs.Sensation as of a contraction and of swelling, and pain as from excoriation and ulceration, in chest.Suppuration of lungs after hæmorrhages, or after pneumonia.Emphysema of lungs.

19. Heart

Palpitation of heart; on slightest exertion.Fainting.Fatal syncope.

20. Neck and Back

Burning and drawing pain in back and in nape of neck.Indurated lymphatics.Rigidity and rheumatic swelling of nape of neck, and of neck.Shootings in muscles of neck.Engorgement and inflammatory swelling of glands of neck, with shooting and pressive pains.Shooting pains, instability, and weakness in loins.Pain as from a bruise in sacrum, back, and shoulder-blades.Erysipelatous inflammation extending from back like a girdle around abdomen (zona).

22. Upper Limbs

Sharp (rheumatic) pains in shoulders and arms, principally at night, and when moving them.Jerking in arms and fingers.Hot and red (arthritic) swelling of elbow, as far as hand.Itching miliary eruption on arms.Furfuraceous and burning tetters on forearms and on wrist.Tremor of hands, with weakness; could neither feed nor dress himself.Cracking, weakness, and sensation of paralysis in hand.Sweat on palms.Eruption like moist itch on hands, with violent nightly itching.Cramp-like contraction of hands and fingers.Swelling of joints of fingers.Deep and bleeding fissures and rhagades in hands and fingers.Cramp-like pains, and tendency to become stiff in hands when using them.Swelling of wrist, with pain on touching or moving it.Rigidity of wrists.Painful stiffness of r. wrist-joint.Ulceration at the nails.Exfoliation of fingers (of finger-nails).Deadness of fingers.

23. Lower Limbs

Sharp and lancinating (rheumatic) pains in hip-joints, as well as thighs and knees, chiefly at night, and during movement, and often with a sensation of coldness in diseased parts.Tearing in the hip-joint and knee, < at night, or with pulsating pain, suppuration commencing.Burning in nates.Soreness between thighs and genitals.Burning in periosteum of tibiæ.Drawing in tibia.Great weakness, heaviness, and painful weariness in thighs and legs.Weakness and giving way in knees, could scarcely stand.Sensation of rigidity, of torpor and cramps in thighs.Itching pimples on thighs.Œdematous, transparent swelling, of thighs and legs.Dropsical swelling of legs.Tension in hams, as if tendons were too short.Itching miliary eruption in legs.Tetters on thighs and legs.Contraction of legs, and cramps in calves of legs and toes.Swelling of instep or heels, with sharp or shooting pains.Wrenching pains in foot.Coldness and sweat in feet.Painful swelling of metatarsal bones.Swelling of toes.Ulceration at nails.

24. Generalities

Œdema of face, hands, and feet with anæmia.Cellulitis with lumpiness in any region.Periostitis then necrosis.Tearing and drawing, or shooting pains in limbs, chiefly at night, in heat of bed, which renders the pain insupportable.Red and shining inflammatory swellings.Inflammations ending in exudations and suppurations.Nocturnal pains in bones.Softening of the bones, so they will bend (rickets); enlargement of; caries of; inflammation of; prickling of; tearing in.Affections of shoulder-blades; shin-bones; bones of the leg.Sufferings < at night, or in evening, also from fresh (evening) air.Throbbings, sensation of dislocation, and arthritic pains in joints, with swelling.Rheumatic and catarrhal inflammations.Rheumatic pains, with profuse sweat, which affords no relief.The patient feels much better in morning and during repose, and esp. when lying down than when seated or walking.Whole body feels as if bruised, with soreness in all bones.Great agitation in limbs, with pains in joints, principally in evening.Great fatigue, weakness, and rapid loss of strength, with great uneasiness of body and mind.Ebullition of blood, and frequent trembling, even after least exertion.Sanguineous congestions (to head, chest, and abdomen) and hæmorrhages.Great tendency of limbs to become numb.Contractions of some parts.Cramps, convulsive movements, and nocturnal attacks of epilepsy, with cries, rigidity of body, distension of abdomen, itching in nose, and thirst.Sensation of coldness in outer parts; burning pain of inner parts; cutting in inner parts; darting pains in outer parts; darting in bones.Sallow-coloured face.Eructations; vomiting of bile.Blackness of outer parts; bleeding from inner parts; restlessness of body; inflammation of inner parts, also of mucous membranes; secretion of mucus increased from any of mucous membranes.Scurvy, particularly where there is much salivation; wasting away of soft parts; strictures after inflammation; inflammatory swellings, parts which are usually white turn red; zona or shingles.Tonic spasms and tetanus.Cataleptic rigidity of body.Fainting fits.Paralysis of several of limbs.Emaciation and atrophy of whole body.Excitability and sensitiveness of all the organs.Cannot lie on r. side.

25. Skin

Yellow colour of the skin, with perspiration which imparts a yellow colour to linen.Skin dirty yellow, rough and dry.(Jaundice.).Engorgement, inflammation, and ulceration of the glands, with pulsative and shooting pains, hard swelling, red and shining, or without any perceptible alteration in skin.Miliary, urticarial, pimpled, or pustular and purulent eruptions.Exanthema burning; pock-shaped (hence, think of this remedy in small-pox); of scarlet colour; with swelling; purulent exanthema, i.e., ulcerating; ecchymoses appear, of black and blue spots, without receiving any external injury.Erysipelas.Spacelus; brown mortification.Tetters in general; burning suppurating.Ulcers in general; with burning on edges; hard on edges with bloody pus; with corroding pus; with ichorous pus; having too little pus; too thin pus; thin, tenacious, sticky pus; swollen, inflamed; looking like lard; prickling; pulsating; painful on the edges; swollen on edges.Flat, painless ulcers, pate, covered with phlegm-like pus; on scalp, skin of penis, &c.Primary and secondary syphilis; round coppery red spots shining through skin.Itching pimples, which burn after being scratched.Eruptions which resemble scabies, and which bleed readily.Wounds ulcerate easily (and become gangrened).Erysipelatous inflammations.Spots red and raised, or maculæ hepaticæ, or which resemble scorbutic spots.Small and very itchy pimples, which ulcerate, and become encrusted.Tettery, excoriated, and oozing spots, or dry, itching, and mealy tetters.Desquamation of skin.Phagedenic ulcers, or bluish, fungous, and easily bleeding, or superficial, and appearing as if bitten by insects, or secreting an ichorous and corrosive pus.Chancrous ulcers.Violent and voluptuous itching over whole body, principally in evening, or at night, < by heat of bed, and sometimes attended by burning after scratching.Thickening of periosteum; exostosis and caries; abscess in joints; great brittleness of bones.

26. Sleep

Excessive sleepiness, day and night; deep and prolonged sleep.Great sleepiness during day.Inclination to sleep without the power to do so.Sleep retarded in evening, and too early awakening in morning.Failing asleep late; complaints preventing sleep (as toothache, or any severe pain or trouble, &c.); sleeplessness in general before midnight.Very light and unquiet sleep, with frequent awaking, starts, and fright.Sleeplessness from nervous excitability.Frequent, anxious, horrible, fantastic, historical, vivid and voluptuous dreams; dreams of robbers, of dogs that bite, of rebellion, of floods, of discharges of firearms, &c.At night, restlessness, anxiety, agitation and tossing, uneasiness, pains, heat or sweat, ebullition of blood, cries, tears, palpitation of the heart, vertigo, and many other affections.On going to sleep: < of the pains, starts, and frightful spectres before the sight.During sleep: talking, groans, sighs, short respiration, with mouth open and hands cold; on waking, sweat, cries, tears, and incoherent expressions.

27. Fever

Chilliness early in morning, when rising, but more so in evening after lying down, as if cold water had been thrown over him, and not > by heat of stove.Chilliness at night with frequent micturition.Chilliness between the diarrhœic stools.Internal chilliness with heat of face.Heat while in bed; as soon as one rises chilliness.Heat after midnight with violent thirst for cold drinks.Heat with anxiety and constriction of chest alternating with chilliness.Perspiration towards morning, with thirst and palpitation of heart; from least exertion even when eating.Perspiration in evening before going to sleep.Very debilitating night-sweats.Perspiration gives no relief, and accompanies all ailments.Intermittent fever.Chilliness in evening in bed, afterwards heat with violent thirst.Chilliness and heat without thirst, towards morning thirst; during perspiration, palpitation of heart and nausea, the perspiration smells sour or fetid.Coldness, shivering, and shuddering over whole body, principally after having slept, either by day and night, or only at night, or in evening, and in morning in bed, and sometimes with bluish colour of skin, icy coldness in hands and feet, muscular palpitations, convulsive movements of head, arms, and legs, contusive pain in limbs, and inclination to lie down, trembling in limbs, sharp pains in head, want to urinate, somnolence, &c.Ebullitions with trembling from slight exertion.Heat in face and head, with redness and burning of cheeks, and coldness, or shivering, or shuddering over whole body; or heat, mingled with shiverings or sweats.During the heat, insatiable thirst, great desire for milk, and < of pains when uncovered.Febrile attacks at night, or in evening; fever, with inflammatory symptoms, or with putridity; slow and hectic fever.Pulse, irregular, or quick, strong, and intermittent, or weak, slow and trembling (generally full and fast, with violent beating in arteries).Copious, excessive, and colliquative sweats, both day and night, in morning, in evening after lying down, and when eating, and sometimes fetid, clammy, sour, or oily, giving linen a yellow colour, and burning the skin.Sweat, with nausea and inclination to vomit, great fatigue, thirst, anxiety, obstructed respiration, stitches in side, &c.