distinctly circumscribed dark redness of cheeks, throbbing in vessels, full pulse, fainting, difficult speaking, nausea, short respiration and cold feet’ (Buchmann).
Pressive pain in the right side of the forehead. Pressure in the forehead which extends to the orbits, which are painful as if sore on moving the eyes. Also pressive pain in the temporal bone, behind the ear. Dull pressure in right temple, extending to vertex, finally just above the right eye.
Right-sided supraorbital neuralgia; with sharp pain, profuse lachrymation (‘tears fairly gush out’), sensitivity to light; in the beginning some relief by pressure with the hand, later increasing sensitivity to touch and pressure. A description from Ruckert: with shivering and yawning, a throbbing pain sets in the right eyebrow region and temple, usually starting in the morning, slowly extending to forehead and eye and increasing to a remarkable height in the course of some hours. External pressure brings transient relief, but walking, light, air, and motion of the head aggravate the pain. Or Allen’s Clinicals: pain is cutting and extends upward and downward and may involve the right ear.
Right-sided headaches extending down behind the ears and generally to the right shoulder-blade, where the pain becomes seated.
Also left-sided supraorbital neuralgia, with right-sided abdominal, thoracic or back symptoms. Stitches in the bone above the left eye. Pressive pain above the left eye, seeming to press down the left upper eyelid. Slowly drawing stitches, like a pressing, from left side of occiput to forehead. Violent drawing pain from the vertex to the right temple, urging to lie down. Headaches in the forehead and also the temples, as from a band or hoop above the eyes, just above the eyebrows, with a feeling as if the head were compressed thereby; better on closing the eyes. This pressive- constrictive sensation may also be felt in the vertex, ‘as if the whole top of the brain was caving in’.
But there are also headaches with a feeling of swelling and pressure from within outwards. According to Keller, they are better by heat (while the ‘sick headaches’ that Kent describes are heat, see above), mostly localised in the region of the ear, in the forehead, or the occiput, and accompanied by a roaring in the head and ears.
Some proving symptoms are: a pressure outwards, as if the cranium were too small for the brain; it seems to be forced through the ear, where a roaring