neck, and in the parts the patient lies upon.
A marked characteristic is the relationship between thirst and fever in China. Usually China patients have no thirst during the chill or shivering. The thirst appears afterwards, when the chilly stage is over or just before the hot stage. And during the height of the fever heat there is usually lack of thirst, too (burning and dryness of the lips may occur, but seldom real thirst). But after the heat and during the perspiration stage, a violent thirst for cold water will frequently occur. So the thirst is mostly to be seen between the cold and hot stages, but not during them. There is, though, a kind of fever heat (‘with stinging all over the body’) which can be accompanied by strong thirst.
The China fevers also have the peculiarity to frequently begin with a concomitant (prodromal) symptom, such as: with palpitation; with sneezing; with great anxiety; with nausea; with great thirst; with ravenous hunger; with pressive pain in the lower abdomen; with headache.
Haemorrhages. China is not only indicated in the consequences of loss of blood, but also for the bleeding itself. ‘It weakens the heart and impairs circulation, produces congestions and haemor¬rhages, anaemia and complete relaxation and collapse’ (Clarke). The haemorrhages are often profuse and blackish, with clots, and tend to be passive. Bleeding from all orifices of the body has also been observed. It has caused and cured menorrhagia and metrorrhagia, epistaxis, haemorrhages from the lungs and mouth, also from the anus and the urinary passages. In exhausted states with bleeding around childbirth, China is often indicated; also where bloody lochia continue much too long after confinement.
Bleeding may, besides weakness, fainting, loss of vision, ringing in ears, etc., also cause convulsions, twitching and jerks; and there is a tendency to congestion, inflammation and sepsis from haemorrhages.