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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1811

Tyler: ‘In regard to the China debility of China, one has again and again proved the value of the drug in patients who, after an attack of influenza, remained chilly and weak, and went crawling about feeling that they would never again be able to wear summer clothing, or go back to normal… Among the out¬patients who Hock to us for help, there are quite a number of persons not demonstrably ill, but tired and below par, to whom a dose of China in potency is a marvellous pick-me-up.’
In this context, the symptoms from massive doses of the China bark given ‘against intermittent’ that Hahnemann mentions may be useful: ‘But lo, how sallow are their bloated faces, how lustreless are their eyes! Lo, how oppressed they breathe, how hard and swollen are their loins, how disturbed their appetites, how offensive their tastes, how hard and pressive like a weight each food in their stomachs, how undigested and unnatural their stools, how anxious, dreamful and unrefreshing their nights! Lo, how weary, depressed, peevish and sensitive or stupid they crawl about, annoyed by a much greater amount of complaints than during their intermittent fever!’
It is interesting that Hahnemann also mentions an alternate action in this weakness state. ‘Extraordinary lightness in all movements, as if he had no body; alternate action after preceding sensation of weakness, excited by China.’ Or: ‘Now weakness, now extreme sensation of vigour in joints; alternate action in a healthy person.’
Vertigo
A certain ‘confusion’ or ‘dullness’ or ‘heaviness’ or ‘stupefaction’ of the head is a frequent concomitant of the China weakness and fevers, especially after loss of blood. It may amount to dizziness and real vertigo, even to fainting, and is often accompanied or preceded by tinnitus aurium, darkness before the eyes, coldness of skin, nausea, etc.
‘Fogginess of head, with tensive pain in forehead and orbits.’ ‘The head is