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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1813

eyes. Or there are stitching headaches between temple and forehead, with throbbing of the temporal arteries which can be felt with the finger; hard pressure will ameliorate, while movement of head aggravates. Or: sharp, stitching headaches from one temple through to the other.
Rush of blood to the head, with buzzing in ears, perspiration and vertigo; often periodically (Mezger). Heat in head, with distended veins of hands and/or head; with cold extremities. Headaches with nosebleed, the bleeding momentarily relieves the pain (Stubler).
Headache as if the brain was sore, aggravated by the slightest touch of the head or parts of the head, but especially by exerting the mind, concentrating, thinking, even by talking. Or: headache like a cramp in vertex, followed by a bruised sensation in side of head. Or: headache as if the brain were pressed together into a ball, with excessive vividness of mind and fancy. Half-sided headaches, returning every day at a regular hour, especially at 3 a.m. (Chininum sulphuricum); with nausea and vomiting.
Pressive headaches, particularly at night, with sleeplessness are characteristic of China (Hahnemann). ‘Sleeplessness until midnight, with pressive pains all over the head’ (proving symptom).
Drawing, tearing, pressive pain, like a load on the head, also compressive, squeezing pain, relieved during rest, aggravated on the slightest motion; with an empty feeling in the head, ringing in the ears, weak vision. Headache as if the brain was compressed from both sides; as if everything in it was too heavy and was pressed out at the forehead or at the temples; better by forceful pressure with the hand. Violent pressive headache deep in the brain, with a sensation of constriction, especially in right side of forehead and occiput, very much worse when walking.
A violent jerking tearing in several places of the head, motion aggravates, lying ameliorates; also a jerking in the temple that extends down to the upper jaw. Other modalities: headaches worse in open air or by the slightest draught of air. ‘As soon as the air strikes the head the pains come on’ (Kent). Also headaches from exposure to sunlight. And, of course, the typical causation: occipital headaches from loss of fluids.
The occiput feels heavy and is much inclined to sink backward when raising the head.
Pain as if the scalp on the upper part of the head were being grasped with the