Another pathology where Cina may be indicated is a certain kind of whooping-cough (pertussis) with two very characteristic symptoms that form real keynotes of the remedy: a stiffening of the body before the cough, sometimes with wild looking about and loss of consciousness; and a noise like a gurgling down from throat to abdomen after the cough, with crying, anxiety, catching of breath and great paleness. Both symptoms will also be important guides to the remedy where no cough is present.
Hahnemann was the first to hint to the curative power of Cina in ‘certain intermittent fevers, combined with vomiting and canine hunger’. We can add convulsive states and different abdominal complaints (vomiting, diarrhoea), usually with the char¬acteristic voracious hunger which in some cases may alternate with total loss of appetite. Vomiting or fever with intercurrent hunger and almost clean tongue has been successfully used as a Cina indication.
Generalities
As above, Cina will often be indicated in whooping-cough; comp¬laints with voracious hunger, even directly after vomiting, but all the same great emaciation, sometimes with thick, protruding belly. Cina has also cured enuresis nocturna which was worse every full moon (Boger). The patients tend to lie on their bellies or to assume the knee-chest or knee-elbow position.
Many Cina conditions may be referred to intestinal irritation, from ascarides or otherwise. The brain and spinal cord are often affected.
Characteristic is a painful soreness of the whole body to touch, mirroring the emotional ‘touchiness’ that is so marked in Cina. The pains are usually as if bruised, or like the effects of a