causing intense pain.
The arms are frequently asleep, with a crawling sensation and often with a paralytic feeling. This is especially found in the forearms and, even more so, in the hands. ‘The forearm is asleep, with sensation as if the hand were swollen, with constrictive pain in the muscles; the fingers are cool, with an internal sensation of icy coldness’.
In the hands, this symptom exhibits a characteristic, namely an alternation between both hands. ‘Now one hand, now the other, seems insensible and asleep’. An alternation like that will also be found in other ‘manual sensations’, as for instance: now one hand, now the other, is alternately hot and cold. Cold sweat now on one, now on the other hand.
The lame feeling will often amount to very disturbing problems in using the hands. There will often be tremor, either an incessant one or intentional tremor. ‘The hand trembles while eating, and the more the higher it is raised’. Sometimes there is a complete inability to grasp and hold anything, or small objects that are grasped drop to the floor. Patients are unable to do things that afford coordination, e.g. writing, playing piano, etc.
‘Convulsions of arms, with clenching of thumbs’. ‘Painful paralytic jerks through the fingers’.
Some pains in the arms that are found in Cocculus: some stitches in the shoulder and muscles of the upper arm, during rest; especially in the right upper arm. Excessive drawing pain in bones of shoulder and arm, on raising arm after eating; on touch the parts are painful, as if bruised or beaten. And a strange sensation observed by Hering is a feeling ‘…as of very fine, delicate wires or fibres pulling and continually in motion, down both arms from elbow to hand’.
Weakness and numbness in the lower limbs: ‘His knees sink down from weakness; he totters while walking and threatens to fall to one
side’. Great weakness, so that it was difficult to stand firmly.
Paralysis of feet, with pithy feeling in soles and toes of both feet; can’t raise feet but shuffles; feet become stiff and awkward from sitting for a while. Falling asleep of both feet while sitting, or else of one (left) foot, with sticking in it as from many pins.
Pain as if lame and beaten in thighs.