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Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 2043

downstairs, when lying, etc. But the most characteristic modality is vertigo on turning in bed. Also on moving the eyes or the head, especially in sideways motion. In this kind of vertigo Conium is the main remedy together with Belladonna, especially when the vertigo occurs when turning around in bed. Clarke mentions a case of lumbago with the symptom ‘cannot turn over in bed without being dizzy’ that was cured with Conium.
You may also compare Cocculus, because the Conium vertigo fre¬quently has to do with an accommodation weakness of the eyes, as in Cocculus.
Nash reports a case where a patient seemed to have all the symptoms of locomotor ataxia. The striking symptom was that he could not, when walking, turn the head or the eyes the least bit sideways without staggering or falling. When he went out with his wife, he always walked in front of her or behind her, but never by her side! This strange behaviour made Nash think of Conium.
Some more proving symptoms and cured symptoms relating to the Conium vertigo:
Vertigo, in the morning, on rising from bed.
Very dizzy while walking.
Vertigo, like turning in a circle, on rising from his seat.
Vertigo, worse when lying down, as though the bed were turning in a circle. Vertigo on becoming erect after stooping, as if the head would burst. Vertigo on looking around, as though the patient were to fall sideways.
‘On raising my eyes from the object upon which they had been fixed to a more distant one the vision was confused, and a feeling of giddiness suddenly came over me. So long as my eyes were fixed on a given object the giddiness dis¬appeared… ‘Another prover even staggered when walking, but as soon as he closed his eyes, ‘…I could now walk straight and steady, and, what was more, without any feeling of giddiness’.