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Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 39

These patients get very definite acute coryza, with a fluid, water discharge, accompanied by very violent sneezing and a feeling of intense fullness and pressure just about the root of the nose. It is not uncommon in Gelsemium influenza -where there is this feeling of blockage at the root of the nose – to find epistaxis on forcible clearing of the nose. This, again, is worth remembering, for certain Mercurius cases tend to run in the same way.
With their acute coryza, Gelsemium patients, despite a gener- al hot stickiness, very often complain of very cold extremities. (This appears to be a contradiction, and might mislead you when you consider the general heat of the typical Gelsemium patient.)
As a rule, in Gelsemium influenzas, there is no very marked lo- calized tonsillitis, but much more a generalized, puffy, red, con- gested throat. There may be a certain amount of enlargement of the tonsils, but it is not the spotty throat that some of the other remedies have.
In spite of the absence of acutely localized symptoms there is of- ten acute pain on swallowing. Swallowing may be actually dif- ficult – with a feeling of constriction or of a lump in the throat – and it is much more difficult when the patient takes cold fluids rather than warm; this is unexpected, considering the dryness of their mouths.
Associated with these conditions of nose and throat, Gelsemium influenzas quite frequently have an involvement of the ears. But, in spite of what is recorded in the Materia Medica, I have not ob- served the acute stabbing pains that are described under Gelsem- ium: and, where I have tried to clear up such pains with Gelsem- ium, I have not had any success.
Gelsemium does get a good deal of roaring in the ears, a feel- ing of blockage and obstruction and you very often get dullness of hearing, and giddiness; but 1 have not seen acute earaches re- spond to Gelsemium.
Quite frequently there is an extension downwards, with involve- ment of the larynx and loss of voice. Associated with the laryn- gitis, there is liable to be an intensely croupy cough which is al- most convulsive in character, coming in spasms and associated with very intense dyspnoea.