Books

Homeopathy – Medicine for the New Millennium – page 38

As a rule, their mouths and lips are intensely dry and the latter are very often dry and cracked, or dry with a certain amount of dried secretion on them. The patients complain of an unpleasant taste and there is frequently a sensation of burning in the tongue. The tongue itself usually has a yellowish coating – though, some- times, it is quite red and dry.
Gelsemium influenzas always include a very unpleasant, severe headache. Typically, there is a feeling of intense pain in the oc- cipital region, spreading down into the neck with a sensation of stiffness in the cervical muscles; as it is a congestive headache, it is usually throbbing in character.
The patient is most comfortable when keeping perfectly still, propped up with pillows, so that the head is raised without any effort being made. With these headaches, the patients often com- plain of a sensation of dizziness, particularly with any movement.
There is another type of headache sometimes met with in Gel- semium. Again, it is congestive in character, but the sensation is much more a feeling of tightness – as if there were a tight band round the head, just above the ears from the occiput right for- ward to the frontal region. This, also, is very much aggravated by lying with the head low. Peculiarly, these patients often find relief from their congestive headaches by passing a fairly large quantity of urine.
In nearly all Gelsemium influenzas there is a sensation of gen- eral aching soreness, an aching soreness in the muscles. This is worth remembering; there are other drugs which have similar pains but are much more deep-seated than the Gelsemium pains.
Now for a few details of actual local disturbances:
Most Gelsemium patients have the appearance of intense heav- iness of the eyelids that is associated with this dull toxic condi- tion. But there is also a good deal of sensitiveness of the eyes themselves, a fair amount of congestion, a definite sensitiveness to light, probably a good deal of lachrymation and general con- gestive engorgement.
There is an apparent contradiction here: despite this ocular sen- sitiveness; occasionally a Gelsemium patient becomes scared in the dark and insists on having a light.