Complete amaurosis caused by a severe nervous fever, or from large amounts of quinine.
Amaurosis from a cold, with much vertigo; pressing pain and feeling of fullness in eyeballs; black spots before eyes; increased pain by candlelight, and much congestion of vessels.
Amaurosis of four years’ duration, occurring after suppression of rash in scarlatina; only a perception of light remained; pupils dilated.
Falling of lids in the morning after waking.
Styes on upper lid.
Ulceration of lids under surfaces.
Painful quivering of lids.
In blepharitis, lids are painful and swollen like erysipelas.
There is a tendency for oedema and swelling of the lower eyelids, and one frequently sees this swelling as part of the aggravating response to the administration of the remedy.
Ears
The almost absolute deafness seen in cases of Belladonna poisoning is indicative of the ability of this remedy to cure similar conditions. Belladonna is frequently indicated in acute or recurrent otitis media, especially right-sided otitis media. Here one finds a sudden onset of the infection with pulsating, throbbing pain or tearing stitching pains with the general modalities of the remedy. A peculiarity is that the pain from the ears extends everywhere: to chest, to face, to forehead, to occiput, to teeth but mostly downward to neck. The infection can be accompanied by ringing or roaring in the ears. The earache is worse from least noise. As mentioned, Belladonna can be indicated in Meniere’s syndrome with vertigo and tinnitus, with or without a middle ear infection.
Ear sensitive to wind; sensation of wind in ear.
Heat inside ear. Heat of ear during chill.
Discharges of blood from ear during cough.
Sensation of distension of ear.
Belladonna has a great variety of noises in ear. These include:
Roaring, ringing, tingling, murmuring; fluttering sounds in the morning;