air, for quiet; cloudy, damp days; drawing knees up; descending, sitting up, cold food and drink after eating, from perspiration, from diarrhoea, in the evening from 6-9 p.m.
Vertigo
The vertigo of Bryonia possesses some unique characteristics. During an episode of vertigo these patients may report the peculiar sensation that they feel as though they were sinking
through the bed. This feeling is very characteristic; they feel that they are passing right through the bed or sinking with the bed. Bryonia patients will feel better if they lie quietly in bed; if they attempt to sit up, they will suffer a surge of nausea and vertigo requiring them to lie back down.
Whirling in the head if she sits up in bed, with nausea in the middle of the chest, as if faintness would ensue.
Staggering and drunkenness as if the head were congested, with staggering and running backwards. Dizzy in the morning, and weak in the limbs the whole day; dizziness before a chill.
Confusion, giddiness and cloudiness of the head with a sensation of looseness in the brain when stooping and when raising up the head or on the slightest motion.
Vertigo felt in the occiput, followed by epistaxis or dizziness with epistaxis. Vertigo on turning or moving the head quickly or from inclining it forward; with suppressed eruptions.
Vertigo on rising in the morning with weakness in the limbs, as if the head were turning in a circle or on rising from a chair when everything seems to turn in a circle, ameliorated after walking.
Vertigo ameliorated while sitting and while lying with the head high.
Head
The important key-note is ‘aggravation from motion’, and this applies to the head most impressively.
Headaches, for instance, can be aggravated by the slightest motion of the eyes; simply by turning the eyes ever so little, the headache can become excruciating.