in the mouth in infancy.
Collection of much soapy, frothy saliva in the mouth which is offensive and slimy.
Salivation in the evening or while smoking.
An intensely bitter taste on the tongue with a nauseous bitter taste in the mouth in the morning. Frequent drinking of cold water relieved the bitter taste and the inclination to vomit.
The mouth tastes rancid, stale, burnt, sweetish. Eating is unpleasant as the bitter taste is there during and after eating.
Food is difficult to swallow and after drinking beer there is an offensive, bitter taste.
Bitter rising into the mouth with nausea but without eructations.
The mouth has an offensive, putrid odour.
Teeth: pain as if a tooth were screwed in and then pulled out, which is momentarily relieved by cold water, but becomes better on walking in the open air. The toothache is ameliorated by washing with cold water, or lying on the painful side. Taking anything warm into the mouth brings on toothache, although the pain is sometimes better from warm drinks. Toothache from smoking, chewing, from opening the mouth, after midnight; in the summer and the autumn.
Toothache shooting from one tooth to another, or into head and cheeks. Drawing, at times jerking toothache in the left upper back teeth, only during and after eating, when the teeth seem too long and wobble back and forth.
In the evening, in bed, jerking toothache, first in the upper, then in the lower back teeth; when the pain is in the upper teeth, and they are pressed by the tip of the finger, the pain suddenly ceases, and changes to the corresponding lower teeth.
The pains are aggravated by brushing the teeth, from coughing, from motion and by others talking. Amelioration from chewing hard on something and from lying down.
Severe toothache in teething children.
The gums are spongy and painful as if they were excoriated and the teeth become loose.