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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1293

Trembling of the limbs; rheumatic pains in the limbs.
Numbness in the arms and hands. ‘All the fingers felt very large, like sausages, she could not use them well; they felt as if they were going to be paralysed. ’ (Berridge). ‘Arms asleep on waking in morning; can hardly move them. ’ ‘Left thumb as if asleep; also little finger, with crawls. ’ (Hering)
Sleep
Strange, crawling sensations keep him awake. Sleeplessness from pruritus, especially in the genitals.
Sleepiness in the morning and morning, with weakness of the limbs, ill humour, dazed head. Sleepy in the morning after rising, cannot keep eyes open when walking in the open air, with nausea and giddiness felt in stomach.
Sleepy during the daytime but cannot sleep because the itching is unbearable, especially in the genitals, or on account of shivering and feeling very giddy. When wants to sleep is very sensitive to any noise.
Very loud snoring. Groans and moans anxiously in sleep.
Restless sleep; violent starting in sleep.
Vivid, anxious dreams which he remembers better than the activities of the day. Dreams of dead people and past events are so vivid that when, after waking, he immediately falls asleep again, he continues to dream of the same subject where he left off.
Wakes at night from thirst, with dry lips. ‘It seemed uncertain whether she was always aroused by a noise, or whether she was not often aroused by thirst; each time she was aroused she asked for water. ’ (Hering)
Fever
Kent says that this remedy ‘has a continued fever; it has no great amount of fever in it, but it is a continued fever; we shall see that there is coma and stupor from fever; ’delirium, unintelligible murmuring;’ mental prostration. Murmuring and muttering during the delirium; he does not recognise anyone. The speech is incoherent and prattling. This remedy is suitable in low, murmuring, exhaustive cases of typhoid fever, cases that run a very sluggish course; not a very active delirium; but muttering; a low form of semi-consciousness, very often coma or stupefaction like Phosphoricum acidum, or a dazed mind. ’
This is true for febris continua, for the typhoid type of fevers. In other cases the fever has an exacerbation in the evening around 6 or 8 p.m., and is
ameliorated by sleep.
Falls asleep during evening fever, and wakes when it stops.