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Materia Medica Viva Volume 7 – page 1452

from drinking. Worse when having a cold or when tired. Bathing can trigger the appearance of deafness.
Difficulty in distinguishing speech when two or more people speak together; an inability to distinguish where the sound is coming from.
Nose and Face
Coryza in one nostril; with much green discharge.
Severe sneezing.
‘Black and blue’ eyes, from extravasation of the blood after injury.
Face puffy and swollen, particularly under the eyes.
After taking a tablespoon of the tincture, Price experienced the following: ‘Immediately, sensation as if lips were swollen; from the lips it spread to sides of nose, and increased rapidly in intensity. After one hour, lids were much swollen and pupils dilated…’
Mouth and Throat
After extraction of teeth, or dental operations resulting in laceration of gums. Burns on the lips, the tongue, scalding of buccal mucous membranes; tongue dry, red and cracked.
Submaxillary glands swollen and painful to the touch, as if ulcerated, at the same time axillary glands painful to the touch. Or: submaxillary glands painful, but also without being touched there is a tensive pain which becomes a pressure in the throat, especially on swallowing. Or: drawing tensive pain in the glands behind the left ramus of the lower jaw, when moving the head. Bitter-slimy taste in the throat before eating, but food tastes normal.
A case of violent toothache, diagnosed as acute pericoronitis, was treated successfully by a single dose of Calendula C 200 (per os). The symptoms exhibited were: severe pain in the muscles and bone of left lower jaw; worse at night; pain radiating to the left ear; tired, weak and nauseous; general aggravation from heat. The reason for prescribing Calendula was due to the advice from a workshop the practitioner had attended that the remedy was to be considered for any septic condition when another remedy was not indicated. (Gregory Pais, Simillimum, Winter 1991, p.82).