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Materia Medica Viva Volume 7 – page 1467

weak, often scarcely perceptible.There may be cold perspiration over the body, especially on the forehead. On recovery, there may be one-sided paralysis or blindness.
The tendency for convulsions and spasms is well-known, though this remedy is often neglected in cases of epilepsy or convulsions from an inflammation and high fever; trismus and other tetanus symptoms; subsultus tendinum (twisting movements of the muscles and tendons) with excitability, jerking, twitching and trembling. The arms may move spasmodically in circles (rotation). The head is often spasmodically drawn backward or to one side; the eyes are convulsively turned upward; epileptic seizures are followed by a state of extreme exhaustion.
Camphora can be indicated in ill effects from shock (from an injury or inflammation), vexation, sunstroke, or exposure to extreme cold. Ill effects of suppression: headache or other symptoms from suppression of sexual desire; spasms from suppression of exanthema, eruptions, or discharges.
An important indication is spasms in children when an exanthema does not come out (in measles, in scarlatina). They can also occur after suppression of a cold or in new-born children (trismus). Asphyxia neonatorum, with cyanosis and spasms as a consequence. Hasty in action and speech.
After eating, chill and drawing through whole body, with cold arms, hands, and feet.
Feeling of dryness in the body, mostly in the head and bronchi.
A feeling of indescribable discomfort in the whole body.
Pain runs from the head to the tips of the fingers, with trembling and uneasiness.
Finds pleasure in drinking, but without thirst.
Disgust for tobacco.
Great sensitivity to, and aggravation from, cold air and draughts (but coldness may also be better by cold air and worse from covering!).