The congestion will often be caused by anger, vexation, etc.
One-sided drawing headache is another manifestation of the megrim. ‘Nocturnal rheumatic headache of oversensitive women’ (Leeser).
Heaviness in the head, with a strong inclination to bend the head backwards. Sometimes there is also a wish to bend it forward or backward; then only keeping it erect and still is impossible.
Another headache (elicited in Hoppe’s provings) is a pressive pain that begins in the vertex and spreads over the forehead and the temples (or sometimes one temple only). The pressure is constantly present, but increasing and decreasing in intensity. In the temples it may be described ‘as if from firm pressure with the fingers’, even like a strong compression. Sometimes this pain is accompanied by very severe dull stitches that may extend to the occiput like electric sparks. (The symptom ‘Wandering pain in the temples, frequently recurring, and always worse at the beginning,’ listed in Allen, Hering, Kent, and others, has its source in a translation error. In Hoppe’s proving, where it is taken from, it reads ‘wandering pain in limbs…’)
Not only is such pressive pain experienced as virtually unbearable, it also increases from any mental exertion, such as reflecting or even reading, but mostly on directing attention to it. This is why Kent says the headache is better ‘by busying the mind at something else,’ but this occupation must not be anything that needs exertion of the mind or any mental effort. The patient is unable to concentrate upon one subject for any length of time. Fast stooping will also aggravate the pain.
Confusion of head, with painful pressure upon the eyes.
Another kind of headache is pressing outward instead of inward. ‘On waking from sleep, pain in head as if it should burst’ (Hahnemann).
Tearing and sticking which extends outward, out of the temples.
As to the time modalities of the headache: ‘It prefers the night time, is even felt during sleep, or in the morning on waking, resp. in half-sleep, usually disappearing as soon as one is fully awake’ (Noack/Trinks). 9 p.m. to 12 p.m. with relief after midnight, is typical according to Kent.
‘Wrinkled skin of forehead, above the nose’ (Stapf).
A hot sticky perspiration, mostly or even only about the head and especially on the forehead and hairy scalp, making the hair literally wet from sweat, is a key-note.