Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1735

external pressure just under the angle of the jaw causes pain in fauces.
Sore throat with swelling of glands and lymph nodes: of parotis, of submaxillary glands, of tonsils. Chamomilla may be indicated in tonsillitis or sore throat from catching a cold if the throat is of a uniform redness, spreading evenly over the whole throat, with considerable swelling. Or there can be tonsillitis affecting the ears, with amelioration from hot applications (both Kent).
Larynx, Trachea, Respiration and Cough
Hoarseness from tough mucus in the larynx, only detached by violent hawking. Catarrhal laryngitis, with hoarseness and rawness in the larynx.
Catarrhal hoarseness of trachea, with dryness of eyelids.
Spasms of larynx. ‘The spasms that affect the child all over are likely to affect the larynx, and sometimes only the larynx’ (Kent). ‘Violent spasms of chest and throat with attacks of anxiety, after a row, after anger, vexation, jealousy and so on’ (Noack/Trinks).
Sensation of rawness and scraping in larynx; in upper half of trachea.
Sensation of slight pressure on the trachea, with some irritation to hacking cough. Tickling in the pit of the throat causing attacks of scraping, dry cough, an ‘irritable cough.’ ‘Almost uninterrupted irritation to cough beneath the upper part of the sternum, but the irritation doesn’t always result in cough.’ ‘Cough from irritation deep down in trachea.’The cough is worse at night and even comes on in sleep, without waking the child. ‘Violent dry cough during sleep.’ Exposure to cold windy weather causes cough; Chamomilla may be indicated in a cough that returns every winter.
Suffocative dull cough, similar to pertussis, from tickling irritation in the chest, throat, larynx, and the pit of the throat; no expectoration at night, with scanty, tough, mucous sputa by day, tasting bitter or putrid (Bönninghausen). Fit of coughing around midnight, with a sensation as if something came up in the throat and suffocated her. Catarrhal croup in children, with suffocative attacks. ‘A very common remedy in whooping cough where the child wants to be carried; keeps the nurse busy all the time. Coughs and gags and vomits…’ (Kent). Vomiting with coughing is a frequent Chamomilla symptom.
Bronchitis, with free expectoration, especially in children.
Asthma, starting with pneumonia during pregnancy, with great sensitivity to light