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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1808

white, easily pitting on pressure. Kent: ‘Dropsy that comes after haemorrhage.’
Diarrhoea, especially at night and after eating. ‘Several gushing, black, watery stools during the night; in the daytime, only after eating’ (Kent). According to Tyler, ‘some of the most outstanding curative actions of China’ have been witnessed just in diarrhoea; especially in summer diarrhoea in children with painless, undigested stools, profuse and exhausting.
China has also migraines, severe migraine headaches that come on around 3 a.m.; but here another closely related remedy is often more useful, namely Chininum sulphuricum. The patient cannot tolerate any touch, but hard pressure will ameliorate. (The other remedy with these modalities in headaches is Magnesia phosphorica).
‘Rush of blood to the head, with cold extremities.’ This is very frequent in the feverish conditions of China. Usually the face is red and hot and the rest of the body chilly or objectively cold. It is also possible that there is only internal heat in the face, with the cheeks remaining cold to the touch and cold sweat on the forehead.
Kent: ‘China has a fullness of the veins’, of the uncovered parts: hands and arms, head and face.
The ‘intermittents’ of China have a clearly marked succession of stages: the chill, fever heat and perspiration are distinctly manifested, and between them a clear intermission takes place. An exact periodicity is not always there, but periodic recurrence of the symptoms is nonetheless a strong hint for China (see above: 12 midnight, every other day, etc.). Febris continua will usually not require China.
The perspiration is usually very strong and profuse, weakening, exhausting, and especially found on the back and