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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1833

fever states. There is a marked prodrome, the fever often beginning with a concomitant: palpitation, sneezing, great anxiety, nausea, great thirst, ravenous hunger (this symptom may, however, also occur during the paroxysm), pressive pain in the lower abdomen, or headache. In the hot stage there is usually a rush of blood to the head, with a red hot face, but chill and coldness of the rest of the body; with this we see distended veins on the uncovered parts (head, hands).
During the chilly stage, and in most cases also during the hot stage, there is lack of thirst; thirst is often only felt between the stages (during apyrexia) and while the sweat is on. The perspiration is very profuse and weakening, exhausting; patients are often worse after perspiration. H. C. Allen adds that the paroxysms usually will not occur at night.
On the other hand, there is also a kind of fever heat which is attended by violent thirst for cold water, viz.: ‘Heat over the whole body, with fine needle-like stitches in the skin, especially of the neck, together with great thirst for cold water.’
Many ‘heat’ and ‘chill’ symptoms have been observed, which often have the peculiarity that the internal sensation and the external objective temperature diverge: there is internal chill with normal temperature of the surface of the body, but also coldness all over body without chilly feeling; similar symptoms during heat. An example: ‘Warmth and redness of the face, while the rest of the body was cold, with sometimes an unpleasant sensation of coldness (chill) on the warm forehead.’
China is generally a chilly remedy, with cold hands and feet and with great sensitivity to cold, especially to draughts of air which are dreaded. In exhausted, prostrated states, the surface of the whole body will be cold. One-sided coldness, especially of the hands.
Chill and shivering may come on or become worse after drinking; after every swallow of water.
Chill may be felt so strongly that external warmth is desired but doesn’t relieve. Chill begins in back, or in breast, and generally commences in the morning (Boericke) During the hot stage there is often desire to uncover, but sometimes on slightest uncovering chill and shivering come on.
Flushes of heat, also during climacterium; hot flashes all over body, but prominently over head and face; followed by drenching sweats, frequently oily;