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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1847

Attacks are excited or renewed by every slight touch, from opening a door, from every noise, such as talking in the room, etc. There is a great sensitivity and aversion to the head being touched. Excitement of any kind may also trigger a convulsive state.
Some frequent symptoms of the spasmodic attack: falling to the ground, loud and strong shouting, biting the tongue, involuntary urination, the urine being propelled with great force; loss of consciousness, with wide open, protruded, staring, glassy eyes, crying, howling, whining, even biting, or laughing, arrest of respiration, great dyspnoea and a host of other symptoms.
The attacks may come on suddenly, without any aura, but there are also some well-defined aura symptoms, such as: a feeling of anxiety; a piercing cry; a sudden stiffening of the whole body; a loss of hearing, hiccup; a pressure on the head, with ringing in the ears and a dizziness as if about to faint; a cold sensation about the heart, spreading to the extremities; or a sudden shock, similar to that from electricity, particularly if felt in the region of the pit of the stomach.
‘He feels a sudden shock in the epigastric region, as though from a finger, which makes him start; only then he becomes collected again and returns to his full senses.’ This shock-like feeling can go right through to the back as fast as lightning, triggering a violent opisthotonus. Electric-like shocks are also felt in other body regions: sudden jerks through the head, arms, fingers, lower limbs, like electric shocks; or sudden shakings as from a chill.
Severe attacks are almost invariably followed by excessive prostration; the individual lies as if dead, and comatose sleep may follow that lasts hours or entire days. The prostration, as Farrington says, is only comparable with that of Chininum arsenicosum. Often memory blanks will remain, for hours or even days (Kent).