alternate or to change a lot, also to wander around. As Kent says, ‘So markedly do her troubles alternate with each other that alternation is the nature of her case… You will find when one set of symptoms becomes extremely severe others have tem¬porarily subsided, and so they change about like Pulsatilla… A woman will come to you with one group of symptoms today and may come back to you with an entirely different group in a couple of days’.
‘Agitation and pain are the signs of its influence everywhere’ (Hughes). The agitation shows in a lot of involuntary, ‘nervous’ motions. There is a restlessness and uneasiness that affects both the mental/emotional and physical level.
Nervous shuddering, through upper and back part of the body; without actual feeling of coldness.
Tremors all over; so weak and trembling as not able to walk or study. Jerking, general or in single parts; especially in left side of body. Another locality of the jerking and twitching is ‘in the parts lain on’.
A proving symptom says: ‘After going to bed, jerking commenced on the side on which he was lying, obliging him to change position; it began by a perceptible twitching in left foot’.
Kent gives this example: ‘One of these nervous, rheumatic, hysterical subjects may not have chorea constantly, but as soon as she retires at night the whole of the side lain on will commence to jerk and prevent her from going to sleep. If she turns on the back the muscles of the back and shoulders will jerk and prevent sleep. She turns over on the other side, but after a little while the muscles pressed on commence to jerk. All this time she has become so restless and nervous that she is driven to distraction’.
Chorea and choreiform motions may indicate Cimicifuga. Such states