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Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 1876

can come on from any derangement of the menstrual functions and are usually worse during the menstrual periods. This is also true in suppression of the menses, when the chorea-like state manifests instead of the menses, at the time when they should appear. Any other disturbance in the uterine region can also cause chorea.
Other causes can include: emotional excitement; undue exposure to cold; rheumatic irritation of motor nerves (anterior column of spinal cord). Symptoms are: abnormal movements, uncontrolled by the will, in all those parts of the body supplied by motor nerves, both in voluntary and involuntary muscles. Twitching, jerking, twisting actions, which may be attended by pains like in neuralgia or rheumatism, also by depression of spirits, insomnia, and often mental derangement. The movements abate or are absent during sleep (Hale).
This also applies also to irregular motions of the heart. Hale praises it for a pathological state he calls ‘chorea of the heart’, characterised by tumultuous, irregular, unexpected and strange motions of the heart, aggravated by emotions, subsiding during sleep.
Hale is of the opinion that Cimicifuga probably would not act in real epileptic convulsions, but only in states that resemble chorea. However, there are some cures of epileptiform and epileptic convulsions with Cimicifuga. Clarke relates an ‘inveterate case’ where the aura was a ‘waving sensation in the brain’. Hysterical and epileptiform spasms that occurred at the time of the menstrual period have more than once been cured with Cimicifuga.
The pain is felt intensely. Cimicifuga persons are often delicate and sensitive, very nervous and chilly, and pain can be absolutely intolerable to them. Oversensitivity to pain is a great feature of the remedy (Chamomilla), but with different consequences. Phobic and even psychotic states are triggered by the fear of the intense pains of labour. The pain can be so intense that the patient feels she