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Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 1904

Before and during the headaches the scalp is extremely sensitive to touch and pressure. Children cannot have their hair combed, brushed, or cut; women must have their hair down during the headaches.
‘On the middle of the vertex, intermitting pressure as from a heavy weight, as though the brain were pressed down; external pressure increases or renews the pain’. Or; a pressive pain, from above downward, externally at the forehead, as if a weight were gradually sinking down.
Dull headache with affection of the eyes, in the morning.
‘Stupefying internal headache on walking in the open air, especially in the forepart of the head, later also in occiput’. Or: ‘Confusing, drawing pain from left frontal eminence to root of nose’. ‘Drawing pain in right temple in a vertical direction, on coughing it feels as if it would burst’.
A dull slow stitch, extending from below the upper orbital margin deep into the brain.
A characteristic symptom is an empty, hollow feeling in the head with nausea and inclination to vomit.
Children lean their heads sideways all the time, or they turn their heads to and fro which seems to ameliorate their pains.
Cina may be indicated in irritation of the meninges, particularly if abdominal complaints coexist or alternate with brain symptoms; the abdomen is swollen and hot. It has even been used in hydrocephalus and encephalitis. Kent gives these symptoms: ‘Rolling of the head; frequent headaches; sensitiveness to jar; cannot be touched or tapped along the spinal cord without headache; always worse in the sun; the head is hot and the feet are cold in the sun’. Heat mostly in the head during fever, but with yellowish colour of face and blue rings around eyes. Very hot head, with extreme sensitivity to touch. Cold sweat on forehead.
Eyes
Dilated pupils with many complaints.
Fatigue of eyes; eye strain causes pains in head and eyes and affects the vision. Wiping or rubbing the eyes ameliorates, at least for some time. ‘While reading a book, dimness before eves, has to rub the eyes vigorously with the fingers to be able to continue reading’. ‘In the