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Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 1952

‘Very sensitive mood; everything offends him’. Cocculus is very much affected and offended by slight obliquity and untruths of others, and easily angered, taking everything in bad part. Or else they are offended at the slightest circumstance, often to weeping, with contraction of the pupils; after weeping, there is loss of appetite.
On the other hand, there is a strange kind of alternation in the moods of a Cocculus patient. ‘Everything makes him angry and peevish; after a few hours he became lively and jocose’. This can even amount to a manic state: ‘Irresistible inclination to sing’. This manic kind of mood will often exist in drunkards, sometimes alternating with the profound sadness described above, or with irritability; and in fact, Cocculus is a remedy in ailments from alcohol.
Weakness of memory. ‘Distracted (loss of memory); he easily forgets of what he has just thought’. A difficulty to find the right words. Often failed to use right expression for thoughts, could scarcely recollect anything of the past; mumbled, so that it was great trouble for him to pronounce his words’. A slowness and clumsiness of comprehending and thinking.
Some Keynotes
Ailments after sleepless nights.
Vertigo accompanied with vomiting and diarrhoea worse after eating or drinking.
Sensation of hollowness or of emptiness in the head and abdomen.
Car or sea sickness.
Painless paralysis with exaggerated reflexes.
Aversion to cheese.
‘Empty and hollow in the abdomen, as though there were no viscera’. ‘Audible rumbling in the left side of the chest as though it were empty, most felt when walking’.