sickness, as if the stomach heaved up and down… She told me that travelling in a carriage made her feel ill, and that sickness has often been brought on by looking at a vessel pitching up’.
Aggravation from lying on the back mostly applies to occipital pains as Turner describes them: ‘Pain began in occiput and nape and now extends to both shoulders’.
Another kind of occipital pain was described by Farrington. He mentions an intense pain in lower part of occiput and nape of neck where the guiding symptom was a sensation as if the occiput opened and closed alternately.
This strange sensation is not the only one. We have already mentioned the sensation of emptiness and hollowness in the head. Two interesting symptoms were observed during a proving of Berridge and clinically confirmed: ‘Feeling as if the brain were rolled up or compressed into a smaller bulk’. ‘Feeling as if the nerves in head were drawn up tightly’.
There are also frontal headaches which take in the eyes, as in these two proving symptoms: ‘Headache, as if something forcibly closed the eyes’. ‘Headache, as if the eyes were torn out’.
Frequently headaches have the character of tightness or pressure from without inward. As for example: ‘The head is painful, as if bound up. ‘Pressive headache, as if the brain were pressed together’. ‘Headache in temples as if head were seized in a vice’.
Another kind of headache is more throbbing, as if apoplexy should come. ‘Throbbing in vertex worse by motion of eyes and touch of fingers, with congestion to head’. Violent headache extending from vertex to left side of forehead and nose, with a feeling of oppression and tottering.
All the head symptoms are worse from eating and drinking, from talking, from sleeping, from any noise and jar, from cold air, from mental exertion. ‘Headache, increased after eating and drinking and accompanied by a sensation of ‘emptiness and hollowness’ in head’. But exposure to the sun may also bring on a headache.
Very often the head feels heavy, and especially so because of a marked weakness of the cervical muscles which compels the patient to lean on the head. Usually this relieves only temporarily, so the head has to be moved and leaned on again, which is another expression of the restlessness of Cocculus. There may