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Materia Medica Viva Volume 3 – page 703

Head
Severe headache followed by an epileptic attack. Sticking in base of skull and especially over eyes on every motion and worse stepping. Intermittent fine drawing stitches across forehead and temples. Stitching in left temple in morning on waking, extending behind ear, scarcely permitting him to open left eye. Aching as if brain pressed out in all directions. Sticking pains in back of skull and over eyes, worse from every motion and on stepping. Headache, with flushing of face and head, with rush of blood to head. Periodical headache, coming on suddenly, increasing rapidly, until intensely severe, making him blind and delirious. Headaches of epileptics.
Eye
Obscurity of vision. Dilation and subsequent immobility of the pupil. Mydriasis. Excessive dilatation of pupils; eyes appear fixed and glassy; entire loss of power to compare objects with eye and determine their respective distances. Objects appear as if enveloped in a fog. Blindness. Hallucinations of the sight. While the obscurity of objects is increasing, various phantoms are observed, gigantic forms, and sometimes laughable, sometimes terrifying appearances; also quick rotation and duplication of objects. All kinds of illusions of vision. Everything appears large.
Lids heavy and difficult to keep open. Diplopia. Dimness of vision, with dilated pupils. Sharp neuralgic pains in and about eyes. Neuralgic pains, commencing under left orbit, and running back to ear. Photophobia; swelling of lids. Blepharospasmus and irritability of eye; with corneal ulcers. Conjunctivitis, with lachrymation. Erysipelatous inflammation of conjunctiva and lids. Hallucinations of the sense of hearing.
Face
Face red, and hot; with white spots; afterwards pale. Pale; and sweaty. Expression of mania. Difficulty in swallowing either liquid or solid substances. Frequently they can only effect deglutition after making several strains with the muscles of the neck and throat. Failure of voice, which, in one individual, amounted to complete aphonia. Dysphagia is never absent and keeps pace with the dryness of the fauces. Swallowing produced spasms of suffocation. Dark, red, dusky hue of throat. Difficult swallowing from great dryness.