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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2084

Extremities easily fall asleep, for instance: ‘Numbness of one hand, one arm, and one foot’.
Coldness of the limbs, especially with haemorrhages. Perspiration of single parts, on the lower section of the body.
Pain within the shoulder joint on motion of the upper arm as if the head of the humerus were only lying loosely within the capsule of the joint and could be easily dislocated; also a pain as from real dislocation, on quick motion, with cracking of the joint.
‘Immediately after some slight movements of the arms, a pain in them as if bruised’.
A feeling of ‘uneasy burning and crawling motion’ in the finger tips, as if they had fallen asleep, coupled with a sensation of tension as though they were tightly bandaged and the blood is unable to circulate; relieved on bending the fingers into a fist.
Chilblains on the toes.
Violent cracking, like a detonation, in the hip joint, on extension and abduction of the thigh.
Numbness of both arms and both hands; also at night, with a painful tingling that wakes the patient from sleep.
Chilblains in the hands and fingers.
Sleep
Great sleepiness and a deep and heavy sleep, as if in a coma. The sleepiness may come on without perceivable reason, and it may be coupled with an excessive sensation of lassitude, as from very hard physical work. Sometimes this weariness can be driven away by stimulating intellectual activities like reading or writing.
Insomnia, with a feeling as if everything in the patient were alive.
Singingduring sleep.
Very vivid dreams, especially of everything that has been done or thought during the day, even the least trifles. Frightening dreams, such as dreams of fire. A great number of very confused dreams, which can only be remembered in fragments the next morning.