Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2135

I mentioned above some symptoms of acute manic states, as they are described in reports of proving and poisoning. They often have a very aggressive component: ‘Attacks of mania, he spits peo- ple into the face and laughs heartily about it’. ‘Attacks of rage, frequently recurring; they were biting the bystanders’.
‘Attacks of morose and malicious mania’. Clarke lists malice as a
Cuprum symptom.
Hering gives this case: ‘Mania with biting, beating, and tearing things to pieces; insane foolish gestures of imitation and mimicry; full of insane spiteful tricks’, and also this: ‘Attacked suddenly with convulsions, with biting, after attack, malicious disposition towards nurse, biting, and striking and doing everything to annoy her, passed her excrements on the floor’.
But even when the states are not aggressive, they are invariably active and exalted, not tranquil and peaceful. The descriptions show the great force by which the provers or patients seemed to be driven: ‘During the manic attacks, full, frequent and strong pulse, with red, inflamed eyes, wild looks and incoherent talking, and always ended with perspiration’. ‘Incoherent, delirious talking’. ‘Delusion as though he were a commanding military officer’. ‘Exalted and ecstatic mind’.
In addition, specific fears are very frequent in Cuprum people, sometimes also general fearfulness. The fears may be connected with great restlessness, also with profound sadness; paroxysms of fear of death; great anxiety, with uneasy tossing about in bed.
‘Throws himself restlessly about, with constant uneasiness’. There is a prominent fear of people who approach the patient, of strangers, of every kind of company, even a fear of imaginary people. ‘Fixed idea that he sees court officials who are about to bring him to trial, causing great anxiety in him; he began to cry and lament’.