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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2141

Convulsive Attacks
As mentioned above, Cuprum may have practically any sort of spasmic affection. Convulsions after irritation and especially after a fright are particularly known. Clarke quotes a case of a boy who became epileptic after being locked up in school. And in a ‘classic’ case of Bethmann, a girl developed chorea after she had seen a convulsive fit in another child, being frightened by the sight.
‘Ailments of nerves, with too acute and sensitive senses’ (Hahnemann).
The spasmodic affections often return in ‘irregular attacks of similar groups of symptoms’, as Hahnemann says, and he gives examples for such a group of symptoms: ‘palpitation of the heart, vertigo, cough, haemoptysis, painful contraction of the chest, loss of breath’. Cyanosis, with blue discolouration of face and body, is often a concomitant of convulsive fits.
Well-confirmed is also that generalised spasms begin in the extremities, especially in the fingers and toes. Clarke also mentions the cure of a tonic spasm of the toes of the right foot, lasting for hours every time. In this case, the spasm remained confined to the region of the toes. Another location of spasms and cramping pain is the region of chest and abdomen, especially the solar plexus; cramps beginning in the fingers and toes or else in the knees and spreading towards the solar plexus.
Hering writes in Gynaecology and Obstetrics: ‘Chorea, or other clonic spasms, during pregnancy, when attacks are always coupled with certain other Cuprum symptoms or when they commence in one part – a finger, or a limb – and gradually extend until the whole frame is involved… Violent cramps in uterine region, in pit of stomach, fingers and toes’.