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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2148

full-blown pectoral spasm arises. During the very short, anxious, whistling and difficult, strained respiration, the guy sits in bed bent forward, expector- ating white mucus all the time which after some standing dissolves into a watery liquid; with this, heat and perspiration over whole body; soreness of abdomen, especially hypochondria. When this state is relieved after some hours, a spasmodic cough comes on, similar to whooping-cough, with a feeling of great emptiness and weakness in the pit of the stomach’.
Spasms of the diaphragm with very short breath, as after running fast, and with constant up-and-down motion of the abdominal muscles and the thorax; better while lying down.
Cuprum is an important remedy in several spasmodic forms of cough but especially in whooping cough ‘in its most malignant forms’ (Bönning- hausen). Some characteristics of Cuprum in whooping cough: great anxiety may precede the attack; children become rigid and stiff from coughing (compare Cina), lose their breath, become blue in the face, and in addition, twitching appears; sometimes the paroxysms are provoked by eating solid foods, with consequent vomiting, also usually of solid foods, sometimes also with convulsions; between the paroxysms of cough, rattling of mucus; amelioration by drinking cold water.
The cough itself is described by Bönninghausen like this: ‘Whooping-cough in long attacks, uninterrupted until breath is gone; paroxysms excited by phlegm in trachea, or a feeling of cramp in throat; cough dry in evening, but in the morning frequently expectoration of small quantities of phlegm mixed with dark blood, of putrid taste and smell’. The interruption, even suppression of respiration by the cough is characteristic of Cuprum; cough with suffocative attacks and gagging. The paroxysms may last a very long time, in spite of their intensity; Hahnemann mentions attacks of half an hour up to two hours’ duration.
‘Violent but dry cough, with a tearing pain in the head, coming on at night between 11 pm. and 1 am.; the cough was followed by violent palpitation of the heart, lasting several minutes’.
Cough with blowing of blood from nose.
In the chest, especially the lower chest, in the region of the processus xiphoideus of the sternum: cramp-like pain, either like a contraction or constriction, or as though the chest were transfixed to the spine by a