heavily, as through a metallic tube, into the stomach, which trembles violently’.
Liquids pass down the oesophagus with a gurgling noise.
Burning in the throat, as from a mustard plaster inside at the throat pit, in the morning when swallowing; worse by hot things, better by cold things. Inflammation of the tonsils; swallowing of solids as well as of liquids very painful, almost impossible; external throat very sensitive to touch.
Inflammation of the nasopharynx, especially with greenish membranes and subjectively disagreeable odour. ‘The posterior wall of the throat is covered with a dry, greenish-yellow membrane, wrinkled and fissured, extending to posterior nares; occasionally portions are detached and expel- led from nose or mouth, leaving a raw, corrugated surface’. If the patient has fever and his skin is hot and dry, he will constantly complain that he feels cold.
Respiration and Heart
Noise as from shutting of a valve in trachea, causing a column of air to rush into the pharynx.
Easily loses his breath, especially when going upstairs; this chronic ailment completely disappeared during Mure’s proving.
Feeling of a heavy load on the chest.
Violent paroxysms of a dry cough, ending in expectoration of black blood; with frightful pain throughout the lungs as if they were torn out, especially in the right upper portion of the chest.
Expectoration of black blood with a painful tearing that seems to come from the heart.
Dry cough in frequent and constantly recurring paroxysms, after suddenly catching cold.
Lancination in the apex of each lung, but especially in the right.
Very painful pulling in the right side of the chest, therefore patient cannot incline to the right side.
A feeling of coldness in the chest after drinking. Mure describes a particularly strange sensation in this context: ‘As if ice-water were rising and falling through a cylindrical opening in left lung’, which also occurred after