•Perspiration of the face or beginning on the face is a valuable confirmatory symptom of this remedy.
•Stomach emptiness unrelieved by eating; stomach distress induc-
ing deep breathing and sighing.
•Sensation of constriction or a lump in the throat after grief, when trying to express emotions.
•Aversion to fruit.
•Cannot bear cigarette smoke.
Generals
Ignatia is full of surprises you see an inflamed part where there is heat, redness, throbbing, and weakness; you will handle it with great care for fear it will be painful. Ordinarily you have a perfect right to expect it would be painful. But you find it is not painful, and some- times ameliorated by hard pressure. Is not that a surprise? You look into the throat. It is tumid, inflamed, red; the patient complaints of a sore throat and pain. Naturally you will not touch it with your tongue depressor for fear it will hurt. You have every reason to suppose that the swallowing of solids will be painful. But you ask the patient when the pain is present, and the patient will say: When I am not swallowing anything solid. The pain is ameliorated by swallowing anything solid, by the pressure. It pains all other times. The opposite of what would be expected, will be found. The patient is better ly- ing on the painful side, instead of increasing the pain, it relieves the pain. (Kent)
Nervous affections of all kinds, worse at the menstrual period. Trembling of the whole body with itching and frightful convulsive twitchings (vellicationibus), in the jaws so that the mouth is distorted as though he were laughing. Constant motion of body. Jerks and twitches through the whole body; in the evening on going to sleep. Twitching and quivering in single muscular parts. Emotional