The most marked and persistent symptoms of this drug are the nausea and vomiting; they generally accompany the respiratory troubles.
It has been used for gastralgia and dyspepsia, for the nausea and vomiting of pregnancy, especially if with the nausea there are extreme faintness and sinking at the pit of the stomach.
Dr. Cooper has reported in the Monthly Hom. Review for Dec., 1888, some remarkable cases of chronic diarrhoea and vaginal discharges, in which the tincture of Lob. had entirely failed, but the extract with acetic acid produced wonderful results; these cannot be accepted as a contribution to Lob., since it may fairly be assumed that acetic acid, which we are beginning to appreciate as a great antipsoric remedy, bore an important part in the cures mentioned.
Bronchitis and asthma, with very great oppression of the chest, as if it were full of blood, which seems to stagnate, > moving about.
Spasmodic croup, with nausea, vomiting and threatening suffocation.