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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2115

he lies down in bed, the fear of suffocation and the cough return. If there is a skin eruption, as described above, in combination or alternation with this peculiar cough, Croton is likely to be indicated.
The ‘suffocative cough’ may be accompanied by a piercing or drawing pain extending from the chest (usually the left side) backward, straight through to the shoulder blade. This pain has been described as though a string were attached to the chest and as though the chest were pulled backward by this string. However, the ‘string feeling’ with the pain that draws backward is not confined to the respiratory organs alone.
It can also be experienced in the breasts during lactation: ‘Every time the child nurses, there is an excruciating pain from the nipple through to the scapula’. Or it may be found in the region of the eyes, especially in ciliary neuralgia: ‘Sensation as of a string pulling eyeball back into head’. It has also been observed in the umbilical region, a drawing inward and backward similar to that in Plumbum. The ‘string feeling’ is a general symptom that may occur in every part of the body. In neuralgia it appears from the pupil of the eye to the back of the head.
Croton has a tendency to fainting and weak spells, often coupled with vertigo, nausea and ascending heat.
A modality: a number of symptoms are worse when lying down (the suffocative feeling, pain, etc.), but if the patient is able to rest and sleep, he will, in general, feel ameliorated.
Vertigo and Head
Dizziness and dullness of the head, with nausea; she goes into the open air but is only aggravated by it; looks pale, feels weary and prostrated.
The head is confused, befogged and heavy, with a feeling of dullness. These