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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2118

Mouth
Bad taste in the mouth, with a clammy, nasty feeling.
Sensitivity of the tip of the tongue. ‘Sensation and taste at the tip of the tongue electrically sensitive and sweetish-bitter’. ‘Ticking, annoying and painful sensation at the tip of the tongue, with an insipid taste’. Swelling of the submandibular gland, painful to the touch.
Throat
Redness and elongation of the uvula.
Swelling of the tonsils, which are painful upon external pressure. Dryness of the pharynx, with an irritation as if from inflammation. Sensation as though the throat were constricted.
Extremely unpleasant scraping sensation in the pharynx, which cannot be removed or neutralised.
A continuous and irresistible impulse to swallow saliva, with a sensitive pain deep in the oesophagus as though a little ball is being pushed out on the left side; it disappears after drinking cold water.
Respiration
Chronic hoarseness with chronic inflammation of the larynx and trachea. Aphonia after measles or after a cold. For example: loss of voice after drinking cold water while overheated, lasting for years; perfect articulation, but toneless, cannot utter even one loud word.
Sensation as though one cannot get air. ‘He feels as though the air could not penetrate deep enough into the cells’. ‘He feels as though the lung did not expand on inspiration’.
Extreme irritation of the air passages so that the inhalation of air, especially deep inspiration, brings on a cough.
Cough with dyspnoea. The cough usually occurs at night, often waking him from sleep. The patient loses his breath, he is unable to remain lying in bed and has to jump out; first he walks the floor, later he becomes tired but is still unable to lie down because of his fear of suffocation; he has to sit in a chair or stay propped up in bed in order to cough; later he falls asleep in a sitting