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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2140

calves, the soles, the toes, so violent that they are compelled to moan and groan, and these cramps prevent intercourse.
The voice is also altered by cramping. The vocal cords con- tract, and sometimes the sound that comes out sounds like the
‘bellowing of a calf’ as Hering says. Hahnemann mentions a ‘crying like croaking of frogs’ or else ‘like a child’.
Pertussis (whooping-cough) and other spasmodic coughs, mak- ing the patient totally breathless and finally cyanotic, are also seen. There is a remarkable modality that is stressed by Bönninghausen in his book about pertussis: drinking cold water ameliorates. ‘Cold water especially will relieve the spasm, and so the mother soon gets into the habit of hurrying for a glass of cold water, and the child also knows, if it has tried it once, that a glass of cold water will relieve it’ (Kent).
Spasmodic asthma may be Cuprum, if the attacks tend to come at
3 am. It will give you the impression that this asthma has nothing to do with an inflammation of the bronchi, but is a purely spasmodic state, which has its source in the vagus nerve. Cuprum is suited to very severe forms of asthma. Like the other Cuprum cramps, the asthma may also be triggered by emotional stimuli, which ‘strike right through’ to the physical level (compare Arnica). Attacks of asthma or whooping-cough may be preceded by ‘great anxiety’ or
‘alternation of gaiety and depression’.
A strange symptom: ‘Audible gurgling of drink down the throat, while drinking’.
Cuprum may be useful in menstrual cramps, before or during menstrual bleeding, but especially when the menses fail to appear, and cramps come instead.