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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2225

Kent adds that cough after eating or drinking something cold is typical of Drosera.
Jahr mentions in his Codex of Symptoms: dry spasmodic cough, attended by gagging; whooping-cough, with bleeding from mouth and nose, anxiety, blueness of face, whistling breathing and suffocative attacks; haemoptysis, with expectoration of bright red and foamy (or else of black and clotted) blood.
‘If the pertussis is fully developed, the patient has not enough time to inspire regularly on account of the quick succession of the coughing spells, which entails danger of suffocation; if the cough is excited by a crawling and tickling in the larynx and the child is frequently disturbed in his sleep after midnight by the coughing spells; if blood comes from mouth and nose, and during the day the cough is excited by singing, laughing, weeping, mental emotions, etc…’ (Hartmann).
As soon as the patient wakes from sleep because of the cough, usually perspiration sets in (Hering), either general perspiration or else confined to the forehead, and frequently cold sweat.
‘In cases where the cough has been lasting for several weeks, steadily increasing, coming on night and day, usually in intervals of one or two hours, so violent that the patients were hardly able to get their breath; at the end of an attack, they vomited a great quantity of tough mucus mixed with food, with the head pressed against the wall; often the face looked bloated’ (Bethmann).
‘Whooping-cough, most violent after midnight, with bouts in quick succession that produce a clear sound and prevent from getting one’s breath; with bluish-blackish face, sensation of constriction in chest and hypochondria, compelling to press upon it with the hand, bleeding from nose and mouth, aggravated by drinking and tobacco smoke, ending in vomiting, first of food, then of mucus’ (Bönninghausen).
Another remarkable guiding symptom that was discovered and repeatedly observed by Schroen: ‘If the paroxysm of cough is preceded, in an interval of 15–20 minutes, by a rattling caused by ascending or descending mucus in the bronchia, a phenomenon that the patients believe to be the sole reason for the coughing spell’.
The taste of the sputa may be bitter or salty; in the morning it tastes nasty and