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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2275

one to three hours before chill; knows chill is coming because he cannot drink enough’. During the hot stage of the fever, the patient seems to burn all over; sometimes he has a feeling of electric sparks from his skin. ‘Burning in the top of the head, his feet burn and his skin burns’.
Finally, Eupatorium patients tend to restlessness, especially in connection with the severe bone pain; very different from Bryonia patients who otherwise have much in common with them. ‘Very restless with the pains, cannot keep still, although there is great desire to do so’. Kent puts it like this: ‘The patient desires to keep still, but the pain is so severe that he must move and so he appears restless’.
So this is a physical restlessness, caused by pain, not a mental restlessness. It is connected with moaning and groaning, crying out and anxiety, but especially with profound and overwhelming sadness and despair. In Berridge’s proving this characteristic symptom was elicited: ‘Could not lie in bed on account of a feel- ing as if every bone was bruised, which caused a feeling of despair, moaning, and crying out’.
Depression, even amounting to despair, is reported several times in reports of cured cases, and Kent emphasises the sadness of Eupatorium by contrast to the irritability of Nux vomica. This mental symptom may contribute to a differential diagnosis in cases where great sensitivity to cold, severe bone pain and desire for warm covering are present, symptoms that are shared by Nux-v. and Eupatorium.
This combination of physical restlessness with profound sadness is an essential feature in Eupatorium. Another mental symptom is an amelioration, mainly of pain, by diversion, especially by conversation with other people. For instance, in Williamson’s proving, a headache was relieved by conversation.