through the nostrils, but also backward through the posterior nares; it is usually not irritating. Also pain and soreness of the inside of the nose; sometimes also a great feeling of dryness inside, together with the same sensation in the eyes.
Often the frontal sinuses are involved, and there may be ‘painful confusion’ in the head and pressive frontal headaches, especially near the root of the nose. ‘Pressive cutting pains in the eyes, spreading to the frontal sinuses in the form of a boring gnawing pain’.
The cough of this remedy is most remarkable because of one modality: it occurs only during the day or is at least much more severe during the day; ‘at night he has no cough’ (Hahne- mann) or very little cough. The cough is especially ameliorated by lying down, which is even true of the dyspnoea in many cases. A case of Gross: ‘At night there was no cough, but from the moment he rose from his bed to the moment he lay down again, he was almost unable to catch his breath, a perm- anent tickling in the trachea constantly excited the cough’.
‘Cough almost exclusively during the day, none by night; but the general state of health aggravated in the evening’ (Bönninghausen). In some cases there has even been observed an aggravation of the coryza at night and while lying down. This has led Kent to state that the Euphrasia cough furnishes a ‘very rare group of symptoms’: cough with difficult breathing and profuse expectoration, with coryza or following after it; cough and dyspnoea ameliorated at night and from lying down, whereas the coryza is aggravated at night and from lying down. A case of influenza or common cold with these para- doxical modalities will probably yield to Euphrasia, especially if the eyes are also affected.
While the cough only during the day is a very well-confirmed symptom of this remedy, the nocturnal aggravation of coryza is not