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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2307

of equal importance. A cough which occurs mainly at night will not be cured by Euphrasia; but a coryza which is worse by day may well be cured by the remedy if the symptoms agree. ‘Fluent coryza during the day, stopped during the night’.
It is fairly common that lachrymation and fluent coryza are worse in the open air than in a room, and indeed there are several obser- vations on record that the eyes were very sensitive to open air, especially to cold air and wind, and of course also to sunlight, in Euphrasia cases, but this is by no means a general modality. The characteristic frontal headaches are usually ameliorated in the open air, and the patient himself is generally better when not in a closed room. Although cough, coryza, and eye symptoms will frequently be aggravated by exposure to the open air, the opposite is also possible; Euphrasia cases with a definite aggravation of all complaints in a closed room are by no means rare.
Euphrasia also has a marked action upon voice and speech: the voice easily becomes hoarse, especially in the morning. There may be a strange sensation of tightness in the larynx as if it were compressed. Much mucus is lodged in the throat, which sometimes is expectorated in great quantities by hawking; but in other cases the hawking seems to be impeded or suppressed, and if the patient tries to clear his throat and get rid of the disturbing mucus, he may gag and even vomit his last meal.
But the problem is not only seated in the larynx and the respiratory organs. The cheeks and lips can also be affected; they may become stiff and hard, preventing the patient from speaking. The upper lip may become stiff in paroxysms, so much so that it seems to be made of wood; it is like a spasm that makes articulate speech definitely impossible for a short time.
There are a number of fever conditions where Euphrasia may be indicated. In the first place, measles should be mentioned here,