especially if the conjunctivitis is very marked. The symptoms correspond best with the first stage of measles (before the exanthema appears), with photophobia, much discharge of mucus from the eyelids and violent fluent coryza; if the discharge from the eyes is acrid and the coryza is bland, and cough is present which is much better during the night, Euphrasia will most probably be indicated. If the exanthema does not ‘come out’ to the surface as it should, Euphrasia may support its outbreak and mitigate and shorten the course of the disease – if the symptoms agree.
Euphrasia may also be adapted to ‘catarrhal fevers’, colds with involvement of the eyes, and influenza.
Vertigo and Head
Dizzy feeling and heaviness in head on waking, with nausea and perspiration;
vertigo to falling sideways, aggravated by every motion.
Headaches with catarrh of eyes and nose; profuse discharges, watery or mucous. Usually the pain is a dull frontal ache, seated near the root of the nose, generally ameliorated in the open air and by cool applications. Boring gnawing pain in the frontal sinuses, apparently coming from the eyes.
Very violent headache as if beaten, with fluent coryza; the patient has to lie down because he is exhausted but the headache is even aggravated in that position.
Headache with dazzling from sunlight, as though the skull would burst. Or else: throbbing headache, very violent, the throbbing may be felt externally; with great photophobia and red eyes, in measles.
Half-sided tearing headaches, especially above one eye, in the region of the eyebrow; in ophthalmia. The pain may extend to the middle of the forehead, gradually becoming pressive.
Stitching pain, felt in the brain. They are worse indoors and ameliorated in the open air; also relieved by laying a cool hand upon the temple.