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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2310

brightly, sometimes more dimly’. Letters seem to run together, while reading. Some clinical descriptions: ‘Ophthalmia: swelling and agglutination of lids, eyes injected, slimy discharge from them, mixed with blood, fluent coryza during the day, stopped coryza during the night’
‘Inflammation of the eyes with acrid, biting lachrymation and photophobia’ (Bönninghausen).
‘If there is much pressure in the eyes, discharge of much mucus or smarting tears, if the lids contract, if the whole eye is very red; with severe headache and coryza, worse in the evening’ (Hering).
Catarrhal ophthalmia. ‘Chemosis, reddened conjunctivae; constant lach- rymation; discharge of an acrid liquid, clear as water, from the nose; photophobia, has to stay in a dark room; pressive cutting pain in the eyes, spreading to the frontal sinuses in the form of a boring gnawing pain; ulcers of cornea’ (Weigel).
Conjunctivitis after getting a cold; insupportable itching, painful feeling as from grains of sand, lachrymation and photophobia.
‘Ophthalmia with agglutination in morning; burning, itching and smarting pain; cold air and wind cause lachrymation; worse by artificial light’.
Hay fever: with sensation of foreign body, itching and feeling of dryness in eyes; with swelling of the region of the eyes and burning tears excoriating the skin of the face; with severe photophobia.
‘Streaming of hot, burning tears from eyes, with great photophobia; profuse running from nose without burning; cough only during day; measles’.
‘Spots, vesicles and ulcers on cornea; pannus’.
Alternation of eye complaints and abdominal pain; ophthalmia and dimness of cornea after disappearance of gouty symptoms in a foot; ‘with suppressed or disturbed menses, inflammation of the eyes, which are bathed in tears’ (Hering).
Nose
Sneezing with profuse fluent coryza, much mucus is discharged, both through the nostrils and through the posterior nares. Usually the eyes are simultaneously affected, with redness, swelling, and lachrymation. The nasal discharge is usually bland, as opposed to the acrid discharge from