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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2312

Respiration
‘The voice is somewhat hoarse in the morning’. Or else: no hoarseness in the evening, in spite of reading aloud for a long time.
Colds wandering downward from the nose into the larynx, with hard cough. Much mucus in the throat. Either there is frequent expectoration by voluntary hawking, or the mucus is detached only with great difficulty. Trying to clear the throat may even cause gagging and vomiting. The easiest time for expectoration seems to be in the morning.
When going upstairs, violent cough, caused by a tickling in the larynx.
Cough with mucus in the chest that can hardly be detached. The cough is often connected with loss of breath (‘almost as in whooping cough’) and nearly exclusively occurs during the day; whereas at night, while lying in bed, it is much relieved or totally absent.
Bönninghausen recommends the remedy in the following condition: ‘Paroxy- smal cough, like whooping cough, caused by much watery mucus in throat and chest which tastes insipid and is sometimes mingled with blood; the mucus is detached only with difficulty, and expectoration is only possible in the morning. The cough occurs almost exclusively during the day, no cough at night; but the general state of health is worse in the evening’.
Kent directs special attention to cases where the coryza is worse during the night and while lying down, but the cough is better under the same circumstances; these cases should be cured by Euphrasia.
Gross relates a cured case of cough alternating with haemorrhoids: ‘An old forest-officer, who was prone to catch a cough, lost his haemorrhoids which had been bleeding profusely and regularly every four weeks. After about a year the following condition was arrived at: 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 permanent tickling in the trachea constantly excited the cough; it was aggravated by tobacco smoke and was only absent while eating; the irritation to cough could be suppressed by drinking little sips of beer or water’. Euphrasia quickly improved this condition, soon the cough totally disap- peared – and the haemorrhoids returned!
Respiration may be markedly impaired: ‘Laboured inspiration, even in