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Materia Medica Viva Volume 12 – page 2594

Larynx And Trachea
Sensitiveness of larynx to cold air. Croup after exposure to cold, dry wind or cold air, worse towards morning and in the evening until midnight; with great dryness of the larynx and the respiratory passages and whistling respiration; with swelling below the larynx; with rattling of moist mucus which is difficult to cough up; spasmodic; cough ending with a short sneeze. Frequently recurring paroxysms of violent croupy cough with anxious and noisy respiration, and such great dyspnoea that the patient grasps his larynx. Croupy cough, with rattling in chest, but without expectoration. Laryngitis with tickling and roughness, hoarseness or aphonia; larynx and trachea sensitive to touch; stitching in larynx and cough on forced inspiration. Pain in one spot of larynx worse by pressure, speech, cough and breathing. Scraping in throat causing rough, barking cough. Pressure beneath the larynx, immediately after eating, as if something were sticking in the throat. Pain in the larynx when talking, on touch, on swallowing food, aggravated by cold air or cold drinks.
Constriction of larynx during inspiration. Much green mucus in larynx. Syphilitic affections of the cartilages of the larynx. White gelatinous, sore polypi in the larynx, causing loss of voice or cracked voice, choking and uneasiness. Tracheitis with hoarse voice, violent dry painful alternating rough and hollow sounding cough, worse by eating and drinking anything cold,
by cold air, talking or crying. Chronic tracheitis (the beginning of tracheal or laryngo – tracheal phthisis). Catarrh of trachea, which becomes extremely sore from much coughing. Hoarseness; which can become chronic; from dry, cold wind. Hoarseness, weak voice during heat. Voice toneless and weak, scarcely audible in the evening.
Respiration
Rattling respiration; after eating. Whistling and wheezing with copious expectoration of mucous.
Frequent deep breathing as after running. Difficult respiration preventing sleep at night, just as he has fallen asleep he is aroused and startled by threatened suffocation and must get up to relieve the dyspnoea. Before midnight he sprang up out of sleep, called for help and felt as if he could not get his breath. Sudden attacks of suffocation with loud, whistling inspiration, bends the head back wards and gasps for breath; attacks end with a whistling, crowing sound and are followed by hoarseness. Sensation as of dust in lungs. Asthma worse from cold weather; after suppressed eruption of skin.
Cough
Hoarse, croupy cough. Paroxysms of violent croupy cough with great dyspnoea. Dry, hoarse, barking cough worse from inspiring cold air, from cold drinks,on putting hand or foot out of bed, from dry cold wind, from evening until midnight, on inspiring deeply; from tickling and roughness in larynx; with