cold and warm air’. The symptoms are excessively increased from cold air, especially the headache. Open air is experienced as ‘too cold’ even when it is warm. ‘I am really dazed when I go outside during the lunch hour; it seems as if I can’t tolerate the open air’.
There is much aggravation from coffee, alcohol, tobacco and other drugs. ‘Marked intolerance of wine; feels exalted and excited after a single glass’. (But also much thirst for cold drinks, especially beer; Hahnemann.)
Bonninghausen observed another interesting general modality that should be taken into consideration: ‘Sleep at night undisturbed, feels much better at night than by day’.
A striking peculiarity of Cocculus is a muscular relaxation with a feeling of heaviness which may amount to paralysis and fainting. With this sluggishness (which also affects the mind) an excessive sensitivity to external impressions may coincide, however. Some¬times the patient’s nervous system is simply not able to absorb and integrate the sensual impressions fast enough, and just this lack of ability to accommodate is the reason for the oversensitivity and uneasiness.
‘His knees sink down from weakness; he totters while walking and threatens to fall to one side’. There are attacks of paralytic weakness, with pain in the back. Some examples of related symptoms:
Painful stiffness in the joints;
Great weakness, so that it was difficult to stand firmly;
Hemiplegia, more on the left side;
Faintness on moving the body, with spasmodic distortion of the muscles of the face.
The sensory nerves may also be affected by relaxation and weak¬ening. In this case, we have numbness and paraesthesia in different