Chorea and chorea-like twitchings, neuralgia and various troubles due to weak irritable nerves, with an irritable, anaemic spine, frequently find their remedy in Agaricus.
General aggravation from walking in the open air and relief from being warm in bed predominate.
There is no evidence of any chrong constitutional dyscrasia, such as underlies epilepsy.
Tremor and tremulous tongue in low fever, with delirium and attempts to get out of bed.
Vertigo from the sun.
Severe neuralgic headaches mostly in small spots, sharp piercing pain as from a nail (Ign.).
Dull headache from prolonged desk-work.
An exceedingly valuable remedy in asthenopia from prolonged strain, spasm of accommodation (Physostig.), twitching of eyes and lids; weakness of the muscles, with “swimming” of the type; myopia, with chronic chorioiditis.
The subjective symptoms are extremely interesting, but there are very few clinical verifications; the frost-bitten sensation is, however, characteristic here as elsewhere.
Spasm of the muscles of the pinna of the ear, especially of the attollens, persistent spasms, so that they attracted attention.
The neuralgic prosopalgia of Agaricus is electriclike, as of splinters between skin and flesh, mostly in the infraorbital nerve, and along the jaws.
The symptoms of the lips are very marked, and have been nearly all verified.
These eruptions about the mosth have been repeatedly cured in growing children given to jerkings, licking the lips, and with more or less chorea-like symptoms.
The symptoms of irritation in the nose, and the spasmodic sneezing as well as the discharge of pure,water from nostrils without inflammatory symptoms, all point to its use in nervous complaints, with these peculiarities (whooping cough, chorea, etc.).
Neuralgic toothache < in open air.
Neuralgic, splinter-like pains in tongue, with salivation.
The gastro-enteric symptoms are due to an acute catarrhal inflammation with severe sharp pains, often with purging or only with great flatulence.
The profuse inodorous flatus is often found in the nervous affections requiring Agaricus.
The pains in the region of the liver may indicate the drug in hepatic disease, but probably not in an acute inflammation.
The nervous invalid who requires Agaricus usually passes little urine (unlike Ignatia), though the bladder may be irritable.
Violent spasmodic dysmenorrhoea, with terrible bearing-down pains.
Itching of genitals, neuralgic pains in pudenda.
Spasmodic, convulsive, nervous cough, which may provoke a secondary haemorrhage.
Most of the sensations are of a neuralgic character, but many seem to be dependent on the abnormal circulation in the lungs, caused by Agaricus.
(Dyspnoea caused by contracted bloodvessels and unoxygenized blood.).
The pains are mostly aggravated by exercise and after eating.
Spasmodic cough at night after falling asleep.
(Night-sweats in phthisis.
Laryngeal catarrh, with expectoration of small hard lumps (Stan.) and soreness in larynx.).
A valuable remedy for irregular tumultuous palpitation, especially for the irritable heart of tea and coffee drinkers and of tabacco-smokers (compare Arsenic and Spigelia).
Symptoms of spinal irritation, with pains, often dull but usually sharp, sticking, with excessive sensitiveness of the spine to touch, most severe in upper dorsal region, have been repeatedly verified.
Lumbago, with a host of severe muscular pains, all worse on walking in the open air.
Neuralgic pains, sharp, shooting, as if under the skin, often shifting from place, worse on motion.
Sensations as if a part (especially of feet) had been frozen and was burning on being restored.
Neuralgia in locomotor ataxia.
The sensations in the skin are due apparently to a pure neurosis and not to any tissue change in the skin itself.
The burning itching and redness as after a frost-bite are the chief characteristic indications.