Neuralgic headaches.
Bursting headaches or bruised feeling in the head, with symptoms of indigestion.
The most characteristic indication in the head is the bruised or crushed feeling extending into the root of the tongue, with nausea and vomiting.
Granulations of the lids are reported cured by the instillation of the dilutions.
Subacute inflammation of the cornea, with intense pain and great photophobia.
Extremely valuable in pistular conjunctivitis, especially in children.
Inflammation of the eyes, with tearing painand gushes of tears.
Violent neuralgia of the eyeballs, shooting into the head, with gushes of tears, nausea, etc.
Catarrh or acute coryza, with frequent haemorrhages from the nose, associated with bronchial catarrh, loss of smell, etc.
The gastric symptoms generally are indicated by persistent nausea and aversion to all food; this nausea accompanies the various haemorrhages which call for Ipec.
The vomiting is generally free, consisting largely of mucus, sometimes of blood.
The nausea and vomiting are more frequently the result of nervous irritability than of inflammation of the stomach, so that the drug has often relieved the distressing symptoms of pregnancy; the nausea is a marked indication for the drug in malarial fevers, etc.
Gastric catarrh from injudicious eating or drinking, with white-coated tongue, or sometimes with perfectly clean tongue.
Obstinate vomiting of blood (Ferr., Phos.), extremities cold, countenance hippocratic, pulse feeble, the ejecta sometimes black , tarlike.
Green mucous diarrhoea.
Dysentery, in some cases with dark, pitchlike blood.
Autumnal diarrhoea, green or fermented light-yellow stools.
Cholera infantum, stools light green, with nausea and vomiting.
With the diarrhoea frequently flatulent colic and a distressed relaxed feeling in the abdomen, with the peculiar nausea and vomiting of the drug.
Cholera infantum with green, frothy stools, colic, hot head, etc.
Haematuria, especially from the kidneys, with nausea and cutting pains.
Menstruation very early and profuse, bright red, with colic and nausea.
Threatening miscarriage, with bright red blood and cutting colic.
Haemorrhage following miscarriage or parturition, with persistent nausea, faintness and gasping for breath.
Haemorrhage in placenta previa.
Spasm of the glottis, with rapid alternations of contraction and relaxation of the vocal cords.
Spasmodic asthma.
Capillary bronchitis of infantus, with mucous rales, spasmodic cough, vomiting (the patient is not so prostrated and cold as when requiring tartar emetic).
Bronchitis, with great accumulation of mucus, especially in the larger tubes, violent paroxysms of coughing, retching and vomiting and expectoration of large quantities of mucus.
Cough, with threatening suffocation.
Violent spasmodic cough, sometimes quite dry, caused by suffocative feeling as from sulphur fumes, the patient becomes blue in the face, with coughing (Cupr.).
Whooping cough, with retching and vomiting (Cupr.).
Whooping cough, so violent that the child seems to lose its breath entirely and has haemorrhages from the nose or from the lungs.
Haemorrhages from the lungs in tubercular cases, with gasping for breath.
Haemorrhages from the lungs, with sensation of bubbling in the chest and expectoration of frothy mucus.
It has been found valuable in intermittent fever, the paroxysms characterized by persistent nausea, especially with the chill and fever, frequently with raging headaches, nearly always with great thirst, but the water taken is apt to be vomited; it is to be compared with Eupatorium; Eupat., however, lacks the persistent nausea of Ipec. and Ipec. lacks the bone-pains of Eupat.; besides the paroxysms of Eupat. are only partially developed, while those of Ipec. are perfectly developed, as a rule.
(They are very similar.).