Fever
A high feverish state with comparative absence of toxæmia.—BELLADONNA.
Abnormal sweat after influenza.—AMYLENUM NITROSUM.
Abundant sweat.—USTILAGO MAYDIS.
Aching in limbs and back, and gastric symptoms.—NUX VOMICA.
Acute fever with vomiting, nausea, water brash—TRICHOSANTHES DIO.
Acute or chronic malarial fever; temperature rises afternoon with chill and shivering; bilious vomiting with thirst and headache—TINOSPORA CORDIFOLIA.
Adynamic fevers.—BAPTISIA TINCTORIA.
Adynamic with lack of thirst, but unnatural hunger.—PHOSPHORUS.
Adynamic; restless, trembling.—RHUS TOXICODENDRON.
After perspiration, nettle rash, also with shuddering.—APIS MELLIFICA.
After remission of fever, patient feels extremely weak, disinclined to do any work even to talk, with closed eyes, likes to sleep—CAESALPINIA BONDUCELLA.
Afternoon chill, with thirst; worse on motion and heat.—APIS MELLIFICA.
All catarrhal and inflammatory fevers; first stage.—FERRUM PHOSPHORICUM.
All stages well marked.—CHINA OFFICINALIS.
Alternate flashes of heat in single parts.—MERCURIUS SOLUBILIS.
Alternate heat and cold; chronic intermittent fever, with pain in stomach.—ABIES NIGRA.
Alternation of coldness and heat.—SOLANUM NIGRUM.
Anguish.—CHININUM SULPHURICUM.
Anti-pyretic or febrifuge (fever killer); well indicated in dyspepsia, hyperacidity, functional inactivity of liver, flatulence, anorexia, worm troubles—GENTIANA CHIRATA or SWETIA CHIRATA.
Arctic coldness.—HELODERMA.
Attacks of chilliness with ice-coldness in back.—CASTOREUM CANADENSE.
Attacks of heat with anxiety; heat and redness of face and perspiration.—SPONGIA TOSTA.
Bad effect of quinine which causes continuation of fever with burning in hands and face; jaundice, etc.—TINOSPORA CORDIFOLIA.
Bed-sores.—MURIATICUM ACIDUM.
Bilious remittent fever, with stupor, dizziness, faintness; thirstless, prostrated.—GELSEMIUM SEMPERVIRENS.
Bitter taste.—TARAXACUM OFFICINALE.
Bloody sweat.—CROTALUS HORRIDUS.
Body bathed in profuse perspiration, standing out like beads on forehead; later, cold, clammy perspiration on forehead.—EUPHORBIA LATHYRIS.
Bone-pains.—EUPATORIUM PURPUREUM.
Bones ache during whole paroxysm.—FORMALINUM.
Burning heat; profuse sweat.—MORPHINUM.
Burning in various places.—CARBO VEGETABILIS.
Burning spots.—AGARICUS MUSCARIUS.
Burning, pungent, steaming, heat.—BELLADONNA.
Cerebro-spinal meningitis (Cicuta; Cup acet).—CROTALUS HORRIDUS.
Chill about 11 am.—BAPTISIA TINCTORIA.
Chill about 4 pm.—PULSATILLA PRATENSIS.
Chill all over; worse in bed at night.—CANCHALAGUA.
Chill at 11 am.—WYETHIA HELENOIDES.
Chill at 2 pm begins internally in stomach region.—CALCAREA CARBONICA.
Chill at 4 am.—FERRUM METALLICUM.
Chill at 4 pm.—AESCULUS HIPPOCASTANUM.
Chill at 7 am, with pain in hypochondria, and knees, ankles, wrists, Great loquacity during fever.—PODOPHYLLINUM.
Chill begins in back.—PYROGENIUM.
Chill begins in back; better, heat.—CAPSICUM ANNUUM.
Chill begins in forearm.—CARBO VEGETABILIS.
Chill begins in left hand (Carbo).—NUX MOSCHATA.
Chill between 3 and 4 pm, followed by sweat.—LYCOPODIUM CLAVATUM.
Chill between 7 and 9 am, preceded by thirst with great soreness and aching of bones.—EUPATORIUM PERFOLIATUM.
Chill between 9 and 11 am.—NATRIUM MURIATICUM.
Chill comes on with much yawning and stretching, lasting all through chill.—ELATERIUM OFFICINARUM.
Chill commences in back.—EUPATORIUM PURPUREUM.
Chill daily at 1 pm.—FERRUM PHOSPHORICUM.
Chill daily at 3 pm.—CHININUM SULPHURICUM.
Chill from 9 to 10 am.—MAGNESIUM SULPHURICUM.
Chill generally in forenoon, commencing in breast; thirst before chill, and little and often.—CHINA OFFICINALIS.
Chill predominates; from below upwards.—SABADILLA.
Chill with external coldness, dry cough, stitches.—BRYONIA ALBA.
Chill without thirst, heat with intense thirst, fever comes 5 to 10 am and subsides 3 to 4 am every alternate day—ATISTA INDICA or GLYCOSMIS PENTAPHYLLA.
Chill without thirst; dry heat with restlessness; red cheeks; flushed face; running of nose—JANOSIA or JONOSIA ASOKA or SARACA INDICA.
Chill, as if water were poured over him.—CANTHARIS VESICATORIA.
Chill, beginning in thighs.—THUJA OCCIDENTALIS.
Chill, with extreme coldness and thirst.—VERATRUM ALBUM.
Chill, with flatulent colic, nausea, vertigo, coldness of lower extremities, and heat of head.—COCCULUS INDICUS.
Chill, with rheumatic pains and soreness all over body.—BAPTISIA TINCTORIA.
Chill, with thirst; not relieved by external heat.—IGNATIA AMARA.
Chill, without thirst, along spine; wave-like, extending upward from sacrum to occiput.—GELSEMIUM SEMPERVIRENS.
Chill; worse lying down.—CIMEX LECTULARIUS.
Chilliness after dinner, in evening.—MAGNESIUM PHOSPHORICUM.
Chilliness after eating, worse drinking; finger tips cold.—TARAXACUM OFFICINALE.
Chilliness along spine, with frequent, hot flashes.—BOLETUS LARICIS.
Chilliness and heat without thirst; want of perspiration.—NUX MOSCHATA.
Chilliness and heat.—CALCAREA CARBONICA.
Chilliness evenings after lying down and on awakening, without thirst.—AMMONIUM MURIATICUM.
Chilliness of whole body.—CIMEX LECTULARIUS.
Chilliness on being uncovered, yet he does not allow being covered.—NUX VOMICA.
Chilliness on the slightest motion.—SPIGELIA.
Chilliness towards evening, mostly in back.—DULCAMARA.
Chilliness towards evening; then frontal headache extending into parietal region.—CEDRON.
Chilliness up and down back.—AESCULUS HIPPOCASTANUM.
Chilliness up and down back.—GELSEMIUM SEMPERVIRENS.
Chilliness with thirst.—DULCAMARA.
Chilliness, even in warm room, without thirst.—PULSATILLA PRATENSIS.
Chilliness, followed by sweat.—PETROLEUM.
Chilliness, single parts get icy cold.—ASARUM EUROPAEUM.
Chilliness, with nausea.—ECHINACEA ANGUSTIFOLIA.
Chilliness, with perspiration, and heat of skin.—COCCULUS INDICUS.
Chilliness.—PHOSPHORICUM ACIDUM.
Chilliness; cold sweat.—BENZOICUM ACIDUM.
Chilliness; very sensitive to cold air.—SILICEA TERRA.
Chills and fever, with spurting diarrhœa.—ELATERIUM OFFICINARUM.
Chills in forenoon, followed by long fever.—FORMALINUM.
Chills run down back.—ABIES CANADENSIS.
Chills run up and down the back, with shivering, followed by a suffocating sensation.—MAGNESIUM PHOSPHORICUM.
Chills up and down back; coldness of legs, hands, and forearms.—MEDORRHINUM.
Chills with nausea.—ARGENTUM NITRICUM.
Chills, with cold sweat.—TABACUM.
Chills.—MORPHINUM.
Chilly and cold.—EUPHRASIA OFFICINALIS.
Chilly day and night; always worse during rain.—ARANEA DIADEMA.
Chilly even in warm room.—ANTIMONIUM CRUDUM.
Chilly every evening with night sweats; also useful in consumption and other lung affections attended with cough and hectic fever—JUSTICIA ADHATODA.
Chilly every evening.—PHOSPHORUS.
Chilly from slightest exposure.—MERCURIUS CORROSIVUS.
Chilly if uncovered or touched.—ACONITUM NAPELLUS.
Chilly in back and down spine, followed by fever, little sweat.—CONVALLARIA MAJALIS.
Chilly in back; feet icy cold; hot flushes and hot perspiration.—LACHESIS MUTUS.
Chilly in evening.—MAGNESIUM CARBONICUM.
Chilly in open air or from slightest draught.—HEPAR SULPHUR.
Chilly in open air.—PHYSALIS ALKEKENGI.
Chilly when uncovered, yet feels smothered if wrapped up.—ARGENTUM NITRICUM.
Chilly with pains, in spots, worse evening.—PULSATILLA PRATENSIS.
Chilly, as if cold water were poured over him, followed by heat and inclination to stretch the limbs.—RHUS TOXICODENDRON.
Chilly, cannot endure cold.—ARSENICUM IODATUM.
Chilly; must be covered in every stage of fever.—NUX VOMICA.
Chronic slow fever with history of gonorrhea and weakness due to seminal loss—TINOSPORA CORDIFOLIA.
Cold chills down spine.—STRYCHNINUM PURUM.
Cold extremities, even in a warm room.—SILICEA TERRA.
Cold extremities.—MURIATICUM ACIDUM.
Cold extremities.—ZINCUM METALLICUM.
Cold flashes all over back.—ECHINACEA ANGUSTIFOLIA.
Cold hands and feet; cold sweat.—CANTHARIS VESICATORIA.
Cold hands, feet, back, knees.—BENZOICUM ACIDUM.
Cold knees at night.—PHOSPHORUS.
Cold perspiration all over.—ELAPS CORALLINUS.
Cold perspiration.—CAMPHORA.
Cold rings around body.—HELODERMA.
Cold sensation in various parts, as if spattered with cold water.—BERBERIS VULGARIS.
Cold sensation internally, with chattering of teeth until noon.—RADIUM BROMATUM.
Cold shivering, as if blood were ice-water (Acon).—ABIES CANADENSIS.
Cold spots.—HELODERMA.
Cold stage most marked.—ACONITUM NAPELLUS.
Cold stage predominates.—NUX VOMICA.
Cold sweat and icy coldness of face.—ACONITUM NAPELLUS.
Cold sweat on forehead, nose, and hands.—CINA MARITIMA.
Cold sweats.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Cold sweats.—CROTALUS HORRIDUS.
Cold water feeling between shoulders (Ammon mur).—ABIES CANADENSIS.
Cold waves (Abies c; Acon).—HELODERMA.
Cold waves pass through him.—ACONITUM NAPELLUS.
Cold, clammy sweat, with great faintness.—ANTIMONIUM TARTARICUM.
Coldness and chilliness.—PYROGENIUM.
Coldness and heat alternate.—ACONITUM NAPELLUS.
Coldness in back and icy-cold hands.—CACTUS GRANDIFLORUS.
Coldness lasts long with nausea and bile vomiting; hot stage lasts for 3 to 4 hours, then sweating stage appears; desire for hot water after cold stage—GENTIANA CHIRATA or SWETIA CHIRATA.
Coldness of the body, and continued chilliness very marked.—NATRIUM MURIATICUM.
Coldness predominates; cold sweat, with great anguish.—CACTUS GRANDIFLORUS.
Coldness predominates; felt most acutely in abdomen and legs and tip of nose.—MENYANTHES TRIFOLIATA.
Coldness with intense pallor.—COCAINUM HYDROCHLORICUM.
Coldness, great sensitiveness to open air; shuddering in back, skin feels warm to touch.—CALENDULA OFFICINALIS.
Coldness, trembling, and chilliness.—ANTIMONIUM TARTARICUM.
Coldness, want of animal heat.—LEDUM PALUSTRE.
Coldness, with ill-humor.—CAPSICUM ANNUUM.
Coldness, with pain in long bones, and feeling of stone in abdomen at the same hour daily.—ARANEA DIADEMA.
Coldness, with thirst.—CARBO VEGETABILIS.
Coldness; chills and heat alternate.—LAUROCERASUS.
Coldness; cold, dry skin; cold, clammy sweat; excessive thirst.—SECALE CORNUTUM.
Complete exhaustion.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Congestive chill.—CAMPHORA.
Constantly chilly towards evening.—OLEUM JECORIS ASELLI.
Continued and typhoid fevers.—EUCALYPTUS GLOBULUS.
Continuous, with weakness.—CHININUM ARSENICOSUM.
Copious perspiration.—ANTIMONIUM TARTARICUM.
Copious sweat.—AGARICUS MUSCARIUS.
Creeping chilliness, worse in the evening and into night.—MERCURIUS SOLUBILIS.
Creeping, shivering over the whole body.—SILICEA TERRA.
Debilitating night-sweats.—CHINA OFFICINALIS.
Delirium; worse after midnight.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Desire for acids.—PHELLANDRIUM AQUATICUM.
Discharges show a tendency to foulness, high temperature, accelerated but not strong pulse.—EUCALYPTUS GLOBULUS.
Disgusting sweats.—SULPHUR.
Dreads uncovering.—SAMBUCUS NIGRA.
Drenching night-sweats.—ARSENICUM IODATUM.
Dry burning heat all over.—DULCAMARA.
Dry heat and burning of skin.—DULCAMARA.
Dry heat at night.—HEPAR SULPHUR.
Dry heat of the body.—NUX VOMICA.
Dry heat over the whole body—ABROMA AUGUSTA.
Dry heat while sleeping.—SAMBUCUS NIGRA.
Dry heat, red face.—ACONITUM NAPELLUS.
Dry skin and great thirst.—SULPHUR.
Dry skin and of inner parts, also of eyes, nose, lips, mouth, tongue, throat, etc.—NUX MOSCHATA.
Dry, deep cough precedes the fever paroxysm.—SAMBUCUS NIGRA.
Dumb-ague, with much muscular soreness, great prostration, and violent headache.—GELSEMIUM SEMPERVIRENS.
During apyrexia, headache, diarrhœa, loss of appetite, nausea.—PULSATILLA PRATENSIS.
During fever forgets where he was.—FORMALINUM.
During fever, itching; nettle-rash all over body.—IGNATIA AMARA.
During heat, urticaria.—RHUS TOXICODENDRON.
Dyspnœa during fever.—CONVALLARIA MAJALIS.
Easily excited perspiration.—ASARUM EUROPAEUM.
Easy, profuse perspiration.—BRYONIA ALBA.
Ebullitions.—ACETICUM ACIDUM.
Elevation of temperature.—EUCALYPTUS GLOBULUS.
Evening chilliness soon after going to bed.—ACONITUM NAPELLUS.
Evening fever, skin hot and dry.—AESCULUS HIPPOCASTANUM.
Excellent remedy in influenza and fever associated with cough; acute pain in body; bone pain; soreness of muscles and terrible headache; typhoid fever with chilliness; burning sensation all over body; delirium; drowsiness and comatose condition—OCIMUM SANCTUM.
Excessive prostration.—MURIATICUM ACIDUM.
Excessive rigor, with blueness of finger-nails.—NUX VOMICA.
External heat is intolerable, veins are distended.—PULSATILLA PRATENSIS.
External heat, with smothering feeling.—APIS MELLIFICA.
Febrile symptoms closely related to typhoid.—ARNICA MONTANA.
Feels a glow all over, like being over steam; chilly, while sitting beside the fire.—PULEX IRRITANS.
Feels as if lying on ice.—LYCOPODIUM CLAVATUM.
Feet cold and wet.—SEPIA OFFICINALIS.
Feet icy cold.—BELLADONNA.
Fever 7 to 12 pm.—AESCULUS HIPPOCASTANUM.
Fever appears with greater intensity one day milder on the next day—OLDENLANDIA HERBACEA.
Fever at 11 a. m. to 12 noon with chilliness; during fever, burning in whole body; rise in temperature associated with headache and thirst—TRICHOSANTHES DIO.
Fever at night.—MAGNESIUM CARBONICUM.
Fever characterized by stupor, snoring respiration, twitching of limbs, intense thirst and sleepiness.—OPIUM.
Fever comes in the morning, ranging 101-103 degrees F—EMBELIA RIBES.
Fever during puerperium—RAUWOLFIA SERPENTINA.
Fever either remittent or intermittent, with bilious symptoms—OLDENLANDIA HERBACEA.
Fever every day at same hour.—CACTUS GRANDIFLORUS.
Fever of gout.—URTICA URENS.
Fever with chill or without chill from 4. 30 pm; gnawing heat with burning of various parts of body, copious sweat, esp. on forehead, neck, upper part of body; no sweat in lower parts of body—AZADIRACHTA INDICA or MELIA AZADIRACHTA.
Fever with chilliness and heat all over the body; headache with thirst; burning all over body relieved by cold air, water; fever at 11 am, again at 7–8 pm; disinclined to move during fever—ANDROGRAPHIS PANICULATA.
Fever with enlargement of liver and spleen; fever comes in afternoon; burning sensation felt in eyes and face—CLERODENDRON INFORTUNATUM.
Fever with sweat.—CALCAREA CARBONICA.
Fever with thirst; aversion to food; burning sensation and pain over whole body—SOLANUM XANTHOCARPUM.
Fever, headache, etc—CAESALPINIA BONDUCELLA.
Fever, headache, meningitis—DESMODIUM GANGETICUM.
Fever-blisters.—NATRIUM MURIATICUM.
Feverish in evening.—PHYSALIS ALKEKENGI.
Feverish with headache; aching pain; burning of hands and feet—ANDERSONIA or AMOORA ROHITAKA.
Flashes of heat in face and neck.—MEDORRHINUM.
Flushed face; hot breath; hurried respiration—CAESALPINIA BONDUCELLA.
Flushes of heat all over body.—IODIUM.
Flushes of heat, particularly of the face and head; worse at night.—PETROLEUM.
Flushes of heat.—SPIRANTHES.
Free perspiration caused by every little exertion, especially on single parts.—CHINA OFFICINALIS.
Frequent chill passing up through spine; head hot, body cold; cheeks burn like fire, chill return towards bedtime even when close to fire; fits of perspiration alternate with chills—CALOTROPIS GIGANTEA.
Frequent flashes of heat.—SULPHUR.
Frequent flushes of heat; sweat from least motion.—SEPIA OFFICINALIS.
Frequent, febrile shiverings down back.—ZINCUM METALLICUM.
General chilliness.—TUBERCULINUM.
General coldness of extremities; head and face hot.—FERRUM METALLICUM.
General heat in bed with soreness over abdomen.—URTICA URENS.
General lack of warmth of body.—SEPIA OFFICINALIS.
General low temperature with inclination to stupor.—OPIUM.
General sore and bruised feeling; nausea and retching.—CANCHALAGUA.
Generally gastric or bilious, with profuse nightly perspiration; debility, slow and lingering.—MERCURIUS SOLUBILIS.
Great heat about 3 am.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Great heat and lassitude in afternoon, with throbbing throughout body.—LILIUM TIGRINUM.
Great heat with profuse hot sweat, but sweating does not cause a fall in temperature.—PYROGENIUM.
Great heat; no thirst.—AETHUSA CYNAPIUM.
Great lassitude, congestion of head, with vertigo, face hot and flushed, prickling sensation all over; restless at night from pain in wrists and knee; rheumatic pains; profuse perspiration.—POLYPORUS PINICOLA.
Great restlessness.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Great thirst—ABROMA AUGUSTA.
Hands alternately hot and cold.—SPIRANTHES.
Hay fever, watery coryza, pain in temples.—CHINA OFFICINALIS.
Hay-fever.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Headache about 10 am, with pain in back, ankles and legs increasing until 3 pm, then gradually better.—POLYPORUS PINICOLA.
Headache, water brash, and nausea are key symptoms for its administration—TRICHOSANTHES DIO.
Heat all over, with occasional chills.—BAPTISIA TINCTORIA.
Heat and redness of head, with coolness of rest of body.—ARNICA MONTANA.
Heat and shuddering alternately.—MERCURIUS SOLUBILIS.
Heat and sweat stages, long and exhausting.—GELSEMIUM SEMPERVIRENS.
Heat at night during menstruation, with restless sleep.—CALCAREA CARBONICA.
Heat extending over body.—OPIUM.
Heat in evening.—CALENDULA OFFICINALIS
Heat in evening; exhausting night-sweats, especially towards morning.—STANNUM METALLICUM.
Heat in head and face; hands and feet icy cold, with chill.—SABADILLA.
Heat in palms and soles.—AMMONIUM MURIATICUM.
Heat in palms and soles.—FERRUM METALLICUM.
Heat predominates.—VALERIANA OFFICINALIS.
Heat without thirst, in face, in toes.—TARAXACUM OFFICINALE.
Heat without thirst.—MURIATICUM ACIDUM.
Heat, with aversion to uncover or undress.—STRONTIUM CARBONICUM.
Heat, with itching of eyes, tearing in limbs, numbness of limbs.—CEDRON.
Heat, with violent thirst, dry tongue, profuse cold, clammy sweat.—TEREBINTHINIAE OLEUM.
Heat; violent thirst, increases with fever.—NATRIUM MURIATICUM.
Hectic fever, caused by formation of pus.—CALCAREA SULPHURICA.
Hectic fever, exhausting sweats.—CARBO VEGETABILIS.
Hectic fever.—CALCAREA CARBONICA.
Hectic fever.—OLEUM JECORIS ASELLI.
Hectic, with drenching night-sweats.—ACETICUM ACIDUM.
Hectic, with small, quick pulse; viscid night-sweats.—PHOSPHORUS.
Hectic.—STANNUM METALLICUM.
Hectic; profuse and debilitating perspiration; intermittent, with pain in arms.—PHELLANDRIUM AQUATICUM.
Hemorrhages.—MURIATICUM ACIDUM.
Here repeat dose every two hours (MacFarlan).—TUBERCULINUM.
High fever, alternating with chilliness and great prostration.—PHYTOLACCA DECANDRA.
High temperature.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Hot fever, with intense radiating heat.—VARIOLINUM.
Hot perspiration.—OPIUM.
Hot sweat.—ANTIMONIUM CRUDUM.
Hydremia in chronic malarial states with weakness, constipation, loss of appetite, etc.—NATRIUM MURIATICUM.
Hydroa.—RHUS TOXICODENDRON.
Hyperthermy in the evening and hypothermy in the morning.—VERATRUM VIRIDE.
Icy coldness (Camph; Verat; Heloderm).—CADMIUM SULPHURATUM.
Icy coldness of the whole body.—CAMPHORA.
Icy coldness, with pains.—DULCAMARA.
Icy coldness.—LYCOPODIUM CLAVATUM.
Icy coldness.—MORPHINUM.
In chronic fever with enlargement of liver and spleen—TRICHOSANTHES DIO.
In Cina fever, face is cold and hands warm.—CINA MARITIMA.
In intermittent fever, there is no thirst when fever comes afternoon; again in morning fever there is thirst in hot stage—CAESALPINIA BONDUCELLA.
Insatiable thirst before and during chill, and heat; nausea may or may not be present; drinking causes vomiting—NYCTANTHES ARBORTRISTIS.
Intense heat.—ANTIMONIUM TARTARICUM.
Intensity of fever gradually lessens—OLDENLANDIA HERBACEA.
Intensity of fever rises next day—TRICHOSANTHES DIO.
Intermittent fever every spring.—LACHESIS MUTUS.
Intermittent fever with lethargic condition.—ANTIMONIUM TARTARICUM.
Intermittent fever, irregular cases, after Quinine.—IPECACUANHA.
Intermittent fever, with yellow, slimy tongue.—KALIUM SULPHURICUM.
Intermittent or remittent fever with sleeplessness and drowsiness; fever comes at 7 am with slight chill, lasting for 2-3 hours; burning sensation and hot flushes from face; remission of fever with perspiration—DESMODIUM GANGETICUM.
Intermittent with disgust, nausea, vomiting, eructations, coated tongue, diarrhœa.—ANTIMONIUM CRUDUM.
Intermittent, paroxysms anticipate; return every week.—CHINA OFFICINALIS.
Intermittent.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Intermittent; chill, with dry cough and restlessness.—RHUS TOXICODENDRON.
Intermittent; paroxysms about midday (11 am) incomplete in their stages, accompanied by hemorrhages.—CACTUS GRANDIFLORUS.
Internal chilliness followed by heat of the skin, associated with bowel movements and flatulence.—RADIUM BROMATUM.
Internal chilliness; shivering, with hot face, cold hands, no thirst.—DROSERA ROTUNDIFOLIA.
Internal coldness, as if frozen to death.—HELODERMA.
Internal heat on awakening.—BENZOICUM ACIDUM.
Internal heat.—BRYONIA ALBA.
Internal heat; feet and hands cold.—ARNICA MONTANA.
Intolerable burning heat at night, with distended veins; heat in parts of body, coldness in other.—PULSATILLA PRATENSIS.
Involuntary discharges.—MURIATICUM ACIDUM.
Inward chilliness; very sensitive to air, worse uncovering; violent fever, with headache.—ASTACUS FLUVIATILIS.
Is always too cold, even in bed.—DROSERA ROTUNDIFOLIA.
Knows chill is coming on because he cannot drink enough.—EUPATORIUM PERFOLIATUM.
Lachrymation during paroxysm.—SABADILLA.
Latent pyogenic condition.—PYROGENIUM.
Light chill.—CINA MARITIMA.
Long lasting heat, often with sweat on face.—VALERIANA OFFICINALIS.
Low bilious remittents.—CROTALUS HORRIDUS.
Low types of fever, with dull comprehension ans stupor.—PHOSPHORICUM ACIDUM.
Lower extremities cold.—STRYCHNINUM PURUM.
Malaria associated with urticaria—HYGROPHILIA SPHINOSA.
Malarial fever.—ECHINACEA ANGUSTIFOLIA.
Malignant fevers of a hemorrhagic or putrescent character.—CROTALUS HORRIDUS.
Marked fever, restlessness, red cheeks, apathetic.—IODIUM.
Most valuable febrifuge with mental anguish, restlessness, etc.—ACONITUM NAPELLUS.
Much fever, associated with clean tongue.—CINA MARITIMA.
Much flushing of heat; sometimes followed by cold and clammy skin and profuse sweat.—AMYLENUM NITROSUM.
Much hunger; colicky pains; chilliness, with thirst.—CINA MARITIMA.
Must be covered during sweat.—AETHUSA CYNAPIUM.
Must have something hot to back.—CAPSICUM ANNUUM.
Musty, offensive sweat.—CIMEX LECTULARIUS.
Nausea, vomiting of bile at close of chill or hot stage; throbbing headache.—EUPATORIUM PERFOLIATUM.
Nervous chills.—GELSEMIUM SEMPERVIRENS.
Nervous form of low fever.—COCCULUS INDICUS.
Night sweat, on nape and occiput.—SULPHUR.
Night sweats, especially on head, neck and chest.—CALCAREA CARBONICA.
Nightly sour sweats.—ARNICA MONTANA.
Night-sweat (China).—ABIES CANADENSIS.
Night-sweat and hectic.—MEDORRHINUM.
Night-sweat.—ZINCUM METALLICUM.
Night-sweats.—OLEUM JECORIS ASELLI.
No thirst during chill, but much frontal ache.—EUPATORIUM PURPUREUM.
No thirst in fever.—ACETICUM ACIDUM.
No thirst with fever.—BELLADONNA.
No thirst with heat.—WYETHIA HELENOIDES.
One chill is followed by another (Calc; Sil; Hep).—LYCOPODIUM CLAVATUM.
One-sided sweat; pains during sweat.—PULSATILLA PRATENSIS.
Orgasm of blood in the evening, with throbbing in the blood-vessels.—THUJA OCCIDENTALIS.
Pain in extremities, darting into fingers and toes.—ELATERIUM OFFICINARUM.
Pain in liver during, fever.—PHYSALIS ALKEKENGI.
Painful swelling of various veins during a chill.—CHININUM SULPHURICUM.
Pains in all joints, as if tendons were too short, especially knee-joints.—CIMEX LECTULARIUS.
Palpitations.—USTILAGO MAYDIS.
Paroxysm returns after acids.—LACHESIS MUTUS.
Paroxysms anticipate in morning.—NUX VOMICA.
Paroxysms incomplete, with marked exhaustion.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Partial sweats.—CALCAREA CARBONICA.
Periodicity marked with adynamia.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Persistent subnormal temperature.—CACTUS GRANDIFLORUS.
Perspiration breaks out and dries up frequently.—APIS MELLIFICA.
Perspiration dry only on head.—BELLADONNA.
Perspiration in a stream down head and chest.—STRYCHNINUM PURUM.
Perspiration of single parts.—SULPHUR.
Perspiration on eating.—CARBO VEGETABILIS.
Perspiration on feet and axille.—PETROLEUM.
Perspiration relieves all symptoms except headache.—EUPATORIUM PERFOLIATUM.
Perspiration sour; only one side of body.—NUX VOMICA.
Perspiration, principally on forehead and nape of neck; debilitating; smelling musty, or offensive.—STANNUM METALLICUM.
Post-critical temperature of a remittent type.—TUBERCULINUM.
Predominant chilliness.—CASTOREUM CANADENSE.
Profuse perspiration at night, with hectic chills and fever.—BOLETUS LARICIS.
Profuse perspiration without relief.—MERCURIUS SOLUBILIS.
Profuse perspiration.—PHOSPHORUS.
Profuse perspiration; surface cold.—MERCURIUS CORROSIVUS.
Profuse sweat all night.—WYETHIA HELENOIDES.
Profuse sweat during night and morning.—PHOSPHORICUM ACIDUM.
Profuse sweat on feet.—ZINCUM METALLICUM.
Profuse sweat over entire body during waking hours.—SAMBUCUS NIGRA.
Profuse sweat, smelling like garlic.—ARTEMISIA VULGARIS.
Profuse sweat, which does not relieve.—STRAMONIUM.
Profuse sweat.—IODIUM.
Profuse sweat.—PODOPHYLLINUM.
Profuse sweat.—TUBERCULINUM.
Profuse sweat; sour, sticky, offensive.—HEPAR SULPHUR.
Profuse, bad-smelling sweat.—VARIOLINUM.
Profuse, cold sweat.—AETHUSA CYNAPIUM.
Profuse, debilitating sweat.—FERRUM METALLICUM.
Profuse, offensive perspiration; night-sweats.—PSORINUM.
Prostration.—TEREBINTHINIAE OLEUM.
Pulse at first accelerated then enfeebled.—USTILAGO MAYDIS.
Pulse full and frequent.—CALCAREA CARBONICA.
Pulse full and slow.—OPIUM.
Pulse full, hard, tense, and quick.—BRYONIA ALBA.
Pulse rapid and feeble.—MURIATICUM ACIDUM.
Pulse rapid, feeble, weak, irregular.—ARSENICUM IODATUM.
Pulse slow, full, soft, compressible.—GELSEMIUM SEMPERVIRENS.
Pulse small, weak, slow.—CAMPHORA.
Recurrent fever and sweats.—ARSENICUM IODATUM.
Red eyes.—CEDRON.
Red spot on left cheek.—ACETICUM ACIDUM.
Regular fever with chill and shivering on one day, and on the other day it appears with slight chill; fever comes 8 to 10 am or 2 to 4 pm—CAESALPINIA BONDUCELLA.
Relapses from improper diet.—IPECACUANHA.
Remittent type.—SULPHUR.
Restlessness.—MURIATICUM ACIDUM.
Rheumatic and typhoid marked by gastro-hepatic complications.—BRYONIA ALBA.
Rigor; intense heat, waves of heat and chilliness, tendency to sweat.—YOHIMBINUM.
Rise in temperature early morning with chill, thirst, headache, burning all over body—OLDENLANDIA HERBACEA.
Rise of temperature at night.—KALIUM SULPHURICUM.
Scarlet fever (protective and curative).—EUCALYPTUS GLOBULUS.
Scarlet fever; eruption in spots, large and vivid.—SOLANUM NIGRUM.
Sensation as of cold water over parts; general coldness with heat of face.—LEDUM PALUSTRE.
Sensation as of wind blowing on knees.—CIMEX LECTULARIUS.
Sensation of icy coldness (Heloderma; Camp; Abies c).—VALERIANA OFFICINALIS.
Sense of internal heat.—SECALE CORNUTUM.
Sensitive to cold trade-winds on Pacific Coast.—CANCHALAGUA.
Septic fevers.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Septic fevers.—PYROGENIUM.
Severe aching in shoulders and joints and small of back.—BOLETUS LARICIS.
Shipboard fever.—BAPTISIA TINCTORIA.
Shivering after drinking.—CAPSICUM ANNUUM.
Shivering even in a warm room.—CHININUM SULPHURICUM.
Shivering in afternoon; hands and feet cold, ameliorated by rubbing and becomes cold on cessation of rubbing—HYDROCOTYLE ASIATICA.
Shivering over whole body.—ARNICA MONTANA.
Shivering, with thirst; worse, towards evening.—SEPIA OFFICINALIS.
Shuddering all over; burning in palms; hot sweat in bed.—APHIS CHENOPODII GLAUCI.
Shuddering in back; heat in one part and chill in another.—MAGNESIUM SULPHURICUM.
Skin clammy and sticky.—ABIES CANADENSIS.
Sleeps after the fever paroxysm.—APIS MELLIFICA.
Slight chill, afternoon fever, glowing heat in face, hands, and feet, copious sweat on upper part of body.—AZADIRACHTA INDICA.
Slightest chill with much heat, nausea, vomiting, and dyspnœa.—IPECACUANHA.
Soles burn.—CANTHARIS VESICATORIA.
Sour sweat after slight exertion.—BRYONIA ALBA.
Sour, greasy perspiration.—MAGNESIUM CARBONICUM.
Stupid delirium.—PHOSPHORUS.
Sub-acute, low fevers due to unhealthy climate.—AMMONIUM MURIATICUM.
Subnormal temperature.—CHININUM SULPHURICUM.
Subnormal temperature.—KALIUM PHOSPHORICUM.
Sudden flushes of heat, followed by great nervous weakness.—DIGITALIS PURPUREA.
Suffering parts feel cold.—SILICEA TERRA.
Superficial blood-vessels, distended.—BELLADONNA.
Suppurative fevers with great variation of temperature.—VERATRUM VIRIDE.
Sweat at night; worse towards morning.—SILICEA TERRA.
Sweat drenching, on parts lain on; relieving all symptoms.—ACONITUM NAPELLUS.
Sweat during stool, with creeping sensation, with abundant urine.—PHYSALIS ALKEKENGI.
Sweat general.—COCCULUS INDICUS.
Sweat mostly on chest, at night during sleep.—EUPHRASIA OFFICINALIS.
Sweat on falling asleep.—TARAXACUM OFFICINALE.
Sweat on palms.—SPIRANTHES.
Sweat only on uncovered parts, or all over except head, when sleeping; profuse, sour, smelling like honey.—THUJA OCCIDENTALIS.
Sweat over head in children, so that pillow becomes wet.—CALCAREA CARBONICA.
Sweat profuse and hot with the fever.—AESCULUS HIPPOCASTANUM.
Sweat profuse, cold.—ACETICUM ACIDUM.
Sweat slight, with sleepiness.—APIS MELLIFICA.
Sweats on every exertion.—NATRIUM MURIATICUM.
System depleted.—CHININUM ARSENICOSUM.
Temperature increased.—EUPHORBIA LATHYRIS.
Temperature rises rapidly.—PYROGENIUM.
Temperature subnormal-96° (Camph).—HELODERMA.
Terrific headache during sweat.—WYETHIA HELENOIDES.
Tertian fever—BLUMEA ODORATA.
Thirst and headache during chill.—CONVALLARIA MAJALIS.
Thirst and restlessness always present.—ACONITUM NAPELLUS.
Thirst before chill.—CAPSICUM ANNUUM.
Thirst during apyrexia, but little during chilly stage; still less during hot stage, and none during sweating.—CIMEX LECTULARIUS.
Thirst for ice-water during chill.—WYETHIA HELENOIDES.
Thirst, before and during chill and heat; better vomiting as close of chill; sweat no marked.—NYCTANTHES ARBOR TRISTIS.
Thirst, with dry mouth in afternoon.—LAUROCERASUS.
Thirstless.—SABADILLA.
Throbbing throughout whole body.—AMYLENUM NITROSUM.
Tongue cold, flabby, trembling.—CAMPHORA.
Tropical fever.—URTICA URENS.
Typhoid types, stupid.—MURIATICUM ACIDUM.
Typhoid when ulcers have eaten into tissues, and black blood is discharged.—ELAPS CORALLINUS.
Typhoid with tympanites, hemorrhages, stupor, delirium.—TEREBINTHINIAE OLEUM.
Typhoid, not too early; often after Rhus.—ARSENICUM ALBUM.
Typhoid; tongue dry and brown; sordes; bowels loose; great restlessness.—RHUS TOXICODENDRON.
Typhus fever.—BAPTISIA TINCTORIA.
Used in influenza when the fever is continued type; chronic fever associated with hepatic and splenic disorders—AEGLE-MARMELOS or AEGLE-FOLI.
Useful in all kinds of fever with bilious symptoms—TRICHOSANTHES DIO.
Very sensitive to cool air.—AGARICUS MUSCARIUS.
Violent attacks of heat in evening.—AGARICUS MUSCARIUS.
Violent ebullitions of heat throughout entire body.—SULPHUR.
Violent fever.—STRAMONIUM.
Violent shaking, with comparatively little coldness.—EUPATORIUM PURPUREUM.
Wants to be fanned all the time.—MEDORRHINUM.
Wants to be held, because he shakes so.—GELSEMIUM SEMPERVIRENS.
Warmth in lower part of back, hips, and thighs.—BERBERIS VULGARIS.
With cough and burning in soles.—CALCAREA SULPHURICA.
With the rise in temperature, there is intense itching, which is relieved by cold application; fever appears in the morning without chill or thirst—HYGROPHILIA SPHINOSA.
Yawns and stretches when chilly.—BOLETUS LARICIS.
Yellow fever (Crotalus; Carbo).—CADMIUM SULPHURATUM.
Yellow fever.—CROTALUS HORRIDUS.
Yellow perspiration.—MERCURIUS SOLUBILIS.