For asthmatic affections, with deranged digestion; weakness and oppression of epigastrium and simultaneous oppression at heart and chest.
Dyspnoea: aggravated by the slightest exertion, and increased by short exposure to cold to an asthmatic paroxysm.
Extremely difficult breathing.
Dyspnoea and asthma, with a sensation of lump or foreign body in the supra-sternal fossae.
Nausea in the morning, disappearing after a swallow of water.
Morning sickness, with profuse flow of saliva.
Faintness or weakness at pit of stomach from excessive use of green tea or tobacco.
Chronic vomiting in paroxysms, with nausea, profuse perspiration, prostration of strength, with good appetite and brick-dust sediment in urine.
Violent pain in the sacrum.