CINA. 179 
Curntcat Osservations.—Noack and Trinks: Cina may be 
administered in the following affections. Convulsions. Epilepsy 
(from worms). Eclampsia. Worm symptoms of children, with 
febrile symptoms, etc. Quotidian and tertian fevers, recurring 
after large doses of Quinine: I. Chilliness, without thirst, fol- 
lowed by heat, with thirst after the heat, sweat. 2. Chilliness, 
with much thirst. 3. Fevers, where the thirst is present only 
during the cold stage, and where the patient yomits once or 
twice. Cina has also cured intermittent fevers, when vomiting 
without diarrhea, or diarrhea without vomiting is present, the 
remedy being indicated by the dilatation of the pupils and the 
clean tongue. Chronic vomiting of children, who suffer 
from worms. Involuntary nocturnal enuresis in children suf- 
fering from atrophy. Whooping-cough, particularly in scrofu- 
lous children having worms. Whooping-cough in the convul- 
sive stage, particularly when the spasmodic cough ends in 
vomiting, when the body becomes rigid during the paroxysms 
of coughing, and particularly when a gurgling noise from the 
throat down into the abdomen is heard after the paroxysm. Dr. 
Gray notes that Cina deserves attention in the bronchial catarrhs 
which remain after measles, especially such as have a kind of 
hectic fever with them. 
Axtiporrs.—Bryonia. China. Hyoscyamus. Tpecacuanha. 
