Zika virus is similar to dengue fever, yellow fever and West Nile virus. Carried by infected Aedes aegypti mosquitoes. Zika is largely transmitted through bites, but can also occur through intrauterine infection.
Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!Zika virus is primarily transmitted by the bite of an infected mosquito from the Aedes genus, mainly Aedes aegypti, in tropical and subtropical regions. Aedes mosquitoes usually bite during the day, peaking during early morning and late afternoon/evening. This is the same mosquito that transmits dengue, chikungunya and yellow fever.
Zika virus is also transmitted from mother to fetus during pregnancy, through sexual contact, transfusion of blood and blood products, and organ transplantation.
Most people do not know they are infected with Zika virus. Only 20% of people who are infected develop any symptoms or signs. In a few cases, Zika can trigger paralysis (Guillain-Barré Syndrome).
Zika fever begins with mild headache, followed by a maculopapular rash (pink spots and bumps) starting on the head and upper body and spreading to the palms of the hands and soles of the feet.
Very few infections produce a rash on the palms and soles, so this may help identify the infection. Weakness and muscle and joint aches (myalgia and arthralgia) occur, as well as a short period of low-grade fever. Conjunctivitis (red eyes) may occur, as well as stomach pain and diarrhea.
These symptoms are usually mild and resolve within a week without specific treatment. Most cases do not require hospitalization. Several of the symptoms of Zika infection are similar to dengue and Chikungunya, which can occur at the same time and may be transmitted by the same mosquitoes in the same areas.
In some cases, more serious illness may occur, such as meningoencephalitis. The symptoms of meningoencephalitis are headache, eye sensitivity to light (photophobia), confusion, and inability to bend the neck forward (cannot touch the chin to the chest; stiff neck).
Infants infected in the womb of mothers who were infected with Zika virus at any point in pregnancy may have severe birth defects such as microcephaly (abnormally small head and abnormal brain development), vision and hearing problems, intracranial calcifications, and other physical deformities.
Symptoms are generally mild including fever, rash, conjunctivitis, muscle and joint pain, malaise, and headache, and usually last for 2–7 days.
Complications of Zika virus disease
Zika virus infection during pregnancy is a cause of microcephaly and other congenital abnormalities in the developing fetus and newborn. Zika infection in pregnancy also results in pregnancy complications such as fetal loss, stillbirth, and preterm birth.
Zika virus infection is also a trigger of Guillain-Barré syndrome, neuropathy and myelitis, particularly in adults and older children.
What is the Zika Virus?
Experts at The Johns Hopkins Hospital are closely monitoring the spread of Zika virus and offering useful information to help prevent transmission of the mosquito-borne illness. Infectious disease expert Dr. Lisa Maragakis discusses the virus, concerns around pregnancy and the current state of vaccines.
Aedes mosquitoes breed in small collections of water around homes, schools, and work sites. It is important to eliminate these mosquito breeding sites, including: covering water storage containers, removing standing water in flower pots, and cleaning up trash and used tires. Community initiatives are essential to support local government and public health programs to reduce mosquito breeding sites. Health authorities may also advise use of larvicides and insecticides to reduce mosquito populations and disease spread.
How to Protect Yourself from Zika Virus
Protection against mosquito bites during the day and early evening is a key measure to prevent Zika virus infection. Special attention should be given to prevention of mosquito bites among pregnant women, women of reproductive age, and young children.
Personal protection measures include wearing clothing (preferably light-coloured) that covers as much of the body as possible; using physical barriers such as window screens and closed doors and windows; and applying insect repellent to skin or clothing that contains DEET, IR3535 or icaridin according to the product label instructions.
Key Facts About Zika Virus
- Zika virus was first reported in Uganda in 1947, but a Zika virus outbreak was not reported in the Americas until 2015.
- Symptoms of Zika are mostly mild, with only one in five infected individuals exhibiting any signs of illness. Hospitalization is rare with this infection.
- Zika can be diagnosed through a blood test.
- The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention keeps an updated list of countries where Zika outbreaks have occurred. Pregnant women should speak to their obstetrician-gynecologist if they must travel to an affected area, as well as take precautions to prevent mosquito bites.
- There is currently no vaccine or antiviral treatment for Zika.
Studies in animal models have shown promising results of Zika virus vaccines for preventing maternal-fetal transmission and generating immunity in the vaccine recipient, but further validation is still required in clinical settings. Several vaccine candidates are currently in phase 1 and 2 of human clinical trials, summarized in the WHO vaccine pipeline tracker.
Contagious Period for Zika Virus?
Most people get Zika virus from mosquito bites. Zika virus is only contagious between people via sexual contact. The CDC suggests women assume they are contagious for up to eight weeks, and men for up to six months, if they have had Zika virus symptoms. The contagious period via sex is still being investigated, however.
Diagnosis of Zika Virus
Initial diagnosis of Zika virus is made by a doctor based on symptoms and signs and history of possible exposure to Zika virus. The diagnosis is confirmed by blood, urine, or saliva tests. The specimens are tested for the presence of genetic material of Zika virus with a reverse transcriptase polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) test. Because other diseases may also be present in Zika virus areas, tests are also done for other conditions, such as dengue virus and Chikungunya.
The tests for Zika virus are available to any doctor via certain commercial laboratories. Testing is also done by local health-department laboratories and the CDC.
Zika virus testing is not recommended on a returning traveler who has no symptoms unless
- she is found to be pregnant (because her pregnancy needs special monitoring) or
- he/she has symptoms of Zika fever (because he/she may be infectious to mosquitoes and sexual partners).
Zika virus levels may come and go in someone without symptoms, so no one can say the person is not infected and is safe to have sex without precautions. It is simply best to take precautions to avoid infecting a pregnant woman or becoming pregnant while a partner may be infectious.
Allopathic Treatment for Zika Virus
There’s no vaccine or specific treatment in allopathic medicine for Zika virus. Instead, the focus is on relieving symptoms and includes rest, rehydration and acetaminophen for fever and pain. Aspirin and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) and that’s all.
Homeopathic Treatment of Zika Virus
Polyporus Pinicola
Great lassitude. Vertigo. Face hot and flushed, prickling sensation all over; restless at night from pain in wrists and knee; rheumatic pains; profuse perspiration. Headache with pain in back, ankles and legs increasing. Deep dull, severe pain in shin bones, preventing sleep.
For rashes and itches, The Pine agaric like the Larch agaric, Polyporus officinalis. Despondency; aching distress in many parts; stiffness of back; of fingers; enlarged tonsils with dysphagia and constant inclination to swallow; neuralgic pains in head, face, and temples; pain in liver and spleen with diarrhea or constipation and piles. Quotidian fevers.
Eupatorium Perfoliatum
Constant pain in bones as someone beat with an iron rod. Back pain. Bilious fever. Bones pains. Cough. Dengue. Diarrhea. Gout. Intermittent fever. Jaundice. Liver, soreness of. Measles. Mouth/lips cracking. Ophthalmia. Relapsing fever. Remittent fever. Rheumatism. Ringworm. Spotted fever. Syphilitic pains. Thirst. Wounds.
Thirst a long time before the chill, which continues during the chill and heat, at the conclusion of the chill, vomiting of bile, The intermittent fever paroxysm generally commences in the morning, attended with painfulness, trembling, weakness, and soreness; but little or no perspiration.
Ledum Palustre
Ledum pal could be advised in all type of mosquito bites, use it with or without any symptom. Itching pain and rashes mostly appear on feet and ankles; it goes worse by scratching and warmth of the bed. Ascites. Asthma. Bites. Black eye. Boils. Bruises. Deafness. Ear, inflammation of. Eczema. Erythema nodosum. Face, pimples on. Feet, pains in; tender. Gout. Hemoptysis. Hands, pains in. Intoxication. Joints, affections of, cracking joints. Pediculosis. Priapism. Prickly heat. Puncture wounds. Rheumatism. Skin, eruptions on. Stings. Tetanus. Tinnitus. Tuberculosis. Varicella. Whitlow.
Bryonia Alba
Intermittent fevers. Jaundice. Joints, pain in. Liver disorders. Lumbago. Measles. Meningitis. Menstruation, vicarious. Miliaria. Milk fever. Myalgia. Nephritis. if body pain and muscles pain by little movements, Dengue, Fever. Pulse full and hard, tense, and quick; seldom intermitting. Chill, with external coldness of the body.
Coldness and chilliness, mostly in the evening, and often only on one right side. Shivering with trembling, often with heat in the head, redness of the face, and thirst; or followed by heat, with sweat and thirst. Vertigo and cephalalgia;, bitter taste and thirst, dry, burning heat, mostly internal. Dislike to food and drink during the shivering.
Febrile attack, with cold, and shivering predominating; type, tertian; nausea, and necessity to remain in a recumbent posture, or with shooting pains in the side and in the abdomen, and thirst during the shivering and the heat. At the termination of the fever, dry cough, with vomiting, shootings and oppression in the chest.
Bothrops Lanceolatus
Broken-down, haemorrhagic constitutions; septic states. Great lassitude and sluggishness; haemorrhages from every orifice of the body; black spots. Hemiplegia with aphasia. Inability to articulate, without any affection of the tongue. Nervous trembling. Pain in right big toe. Diagonal course of symptoms. Pulmonary congestion. Amaurosis; blindness from haemorrhage into retina. Hemeralopia, day blindness, can hardly see her way after sunrise; conjunctival haemorrhage. Swollen and puffy eyes. Besotted expression. Throat red, dry, constricted; swallowing difficult, cannot pass liquids. Skin swollen, livid, cold with hemorrhagic infiltration. Gangrene. Lymphatics swollen. Anthrax. Malignant erysipelas. Epigastric distress. Black vomiting (hemoptysis). Intense haematemesis. Tympanitis and bloody stools.
Cantharis Vesicatoria
Furious delirium. Anxious restlessness. Yellow vision. Fiery, sparkling, staring look. Burning in eyes. Itching vesicles on face, burning when touched. Tongue covered with vesicles; deeply furred; edges red. Burning in mouth, pharynx, and throat; vesicles in mouth. Great difficulty in swallowing liquids. Very tenacious mucus. Violent spasms reproduced by touching larynx. Inflammation of throat; feels on fire. Constriction; aphthous ulceration. Scalding feeling. Burnt after taking too hot food. Intense dyspnoea; palpitation; frequent, dry cough. Tendency to syncope. Short, hacking cough, blood-streaked tenacious mucus. Burning pains. Intolerable urging and tenesmus. Nephritis with bloody urine. Constant desire to urinate. Membranous scales looking like bran in water. Urine jelly-like, shreddy. Palpitation; pulse feeble, irregular; tendency to syncope. Pericarditis, with effusion. Tearing in limbs. Ulcerative pain in soles. Dermatitis venenata with bled formation. Secondary eczema about scrotum and genitals, following excessive perspiration. Tendency to gangrene. Eruption with mealy scales. Vesicular eruptions, with burning and itching. Sunburn. Burns, scalds, with rawness and smarting, relieved by cold applications, followed by undue inflammation. Erysipelas, vesicular type, with great restlessness. Burning in soles of feet at night.
Arsenicum album
Ears infections. Eczema. Endometritis. Enteric fever. Epithelioma. Erysipelas. Eye infections. Fainting. Fever. Gangrene. Gastric ulcer. Gastritis. Glandular swellings. Gout, Rheumatic gout. Rheumatism.
Hay-asthma. Headache. Heart, affections of. Hectic. Herpes zoster. Hodgkin’s disease. Lung affections, Pneumonia, Hydrothorax. Hypochondriasis. Ichthyosis. Indigestion. Intermittent fever. Irritation. Jaundice.
Kidney diseases. Lichen. Lips eruption; epithelioma. Lupus. Malignant pustule. Measles. Miliary eruptions. Myelitis. Nails, diseased. Nettle-rash. Psoriasis. Purpura. Pyemia. Ringworm. Scalded. Scarlatina. Thirst. Throat sore. Trachea, affections of. Traumatic fever. Typhus. Yellow fever.
Fever. General coldness, with parchment-like dryness of the skin, Profuse cold clammy perspiration. Stretching of the limbs and restlessness, drawing in the limbs, anxiety and restlessness. Pains in the regions of the liver and of the spleen, dull or shooting headache.
Skin, Desquamation of the skin. Skin dry cold and bluish or yellowish. Shootings, hot itching, and violent burning in the skin. Petechiae. Inflamed spots, as from morbilli, chiefly in the head, face, and neck. Miliary eruptions, red and white. Conical pimples, whitish or reddish, with burning itching.
Nettle-rash. Eruption of painful black pustules. Eruption of itchy pimples, small and tickling. Vesicular eruptions. Herpes, with vesicles, and violently burning, esp. at night, or with coverings, like fish-scales. Skin jaundiced; general anasarca; black blisters.
Rhus Toxicodendron
Acne rosacea. Appetite, lost. Beri-Beri. Bones pains. Caecum inflammation. Chilblains. Cyanosis. Dengue fever. Diarrhea; chronic. Diphtheria. Dysentery. Dysmenorrhea. Dyspepsia. Ear eczema. Ecthyma. Enteric fever. Erysipelas. Erythema nodosum. Exostosis. Eyes inflammation; choroiditis; sight, weak. Feet pains. Gastroenteritis. Glands inflammation. Gout. Hemorrhages. Typhoid. Ptosis. Pyaemia. Redgum. Relapsing fever. Rheumatism. Scarlatina. Smallpox. Typhus fever. Urticaria. Warts. Wens. Yawning. Exanthema.
Itching over whole body, chiefly in hairy parts. Stinging and tingling on skin, burning after scratching. Humidity of skin. Hardness of skin with thickening. Swelling (hard) of affected parts. Erysipelatous inflammations. Nettle-rash.-Eruptions, generally vesicular, scabby, with burning itching. Gangrenous ulcers. Chilblains.
Natrum Muriaticum
Herpes. Herpes circinate. Hiccough. Hodgkin’s disease. Hypochondriasis. Intermittent fever. Leucocythemia. Nettle rash. Pediculosis. Ranula. Seborrhea.
Fever. Frequent, internal, shuddering. Continued shivering. Chill predominates; chilliness internally, with drowsiness, followed by slight perspiration. Flushes of heat and shivering alternately, with headache. Heat with burning thirst. Dejection before fever.
Spleen and liver enlargement and obstinate constipation. Pernicious fever and fever with anemia. Typhus fever, debility, dryness of tongue, and violent thirst. Intermittent fever. Pressive drawing in limbs. Rigidity of all joints, which crack when moved. Reddish urine; complaints after urination.
Sepia
Appetite, depraved. Bladder irritable. Eczema. Epistaxis. Eyes affections. Face yellow. Freckles. Gleet. Gonorrhoea. Gravel. Herpes; circinate. Irritation. Jaundice. Liver-spots. Liver, torpid. Psoriasis. Ptosis. Pylorus induration. Quinsy. Urine incontinence. Intermittent fever. Perspiration sour-smelling or offensive.
Skin yellow, like jaundice; chapping of the skin, or cracks may extend deeply into the tissues. Itching and eruption of pimples in the joints. Excoriation, especially in the joints. Dry and itching eruptions, like scabies. Brown, or vinous, or else reddish, and herpetic spots on skin. Annular desquamation. Hepatic spots.
Pulsatilla pratensis
Acne. Appetite depraved. Bronchitis. Cataract. Chilblains. Clavus. Cold. Cough. Distension. Dysmenia. Dyspepsia. Freckles. Gonorrhoea. Gout. Hands, pains. Intermittent fever. Joints, synovitis of. Measles. Mumps. Puerperal convulsions. Puerperal fever. Puerperal mania. Urine incontinence.
Shooting pain in the nape and back, between shoulders; in sacrum after sitting. Drawing, tensive pain in thighs and legs, with restlessness, sleeplessness and chilliness. Urticaria, after rich food.
Fever, Chilliness, even in warm room, without thirst. Chilly with pains, Intolerable burning heat at night, with distended veins; heat in parts of body, coldness in other. One-sided sweat; pains during sweat. External heat is intolerable, veins are distended, loss of appetite, nausea.
Lycopodium Clavatum
Albuminuria. Aneurysm. Offensive perspiration. Biliousness. Borborygmic. Bright’s disease. Cancer. Cataract. Constipation. Consumption. Corns. Cough. Cramps. Cystitis. Debility. Diphtheria. Distension. Dropsies. Dysentery. Intermittent. Irritation. Polypus of eye; of ear; of nose. Proctalgia. Prostatitis. Pylorus affections. Quinsy. Renal colic. Rheumatism. Typhoid fever. Urine abnormal. Loss of appetite. Mouth clammy or bitter, often with nausea. Bulimia. Diarrheas. Pain in back before urinating; ceases after flow; slow in coming, must strain. Retention. Polyuria during the night. Heavy red sediment. Heaviness of arms. Tearing in shoulder and elbow joints. Profuse sweat of the feet. Fever followed by sweat. Icy coldness. Feels as if lying on ice. Chronic eczema associated with urinary, gastric and hepatic disorders; bleeds easily. Skin becomes thick and indurated.
Sulphur
Acne. Adenoids. Ague. Biliousness. Boils. Bright’s disease. Bronchitis. Cataract. Catarrh. Chagres fever. Chancre. Cheloide. Chest pains. Liver derangement. Lumbago. Lupus. Mania. Measles. Nettle rash. Ophthalmia.
Rheumatic fever. Skin affections. Spleen pain. Stomatitis. Taste, illusions of. Tenesmus. Thirst. Throat, mucus in. Tongue coated.
Calcare Carbonica
Fever. Excessive cold, internally, Shivering and shuddering, with thirst, followed by chilliness beating of the heart. Tertian fever in the evening. Sweat with anxiety. Nocturnal sweat. Appetite, depraved. Cataract. Chilblains. Eyes affections. Fever intermittent. Gallstones. Glandular swellings. Gleet. Gonorrhoea. Ringworm. Typhoid. Urticaria.No appetite. Unpleasant taste in the mouth, mostly bitter, or sour, or metallic. Burning or constant thirst. Cramps and contractions of the limbs. Wrenching pains. Burning, smarting, itching. Nettle rash. Miliary eruption.
Arnica Montana
Abscess. Apoplexy. Back pains in. Boils. Carbuncle. Eyes affections. Feet sore. Hematemesis. Hematuria. Headache. Heart affections.
Lumbago. Spleen pain. Sprain. Stings. Suppuration. Taste putrid or bitter, or slimy, thirst for cold water, without fever.
Fever. Pulse very variable, mostly hard, full and quick. Chilliness, internally, with external heat and redness of one cheek, Shivering in the evening, and sometimes with a sensation of cold water. Intermittent fever. Perspiration smelling sour or offensive-sometimes cold. Typhus putrid breath and stool. Nocturnal acid sweat. Shootings in the region of the spleen. Pressure in the hepatic region. Abdomen hard and swollen. Stiffness of the limbs after exertion. Muscular jerking. Stiffness and weariness of all the limbs. Bleeding of internal and external parts (vomiting of blood). General prostration of strength.
Skin hot, hard, and shining swelling of the parts affected. Stings of insects; snake-bites. Red, bluish, and yellowish spots, as if from contusions. Black and blue spots on the body. Yellow-green spots, caused either by a bruise or by disease. Bed sores; blue mortification. Miliary eruption. Petechiae. Many small boils, or blood-boils; one after another, extremely sore.
Lachesis:
Albuminuria. Boils. Bubo. Carbuncle. Catalepsy. Chilblains. Ciliary neuralgia. Cough. Cyanosis. Enteric fever. Erysipelas. Eyes affections; hemorrhage into eyes. Gallstones. Gangrene. Hay fever. Headache. Heart, affections of. Intermittent fever. Jaundice. Skin Ecchymosis. Dropsical swelling over whole body.
Hard and pale tumefaction. Skin yellow or green or lead-colored, or bluish-red or blackish, chiefly round the wounds and ulcers. Yellow, red, copper-colored spots. Pale, livid spots, with fainting fits. Dry Miliary itch, with eruption of large vesicles of a yellow or of a bluish-black color, with swelling of parts affected, and pains which drive to despair. Miliary eruption, which subsequently resembles nettle-rash, Scarlatina, or morbilli. Erysipelas and vesicular eruptions with a red crown. Excoriated places, on touching which a burning pain is felt. Rupia and other skin affections, with angioleucitis. Ulcers surrounded by pimples, vesicles, and other small ulcers.
Gangrenous ulcers. Gangrenous blisters. Superficial ulcers, foul at bottom, with a red crown. Cancerous ulceration (of wounds). Red and itching lumps and tuberosities. Carbuncles, with copper-colored surroundings and many smaller boils around them. Flat exanthemata which do not fill up; pustules exanthemata; spongy excrescences.
Fever. Icy coldness of the skin with clammy sweat and weakness. Shivering, delirium, insatiable thirst, eructation, bilious vomiting, cries, groans, dryness of mouth and throat, and frequent stools.
Temperature alternately. Perspiration coloring linen yellow red. Febrile sweat. Pulse intermittent, or feeble and quick (but accelerated), or irregular, or scarcely perceptible, or tremulous, or alternately full and small. Intermittent fever. Typhus fever.
Gelsemium
Fever. Pulse slow, accelerated by motion. Limbs cold with oppressed breathing – In the evening, when entering a warm room, thirst, pain in the back and loins and in the lower part of the thighs. Chilliness in upper part of body and back. Typhoid fever. In eruptive and fevers restlessness. Profuse perspiration relieving the pains. Intermittent fevers. Remittent fever. Measles. Hay-fever. Headache. Intermittent fever. Jaundice. Labor. Liver affections. Measles. Retina detachment. Tremors. Vertigo. Trembling in all the limbs. Deep-seated, dull aching in the muscles of the limbs and in the joints. Neuralgic and rheumatic pains in the extremities.
Vinca Minor
Acne. Alopecia. Crusta lactea. Eczema. Favus. Neck, stiff. Nose, redness of. Plica polonica. Seborrhoea. Throat, sore. Uterus, bleeding from.
Syphilinum
Abscess; succession of abscesses. Bubo. Constipation. Neuralgia. Night-sweats. Ophthalmia. Otorrhoea. Ovaries, affections of. Ozoena. Pemphigus. Psoas abscess. Ptosis. Aching pains in limbs. Gradual rigidity of all joints after eruption; flexors seem contracted.
Pustular eruption on different parts of body; in patches on certain places, particularly on wrists and shins, large pustules, discharging an ichorous fluid, then heal, leaving characteristic pockmark cicatrices; patches take longer to heal, discharging same fluid till healing process commences. Skin bluish.
Great pains in head, whole body extremely cold, looked blue; wanted to be covered with blankets or couldn’t get warm; no appetite; sleeping almost continually, Nervous chills preceded by pains in head, especially occiput and scalp.
Pains below waist, in pelvis, legs, tibia, which is sensitive to touch; bowels torpid; cross, irritable, peevish pain.
Fever: dry, hot, shortly after going to bed, parted lips, great thirst; 11 to 1 daily. Sweat: profuse at night, sleepless and restless, with excessive general debility.
Baptisia
The symptoms of this drug are of an asthenic type, simulating low fevers, septic conditions of the blood, malarial poisoning and extreme prostration. Indescribable sick feeling. Great muscular soreness and putrid phenomena always are present. All the secretions are offensive-breath, stool, urine, sweat, etc. Epidemic influenza. Chronic intestinal toxemias of children with fetid stools and eructation.
Baptisia in low dilutions produces a form of antibodies to the bac typhus, viz, the agglutinins (Mellon). Thus it raises the natural bodily resistance to the invasion of the bacillary intoxication, which produces the typhoid syndrome. Typhoid carriers. After inoculation with anti-typhoid serum. Intermittent pulse, especially in the aged.
Wild, wandering feeling. Inability to think. Mental confusion. Ideas confused. Illusion of divided personality, double personality, and tosses about the bed trying to get pieces together. Delirium, wandering, muttering. Perfect indifference. Falls asleep while being spoken to. Melancholia, with stupor.
Confused, swimming feeling. Vertigo; pressure at root of nose. Skin of forehead feels tight; seems drawn to back of head. Feels too large, heavy, numb. Soreness of eyeballs. Brain feels sore. Stupor; falls asleep while spoken to. Early deafness in typhoid conditions. Eyelids heavy.
Taste flat, bitter. Teeth and gums sore, ulcerated. Breath fetid. Tongue feels burned; yellowish-brown; edges red and shining. Dry and brown in center, with dry and glistening edges; surface cracked and sore. Can swallow liquids only; least solid food gags.
Soreness over region of gallbladder, with diarrhea. Stools very offensive, thin, dark, bloody. Soreness of abdomen, in region of liver. Dysentery of old people. Puerperal fever.
Back and Extremities: Neck tired. Stiffness and pain, aching and drawing in arms and legs. Pain in sacrum, around hips and legs. Sore and bruised. Decubitus.
Skin: Livid spots all over body and limbs. Burning and heat in skin. Putrid ulcers with stupor, low delirium and prostration.
Fever: Chill, with rheumatic pains and soreness all over body. Heat all over, with occasional chills. Adynamic fevers. Typhus fever. Shipboard fever.
Hemamalis:
Chilblains. Consumption. Enteric fever. Gastric ulcer. Hematemesis. Hematuria. Hemorrhages. Hemorrhagic diathesis. Hemorrhoids. Scurvy. Smallpox. Testicles, inflamed. Ulcers. No appetite for breakfast; considerable thirst. Appetite good. Very thirsty; in afternoon and evening; throat dry. Averse to water. After eating: nausea, must keep quiet; eructation; hiccough. Eructation after a meal, taste of the food. Nausea, eructation and violent hiccough after oily food, followed by burning in stomach and esophagus; later, cramp pains in stomach and chest.
Nausea and inclination to vomit after a meal. Hematemesis, blood black; sensation of trembling in stomach, or fullness and gurgling in abdomen; feverish by spells; weak, cold, quick pulse, profuse sweat.
Fever – Chilly on going to bed; dreaded an attack of fever. Cold creeps in the open air, chills run up the legs, head stopped up, dull pain over orbit. Chilliness over back and hips, extending down the extremities. Fever at night; hands hot, burning in the eyelids on closing them. Sweats freely at night, after lying down. Pulse accelerated and full.
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