The discharge of watery mucus from the nose, usually due to rhinitis. Rarely, the discharge consists of cerebrospinal fluid and is the result of a head injury. (See also nasal discharge.)
The persistent discharge of watery mucus from the NOSE. This is a usual symptom as a result of COMMON COLD or consequent upon ALLERGY (perennial rhinitis and HAY FEVER).
n. a persistent watery mucous discharge from the nose, as in the common cold.
An accumulation of cerebrospinal fluid between the membranes of the brain or when fluid collects in the ventricles resulting in brain damage. Head abnormally large.
Causes. Injury, tumour, blood clot, meningitis, or congenital malformation obstructing the aqueduct. Symptoms. Headache on the crown of the head, enlarged pupils, double vision, eyes squint and appear abnormally small, convulsions, slow onset of fever, high blood pressure, delirium, flushed cheeks, patient shuns the light.
Treatment. As a supportive aid to conventional treatment by hospital specialist or general medical practitioner.
Formula. Yarrow 2; Lily of the Valley 2; Ginkgo 1. Dose: Powders – 750mg (three 00 capsules or half a teaspoon). Liquid extracts – 1 teaspoon. Tinctures – 1-2 teaspoons every 2 hours for acute cases, otherwise thrice daily.
Ivy. Dr John Clarke, homoeopathic physician, reports the case of a colleague, Dr L. Cooper, who cured a case with one single dose of 1 drop mother-tincture of Ivy (Hedera helix). “Clear fluid (cerebrospinal rhinorrhoea) dripped from his nostrils for three weeks; 20-30 handkerchiefs being used a day.” Evidence of efficacy of the traditional reputation of 1-2 drops Ivy juice for the condition is lacking.
Diet. 3-5 day fast on fruit juice only. Yarrow tea. No solid food until fever abates; then Slippery Elm and Complan.
Note: Pregnant mothers are advised by the Medical Research Council to take folic acid – part of the Vitamin B-group – to help protect against neural tube defects; severe birth defects of spina bifida and hydrocephalus. See: FOLIC ACID. ... hydrocephalus