- Ost is sometimes regarded as a variety of the common Hornbeam naturalized in America, though native to southern Europe.
- The chief difference between them is that Ost vulg.
- has pendulous catkins, and Ost virg., upright.
- The wood is exceedingly hard and heavy.
- The preparations of which the provings by Burt and others were made were from the wood.
- Marked action on the liver with the usual dull headache and pain in back and shoulders, cutting, sinking pains in abdomen.
- Nervous, languid, weak, uneasy.
- Very nervous with dull headache.
- Increased appetite, hunger wakes the patient at 4 a.m.
- Sinking at the epigastrium.
- Sickening pains.
- Black stools.
- Bilious conditions and intermittent fever.
- AnemiaLack of healthy red blood cells or hemoglobinA condition marked by a deficiency of red blood cells or of hemoglobin in the blood, resulting in pallor and weariness. from malaria