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Materia Medica Viva Volume 1 – Page 14

Abrotanum

the infant’s navel. Ready exudation in the pleura in pleurisy, or in the joints in arthritic conditions are characteristic.
The next prominent and peculiar condition we see in this remedy is an emaciation that takes place in the lower extremities and then progresses upwards. (The opposite is true for Lycopodium and Natrium muriaticum.) This Abrotanum characteristic can be observed in all its glory in "marasmus" of the new born. These children, whose skin is shrivelled, look malnourished and old, with ulcerations or exudations in the navel. The baby’s head topples over because the neck is emaciated. The face looks old, and a small child looks like an old man. The whole body is emaciated and wrinkled. Abrotanum is one of the main remedies to be thought of in this condition, together with Baryta, Sulphur, Calcarea, Iodine, Silica, Sarsaparilla, Natrum muriaticum, Aethusa, and if this marasmus comes from Syphilis Aurum muriaticum etc.
The emaciation in Abrotanum occurs inspite of the fact that there is excessive appetite and that the patient eats a lot.
Another condition for which Abrotanum should be thought of is in case of anaphylaxia after T .B. vaccination. The child has boils or abscesses, commences to lose weight, develops hectic fever that can develop into pleurisy or any other tubercular manifestation.
Abrotanum in its mental-emotional make up is an angry person, not easy going, sometimes malicious and with some cruelty in his behaviour. Such people feel that they have the capacity to inflict pain on others without much moral resistance. They can be very cross and ill humored. If somebody goes against them, they can be venomous, vindictive, spiteful and fierce. They may let themselves go and become violent. Others see them as irritable, irascible and not willing to open a conversation. At other times Abrotanum cases can behave very nicely, especially with people whom they like. They can be cheerful, gay and talkative. Moods alternate, and you may encounter an element of hysteria in some cases.
They are anxious, apprehensive people, with a fear of losing their brain-power. They have a fear of idiocy. These fears manifest themselves because of the weakness and dullness of their mind, or because of memory failures. They feel that they cannot stand any mental exertion, and do not want to engage in any mental labour; the least mental work, even a conversation, fatigues them. They have anxious