There are some peculiar symptoms in Ailanthus, one of them being electric currents, which may also be described as an electrical thrill, going through the body starting from the head and ending in the finger tips. These symptoms in the provings suggest that the remedy may be of use in convulsions or epileptic fits. Another symptom is a crawling feeling especially on legs where the sensation is as if some small animal is crawling upwards. In the fever these sensations become illusions.
His sleep is restless and there is a lot of moaning and groaning during sleep as well as much talking. 1 have observed that patients with progressed arteriosclerosis talk very loudly in their sleep in response to vivid images they see in their dreams. Do not forget that it is a remedy that can easily deteriorate into a state of delirium.
Pediatricians or general practitioners should make a special study of Ailanthus in acute conditions, as it corresponds to severe cases of zymotic fevers, like blood poisoning, epidemic diseases, especially malignant scarlatina, meningitis, follicular tonsilitis and diphtheria. Ailanthus is also indicated in typhoid, glandular fever, puerpural fever, septicemia, etc., as well as in cases where there is an eruption which is in appearance like measles or scarlatina, but is partially suppressed for one or another reason.
Kent writes: "This remedy is especially suitable in the low zymotic forms of sickness such as we find in diphtheria and scarlet
fever where the rash does not come out, but in its place red spots,
roseola like, make their appearence; the usual uniform spread of the eruption has failed, or has been suppressed, and there is bleeding from the gums and nose, and dreadful tumefaction in the throat…There is an appearence of great prostration but it is really stupefaction; he seems stupid and benumbed. If you look at the throat you see it is covered with little purple patches, intermingled
with an oedematus appearence similar to that found in Baptisia
The blood that oozes is black. The child enters a state of stupor and it is with difficulty that he can be aroused. Sometimes blisters are formed on the end of the fingers, or here and there over the body. From the mouth and nose come fetid odours. The child is going as rapidly as possible into a form of malignant disease. Sometimes the disease comes on as a light febrile attack, but from taking cold and suppressing some of the natural manifestations the case takes on a low typhoid form. Whereas you had at first only a