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Materia Medica Viva Volume 2 – page 262

there is an impressive softness of the tissues. This flabbiness and softness seem to prevail in Ammonium carbonicum patients.
They are fat people with weak hearts and even weaker respiratory systems. As a result, this remedy corresponds to cases of heart disease, angina pectoris, enlargement of the heart, heart failure, etc.; in general the condition of the heart seems precarious. The patient feels prostrated, and every movement produces a violent, almost audible palpitation that drives him to bed with great anxiety, feeling as if he is dying. He has to rest all the time in order to feel comfortable; the least exertion induces this tumultuous palpitation, a feeling of prostration and a sense of suffocation. However, all these symptoms may be present with or without obvious heart pathology. In some cases an early subclinical enfeeblement of the heart produces such symptoms, but the same remedy, given for the same symptoms, will prove useful for gross pathology, such as the final stages of pneumonia with heart failure.
Acute pulmonary edema is a state for which this remedy should be studied. Kent writes: "You see ’heart failure’ spoken of in old school literature (allopathy). They say the patient got along very nicely, but finally died from heart failure. In a great many instances, if Ammonium carboncium were given in time, it would save life." Usually, with this kind of symptomatology signs of cyanosis will be present.
Unfortunately, in our western system of medicine people are permitted to die only under allopathic treatment, so homeopathic physicians do not have a chance to treat such severe pathology with homeopathic remedies, especially considering the absence of homeopathic hospitals that can accomodate such cases. Consequently, we cannot develop a full knowledge of our remedies; it will take a very long time before their real pathogenesis is reliably comprehended.
Dyspnea, the result of a weak heart, is produced by Ammonium carbonicum; consequently, cardiac asthma is covered by this remedy, but Ammonium carbonicum has also been useful in bronchial asthma and emphysema.
Think not of Carbo uegetabilis or Antimonium tartaricum, but of Ammonium carbonicum when you have a case with the following picture: the patient is in great distress with suffocative breathing and loud, noisy respiration. He displays cyanosis of the lips, across the nose and even of the fingertips; his nose is cold, yet his body and feet feel warm. His pulse is extremely rapid, and his voice is very weak and