the state of great relaxation, prostration and coldness. It seems as if he will die. When you hear him cough, you are at once impressed with the ^ idea that there must be some profound weakness in his lungs’ power.
We know that it is the power of the lungs to produce an expulsive action with the deep inspiration. They have no such power in Ant-t. The chest is full of mucus and it rattles … he is suffocating and is really passing away, dying from carbonic acid poisoning due to a lack of expulsive power…" Nash says that Antimonium tartaricum is one of our best remedies for the hepatization of the lungs after pneumonia.
The clinical signs in such cases readily suggest that hypoxia is severe; a compensatory laboring of the heart is evident. Amidst this distressing presentation another characteristic sign of Antimonium tartaricum is apparent – drowsiness. The patient feels very sleepy, and on closing the eyes, he feels as if he is losing consciousness. It is a form of sleepiness that is close to a comatose state. Were you to have to wait until the next day to prescribe the remedy, you might well fear that it would be too late.
Your apprehension might be multiplied as you further observe the patient: the face looks very pale, or livid, sickly and shrunken; the nose is pinched; the eyes are drawn back, with dark rings around them; the lips are pale, dry, shrivelled; the nostrils are flapping, and there is a dark appearence inside the nostrils. The face is covered with cold sweat. You hear the laboring respiration with the coarse rales, and you wonder whether he will be able to empty the chest of the accumulated mucus. You stand there, taking in the situation – the patient looks exhausted and almost ready to faint; then a retching and gagging comes, and the patient turns around to vomit and begins to struggle to expel some matter, as you sit there observing helplessly. You see the mucus coming out, yet you do not know whether it is from the stomach or from the lungs, and after he has struggled so and has finally expelled some matter, he looks so sleepy and exhausted that you do not feel like asking any questions. Such is the situation with an Antimonium tartaricum bronchopneumonia.
The patient becomes increasingly weak. He looks anxious and desperate. His face twitches, and it is drenched with sweat. He becomes more and more drowsy, and it is obvious that his power of reaction is receding. At this point delirium may supervene – muttering delirium; talking to himself. If he is spoken to, he seems to return to