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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2096

Some modalities of Crotalus that it shares with other snake poisons: Crotalus patients are often aggravated by sleep, they ‘sleep into the aggravation’ as we see in Lachesis. This is especially true in headaches and pain of the extremities, and in the states of weakness and faintness that are characteristic of the remedy. ‘Aching as if bruised in the morning after waking, is hardly able to muster the energy to get up’ (Hering).
Moreover, there is a typical aggravation every spring. The ‘springtime complaints’ of Crotalus may consist, for instance, of vertigo with headache and nausea; or else in acne and similar eruptions in the face, especially when the weather is warm; or in problems of digestion with unusual irregularity of stool, cutting pain in the abdomen after a meal and in the morning, soreness (uncharacteristically on the left side) of the pit of the stomach, etc. The slightest pressure may also aggravate, which in Crotalus refers to the abdomen rather than to the throat. ‘Intolerance of clothing about epigastric region and beneath the hypochondria, at the waist’.
A keynote of this remedy is a very strong desire for fat pork, even if it is not tolerated by the stomach. Hering reports the case of a patient with bilious vomiting and hepatic pain who vomited every- thing she ate or drank in the morning; this patient sometimes felt a desire for fat pork. The symptom could be confirmed in recent cases, e.g. in a case of trigeminal neuralgia of long standing where the patient loved pork in every form, while she did not like any other kind of meat; she was cured by Crotalus.
Another keynote is a mouldy smell of the breath, which may be connected with scarlet-red colour of the tongue, and difficulty in swallowing.
Crotalus pain will usually begin suddenly, continuing for some time (from half an hour to about three hours) and ceasing just as suddenly. It tends to recur frequently. Crotalus belongs to the