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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2186

The dyspnoea of Digitalis may be accompanied by a painful feeling of weakness and lassitude in the chest; such a ‘weak sensation’ usually has its origin in the epigastrium, ascending from there into the chest. Another characteristic symptom of Digitalis is a gasping respiration, especially on falling asleep. As in Lachesis, the breathing may be arrested in the moment of falling asleep, returning suddenly with a gasp that wakes the patient.
‘Gasping respiration, each breath seems as though it would be the last’. The Digitalis cough is best characterised by a quotation from Bönninghausen’s book about whooping-cough: ‘Hollow, deep spasmodic cough, excited by roughness and scraping at the palate and in the trachea; dry in the morning, in the evening with scanty, difficult expectoration of yellow, gelatinous slime of a sweetish taste, sometimes also with a little dark blood. Aggravation: midnight and morning. Being heated. Eating. Cold drinking. Speaking. Walking. Open air. (Warm air in a room.) On waking. Bending body forward’. After eating, the cough may be so violent that food is vomited. Dry cough, with infrequent expectoration consisting of hard balls of mucus.
Pain in the thorax, especially in the region of the heart, resembling rheumatic pain, may also be cured by Digitalis. They may begin at the left margin of the sternum, changing from there to the right side and back again.
Heart
In the ‘Essential Features’ some important heart symptoms of Digitalis are already discussed, especially the bradycardia, the intermissions and extrasystoles, the aggravation from motion and the sensation as though the heart would stand still as soon as one moved, often followed by a fluttering sensation at the heart. There are, however, a great number of heart symptoms in Digitalis, because there is a close affinity of this remedy to the heart.
Irregular pulse, both in respect of the power of the expansion of the arteries and in respect of the frequency. For example: ‘Slow pulse of 50 beats, which are absolutely irregular, between 3 to 4 soft beats a full and hard one’. ‘With a frequency of 78, beating strong from twelve to twenty times, and then very weak for four or five times’. ‘Great slowness and irregularity of the pulse’. The slow and small pulse often intermits for a shorter or longer