The blood that is discharged will usually be dark and thin, fluid, not coagulating, so that the haemorrhage lasts for a long time; it may also have an offensive odour.
Moreover, Crotalus is one of the main remedies in sepsis. It may be indicated when there is a septic focus anywhere in the body, in panaritium, abscesses, or in blood poisoning after an injury. The septic processes will come on very rapidly, and often they are connected with a yellow (or sometimes bluish) discolouration of the skin. According to Margaret Tyler, Crotalus is indicated in such cases, especially if there is much spoilt, dark, uncoagulable blood.
Haemorrhage and decomposition go together with a rapid decrease of strength. ‘Lost his powers so much that he wasn’t able to make the least exertion’. ‘Lassitude and rapid decrease of the vital force’. Crotalus patients become easily tired by the slightest exertion; the muscles refuse their service. Fainting and weak spells are frequent, also attended by trembling all over.
‘Attacks of sudden weakness, like syncope, with pallor of face’.
States of clouded consciousness will rapidly appear, with delirium, but these conditions present a great difference to Lachesis. In Lach. we see an active, wild, manic delirium; Crotalus has, on the other hand, a kind of soporous, drowsy, ‘low’ and passive state. And this drowsy quality is not confined to the delirium, but is a feature in the progressed pathology of the Crotalus mind. ‘Unusual sluggish- ness and stupidity’ was produced in the proving, for instance; the prover ‘didn’t know any more how to express himself’, and for this reason could not write down all of his symptoms.
The intellectual weakness may increase more and more in chronic states until a condition of dementia is arrived at, of ‘imbecility’. So Crotalus has been successfully given in a case where there were symptoms of incipient senile dementia. The patient began to make mistakes in keeping his accounts and in writing letters; he forgot