The patient fears death, evil, psychosis and misfortune; he wants to be alone when tired, and feels despondent that his senses are dull. Fear of death while walking has been reported. This leads to melancholia, dull lethargy with a slow pulse; and particularly anxiety at twilight.
Depression
Digitalis patients have a disposition to depressed moods. They do not like company, and they have no desire to talk or to do any- thing; they sigh constantly, which seems to relieve a little. ‘Tearful sadness about several things in which he didn’t succeed’. Digitalis is sensitive, not only to moral impressions, but to music and sensual impressions. On the other hand, the sadness of these people is often coupled with a considerable excitability, as could be observed in severe anxiety.
The gloomy mood is attended by peevishness and inclination to quarrel. ‘Great irritability; everything affects him very much, especially sad things, and the merest trifle may excite an inconsolable despair in him’. This ‘sad irritability’ is sometimes felt physically too, in the form of a ‘sensation of sickness’ that mostly affects vision. ‘He is sad and has a feeling as though he were very sick; all objects look to him as if he had a fever, he seems to have the altered sense of vision as in fever’.
This ‘sad excitement’ may result in trivial symptoms, such as stammering when talking in public or to strangers, but can also lead to very acute pathological states, including delirium, hallucinations, manic episodes, psychotic states of confusion, even attempts to commit suicide. ‘Raving excitement alternating with melancholy’ (Bönninghausen). Baehr relates a case that was cured with Digitalis; the patient suffered with ‘delirious mania’ and complete insomnia, and could only with difficulty be prevented from jumping out of the