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Materia Medica Viva Volume 11 – page 2318

paralyzed in his legs while walking, he has to drag his feet to reach where he is going, he feels that his limbs will give out. It looks like a paralysis but it is not, it is an anaemic state.
Showing lack of stamina, they complain that cannot perform their duties. Together with this weakness there is a dizziness, aggravated by stooping, and turning to vertigo on rising. At every step they hear roaring in the ears and head: when walking they feel faint, with apparent darkness before the eyes.
In their weakness, they get exhausting flushes of heat that are accompanied by perspiration that makes the weakness worse; they cannot stand any kind of exertion. They may look superficially healthy with red circumscribed cheeks, but the rest of the face and body is extremely pale and waxy, a phenomenon known as a false plethora.
Even speaking brings a general weakness; fatigue alternates with anxious trembling. Walking in the open air fatigues them, they easily get out of breath, and the least exertion brings palpitation. Rapid exercise or any heavy labour is impossible. Exertion and motion bring on weakness, dyspnoea, sinking feelings and fainting. Marking the connotation of general weakness, asthmatic conditions are also treated with this remedy.
‘They feel cold and are worse from exposure to cold. They get frequent colds with coryza. They can become waxy, yellow and pallid, with a sickly and anaemic appearance.’
Ferrum is ameliorated when moving about quietly and gently (like Pulsatilla), but is a cold remedy, and is ameliorated by warmth, except for pain around the neck, face and teeth, which are ameliorated by cold. But most of the arthritic pain is ameliorated by heat; the patient wants to keep warm, and dreads anything like fresh air or draughts.