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Materia Medica Viva Volume 11 – page 2545

stupefaction and sluggishness. The extreme state is unconscious¬ness; complete unconsciousness in connection with cerebral congestion, or inflammation which has gone on to hydrocephalus, cerebro-spinal meningitis, or inflammation of the brain, with stupefaction.
The characteristic picture that you will see in cases of Helleborus when the meninges are inflamed, will be that of the patient lying on his back, eyes partly open, rolling the head constantly to left and right in an agony and mental turmoil, staring mostly into space. The excessive rolling of the head with a staring lifeless look is the characteristic that will lead you to prescribe this remedy.
In a conversation, the Helleborus patient will be staring with a similarly empty look to the person talking. When a question is directed to him, he takes very long time to answer or will not answer at all; he seems has forgotten that he was asked a question in the very moment he was asked.
Helleborus stares at his surroundings in stupid manner, but at the same time there is something of agony in his look. The internal turmoil that is going on in his mind makes him feel that his brain is totally fragmented, that he cannot collect and control his mind. A wild feeling inside the head drives him to hold his head in his hands, as if to prevent it from fragmenting and disintegrating.
In such a state you may hear the patient walking up and down the floor muttering constantly, “Help me, help me.” It is a state just before madness where they feel the mind is really breaking down into a thousand pieces and they cannot control, cannot save it any more. It a condition very much close to a living hell; they report feeling that they are really in hell.
The nature of concentration shifts, muscles refuse to obey the will when attention is turned away. Dullness of the mind and indifference