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Materia Medica Viva Volume 11 – page 2548

a peculiar kind of imbecility or stupefaction of the body and mind.
A sudden relaxation of all the muscles, cold sweat on the forehead, and suddenly falling down and stammering point to Helleborus. Muscles refuse their service when not governed by strong attention and will. Great debility; great relaxation; the muscles refuse to act. The patient slides down in bed.
The whole sensorium is in a benumbed state, a stupefaction, a blunting of general sensibility. It is a remedy that fits well severe cases of chronic fatigue syndrome that have come after excessive use of antibiotics. A child may feel dazed and stupid, and a slowness in perception ensues; or a child will remain in a dazed state where there is no fever, but the child does not regain full consciousness and the head rolls, and the look is empty. Helleborus will re-establish order, and after one week a fever sets in with diarrhoea and vomiting, however this is a good reaction that should not be suppressed by another remedy.
There is indifference to all external impressions; rarely much disturbed by being touched, or by being covered too warmly, or by not being covered at all. He does not seem to be sensitive to heat, or cold, or pricking, or handling or even pinching.
In the open air he feels better, the inclination to vomit reduces, and the headache is considerably relieved. Better by thinking about his symptoms. Sometimes they have to do breathing exercises so intense, with such apparent pain, that listening to them will be frightening, yet all this breathing activity makes them feel, after an hour or so, that they are more grounded, more whole, and the taste of agony is relieved to a certain extent.
‘A little girl had every day five or six paroxysms, each lasting from one to three minutes, and almost always followed by sleep. There was sudden inability of the body, without any marked