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Materia Medica Viva Volume 2 – page 263

hoarse. He wears an anxious expression and has a feeling as if something bad is about to happen. It is for cases such as this that Ammonium carbonicum will be of great service in hospital practice.
Ammonium carbonicum asthmatic patients have to make a tremendous effort to climb just a few steps; they are terribly aggravated in a warm room and can breathe better if they are in clean, open air. These are the people who suffer the most from pollution, from the motor vehicle exhaust fumes so prevalent in large cities. In these respiratory disease cases there will be a long history of susceptibility to repeated attacks of common colds, repeated coryzas with very acrid catarrh from the nose, which is blocked completely during the night in bed. The patient wakes up frequently from inability to breathe. The colds travel down to the throat and finally settle in the bronchi, eventuating in a dry, tickling cough. This cough is almost always associated with hoarseness and a great deal of chest oppression, the result of an accumulation of tenacious mucus in the chest. Year after year these colds become more frequent and more severe and progressively weaken the chest until, one day, the colds settle in the bronchi and refuse to yield; then the dyspnea starts. There is an accumulation of mucus in the bronchi which is very difficult to expectorate. Finally, the emphysema becomes so severe and the movement of air so restricted that the cough and rales disappear; only severe dyspnea is then clinically apparent.
Most probably, the Ammonium carbonicum case will be recognized as such after one has for years prescribed other remedies; such as, Allium cepa, Arsenicum album, Dulcamara, Arum triphyllum, and, later, Carbo uegetabilis, Antimonium tartaricum and Kali carbonicum, with little or only partial success.
A great characteristic of this remedy is that all discharges are acrid. Like crude ammonia itself, which always emits a pungent odor, Ammonium carbonicum exudes acidity both mentally and physically. The saliva becomes acrid and excoriates the lips, which crack at the corners and in the middle. The eyelids fester and become dry from the excoriating fluids discharged from the eyes. The stool is acrid and excoriates the anus. The menstrual discharge and the leucorrhea are acrid and excoriate the female genitalia; the discharge from ulcers is acrid and excoriates the surrounding area.
The gums recede; they bleed and become spongy; the teeth loosen and
fall out. It is a remedy that should be thought of for tuberculosis due to its tendency to produce hemorrhages. The nose bleeds easily when