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Materia Medica Viva Volume 2 – page 264

washing the face and hands and when eating. The tonsils and throat ulcerate easily.
It is appropriate to mention here another characteristic of this remedy – the effect it has upon the skin, its tendency to produce dark reddish eruptions; the body is red, as if covered with scarlatina. Malignant scarlatina with deep sleep, stertorous breathing, and starting from sleep. Erysipelas. Snake bites.
Kent writes, "It effects rapid blood changes, it disturbs the whole economy and it establishes a scorbutic constitution… This remedy has bleeding of black blood, often fluid blood, that will not coagulate… The blood is dark showing that a great disturbance is taking place in the circulation… If you examine the pathogenesis of people who have been bitten by snakes and then examine the pathogenesis of this remedy, you will see a great similarity between them. It is well known that this remedy has had repeated use in snake bites… Give it not as an antidote per se, but when indicated in blood poisoning and animal bites with zymosis, with a tendency to black, liquid bleeding, as in Elaps."
Another important aspect of this remedy is the prostration associated with heart or respiratory problems. There is tremendous exhaustion; the patient tries to get up from bed but falls back into it, the heart pumping very strongly. There is indescribable fatigue in cases of heart problems or lung emphysema. The patients are dyspneic and unable to expel the mucus which seems to be in the lungs; breathing is nearly impossible and the exhaustion tremendous. Exhaustion is also accentuated at every menstrual period – an exhaustion accompanied by vomiting and diarrhea, coldness of the body, blueness of the skin, and dyspnea.
The Ammonium carbonicum patient is one who cannot tolerate cold weather, especially if it is also wet and stormy. Anything wet upon their body makes them feel uncomfortable. As a result of this aggravation they develop an aversion to taking a normal bath and eventually develop unclean habits. They seem unconcerned about their physical uncleanliness, but their sullied condition is rather extenuated by the degree of aggravation they suffer from contact with water. One has to imagine what life is like for these persons with their respiratory problems: their heart feels weak, about to give in; they are acutely aware of their great susceptibility to catching colds and of the aggravation of their chest problems that will result; and, given their sensitivity and weakness, they fear that any exposure to cold weather or wetness will