of frequency are: Antimonium crudum, Natrum carbonicum, Nux vomica, Ignatia, Colocynthis, Staphysagria, Robinia, etc. The differential diagnosis of each of these remedies must be based upon an intimate knowledge of materia medica. For instance, when we see a patient suffering from a duodenal ulcer, our mind goes immediately to Nux vomica because we know that of all our remedies, Nux vomica has the stongest tendency to disorder the duodenum. Or when you see constant and intolerable heartburn, your mind goes to Robinia. Similarly, the personality of your patient suggests one or another remedy. If you know the materia medica, you cannot give Nux vomica to an Antimonium crudum patient. Nux vomica is irritable; his irritation, even if latent, is perceptible. Antimonium crudum creates altogether another picture: the person is sweet, sentimental, and careful not to be hurt or to hurt others; such a personality coupled with a stomach affection arising as a consequence of a severed love affair or grief should bring this remedy to mind.
There is also another advanced pathological state of Antimonium crudum which affects the nervous system; in this instance we see spasmodic contractions in the extremities and face. The facial contractions affect the mouth primarily and are associated with respiratory problems, which can progress to suffocation and subsequent convulsions. Chorea may be seen, also jerking all over and moaning during sleep.
Mental retardation may be met with Antimonium crudum. Imbecility is a more frequent eventuality than insanity; idiocy. This remedy may benefit retardation in children in whom the fontanelles remain open for a very long time.
In this remedy we may observe a state similar to that of Pulsatilla in its progressed mental state – total passivity, without any reaction or response to any stimulus. Antimonium crudum can appear close to such a state, though without such extreme passivity.
In Antimonium crudum, the patient will not leave her bed, will not speak unless asked, and demands neither food nor drink; however, she will gladly eat if hungry and food is offered. She may be seen to repeatedly pull at a napkin tucked into her shirt at the collar, or fold and unfold a cloth over and over. Neurological sensation may be so impaired that she may develop bedsores at several locations, due to contact with fecal matter, without seeming to feel them and without complaint.