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Materia Medica Viva – Volume 2 page 402

says that this is the remedy." I have seen repeatedly that this kind of practice can lead to protracted suffering for the patient. When you have firmly fixed in your mind the situation described above and meet it in a patient, you can make a quick decision, one that looks like intuition, but which is in fact knowledge properly applied.
Because of deficient oxygenation of the brain, this remedy is prone to have profound sleepiness bordering on a comatose state with most of its complaints.
When Antimonium tartaricum affects the gastrointestinal system, we see intense nausea, vomiting, prostration, general coldness, cold perspiration and sleepiness. Nash says it is a great remedy for cholera morbus, for the advanced stages of this severe acute gastroenteritis, as long as the patient’s appearence is similar to the one described above.
When this remedy affects the nervous system, we see trembling, internal and external: trembling of the head with paralytic trembling of the hands on every motion; trembling of the whole body with great prostration and faintness. Convulsions also occur: convulsions with tetanic spasms, with unconsciousness; epileptic convulsions with intense nausea or vomiting; convulsive movements; convulsions from suppressed eruptions; contraction of all the muscles, especially of the abdomen and upper limbs.
The two remedies Antimonium crudum and Antimonium tartaricum have much in common, though as we have seen they also have differences, each one possessing its own individual nature. The similarities between the two become most apparent when we consider the mental-emotional picture of this remedy, beginning first with the Antimonium tartaricum child.
The child is fretful, peevish, whining, moaning, and it will not allow you to touch it. It will resist being examined by the doctor. It is an angry child, one which will yell if you merely look at it while it is cross. The anger actually affects the child’s entire system, as is reflected in our texts; e.g., the child coughs when he is angry. This is only a partial indication of the nervous state of this remedy – the sensitivity and the suffering. Despite being difficult, however, the crying of Antimonium tartaricum will not be as exasperating as the crying of the Antimonium crudum child.
"Ill humor on waking, with rubbing of his eyes as if in a stupid sleep, and howling if anyone looked at him; with intolerance of noise."