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Materia Medica Viva – Volume 2 page 472

One characteristic that you might have missed is that the patient, despite having suffered such severe colds which ended nearly every time in cough and dyspnea, recovered almost completely, until the next bout which brought him down to bed with the same symptomatology.
Typically, the only symptom which remains after such a crisis is a raw, burning feeling in the center of the chest, as if the area were being continually irritated by smoke; the patient is constantly reminded of this sensitive spot. Deep breathing makes this burning much more pronounced, and the patient will tell you that this irritation always reminds him of his main sensitivity.
Another sensitivity these patients have relates to smoking. They are forced to give up smoking cigarettes as the smoke causes immediate coughing, even when they are not experiencing an acute exacerbation. They also have a great sensitivity to the smoke from others’ cigarettes. While this is a common symptom in people suffering with asthma, in Aralia it is very pronounced even when the patient is not experiencing asthmatic symptoms.
There are several characteristics of the acute exacerbations which, together, constitute a case of Aralia racemosa, among them: irregular periodicity (They may have a cold any time of the year, but always at least once every winter.), an aggravation at night on lying down and especially after a short sleep, the speed with which the colds travel from the nose to the bronchii, a need to sit up, an aggravation from cold and drafts, viscid, tenacious mucus, and loud wheezing. This is the full symptomatology of Aralia; as you will observe, it entails far more that its principal keynote, which according to Burnett is "a fit of coughing occuring before midnight, either immediately on lying down or more commonly after a short sleep."
I have given this remedy in a severe case of bronchopneumonia with high fever, coughing with loud wheezing, and dyspnea, with an aggravation around midnight that woke him after a short sleep. However, the remedy modified only the time of aggravation and let the patient sleep a little longer; it did not cure. Subsequently he awoke at 2 or 2:30 a.m.. Kali carbonicum and other remedies were tried, but only with partial local amelioration; symptoms changed, but the patient did not really benefit. The remedy that finally really cured was Phosphorus because it fit the entire mental-emotional picture. In another case, Aralia modified the wheezing and coughing in a child who woke up around this time of morning, but again without curing. So, prescribing on this