Books

Materia Medica Viva – Volume 3 page 596

cannot concentrate; he cannot force his mind to pause in order to concentrate on any one thing.
There is an inner restlessness that eventually seems to burn out the body. The impression we get is of the body having been woken up and being unable to rest anymore. The Arsenicum iodatum case seems to be consumed by an internal fire that eventually will burn out the body, leaving it exhausted and totally prostrated, much like Arsenicum. A tubercular diathesis underlies the condition, and the child, if not treated correctly, is in danger of becoming consumptive. It lowers the appetite and increases the metabolism. The person is quickly wasted away, and emaciated.
The restlessness accompanied by anger and irritability that characterize the first stage of a serious Arsenicum iodatum case are eventually replaced by utter prostration and indifference. You may find that, where in the initial stage the patient showed great excitement, impatience and haste, with an inclination towards talkativeness and mirth, a change may overcome him eventually causing him to become silent, with an aversion to answering questions and to being spoken to. At this stage the patient is so weak that he will not talk, feeling totally disinclined for any kind of conversation. Should one press him to answer he will do so in monosyllables. He is indifferent to everything because of this exhaustion, indifferent to his pet that he loved, to happiness and to his surroundings.
Then sadness and discontent set in, accompanied by aversion to work and inability to study.
A degree of mental prostration prevails continuously, accompanied by an inability to decide between two opinions. A child may look and act as if extremely stupid, answering by moving the head as though saying only "I do not know".
Changeable moods and alternating conditions of mind characterize Arsenicum iodatum, but the fine shades of the mind are not yet apparent or determined.
Further symptoms include fear of impending evil, fear of insanity, of misfortune, of people. Extreme anxiety, restlessness and fear, worse in a warm bed. There are persistent tormenting thoughts, wandering thoughts, stupefaction and prostration of body and mind. The patient may suffer from a sudden impulse to kill somebody. Confusion may set in morning, night and evening, with delirium during the night. Delusions