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Essence of Materia Medica – page 77

or the toes, but it most frequently involves -the forearms. Gen¬erally, these numbnesses are associated with cramps. When the numbness affects the TIPS of the fingers, however, think of Phos¬phorus.
Graphites is generally left-sided, and it is sensitive to cold. In keeping with its general insensibility the sensitivity to cold does not seem to be so much of an intolerance to wet weather or to change of weather. Rather , it seems to be internal.
The food symptoms in Graphites are distinctive. Graphites has an aversion to salt, sweets, and fish. It is the only remedy which has this combination. In respect to salt and sweets, it is inter¬esting to compare Arg.nit, which is just the opposite. Arg. nit. craves sweets and salt, and it is a high-energy excitable, warm¬blooded remedy. Graphites, on the other hand, is a chilly, bland remedy with an aversion to these foods. In addition, Graphites has a strong desire for chicken.
As always, these keynotes must not be prescribed upon in them¬selves; they must always be fitted into the general picture—the lack of contact, the blandness, the general appearance.
When one considers the tiredness, the fatness, the coldness, the glandular affections, and the flushing, it would seem easy to con¬fuse Graphites with Ferrum. However, in Graphites, the fears come mostly in the morning, and the dissatisfaction, irresolution, and fear that a calamity is going to occur help to differentiate Graphites, Pulsatilla can sometimes be confused with Graphites because the irresolution can appear to be a kind of changeability. Of course, Pulsatilla is warmblooded and is aggravated in the evening after twilight. Many cases present a dilemma between Graphites, Ferrum, and Pulsatilla. In these situations, the diffe¬rentiating parameters are the effect of open air, how fast the patient wants to walk, and the food desires and aversions.
Another remedy similar to Graphites is Calcarea, of course. It is chilly, obese, and easily exhausted by mental work. Graphites has a definite aversion to mental work—an almost anti-intellectual condition. Calcarea, on the other hand, may suffer from mental exertion but will continue to perserve in an effort to complete the task Also Graphites is more physically robust than Calcarea. Graphites patients may oe more crude and coarse-