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Essence of Materia Medica – page 159

The need for company can be so strong as to drive him to leave his house to find friends to talk to. This is not a need to talk to people about health in particular, as in Arsenicum; rather, Phosphorus just feels the need to talk to anybody about any¬thing, in order to relieve the panic.
As the states of fear increase, many of the other corroborating symptoms on the physical level disappear. There may be no thirst, no craving for salt, and no craving for fish.
Finally, in the fourth stage, the mind breaks down completely. The fears diminish, but the mind degenerates. There is a diffi-culty in concentration, an inability to think coherently, or an ina-bility to understand what is being said by others. The body and the mind become weak. The patient becomes indifferent to comapany and indifferent to surroundings. The result is a state of senility or imbecility. Another common end result in Phos¬phorus is a stroke in which many mental faculties are lost.
The final stage can be a very difficult one in which to prescribe because there is a paucity of symptoms to distinguish Phosphorus from other remedies. For this reason, a careful history of the past sequence of events and proper knowledge of the stages of pathol-ogy of remedies is crucial to being able to benefit the patient.
Once the essence of Phosphorus is seen, one needs only to con-firm the remedy with corroborating symptoms. From experience, some of the most useful are; thirst, desire for salt, desire for fish, desire for chocolate, desire for sweets, worse left side, unable to sleep on the left side, formication of the tips of the fingers, pain-less loss of voice. In addition, different Phosphorus patients may be either warm blooded or chilly—though not in the same patient.