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Materia Medica Viva Volume 7 – page 1602

state where everything about the organism is turgid, distended and swollen. In these cases, there is a dull feeling in the limbs that makes the patient want to elevate the feet to let the blood run out, and this ameliorates his condition.
As Boericke says, ‘bacteria find a rich soil in the nearly lifeless blood stream’, and septic conditions arise. There is a general tendency to decomposition, necrosis, gangrene, with a marked putridity of discharges, ulceration, breath, sweat, etc. Boger summarises in his ‘Synoptic Key’: ‘Blueness and decomposition’ as a typical combination of features of Carbo vegetabilis. The discharges are also frequently acrid, corrosive, excoriating.
A lowered vital power, with lack of reaction of the organism, is very characteristic of the remedy (Carbo vegetabilis should be thought of in AIDS cases). This weakness of the organism often dates from specific stresses, some of which were mentioned above. Very typical is a state of ‘never well since’: never well since an acute disease, such as measles, never fully recovered from the effects of some previous illness. Margaret Tyler relates, however, that she had no good results in such cases when the symptoms didn’t agree; but if they did, the action could be miraculous.
The state after surgical operations where Carbo vegetabilis is indicated is like that: paleness, hardly signs of life; exhausted, cold, with a fine cold sweat, but a desire to be fanned all the same, especially in the head. In these conditions the remedy will help the patient recover much faster and without complication. Another indication is excessive flatulence after abdominal operations (where Carbo animalis may also be indicated).
The acute collapse states of Carbo vegetabilis are virtually unmistakable. Deadly coldness, cold body, cold tongue, cold nose, cold breath, cold sweat, but in some cases the head remains hot in spite of the bodily coldness; air hunger, desire for