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THE BERN SEMINAR_PAGE 9

DIFFERENTIAL DIAGNOSIS OF THE ANXIETY STATES OF SOME IMPORTANT REMEDIES

As most of you know, the anxiety states are quite difficult to differentiate from one another. The patient may come in for treatment in an anxiety state, in a panic, claiming to be on the verge of death, and you find that you are at a loss to know what to do for him. Perhaps you have seen cases like this and you’ve resorted to Valium® or other sedatives, in order to sedate the patient and to give yourself enough time or space to think of how you can help him. Let’s say that you do not know what to do; so you give the first remedy you can think of for anxiety, for instance Arsenicum. What other remedies produce states of anxiety? Phosphorus, Aconitum, Nitricum acidum, Calcarea carbonica, Lycopodium, Kali arsenicum, Argentum nitricum; all these remedies can produce states of anxiety that are severe and almost indistinguishable from one another. But you cannot just replace one remedy with another, nor can you replace the anxiety of Arsenicum with Phosphorus. A remedy not specifically suited to the type of anxiety your patient exhibits might bring about temporary amelioration, he might feel better for a day or so, but eventually he will suffer a relapse. Each remedy has its own anxiety. I admit that it is very difficult to differentiate one sort of anxiety from another; still, there are ways of determining a remedy’s corresponding anxiety state.
I’d like to begin with the panic attacks of Aconitum, which are very impressive. The chief characteristic of an Aconitum anxiety attack is that the patient thinks that he is dying. In this state the patient does not know what he is really panicking about. All Aconitum cases will revolve more or less around this theme. Now, what makes an Aconitum an Aconitum! Let’s look at the questions you’d have to ask in order to find this out: Therapist: »How frequently do you get these attacks?« Patient: »Not very frequently.« Therapist: »How strong are they?«
Patient: »Very strong, when it starts I cannot control it at all.« Therapist: »Does it start slowly?« Patient: »No, it just suddenly overwhelms me.«
What you see here is a sudden overwhelming attack of anxiety, accompanied by panic, palpitations, hot flushes, in an individual who is otherwise quite calm. Suddenly the person feels a storm coming on inside, a storm which overcomes the psyche and produces a state of panic that