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Materia Medica Viva Volume 4 – page 815

In cases of pneumonia, bronchopneumonia, pericarditis or endocarditis, the patient wakes up at night and breathes with great difficulty; the lungs feel tight; he cannot get a deep breath; he will give you the impression that he is out of breath, as if tired after ascending a hill. The bed feels so hard that he cannot lie long in one place. The fever is high, the skin dry, the face red and has a besotted look.
There is obvious confusion in the mental sphere. The patient feels that he is suffocating, and gets up from bed or asks for the window to be opened. This seems to relieve him [Carb-v., Puls.]. His breathing is worse on lying down; there is a fear of going to bed, mostly because of a fear that on going to sleep he will suffocate and have terrible nightmares.
Having considered the features of acute Baptisia cases, I shall now concentrate on the Baptisia chronic case. This is characterised by a feeble mind; there seems to be an aversion to thinking, a dislike for mental, emotional or physical exertion. The mental powers seem to slow down and confusion supervenes. This individual cannot concentrate on a specific subject and experiences a wild, wandering feeling in his mind.
The patient feels as though the forehead and eyes were pressed inside the head, and as though the forepart of the brain were stuck, preventing him from thinking, and causing him to rub his forehead all the time as though to activate the brain. The moment he tries to say something he forgets it. His thoughts wander and vanish. The brain softens, and Alzheimer’s disease is on its way fast. The patient’s ideas are confused in his brain, and he is taken over by the feeling that he no longer wants to live, that he has nothing to live for, that he wants to die. In a more acute mental state the Baptisia patient becomes very restless, rubbing his hands continuously, wanting to move all the time, lying in bed and rolling his head from side to side. He is confused as to his identity. He feels