way or another. Therefore we must perceive the remedies as developing in pathology, which goes deeper and deeper, accompanied by analogous manifestations.
Sometimes these older patients may sit and give a feeble, helpless sort of moan. When they attempt to write the size of the letters is very small, so small as to be difficult to read.
Old people needing this remedy may present cardiac, vascular and cerebral problems, enlarged prostate glands, indurated testes, weakness with palpitation, need to lie down, chilliness, loss of memory and aversion to meeting strangers.
They don’t really say what is bothering them but instead just continue whining. Treatment with Baryta carbonica may bring these people several more useful years before their degeneration begins again. In these senile states these patients may even take on a childish appearance. The face is practically free of wrinkles, as if they have lived life only superficially. The feelings have not been sufficiently intense or deep to leave their mark on the face.
Baryta carbonica particularly affects the lymph glands. It produces hypertrophy of the parenchyma of the tonsils with chronic ulceration of the glandular system and atony of the lymphatic system. Its other main focus of action is on the cerebral and ganglionic nervous systems, irritating and depressing them and thus producing a condition resembling mental and physical decay.
There is also a characteristic action on muscular tissue in that it prolongs the contraction of a muscle, both smooth and striated, when it is stimulated. There is a tendency to arteriosclerosis.
You will prescribe this remedy with certainty when you see children whose development is arrested, and scrofulous with a tendency to marasmus who grow very slowly, have enlarged glands, constantly