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Materia Medica Viva Volume 4 – page 856

but open air aggravates certain of their complaints. They suffer with lack of vital heat. Taking a part out of the covers like the hand or the feet makes them feel worse [Heps.]. Cold bathing and cold wet weather aggravates them. Aggravation from lying on painful side; from thinking about their complaints. There is also a strong tendency to take cold.
They often have an aversion to sweets, and Baryta carbonica is one of only a few remedies with an aversion to fruit, especially to plums, but also to bananas. Aversion after eating a little food, sudden aversion while eating. Finally, a peculiar symptom which might lead one to consider Baryta carbonica is the sensation that smoke is being inhaled when, in fact, the air is clean.
Weary, as with sleepy eyes during the whole day.
After eating, so tired that she cannot raise the hands; she is too weak to masticate.
Emaciation in old people, premature ageing.
Marasmus of old people.
Convulsions with sexual excitement.
Strong sensation of heat on waking.
Weakness after eating in old people, emissions with weakness; paralytic weakness.
Sensitive during perspiration.
Offensive perspiration on left side.
Sensation as if forced through a narrow opening.
Fainting at night, in crowded room, after eating.
Seminal emissions from lassitude.
Numbness of upper half of body.
Kent writes:
‘The Baryta carbonica patient is often sensitive to the extremes of heat and cold. Hot weather will bring on complaints. Hot weather will cause the blood to mount to the head, and favours apoplectic conditions. It has many complaints of the head like