humid cold weather, particularly where the air is saturated with moisture and the smell of mould. This type of smell is prominent in damp climates, like that of India, where the smell of the ground after rain mingles with the odour of rotten leaves. The attacks of asthma may be periodic but irregular, very severe at the time of the crisis but once the crisis is over the patient can be entirely free of it. Amelioration of the asthmatic attack may be found by sitting up and bending forwards.
Excess of heat all over the body is another key-note for Blatta orientalis. Heat radiates from the ears, the eyes, the nose, the top of the head, palms, soles of feet, or indeed anywhere. Another symptom indicating this remedy is a dry hacking cough with little expectoration during the day, in spite of the fact that the lungs are full of rales. In some patients the excess of mucus is such that it threatens suffocation. Streaks of blood in the sputum may become the cause of great anxiety to the patient, who fears contracting tuberculosis.
Blatta is indicated in the first stages of tuberculosis where there is cough with dyspnea, blood streaks in the sputum and great anxiety on seeing this little bit of blood. The Blatta patient as a rule is not anxious, but as soon as he sees blood in the sputum he immediately thinks of a bad haemorrhage and death. In other cases we may see prolonged fits of spasmodic cough at short intervals with only slight expectoration; alternatively there may be much pus-like mucus.
In the final stages of Blatta’s respiratory problems the patient breathes with extreme difficulty. The breathing is hard, the jaws are locked, saliva dribbles from the corners of his mouth, the body is cold with clammy perspiration on forehead, the patient is so exhausted that he is motionless. The patient looks almost dead, sitting in bed and leaning forward so that the head almost touches the legs.