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Materia Medica Viva Volume 7 – page 1603

fresh air, desire to have the windows open and to be vigorously fanned, notwithstanding the coldness; feeble, imperceptible pulse; oppressed and quickened respiration. The weak, sick and exhausted feeling may become chronic and persistent, but it may also come on suddenly, in a moment. ‘Very frequent fainting fits, only momentary, even to sinking down…’ (Hahnemann) or Sudden attacks of faint-like weakness’ (ibid.) are symptoms caused and cured by this remedy.
Carbo vegetabilis will also be indicated in haemorrhages that are passive, oozing all the time. This kind of bleeding runs all through the remedy picture. Kent describes the Carbo vegetabilis haemorrhages: ‘On account of the feeble circulation a capillary oozing will start up and continue. The remedy hardly ever has what may be called an active gushing flow, such as belongs to Belladonna, Ipecacuanha, Aconitum, Secale, and such remedies where the flow comes with violence, but it is a passive capillary oozing… Black venous oozing.’
There is often blackish, putrid, slowly oozing exudation. The remedy has been used in severe diseases such as typhoid and yellow fever by the old homeopaths. An indication for the ‘haemorrhagic’ stage of yellow fever (with the characteristic black vomiting), which illustrates very well the concomitant symptoms of the Carbo vegetabilis bleeding, also in other diseased conditions: ‘Haemorrhages with great paleness of the face, violent headache, great heaviness in the limbs and trembling of the body.’
In digestive disorders, Carbo vegetabilis will often be the remedy of choice, especially when there is excessive flatulent distension. The food seems to decompose and to turn to gas before it can be digested. This will be accompanied by frequent eructations that relieve, at least for some time. Both symptoms, the flatulence as well as the amelioration from eructation, may be seen as general symptoms. For instance, asthma cases which are aggravated or