confirm its reputation. There is intense nausea, retching and gagging, and then vomiting even with the least food or water; vomiting of even a spoonful of water.
Kent says – "With the stomach symptoms and bowel symptoms there is this constant nausea, but it is more than the nausea, it is a deadly loathing of every kind of food and nourishment, a nausea with the feeling that if he took anything into the stomach he would die; not merely an aversion to food, not merely a common nausea that precedes vomiting, but a deadly loathing of food. The weakness takes on an increased anxiety, and he increasingly suffocates when he is offered food. Kind-hearted people often want him to take something, for perhaps he has not taken any food all day, or all night; but the thought of food only makes him breathe worse, increases the dyspnea, increases
the nausea, his loathing and his suffering The vomiting is more or less
spasmodic…Gagging and retching and straining to vomit. The stomach seems to take on a convulsive action, and it is with the greatest difficulty after many of these great efforts, that a little comes up, and then a little more, and this is kept up. Vomiting of anything that has been taken in to the stomach with quantities of mucus." –
If you can perceive the meaning of the word deadly that Kent uses then you understand the extend of the nausea. The nausea is accompanied by an anxiety; the greater the nausea the greater the anxiety. Anxiety in stomach, a deathly sinking as if about to die.
After vomiting feels relieved but exhausted and wants to go to sleep. You have to visualise the whole scene, the intensity of the organism’s reaction, to get the feeling and be able to recognise it in the patient.
This remedy should be carefully differentiated from Ipec. as the two remedies have a lot in common, especially in affections of the chest, with coarse rattling and nausea or vomiting. But the Ipec. has a more steady and constant nausea where in Ant-tar. the nausea is intermittent, comes in crisis, in waves. There is violent retching and gagging and straining to vomit. But if he manages to bring out some matter he is relieved while Ipec. is not. The nausea is more intense but less obstinate than the Ipec.
The problem for contemporary Western homeopaths is that they do not handle cases of such severity any more and they do not see these situations frequently, whereas in India or Pakistan one can see many more such cases.
We hope that homeopathy will soon be given a chance to prove what it can do in Hospital cases; before that however we need totally dedicated homeopaths able to make a proper study of the materia medica and who can then apply it easily and correctly.
There is no worse feeling than a severe case on which you do not know what to do homeopathically – and there is no better satisfaction than a severe case that has done well under homeopathic treatment.
It is a thirstless remedy, like Ipecacuanha. If water is offered by others in the acute cases it will irritate the patient, especially if the nausea is present. Sometimes there will be thirst but this will be the exception.
Violent pains in region of stomach, constantly increasing until they cause fainting. Vomiting until he faints away. Once he vomits there is exhaustion and sleepiness. Vomiting returns after sleep. The vomiting is better on lying on right side.