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Materia Medica Viva Volume 4 – page 959

Distension in evening in bed.
Epileptic aura starts from the stomach.
Abdomen
It would appear that Belladonna is indicated in perhaps five percent of cases of acute appendicitis. The attacks begin abruptly. As in most Belladonna complaints, there is aggravation from touch (local pressure) and/or from a jar. However, generalised pressure on the abdomen may often ameliorate the pain; consequently, lying on the abdomen or bending forward will relieve, but local pressure will aggravate it. The patient is unable to even lie on his right side during the attack of appendicitis or cholecystitis.
Belladonna will be the remedy to be thought of in the following cases: Peritonitis, inflammation of liver or gall bladder, spastic colitis, intussusception, inflammation of inguinal hernia with vomiting, strangulated inguinal hernia, inflammation of inguinal glands, typhlitis, acute and chronic hepatitis.
Of course, Belladonna is well-known as a remedy for colitis. In colitis there is a striking tendency for complaints to affect the transverse colon, and sometimes spasms in this region will be visibly reflected in motions of the abdominal wall. I once saw a striking example of this phenomenon in an infant with intussusception. There was complete bowel obstruction, and upright abdominal X-rays showed air-fluid levels. I examined the child and saw that the face was hot and flushed. The hands, however, were quite cold.
Then I noticed spasms travelling in ripples (that were visible in the abdomen) across the transverse colon. We scrambled to find a dose of Belladonna. Meanwhile the child was being prepared for immediate surgery. We gave a dose of Belladonna 10M, and within forty minutes the child passed some stool and repeat X-rays showed resolution of the condition. Of course, the colitis pains are ameliorated by bending forward or lying on the abdomen.
The modalities of the pains in the abdomen have all the general characteristics