quite free from pain’ (compare Rhus toxicodendron).
A peculiar symptom of Dioscorea is a nausea that is felt in front of the ears, at the temples. ‘Sensation in front of both ears, as if I would vomit’. ‘Pulling pain in front of both ears, as precedes vomiting’.
Digestion is a real problem for many Dioscorea patients. The remedy may be indicated in people who are generally inclined to flatulence and cardialgia, but especially those who get the most violent colic after any irregularity in eating. If they only once eat too much, or miss a meal, or if they eat some pastry or unwashed fruit or something outside their normal diet, they will immediately suffer with tremendous pain. Heavy tea drinking will also lead to colic.
Vertigo and Head
The paroxysmal character of symptoms is an important hint to Dioscorea, also in this area. For instance: in the morning vertigo and giddiness gradually come on, accompanied by rumbling of the bowel and lasting for an hour, then subsiding; sudden reappearance of the vertigo, with heat of the head; this continued with great violence for half an hour, and then subsided, but continued more or less all evening.
Sharp, cutting pain along the whole right side of the forehead, shooting back as far as the ear; the pain is not a steady pain, but remits, and is aggravated by pressure and cold air.
Sensation of fullness in head, speedily followed or else accompanied by spasmodic pain in abdomen.
Dizziness: on sneezing; when waking at night, with dry mouth and bitter taste. Most headaches are dull and localised in the forehead or in the temples. Sensation as though the temples were in a vice, especially when there is belching of great quantities of air at the same time.
Dull headache in the forehead, with nausea; later extending to the nose, with fluent coryza, and other symptoms of a bad cold.