patients will often suffer with tremendous colic; but rumbling in abdomen with discharge of very much flatus upward and downward is also a frequent symptom of Dioscorea.
The discharge of flatus or faeces will often ameliorate the abdominal complaints;
sometimes there is also relief from urination.
Rectum and Stool
Dioscorea may act curatively in diarrhoea driving the patient out of bed very early in the morning (compare Sulphur). Usually it consists of great quantities of thin, yellow stool that are discharged with pain and burning in the anus, and severe straining and tenesmus; also stools that are slimy, jelly-like, like egg-white.
Usually those stools are preceded by the severe twisting, colicky abdominal pain in the umbilical region that was described above; the evacuation will often relieve the belly pain but not always. After stool, a faint feeling may follow, almost like syncope.
Some symptoms from the provings: ‘Urgent desire for stool, with sharp cutting pain in umbilical region, extending to the rectum, with shuddering during stool, and chilly after stool’. ‘Frequent urgent desire for stool, commencing with pain in upper portion of sacrum, extending to rectum, then to region of bladder, causing a sick, faint sensation, followed by dull pain in the rectum and distress at the umbilicus, in the morning’.
It is not so well-known that Dioscorea may also cure obstinate constipation. In one case a woman had urging to stool only once a week though she ate heartily; she suffered with full and distended abdomen and dull sensation in the head. With the characteristic colic pain of Dioscorea, a constant urging to stool and urine may be present, but only small quantities are evacuated.
Involuntary discharge of mucus from the anus. Itching in the anus.
Haemorrhoids. Piles of the size of cherries, prolapsing during stool, with much pain at the anus; they then remain constantly prolapsed. Shooting pain from a haemorrhoidal tumour to the liver region.