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Materia Medica Viva Volume 1 – Page 10

In the morning they never want to eat, there is no appetite, but as the day advances appetite returns and they can in fact eat a lot, and finally at night in bed they may feel hungry. You will not however find the empty, gnawing feeling in the stomach that characterizes Abies canadensies. Such patients tend to have cardiac problems associated with the stomach, where the heart feels as though it were working slowly, and as if there were a kind of heaviness, in which case we have bradycardia. A tachycardia is also possible sometimes.
Abies nigra will also be indicated in cases where the person feels as if he has aged mentally, where he has lost his mental agility, his ability to comprehend and process ideas, where he senses a difficulty in comprehending a discussion, difficulty to think, to put the mind in action. He has the impression that his mind is blocked, that his mind is tied up, and therefore he cannot study. Because of this situation he becomes dejected and sad.
We perceive a Similarity in the patterns occuring in both the stomach and the mental sphere: in short a difficulty to digest, or to "process intellectual food" which remains as a big lump in the brain.
Every meal is accompanied by pain in the stomach, followed by a great number of sour eructations and a tendency to vomit, all pointing to the degree of indigestion. This brings to the patient’s mind the idea that he may have cancer, and indeed he will feel as though he has a tumor in the stomach. He will not express or admit a great anxiety about his health but in the way he describes his symptoms you will notice a hypochondriacal element. It is interesting also to observe in this remedy that whenever he has this feeling of a lump, or hard ball-like substance in some part of the organism, the tendency is to bring it out. With the sensation of a foreign substance lodged in the lungs, for instance, the patient will try to cough until it is ejected.
There is restlessness at night in bed, and he may stay awake with hunger. In this remedy it is interesting to note that the patient’s appetite is non-existant in the morning, increasing during the day until eventually at night it becomes an annoying hunger that keeps him awake in bed.
So we see that, inspite of the fact that these two remedies have so much in common, you will not confuse the one for the other, so long as you know what to ask for and how to obtain information.