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Materia Medica Viva Volume 1 – Page 9

Abies Nigra
Black or Double Spruce. N.O. Coniferae.
Tincture of the gum.
THE ESSENTIAL FEATURES
Both the Abies affect the digestive system, but each one in its own unique way. Where in Abies canadensis the focus is on the empty feeling in the stomach with the faintness arising from epigastrium, in Abies nigra the leading symptom is again in the stomach but this time it is accompanied by a feeling as if a hard boiled egg had lodged in the cardiac orifice of the stomach. This symptom will not always be described using this particular expression by the patient but the main idea should be there. It can be described as a constriction in this area, or as an undigested lump of food that has lodged there, or as a discomfort, or a knot etc. In such a case, you will have difficulty in the digestion, a stomach that is overworked and gets upset easily, a stomach of the aged.
There is a kind of hysteria going through this remedy; you may see this idea of constriction, or lump, or hard round substance appearing in other parts of the body, like the lungs or the throat, and you will tend to think of Ignatia, because in the X-rays there is no pathology yet the patient complains bitterly. You will notice that the patient is quite a hypochondriac as he relates his symptoms in great detail, and in a gloomy, dejected way as though something were very seriously wrong with his health.
Abies nigra is indicated in aged people with weak digestive power, who have a flushed face, who drink a lot of tea and smoke and are aggravated by both, who stay awake at night and feel drowsy, and sleepy all day. They are never optimistic, but usually despondent and with a bigger or lesser degree of depression. As soon as they try to drink their usual tea there is a heartburn in the stomach and eventually the stomach feels knotted up, constricted, especially after eating. It is mostly after loading the stomach with food that the symptoms appear.