Proctalgia after stool, lasting for hours and even half a day, has been caused and cured by Croton. These stools are frequently preceded by swashing noises in the bowel, as of water that seems to flow through them. One can feel and hear these movements. ‘Gurgling in the intestines as if they contained pure water, especially on the left side’.
There is much flatulence and pain due to flatulence, which is relieved as soon as the gas is out. Sometimes the amount of gas that is released involuntarily, while the patient is walking, is enormous.
Pressure upon the umbilicus may aggravate the diarrhoea. As soon as a slight pressure is exerted upon the navel, a slightly painful, dragging feeling is perceived in the abdomen. This pain follows the course of the bowel as far as the rectum, which, in turn, may protrude through the anus. The characteristic Croton stool will also come on immediately after taking anything into the stomach, solid or liquid.
Kent provides us with a picture that summarises the diarrhoea in children when in the Croton state: ‘Great exhaustion, tympanitic abdomen, much rumbling of the bowels, great sinking, and as soon as the infant takes one mouthful of milk or draws from the mother’s breast it expels a gush of liquid or pasty stool’.
On the skin, Croton causes eruptions with very characteristic symptoms and stages of development. Usually, they begin with a vivid redness. This is followed by a stage in which there are lot of very small vesicles, which stand very close to one another and itch excessively. The vesicles then change to pustules. To the patient’s dismay, hardly is the skin free in one area, when new vesicles appear in another. This tendency to constant renewal of skin eruptions is characteristic.