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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2198

• Clammy sweat in the genitalia, with a strong odour.
• Gall-stone colic that extends to the arms, renal colic that extends down the legs, or pain from angina pectoris that extends to the sternum, arms and hands.
The Mental Picture
Dioscorea constitution patients are tired, closed individuals that seek solitude to relax. They avoid, and are aggravated by, contact with others. They are those types that we call bilious, sour, surly charac- ters that concentrate on their own problems of health and avoid everyone. They may develop anthropophobia and fear of crowds.
They feel permanently tired, and any conversation wearies them. They feel dull and unable to attain any mental coherence. Even- tually they lose all ambition to do anything. Memory fails them and they start making mistakes in speech and writing, using the wrong words, or forgetting words altogether.
They exhibit inability to call things by their right names. The patient might say ‘right’ instead of ‘left’ and ‘arm’ instead of ‘leg’, but at once feels that he has made a mistake, and then corrects himself. In other cases the patient always omits the end of a phrase or of a word, but knows that this is incorrect: he always corrects the mistake later.
We find the same ‘twisting’ that we see in the bowel in behaviour and character as well; peevish, ill-humoured, wanting to be left alone and quiet, a ‘Don’t bother me’ attitude much like Bryonia.
Dioscorea seems to affect the hormones concerned with sexual activity. Patients become hyper-excitable at the beginning, with strong nightly emissions and amorous dreams. In this state they have