occur, and often there is also real diarrhoea.
Some proving symptoms which throw some light upon qualities of pain and concomitant symptoms: ‘Rumbling in the abdomen, as if a stool should follow, with some pain in small of back’. ‘Pinching and cutting and digging all over the abdomen, as if diarrhoea should come on’.
A very frequent location of stomach ache (but also of skin affections) is the umbilicus. Pain felt ‘in the middle of the hole’ (Tyler) should make one think of Dulcamara. The proving gives, for example: ‘Twisting digging and pinching around the umbilical region’. ‘Gnawing throbbing just above the navel’. ‘Sticking pain in the umbilical region’. In many clinical cases, especially where the chief complaint was diarrhoea, a cutting in the bowel and especially about the navel has been observed.
A strange painful sensation: ‘Violent pinching in the abdomen, as if a long worm were crawling up and down in the intestines, gnawing and pinching the parts’.
Dulcamara also has a marked action upon the inguinal glands which may be enlarged and inflamed, especially after catching cold. In the Handbook of Noack, Trinks and Müller, a cured case from Knorre is related: ‘Inflammatory swelling of the inguinal glands, from a cold, most painful on moving the feet and trying to walk, less painful on touch, with a drawing, tensive pain in the affected part, spreading beyond the arcus pubis; with vomiting, diarrhoea, fever’.
Rectum and Stool
Slimy diarrhoea with colic, especially in the umbilical region, as a consequence of catching cold is the characteristic pathology of Dulcamara in this area.
Jahr summarises the symptoms in his Symptom Codex: ‘Slimy diarrhoea, white or green or yellow; diarrhoea with colic after catching cold, espe- cially in summer, with watery evacuations at night, or with protrusion of the rectum; protracted bloody diarrhoea, with smarting pain at the anus, or with vomiting, eructations and thirst’.
The usual cause of the diarrhoea, namely ‘catching cold’, frequently means a sudden fall in temperature. This may be the case in autumn (cold nights after hot days), in workers in cold-storage chambers (who have to go from warm