to; burning in the face, on the skin, in the mouth, throat, stomach, abdomen, and anus; burning pain in bones and joints. Patients feel
‘very hot’, with lassitude and heaviness all over.
A symptom from Hahnemann’s proving: ‘Great heat all day; all his clothes seemed like a load to him, and his body felt too heavy as well, as though he were carrying a great load’. There is also tensile pain, markedly aggravated by touch or pressure.
Two striking sensations in this context: a feeling as though a thin cord were lying under the skin, accompanying a red discolouration of the skin in the form of stripes or streaks; and a boring, gnawing and digging pain from the gums to the ear, with itching and crawling in the cheek as soon as the pain is relieved, with inflammatory swelling of the cheek.
Euphorbium may also be indicated if a swollen cheek has been caused by toothache. A case where Rückert successfully used Euphorbium: ‘Throbbing pains, and a sensation as if the teeth were screwed in; under the eye tooth a painful swelling, very sensitive to touch, developing into an abscess; cheek greatly swollen and inflamed as in erysipelas’.
Pain as if contracted, compressed or ‘screwed in’ is characteristic of Euphorbium, not only in the region the teeth. In many areas of the body there are found contractile or compressive pain on one hand, and pain as if pulling apart on the other, as in the head, stomach, abdomen and chest. The toothaches of Euphorbium are usually aggravated by touch and mastication.
Generally, Euphorbium is apt to palliate extremely severe pain if the symptoms agree, even in cases where the disease itself is incurable. Especially burning pain as it occurs in cancer will be relieved by Euphorbium if the remedy is indicated. Clarke, for instance, reports a case of burning pain in the bones in a