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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2289

desperate case of sarcoma of the pelvic bones, where Euphorbium
C6 brought considerable amelioration of the pain.
Moreover, Euphorbium will be indicated in certain cases of gastritis and in some infections of the bowel. It produces nausea, vomiting and diarrhoea. There may be very violent burning all over the digestive tract, from the pharynx all the way down to the anus. The burning is described as from pepper or fire;
‘burning in the throat and stomach as if a flame streamed out of it; had to open the mouth’. The pain in the stomach and abdomen is also very violent, burning, contractile, constrictive, griping and clawing, or else pulling apart.
A keynote is: ‘Contraction of the stomach from all sides towards the middle, as if constricted, with accumulation of saliva in the mouth and nausea’. Eructation of wind, salivation and shivering are frequent concomitants. Diarrhoeic stools may look like boiled glue, especially in pregnant women; the stools are often preceded by itching in the rectum, and accompanied by severe pain in the abdomen and anus.
The Mental-Emotional Picture
The mental picture of this remedy is also important. Euphorbium patients are distressed by many fears, apprehensions and worries; most marked is a fear of having swallowed poison, which would surely kill them. Fear of evil is also prominent. But they are rather introverted persons who tend not to express their fears; rather they are quiet, serious and reserved. They feel best when they are diverted by a serious occupation, and for this reason they usually enjoy their work. ‘Quiet seriousness, with a desire to work’ (Bönninghausen).