Books

Materia Medica Viva Volume 11 – page 2319

Another keynote is that they cannot tolerate food in the stomach for long, and will vomit immediately after eating. Sometimes only a mouthful of totally undigested food is brought up. It is a similar situation with their bowel motions, they may have a bowel motion halfway through meals, or by the end of a meal. And they have to hasten, or otherwise may lose the stool. The stools can be frequent, and finally involuntary.
The worst food for Ferrum is egg, to which they have a strong aversion. Also they cannot tolerate farinaceous food, especially wheat, which brings on diarrhoea. They are aggravated by sour food, by tomatoes, beans, peas and lemons. A craving for milk, and aversion to acid, is typical. In some cases there is a desire for lemons and tomatoes, which aggravate.
The blood-vessels are distended, there are varicose veins, and their coating is relaxed. On this account bleeding takes place easily (capillary oozing). You may expect haemorrhage from all parts of the body, from the nose, the lungs, the uterus at times with clots, but commonly with copious, thin, liquid blood, very dark.
Due to the anaemia there is suppression of the menses, miscar¬riage, male impotence and female frigidity and sterility.
In Ferrum cases the muscles become flabby and relaxed and are incapable of sustained effort. Relaxation runs through the remedy; dragging down in the lower part of the body, as if the
internal organs would come out, prolapse of the uterus, the skin pits upon pressure and is pale.
The following is a very good description of the action of the remedy: ‘She became pale, had rumbling in the abdomen; the chest was squeezed together, a rushing up to the head; she got spasmodic violent eructation, then heat in the face, especially in the right cheek, and pain in the crown of the head like shooting.’