the whole of such symptomatology is typically masked by allopathic drugging. Allopathic medicine has at its disposal a lot of drugs to suppress these symptoms, while the real disease progresses and the patients condition worsens in spite of not feeling the pains. When allopathic suppression has taken place, it is often difficult to recognise the symptoms. For example, it is possible, for the patient to exhibit a slow and feeble pulse instead of intense palpitations. In such cases the practitioner should go back and study the initial pathology of the case to see if Cactus is appropriate.
I have tried to separate the functional from the pathological states, but in reality they cannot be so clearly demarcated. The student should use his imagination to perceive how a patient under the influence of this remedy might feel, and to grasp the idea of the pattern behind the symptoms.
Constrictive Pain and Irregular Congestion
The first and most prevalent key-note of the remedy is the constrictive pain that is often so intense that the patient is forced to cry out. The sensation of tightness and constriction is not only to be found in the heart but is a general characteristic of the remedy. You may find it in various other places, like the oesophagus, the bladder, the vagina, the uterus, the chest (sometimes marking the attachments of the diaphragm), all over the abdomen, etc.
A spasmodic constriction of the vagina upon introduction of the penis (vaginismus) is an indication of the remedy. The tightness is such that it not only prevents any movement, but inhibits the withdrawal of the penis. The sensation the woman has is as if an iron ring squeezes her vagina immediately after the intromission of the penis and gives her such severe pain that she can go into convulsions. Her partner feels as if a string were tightly drawn around his penis. This trouble typically occurs only in the beginning of coitus; however, in severe cases, it can prevent it altogether, except during menses and one or two days before, when the