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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1240

Cactus is also a haemorrhagic remedy. It has bleeding from vascular relaxation accompanying cardiac and vascular conditions and also from violent congestion of a part. The bleeding may come from the nose, the lungs, the rectum, the bladder or the stomach. However, as the blood flows it quickly forms large clots which cause blockages in the organs.
The Mental Picture
The mental symptoms produced correspond to those found when there are heart disorders with sadness (Aurum iodatum).
Patients are in a sad, anxious and weeping mood. They are melancholy, without being able to find any reason for it. There may be an irresistible inclination to cry. This is particularly strong in women before and during the menses. There is also hysterical behaviour during the menses.
The patient is taciturn, disinclined to speak or answer questions, and generally ill-humoured. He loves solitude and avoids those around him who wish to comfort him (Nat-m.). This depressive mood is coupled with feelings of self-reproach. The provings give us the following symptoms: ‘Feeling of semi-remorse at having done something wrong.’ ‘Feeling of having done violence to myself.’ Extraordinary irritability has been observed; the least contrariety puts him into a passion. In Schoeler’s proving, there was a tendency to develop a quarrelsome mood, sometimes over the most trivial things, and later the irritability increased even more, with the prover flying into fits of rage. The Cactus person is sensitive to noise, the sound of talking and music, and also to strong light.
In heart diseases like angina pectoris, the patient becomes really hypochondriacal, calling the physician frequently and describing in detail how he feels. The intensity of the suffering causes him great distress. The patient is an easily frightened person who screams and shrieks with the pain and who may even lose