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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1807

Another indication is excessive flatulence in the whole abdomen, not ameliorated by belching or passage of flatus, with the belly very sensitive to touch, but ameliorated by hard pressure.
China is one of the great flatulence remedies, together with Carbo vegetabilis, Colchicum and Lycopodium. ‘Post-operative gas pains, no amelioration from passing it’ is a well-confirmed indication. Fruit or fish generally aggravate and cause indigestion, flatulence, fermentation in the bowel and diarrhoea. Also seen are gastric symptoms from: excessive use of tea; sour wine; freshly brewed beer; impure water; eating bad meat or fish. It is worse from drinking wine and other alcoholic beverages; it has been of use in the ‘exhaustion with irritability’ of alcoholics. Also from ‘flatulent foods’: cabbage, etc.; from milk; from sour foods.
Hughes accentuates the action in all ailments from excessive use of tea; not only gastric and abdominal, but also disturbances of sleep at night from tea drinking. ‘Rapid emaciation, with indigestion, voracious appetite, undigested stools, copious night-sweats’ (Allen, Clinicals). There can be a feeling of fullness with only a little food; but also getting hungry during the night, and like Psorinum may get up to eat.
If you ever find a lost appetite in foggy weather, it is China. The remedy is also in the rubric ‘Generalities, cloudy weather aggravates,’ but the main remedy in this modality will be Rhus toxicodendron where we see a marked aggravation on all levels, mental, emotional, and physical. The spleen and the liver are often affected, usually with swelling and hardness, and especially with pain (stitching, pressive, as if bruised, etc.) and extreme sensitivity to touch.
‘Bloating’ is also seen in the tendency of China to develop oedema, especially of the legs and abdomen. The swelling is very soft and