if they were in the spine; they are not felt on the outside of the back, like Belladonna, but rather deep in the spine.
While the acute exacerbation of pain is continuous for days at a time, chronically the pain recurs in paroxysms with an irregular periodicity. This periodicity may vary from every fifteen to thirty to forty-five days, and, once the paroxysm begins, its violence, anxiety, and characteristic great thirst for cold drinks (which are vomited) are unmistakable signposts to Bismuth.
It is strange, however, that once the pain abates, these patients can eat and digest virtually anything. During the paroxysm, the body and head may feel as if fever is present. Eventually the extremities become cold, but the torso and head remain warm to the touch, even though there is no actual fever.
Bismuth is indicated in the chronic non-febrile vomiting following an acute gastritis, or indigestion. It is important to remember that in spite of the fact that there is such a strong inflammation of the stomach lining, fever is lacking or very low. This will help you to differentiate it from the Belladonna gastritis, as both have the intensity of the pain and the extension to the back.
I have used the oxide of bismuth with success in a number of cases:
a. for a wearing, nightly cough, in a hysterical female patient.
b. in a case of sub-acute cystitis, (after Plumbum), accompanied with violent crampy pain at the bladder, which came on in irregular paroxysms.
c. in several cases of dysmenorrhoea in hysterical female patients.
d. and lastly, with spectacular success in a case of phlegmasia alba dolens (phlebitis of the femoral vein). The left lower extremity was the principal seat of the disease.