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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1658

her greatly: ‘Great giddiness with inclination to fall forward; and a sudden and profuse epistaxis followed by great relief.’
Besides the liver, the portal system is mainly affected. Liver infection with pain, soreness to touch and jaundice. According to Burnett, Carduus has a great affinity to the spleen and especially to the splenic end of the liver. Provings show that there is a relationship between Carduus and the left lobe of the liver. Moreover, the remedy may be indicated in water retention due to liver disease and pelvic congestion.
In infections of the liver, spleen, or kidneys due to abuse of alcohol, especially beer, Carduus has shown good results. Clarke relates two cases from Proell: one in a cook who had symptoms of cirrhosis of the liver and general water retention which made her features unrecognisable; and one in a worker in a brewery who developed dropsy.
In recent times, confirming evidence for the indication in liver cirrhosis with water retention has been published (Allgemeine Homoopathische Zeitung 3/86 & 3/90), as well as for a diminished mortality rate from intoxication with death-cap mushrooms (Amanita phalloides), after the main active principle of Carduus (Sylibinine) had been given. Proell adds that Carduus is indicated where there is a relaxed state of the mucous membrane of the stomach as evidenced by flatulence and diarrhoea, especially when the stools are clay-coloured (lack of gall pigment).
The Mental/Emotional Picture
If one word could characterises the Carduus symptomatology in general that word would be ‘touchiness’. The constitutional case of Carduus is aggravated when touched upon his/her painful spots, either in the physical body or in the emotions. They will