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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1688

inability to keep the lids of the eyes open, which droop involuntarily. In the mental makeup, the anxiety about the future and fear that something will happen are prominent.
They have great anxiety about labour; fears something may go wrong during confinement or something may happen to her child during labour. All this worry or anxiety, combined with night-watching and physical and emotional fatigue, may itself lead to nervous exhaustion. It can also have bad consequences for lactation; Causticum is a well-known remedy for suppression of milk from these causes.
There is difficulty in labour. Because the neuromuscular tissues involved in the expulsion of the foetus are weak or paralysed, there is improper and insufficient pressure and force to push the baby out, which results in delayed labour. In uterine inertia during labour, Causticum should be thought of; also in spasmodic labour pains. But the suffering mother may be more worried about others, even about the inconvenience caused to the doctor and the nurses due to the delayed labour, than about the complications of her own situation. Or she cannot bear to listen to the labour cries of other mothers in the next wards. This is another form the sympathetic element of Causticum assumes.
The uterine musculature will often not regain its previous vitality after the delivery; it seems to remain in a state of inertia. Other functions also remain disturbed, as urination; retention of urine after confinement is an indication for Causticum (compare Arsenicum), also retention after some kind of surgery.
In addition to the suppression of milk mentioned above, the breasts are affected in Causticum patients, especially at the time of nursing. The nipples are often sore, excoriated and cracked. Even ulceration and fistular openings can be cured with Causticum.