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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1701

organic lesion; rheumatic or arthritic toothaches.
A ‘peculiar feeling in the roots of the teeth’, urging him to grind the teeth.
The toothaches may be throbbing, stitching or tearing, also boring. They often extend to the nose and eye, also to the zygoma or even to the ear. ‘Tearing pain in upper and lower teeth of the right side, extending to the zygoma, with bruised pain in the jaws of this side, when pressing upon them or chewing.’ Dull stitches in molars, extending to the roots (i.e. upwards in upper, downwards in lower teeth).
Throat
A feeling of rawness in the throat, also a sensation as if some mucus were stuck there and he cannot hawk it up no matter how much he tries, are the great characteristics in this area.
The sore rawness of the mucous membranes, which is a general feature of Causticum, also shows in the pharynx and oesophagus. Scraping, burning and stitching as from needles are prominent painful sensations, often especially felt on swallowing. But also: ‘Burning pain in throat, not caused by swallowing; on both sides, seems to arise from chest.’
Disturbances of swallowing are generally frequent in this remedy, usually from a paresis of the muscles of deglutition, partial or complete. This is one reason why Kent recommends the remedy in paralytic effects from diphtheria, even with complete paralysis of both pharynx and oesophagus. ‘The food goes down the wrong way,’ or it surges into the posterior nares.
A feeling of a foreign body in the oesophagus, especially on swallowing. ‘Scraping throat pain, with a sensation upon empty swallowing as if he had to swallow over a plug.’ ‘A dull pressure in the oesophagus, as if behind the sternum, as though too large a morsel had been swallowed.’ ‘A gagging pressure in the oesophagus, mornings on waking, as from swallowing bread crusts without chewing them properly.’
On the other hand, a nervous urge to swallow may prevail continuously, with a swollen feeling of the throat and much dryness there. ‘Must swallow constantly, with a feeling as though the throat were not wide enough, and sensation of dryness on swallowing.’ This may be a forerunner of paralysis, as Kent states.
Besides the complaints of dryness, there are also complaints from much mucus