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Materia Medica Viva Volume 8 – page 1761

indisposition to make any effort.’ ‘Sickly feeling as in influenza.’ ‘So weary, seems unable to rise from bed.’
A characteristic in connection with this depressed, weak state of the organism is also a great loss of appetite; in most complaints, the patient has little or no desire to eat, and often loses weight as a consequence, with much emaciation.
The indisposition to make any effort and the dread of motion goes along with a decided aggravation from motion, especially of the suffering part, but also generally from any motion. Kent says: ‘One may not practice long before one will find a Chelidonium patient, sitting up in bed with high fever, bending forward upon his elbows, holding himself perfectly still, for this medicine has as much aggravation from motion as Bryonia. All of the pains are extremely aggravated by motion. The patient is sitting with a pain that transfixes him; he cannot stir, he cannot move without the pain shooting through him like a knife. The next day you will see that his skin is growing yellow.’
Touch and pressure will also usually aggravate, especially in the abdominal region. But an amelioration from hard pressure may also occur, e.g. in complaints of the gall bladder. Also, in supraorbital neuralgia an amelioration from pressure with the hand in the first stages has been observed, which is later replaced by the sensitivity to touch and pressure. If a special sensitivity to pressure is felt at the margin of the ribs, at the border of epigastrium and right hypochondrium, this strongly points to Chelidonium.
Very characteristic is a sensation of constriction or contraction (as if a string, a hoop, a band etc. were wound tightly around the part) which may occur almost everywhere on the body: forehead and temples, nape of neck, larynx, oesophagus, throat, thorax, stomach, across the navel, anus, etc. In the head region, we often