Generalities
Colchicum will be indicated:
• in dysentery and the like where the patient will have numerous stools or evacuations of mucus every day with extreme exhaus¬tion, extreme thirst and total aversion to food, even the smell of which will be repulsive.
• when there is a tremendous flatulent distension of the abdomen, the worst in our materia medica. Distention on abdomen without any bowel motion, without any flatus without stool as if the colon has been paralysed.
• in rheumatic and arthritic complains that are wandering and metastatic.
All complaints are triggered or strongly increased by damp and cold weather. Colchicum has cured a lot of rheumatic complaints that developed during, or immediately after, exposure to damp and cold weather. The same is true with gastric complaints of all kinds, especially diarrhoea and dysentery.
They usually occur in the wet days of autumn, or else with paralysis which comes on after the body has become wet. ‘Paralysis after sudden suppression of sweat, particularly foot sweat, by getting wet’. Kent adds, however, that extreme heat of sun in summer may also aggravate the Colchicum gout, as the secretion of urine is diminished.
Colchicum is worse from touch, motion and exertion but the great characteristic is his oversensitivity to odours, espe¬cially odours of eggs and fish. Moreover, night is a time of general aggravation, especially of the pain of Colchicum. ‘All kinds of pain are worse from the onset of the night till dawn’.
From byegone times, Colchicum has been known as a remedy ‘against’ rheumatism, gout and similar complaints, and conventional medicine still uses Colchicine in acute attacks of gout.