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Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 1993

Another feature of the Colchicum rheumatism is a tendency to metastasis; wandering rheumatism that finally affects the heart or the abdomen.
Another diseased condition in which Colchicum is frequently indicated is frequent painful urging and tenesmus for stool with diarrhoeic or dysenteric discharges, often consisting only of jelly-like mucus, with streaks of blood without any faeces. The quantity of the stools discharged is often small, in relation to the enormous complaints that accompany the evacuations. There may be violent pain, violent cramps of the sphincter, cutting pain in the abdomen, doubling the patient up.
Often the secretion of urine is diminished at the same time, so oedematous swellings and ascites will come on. An interesting description of a cholera case: ‘The vomiting is renewed from every movement, and as soon as the patient rises, vertigo, palpitation with stitches at the heart and fainting fits come on’. ‘Great distension of the abdomen, as if she had eaten too much, although she had not taken the slightest food; after taking a moderate amount of very light food this sensation became much more troublesome’.
A classic indication from Bonninghausen is a bloated abdomen in cows after eating wet clover.
Some other general symptoms:
‘Diminished sensitivity in single organs’, as e.g. loss of sensation in the tongue or the finger tips.
Tingling and crawling in single toes, in the ball of the right foot, in fingers, ears and single spots of the skin of the face, a sensation as if a part of the body had been frozen and now tingled from a change in the weather.