provings and the clinical cases. There is indeed also a proving symptom ‘Enormous appetite’, but the characteristic state is expressed in this well- confirmed symptom: ‘He has appetite for this and that, but as soon as he sees it, or, still more, smells it, he shudders from disgust and is unable to eat anything’. There is extreme sensitivity to odours, bad taste in the mouth, insipid taste of food etc., and all this makes him loathe eating, produces nausea and even fainting. Often it is virtually impossible to take any food in.
In provings and cases we hear again and again about much thirst, burning thirst, even unquenchable thirst. To be sure, there may also be thirstlessness, and Hering emphasises ‘No thirst’ with two bars in bold type. His source is an interesting report by Kurtz (AHZ 26:89-92; R ckert, Clinical experiences 3:511), which has supplied several ‘black letter symptoms’ for the Guiding Symptoms. Kurtz writes about ‘a lot of’ rheuma cases he has cured with Colchicum. Among other conditions, he mentions ‘feverish rheumatism’ with nearly constant chilliness and dry skin without sweat, and he adds, ‘no thirst, or at least not markedly increased thirst’. It is therefore questionable whether the highest degree for the symptom ‘no thirst’ is really justified.
A remarkable symptom is a desire for effervescent drinks and especially for champagne.
Excessive nausea from odour of food (and even from thinking of food) is, of course, a guiding symptom of Colchicum. Nausea: amounting to faintness; with deathly prostration; with great restlessness, distraction of mind and sinking of bodily strength.
Nausea with accumulation of watery saliva in mouth; nausea and inclin¬ation to vomit from swallowing saliva.
Most intense nausea with violent vomiting that is still aggravated by every movement; has to lie absolutely still, ‘bent up and without the slightest motion’. The nausea tends to arise in upright posture. ‘As soon as she rises up, there is a crawling in the stomach, as in vomiturition Vomiting with watery diarrhoea; choleraic affections. Forcible vomiting, first of food, then of mucus and bile, after violent retching. Or in the words of a proving symptom: ‘Violent gagging; after a long time of retching, a great quantity of yellow mucus, tasting bitter like bile, is ejected, leaving a bilious and bitter taste in the pharynx’.