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Materia Medica Viva Volume 9 – page 2013

Anxiety and Restlessness
The Colocynthis states of acute pain are usually accompanied by great anxiety and restlessness. ‘Complaining bitterly day and night’, ‘Anxiety, restlessness irritability and tearfulness’ are among the characteristics of the remedy.
The severe stomach and abdominal cramps may cause oppression of the chest and lead to states of anxiety, and only ‘violent motion and wriggling around’ will relieve a little. ‘No position brings rest or relief; has to scream loud with pain’. Headaches are compelling him to cry, scream and walk the room, it is impossible to rest and lie still. Again and again, in the cases we find the words ‘doesn’t find rest anywhere’, or ‘pains that do not permit any rest, neither by day nor by night’.
The violent pains not only cause restlessness and anxiety on the emotional and mental level, they also cause upheaval in the body. Abdominal pains are often accompanied by vomiting and diarrhoea, which is rather a consequence of the extreme pain than a problem of digestive disturbance. And Kent emphasises that nausea does not appear at first, but when the pain becomes sufficiently intense nausea and vomiting begin’.
The face of the Colocynthis patient bears the marks of the violent pain; the features are distorted. ‘Pinching pain in the abdomen, as if the bowels were pressed inward, with cutting extending toward the pubic region, so severe below the navel that the muscles of the face are distorted and the eyes drawn closed’.
Moreover, there is an aversion to mental exertion of any kind, ‘dislike to study’. And Colocynthis patients are especially disinclined to open themselves up to other people. In the Austrian provings, we find the following remark; ‘Disinclined to mental and physical work, even to see good friends; faint-hearted’.