Stomach
With many Conium complaints, there is loss of appetite. But Conium has marked desires: for salt and salty food; for sour food; for coffee. Milk does not agree. Bread tastes bad and ‘does not go down’.
Empty eructations are frequent. They can start in the morning and continue all day. Usually they are odourless and tasteless, but there is also ‘putrid eructation’.
Much nausea after every meal, with inclination to vomit and often enough with real vomiting. Conium may be indicated in vomiting in pregnancy. Violent spasmodic pains in the stomach, especially if coupled with a tendency to constipation. From a cured case: ‘Feeling as though the stomach contracted, as though a heavy weight were pressing upon it; she thinks she cannot tighten her clothes, and believes the stomach cramp would never stop, it only remits sometimes but increases again, making her sufferings intolerable’.
Contracting stomach pains, together with feeling of coldness in stomach and back; sensation of soreness and rawness in stomach.
In excessive stomach pains, e.g. in the context of a perforating ulcer or even cancer, Conium has been given with good results; the pains and the general state of the patients were markedly ameliorated. In one case the pains were gnawing and appeared mostly two or three hours after a meal and during the night, in another case they had a burning and cramping character and extended as far as the back and the shoulders. But the most remarkable modality was, ‘pains relieved most in the knee-elbow position’.
Abdomen
Distension of abdomen, the belly is often hard and tense, with flatulence. ‘Hardness and severe bloating of abdomen, in the evening after eating, the umbilicus protrudes which makes her sleep restless’.
Swelling of the mesenteric lymph nodes.
Rapid bloating of the belly especially after drinking milk. Cutting in the abdomen precedes the discharge of flatus.
A strange concomitant symptom: ‘Distension of abdomen, like flatulent colic, in the evening, with coldness of one foot’ (compare Lycopodium).