This is indicated primarily by constipation of excess, if it is known that they are not blood, and it is also established that there is a lot of them. This assumption is further supported by other signs: retention of urine, pain felt throughout the entire abdomen, heaviness in the lower abdomen and the absence of indications of vomiting, instead of which even rumbling and swelling of the ureters is observed. This also includes sharply colored stool before the crisis, excretion in larger quantities than usual, rising and protruding hypochondrium and the transition of rumbling to pain. back - sometimes this also happens from the winds. Often, urination becomes profuse and seems to compete with the signs of bowel movement, especially if the patient’s bowel movements are difficult and hard and his pulse is small, especially in cold air. The pulse is small, but strong, and does not become hard, and it is small because it goes down. A crisis through relaxation is sometimes indicated by the fact that nosebleeds and perspiration in a given patient are usually scant, and diarrhea is profuse, especially if he is accustomed to drinking cold water.
They say that if the urine after a crisis during a three-day fever is white and liquid, then one should expect diarrhea, which almost ulcerates the intestines, for bile, if it is not excreted in the urine or with something else, comes out when the patient relaxes. With profuse sweating or increased urination, a crisis through the release of nature rarely occurs.