ought to be, results from an excess of calcium, the complementary feature to the prevailing lack of calcium. Exostoses is a symptom for which Calcarea is well-known. This excess may also lead to swollen cartilage or tumours, especially those of an encysted kind. Those suffering from these ailments are usually the thin Calcarea patients. In contrast to the more prevalent Calcarea personality, these people can be quite active and can also have very positive temperaments.
An especially marked feature of Calcarea carbonica is its tendency to attack glands. It affects particularly the lymphatic glands: the glands of the neck, of the groin, and those found in the abdomen. There is often atrophy or emaciation of the body along with glandular swelling, especially in tubercular subjects. The lymph nodes can become hard, inflamed, and painful; nodular swellings appear under the skin and are often large, up to 15mm in diameter.
Ulcers may also be cured by Calcarea, especially when they are indurated. Kent remarks: ‘It is useful in indurations in ulcers, and the base of ulcers, and round about ulcers, hence its wonderful use in palliating and restraining the growth of malignant ulcers, as malignant ulcers always have an indurated base… In cancerous affections that would kill in sixteen months the patient will live five years with Calcarea, if Calcarea is indicated. That is something, and many times that is all that can be expected in a cancerous growth. ’
Another kind of growth that is often produced in Calcarea subjects is polypus. Polypi develop in the nose, in the ears, in the vagina, in the bladder, in the rectum and so on.
Obesity and emaciation:
An important polarity in Calcarea is that it can cause obesity and emaciation. These states are often coupled with anaemia.
The patients of soft fibre, have a tendency to be obese and