rising, there is a dizziness along with the feeling that he will fall down unconscious. The fainting spells can be coupled with chill, indistinct vision and large drops of sweat on the face.
The ability to convalesce from illnesses is also impaired; Calcarea has easy relapses, does not continue to convalesce.
Muscular ailments:
The muscles become lax and flabby and are easily injured and strained. Muscular atrophy can be found; muscles of the back and limbs can be wasted. Children are late to walk due to muscular weakness. Kent provides us with an interesting differentiation here. The Calcarea child ‘is not late learning to walk, but it is late walking. It knows how to walk, but it can’t walk. Natrum muriaticum has brain trouble, in which the child is late learning to do things. ’
Calcarea has a pyaemic state that results in abscesses in the deep muscles: in the neck, in the thighs and in the abdomen.
Another characteristic, which may be present in Calcarea cases from the ages of 35 to 40 years onward, is cramping in different parts of the body, especially in the calves when they lie down at night. These cramps can draw on the limbs, and, in particular, contract and twist the fingers and toes.
Rheumatic complaints:
Calcarea is prone to many rheumatic complaints, musculo¬skeletal aches and pains that are generally ameliorated by warmth and dryness; they are primarily aggravated by dampness and also by cold. Generally, Calcarea is aggravated by cold bathing and ameliorated by hot baths. Many of the pains are aggravated by lying down, similar to Rhus toxicodendron. Calcarea suffers from muscular rheumatism. With the rheumatic pains hard welts are to be felt in the muscles.