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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1335

Kent points out that in Calcarea we see vertigo ‘on almost all occasions, intermingled with all sorts of symptoms. ’ He notes that vertigo results from every stirring up of the emotions or from mental exertion: ‘If he becomes shocked, or has bad news, or has any mental excitement or chagrin, this vertigo will come out, ’ namely a vertigo with blood rushing to the head. One symptom from the proving is dizziness all evening long from vexation about trifles.
Vertigo also comes on when quickly turning the head, when walking in the open air (she feels as if she might tumble), after walking, while standing and looking around (she feels as if everything is turning around with her).
The vertigo may be accompanied by headache, nausea, and vomiting. A special indication is ‘chronic headache with vertigo, worse ascending stairs, in anaemic women with profuse menses’ (T.F. Allen).
The morning before breakfast is not a good time for Calcarea persons; then they can feel dizzy and tremble.
Head
The headaches of Calcarea typically have their onset after exertion. Other causative factors are: rainy weather, exposure to the cold and damp, as well as draughts of all kinds, catching a cold (especially when the nasal discharge decreases), over-lifting and straining the back, coitus, and emotions, such as grief. Great mental exertion (‘over-studying’) may stimulate hyperaemia and pain of the head and provoke a ‘school children’s headache’. Mental occupation, however, may also have an ameliorating effect.
Walking, noise and talking will aggravate the headache. The pain is better from lying quietly in a dark room, especially on the left side (which is often the painful side), the side preferred by Calcarea people. Amelioration also comes from gentle pressure and rubbing. There is a drawing pain that appears in the occiput, on the side to which the head is tilted, that disappears from sneezing.
Some important headache symptoms are:
Stupefying, pressive pain in the forehead, with confusion of the senses and fogginess of the whole head while reading; has to stop reading and doesn’t know where he was.
Extreme pressive aching in the forehead, as in vertigo, on all occasions, whether in motion or at rest.