be seen: ‘Severe pressing in stomach, like a cramp, for two hours; could not remain lying in bed, but had to get up. ’ (Hahnemann)
Pressing pain in the stomach on coughing has also been observed.
Abdomen
The abdomen becomes hard and distended. There is incarcerated flatus,
and tension in the abdomen with the bloating, and the surface is painful to any touch or pressure. Tight clothes about the hypochondria are unbearable. A strange symptom is a visible distension of the abdomen on walking in the open air. Emotions may also bring on this symptom, e.g. grief or mortification. There is a tendency to great increase in adipose tissue in the abdomen. Even if patients are emaciated elsewhere, the abdomen looks thick and bloated.
Besides the fatty tissues, the glandular tissues are also inclined to swell, as is consistent with the Calcarea action upon the glands. Mesenteric glands in children are hard and swollen; the abdomen feels as if it were full of stones. The inguinal glands also suffer from painful swelling and induration.
The flatulence is accompanied by continuous gurgling in the abdomen. Sometimes a rumbling on inspiration and expiration is to be heard.
The abdominal pains of Calcarea are generally relieved by warmth. They are usually shooting, tensive or pressive.
Colic in the intestinal canal. Hahnemann observed an important symptom here: Frequently violent spasm in intestinal canal, particularly, however, in evening and at night, with coldness of the thighs’. A sensation of coldness in the abdomen may also accompany such spasms. There are frequent attacks of colic after the disappearance of coryza. Cutting and griping in the abdomen in the afternoon, with vomiting of the food eaten for lunch. Cramp-like, twisting feeling around the navel.
Drawing in the abdomen, and uneasiness therein, in the morning on waking. Sensation of contraction in the abdomen, upward to the chest, first thing in the morning. Contractive pain in the abdomen, extending to the small of the back; in the epigastrium, forcing her to walk bent over, particularly excited by deep breathing; in the hypogastrium, extending to the uterus, with the discharge of
bloody slime along with the stool.
Pinching pain in the abdomen, with or without diarrhoea; deep in the