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Materia Medica Viva Volume 6 – page 1386

protruded and was as thick as a quill. Additional ailments cured by the remedy are haemangioma, aneurysm, haemorrhoids, arterioscle¬rosis, and threatened apoplexy.
The remedy affects blood circulation and manifests as swelling of the feet during hot weather and the need to sit with the legs elevated. There is soreness in the vena saphena. Congestion in the head is also often seen in conjunction with the flushes of heat mentioned earlier. In this case the symptoms are ameliorated by open air, a draft of air, and bathing in cold water. During sleep the patient is bothered by hot feet and sticks them out of the covers in order to cool them, but then they quickly become cold and so he retracts them. Clarke says that Calcarea fluorica has been used successfully in haemoptysis, apparently to bring about contraction of the blood-vessels.
Calcarea fluorica has a special sensitivity of the sensory organs.
Light or noise (such as music from the radio) intensifies headaches; the olfactory sense is very acute; provers reported a dulling of the sense of taste. Eye diseases with impaired vision, such as scintillating scotoma and cataracts, have been successfully treated with this remedy.
The remedy increases the skin’s sensitivity. It becomes sore to the touch, and has hyperaesthetic and/or anaesthetic areas. Parts lain on are painful, or feel as if the person is lying on crumbs.
Mezger’s proving established Calcarea fluorica’s special affinity for the region of the throat and neck. Not only do the muscles and joints of the neck and the cervical vertebra exhibit a distinct reaction, but so too do the mucous membranes of the larynx and the thyroid gland.
Concerning the digestive system, a ravenous hunger was observed. This hunger could not be satiated and the provers became emaciated despite eating regularly. Calcarea fluorica patients tend to be lean, to feel weak and to become easily fatigued. They have a ‘feeling of fatigue all day’.