addition, there are cravings for cheese, fish and strongly seasoned foods, especially pepper.
Eggs might be an object of desire or aversion, the aversion to soft-boiled eggs being sometimes quite strong (the opposite of Calcarea carbonica). Milk (mother’s milk or cows’ milk) may also be craved or strongly rejected.
In spite of emaciation, there may be quite ravenous hunger. Infants want to nurse all the time, but vomit easily. A special time for a sudden feeling of great hunger is in the afternoon at 4 p.m.
Before and during the menses, the appetite may be completely lost.
Hering also observed the following interesting symptom: ‘No appetite from noon to noon; but thinking about it, she wants to eat. ’
The stomach is easily disordered. Drinking cold water, eating ice-cream or fruit will cause colic and vomiting or diarrhoea. Clarke relates that a special sort of dyspepsia has been cured by Calcarea phosphorica: ‘Pain better for a short time by raising wind, when fasting the pain goes to the spine, feeling as if one ought to raise wind and cannot. Dyspepsia with indescribable distress in region of stomach, only temporarily better by eating. ’
Violent pain in the stomach, with great debility, headache and diarrhoea; pain is excited by introducing the least morsel of food into the stomach.
Nausea comes on after drinking coffee, with incipient heartburn and
an exceedingly unpleasant sensation, together with a confusion in the head, headache and great ill-humour. Heartburn after lunch, lasting for some time, has several times been observed in the provings.
Nausea when moving, rising from the pit of stomach; better at rest and is followed by a headache and lassitude.
Generally, there is much flatulence in the stomach and abdomen, which provokes loud eructation. This may relieve the flatulent colic temporarily, but not the belching which continues to leave a burning sensation in the epigastrium. An inclination to vomit is often excited by mucus in the throat.
An indescribable uneasy feeling in the region of the stomach is described by provers. It comes in the form of an empty, sinking feeling or a sensation of the stomach being distended by food.
The stomach-ache is often burning, with water-brash or as a consequence of eructation.
Abdomen
Flatulence and flatulent colic are frequent from eating or from certain foods (see Stomach), and the pain, which often has a cutting, sharp quality, tends to localise around the navel. ‘Pain in the middle of the abdomen, while and after eating, lasting half an hour; this pain abated after a copious emission