Calcarea silicata’s cough often comes during evenings in bed, at night, and in the morning after rising; it may be excited by cold damp air, cold drinks, anything cold, and is aggravated by talking.
Spasmodic cough, especially in the evening, racking the whole body. Palpitation of the heart at night, after eating, from exertion, even from the slightest motion.
Stomach
Great thirst, especially at night; but an aversion to milk. There may also be a desire for milk (which, according to Kent, occurred in some provers).
Appetite first increased, then ravenous, finally wanting, with an aversion to food, especially to meat.
The digestive organs are generally slow to function, as is true for most organs in this remedy.
Water-brash, heartburn, hiccup, and sour eructation.
Nausea in the morning, while and after eating, better after empty eructation. Vomiting in the morning and at night, on coughing, after drinking milk. Vomiting of black blood.
A feeling of anxiety in the stomach.
Sensation of coldness in the stomach especially when empty.
Sensations in the stomach: empty feeling in the stomach, which is not
relieved by eating; fullness, distension, and flatulence after eating; sensation of a stone in stomach; a marked sensation of tension.
Stomach-ache after cold drinks, on coughing and after eating.
Pulsation in the stomach.
Abdomen
Distension of the abdomen after eating. Flatulence with much rumbling and fullness with a sensation of movements in the abdomen. Marked tension; even a tympanitic abdomen.
Abdomen very hard, liver enlarged, hard.
Cramping, pressing pains, morning and night, before menses.
Inflammation of the peritoneum.