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Materia Medica Viva Volume 7 – page 1561

There is much thirst, especially when a chill begins, but drinking causes shuddering.
Food tastes sour and after eating he suffers with chronic dyspepsia and eructation. Pungent eructation on coughing.
Dyspepsia from torpor, particularly in old people.
Vegetables cause flatulence.
Flushes of heat extending to the fauces.
Dipsomania with morning vomiting and sinking in the stomach.
Nausea and vomiting, with headache, with a chill; nervous and spasmodic vomiting. Tension in the stomach that is aggravated by motion.
Gnawing and cramping pain aggravated by sitting bent; stitching pain between breaths and while talking; during the menses.
The Capsicum stomach resembles a sack that lacks strength.
Mucus and acids accumulate in the stomach, and there is much burning in the stomach after eating, which extends to the mouth. The stomach either feels icy cold or burning.
Abdomen
An aching tension in the abdomen, especially the epigastric region, between the scrobiculus cordis and navel, particularly increased by movement, and with an aching tension in the lower part of the back. A drawing and turning over in the abdomen.
The abdomen is distended almost to bursting with the suspension of respiration, and he cannot bear tight clothing. He has a pressive tension, especially in the epigastric region, between the pit of the stomach and the navel. A tensive pain from the abdomen to the chest, as from distension of the abdomen. Sensation as if the abdomen was distended almost to bursting, whereby the breathing is impeded to the point of suffocation, and there are dragging movements and strong pulsation in the abdomen.
Burning or cutting pain in the abdomen, such that he has to bend over double. Cutting pain in the region of the umbilicus during motion, that is aggravated on stooping. The pain comes and goes slowly before a stool. Cramping and griping after eating and during fever. Pain in the hypogastrium from flatus.