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Materia Medica Viva Volume 4 – page 958

Convulsive hiccup.
Hiccup while vomiting.
Half suppressed, incomplete eructations.
Bitter, frequent eructations, with lack of appetite and giddiness.
Sudden vomiting, vomiting mucus in the afternoon.
Vomiting after eating or drinking.
Nausea, with loathing of food.
Nausea and bitter eructations Anxiety with and after nausea.
Passing flatus ameliorates nausea.
Unsuccessful inclination to vomit.
Vomiting impossible.
Vomiting: of mucus; of bile and mucus, or undigested food; watery, sour, bloody mucus.
Vomiting after convulsions.
Vomiting during suppressed menses.
Vomiting blood during suppressed menses.
Urging to vomit after stool.
Faecal vomiting in Intussusception.
Faecal vomiting in strangulated hernia.
Tensive pressing pain in pit of stomach, particularly after eating.
Pressure in stomach after eating.
Excruciating pains about pit of stomach.
Chilliness in pit of stomach.
Feeling as if stomach would fall out.
Spasm in stomach like cramp.
Chronic spasm of stomach, always occurring during a meal.
Pain in stomach extending through to spine, between shoulders. Sensation of burning ball in stomach.
Sensation of a hand clutching intestines.
Region of stomach sensitive to touch.
Gastritis and duodenal ulcer: the pain is aggravated before and after menses, aggravated by breathing, by jar of walking, by jolting in a vehicle, from
motion, etc.
Distension of epigastrium, with tensive pain in stomach.