Palpitation of the heart originating in grief, with pain in left side of chest and down left arm; also with numbness of the fingers.
Attacks of palpitation with great mental depression, self-reproaches, anxiety and fear of loss of reason.
Heart murmurs: blowing, ‘bruit de souffle’ (whistling noise); dull rushing and rumbling.
Stomach
Complete loss of appetite, with disgust of odours of food, with a clean tongue; also with an indescribable sensation of emptiness in the stomach. Sometimes there is a desire for bitter food. Or else: violent sensation of hunger on waking, soon followed by complete loss of appetite with a sensation as though the food stood up in the throat.
Violent thirst, especially for cold and sour drinks.
Extreme nausea: deathly, ‘as if he should die’; in recurrent attacks; especially in the morning on waking; with inclination to vomit and actual vomiting.
‘Sensation of fullness and nausea, with a clean tongue’.
The nausea is usually coupled with a tremendous sensation of weakness in the stomach, ‘like a sinking, as if life were becoming extinct’. This ‘deathly’ feeling is very characteristic, and a footnote in Hahnemann’s Materia Medica Pura says: ‘All patients used the same expressions for this complaint’. Great mental depression and sensations of apprehension in the epigastric region may also accompany the nausea.
A characteristic of Digitalis is also nausea remaining after vomiting. Vomiting of mucus and food, the things eaten are wrapped in white mucus; with amelioration of the bellyache. ‘Vomiting, first of food, then of bile’.
A sharp burning, extending from the stomach into the oesophagus and lasting the whole day.
Indigestion with nausea in the morning, frequent vomiting, bitter taste, loss of appetite, thirst, diarrhoea, vertigo and frontal headache.
Great sensitivity in epigastric region, producing frequent deep sighs.
Stitching pain, beginning in the pit of the stomach and extending to the sides and to the back.