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Materia Medica Viva Volume 1 – Page 11

Generalities and keynotes
Most, if not all, of the symptomatology is intimately associated with gastric disturbances. The main idea is indigestion and dyspepsia which is found mostly in old people.
The great keynote is the sensation as if a lump of undigested food or a hard boiled egg had lodged in the cardiac orifice of the stomach. (A similar feeling of choking and constriction or of a foreign body may also occur in the throat). The other most characteristic indication is a continuous distressing constriction just above the pit of stomach, as if everything was knotted up.
Almost all symptoms of Abies-nigra are centered around the stomach. Even chronic intermittent fever is accompanied by stomachache. All stomach symptoms are worse after eating. Severe pain or the sensation of a stone, that comes on at once after eating (and not one hour later like Nux-v.). The appetite is totally wanting in the morning but increased at noon and at night it can become so excessive that it prevents sleep. Incidentally: Abies-nigra is one of the very few remedies with a desire for cucumbers.
At night the patient sometimes has bad, unpleasant dreams or he is wakeful, restless, cannot sleep and wants something to eat although he was dull and sleepy during the day.
A terrible distress in the head with flushed cheeks often accompanies the dyspeptic symptoms.
The combination of dyspepsia with functional heart symptoms or dyspnea especially in aged persons is a very good hint for Abies-nigra.
Heavy and slow beating of the heart, bradycardia or tachycardia; sharp cutting pain in the heart. Dyspnea worse on lying down; sense of suffocation as if the lungs were compressed and cannot be fully expanded; as if a hard lump were lodged in the chest which he wants to cough out; waterbrash after coughing.
The remedy has also often proved curative in the dyspepsia resulting from the use of tea and tobacco.