The classical description of Allium sativum is a dark complexioned, well-fed person with a strong constitution and firm flesh although he may be disposed to corpulence and obesity quite frequently.
He likes a good living, loves eating very much, this being indeed one of his favorite occupations in which he can indulge with excessive abandon. He is nevertheless rather a gourmand than a glutton. He may not in general be very fond of vegetarian food, and prefers meat, a good juicy steak for instance, which may be accompanied by a desire for butter.
But to his great regret, a time comes in his life where he can no longer tolerate this good living anymore. At first he only has complaints after overeating, but very soon he is compelled to keep to a special diet because his stomach or his bowels are disturbed by the slightest deviation, by the least change of his usual food. He may even get complaints if he drinks water which is not good enough.
After he has eaten he must belch, has heartburn and burning eructations which excite a copious salivation. The saliva is often sweetish and a great amount of it accumulates in the mouth especially after supper and during the night, although the tongue may be dry at night. He sometimes also has the sensation as if something cold followed by something hot and stinging ascends the esophagus.
He feels a burning in the stomach which is very sensitive to the
least pressure but painless as long as it is not touched. Or he may have pressing pains as from a stone or a weight in the stomach. He may also feel a weight in the hypogastrium (the region of the lower abdomen) immediately after a meal and everything in the abdomen seems to drag downwards.
After a meal he is very drowsy, and complains about chest problems like palpitations or dry cough which are presumably caused by the formation of gas in the abdomen. This flatulence is connected to an incomplete emission of fetid flatus as if the wind were held back in the bowels.
The abdominal pains can really be terrible, especially the wind-colic. In a similar way to Lycopodium or Momordica he complains about a pain just below the left ribs in the region of the transverse and descending colon. Or he feels a pressure in the upper part of the abdomen – in the epigastrium and transverse colon – which forces him to sit bent forward and to press with both hands in order to get relief (like