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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2150

The vomit often consists of a greenish, slimy mass which tastes bitter; sometimes, however, only clear, sweetish, stringy mucus from the oesophagus is vomited. Severe nausea with much gagging and unsuccessful attempts at vomiting. Vomiting of mucus preceding convulsive fits.
Vomiting of blood. Cuprum acted favourably in yellow fever where haematemesis was present.
A characteristic symptom is a sensation of strong pressure in the pit of the stomach, which is accompanied at irregular intervals by violent con- tractile pain. Spasms of stomach. ‘Tremendous, agonising pain in the stomach and the epigastric region’.
Sensation as though something bitter were in the stomach.
An interesting ‘gastric’ case of Lembke which was cured with Cuprum: ‘A 30- year-old woman has been suffering for three weeks with pressure in stomach, nausea, belching, rumbling in abdomen; sensation as of a round ball going to and fro under ribs, with various sounds; worse from fluid food; eats virtually nothing; bandaging of abdomen relieves a little bit; sleeplessness; best while lying down’.
Abdomen
Cuprum has all sorts of cramping affections of the abdomen. It is stretched and tense, sometimes hard as a board.
Abdomen hot, sore to touch, tense, sometimes also retracted.
Spasmodic motions of the abdominal muscles.
Sudden spasmodic contraction of the M. abdominis rectus.
Cramp-like colic pain in the abdomen, with intermissions. ‘Enormous spasmodic motions in the bowels and stomach’. ‘Tremendous spasms in abdomen and upper and lower limbs, with piercing and agonising screams’.
A description from Noack and Trinks’ Handbook: ‘Spasmodic colic; abdom- inal spasms, occurring very frequently (every ten minutes), very violent, only by day, suddenly disappearing after one minute; with this, during the paroxysm, a sharp piercing pain, shooting through to the spine, with sensitiveness to touch, in the middle of the umbilical region’.
Cutting stomach ache below the navel.