Stomach
Loss of appetite and of thirst. No appetite, especially in the morning and evening; is satiated as soon as he begins to eat. or else: After some morsels of any food, it disgusts him, and he cannot swallow any more of it; with nauseous feeling in palate and throat.
Thirst may be completely absent, especially during the day; may return in the evening when face and hands become warm.
Aversions to certain foods and drinks: fat and meat, especially pork; cold food, especially bread and butter (whereas warm food is sometimes eaten a little less reluctantly); to beer.
Desire for salty food, especially salty fish; for indigestible things (whereas is not interested to eat any normal food.
The stomach does not tolerate pork and fatty meat in general, which causes nausea and a sinking feeling in the region of the stomach. Or else: ‘Only lemonade was tolerated, whereas everything else caused an inclination to vomit’ (from the Austrian re-proving).
Hiccup beginning during a meal and continuing for some time after; especially in pregnant women. Eructation after eating, always ending in hiccup. The nausea may be felt in the stomach, in the lower abdomen, but also in the throat and the palate. ‘In pregnant women, disgust and nausea at the palate and in the throat’.
Vomiting in the context of sick headaches, vertigo, visual disturbances and lassitude.
Pain in stomach, extending through to back, coming on when at rest, relieved by motion.
Abdomen
Full feeling and distension of abdomen, with rumbling in bowel and flatulence. With this, there may be a running and crawling in the bowel as if something alive were in it; the patient involuntarily rubs her abdomen or presses against it with her hands in order to calm down this strange sensation.
‘Discomfort in the lower abdomen, with some nausea there’.
Colicky pain, spasmodic, pinching, especially at night while lying down;
must get up and walk about, which relieves.