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Materia Medica Viva Volume 10 – page 2206

aggravated by stooping’.
Stomach pain that compels the patient to loosen his clothes, even if they are already very loose.
Sensation of fullness at epigastrium, as if the clothes were too tight.
Distress at stomach, as of undigested food, with occasional sharp pain and heat in stomach. Stomach may be so sensitive that it cannot tolerate even the slightest pressure.
Constant dull pain in the epigastric region that frequently increases to paroxysms of very intense, sharp pain. Bad, distressed feeling in stomach all day, at times sharp and cutting; worse by stooping, at times had to walk around the room to get his breath; very bad after riding or walking, when sitting down.
Spasmodic pain in stomach and abdomen, but also in distant parts, arms and legs; especially after going to bed. Pain that commences in the stomach and radiates in all directions, sometimes suddenly appearing in head or feet.
The character of the stomach pain may be: dull and heavy; sharp, stinging, cutting; burning; or cramp-like.
Sharp pain at epigastrium, extending to the left hypochondrium.
A useful indication from Hale: ‘I have used it very extensively in many disorders of the stomach such as accompany dyspepsia, namely: a dull, wearing pain in the cardiac region of the stomach; inordinate belching of gases; cramps of the stomach, and acute lancinations in the stomach’.
Abdomen
The abdominal pain may also be dull and pressive ,or sharp and cutting ,or cramping; but particularly characteristic is twisting pain, also gripping, squeezing, or grinding pain, especially in the umbilical region but also in other areas.
Sharp, twisting pain in the left hypochondrium; at the same time dull, heavy, grinding pain in the region of the liver.
Sharp hepatic pain, cutting or pressive, extending to the right nipple.
A hard, dull pain in the region of the gall bladder. Dioscorea may be indicated