BELLADONNA



Eructations tasting of the ingesta.

Sour eructations.

Burning, sour eructations, during which a corrosive acid moisture came into the mouth, with a kind of strangling.

Frequent bitter eructations.

Bitter eructations after a meal.

Putrid eructations, (Case 8).

Eructations and vertigo, (Case 15).

Eructations with want of appetite, (Case 17).

Several attacks of violent hiccough.

Violent hiccough, which jerked her up, after which she became deaf until the next attack.

Frequent spasmodic hiccoughs, which go on even to suffocation.

Hiccough with convulsion, alternately of the left arm and right leg, followed by violent thirst, with redness and heat of the head. (Case 14).

Nausea.

Squeamish after breakfast.

Nausea.

Feeling of nausea (after two and a half hours).

Nausea in the stomach.

Nausea without vomiting.

Frequent attacks of nausea in the forenoon (after seventy-two hours).

Nausea, with sensation of fulness in the throat; nausea gradually changes to burning (after three and five-sixth hours).

Nausea and eructations, with taste of the ingesta.

Nausea and pain in the stomach.

The influence of medical doses on the intestinal secretions is not very marked, but when given by the mouth and in large doses, Belladonna frequently causes nausea, and in poisonous doses vomiting, and sometimes diarrhoea.

Nausea and inclination to vomit (after six hours).

Nausea and disposition to vomit.

Nausea and desire to vomit (mother and child within an hour).

Nausea and inclination to vomit, but entire inability to vomit.

Nausea and inclination to vomit, often before eating.

(In coughing, the stomach turns, as if vomiting would come on, even when it is empty).

Disposition to vomit when walking in the open air.

Nausea, inclination to vomit, and such violent thirst that they were obliged to drink an excessive quantity of water.

Nausea and inclination to vomit, in the throat (not in the scrobiculus cordis), with occasional bitter eructations, in the evening.

Ineffectual disposition to vomit; empty retching.

Inclination to vomit; unsuccessful retching; he cannot vomit; in excitability of the stomach.

Loathing with inclination to vomit, especially when he would eat.

Frequent loathing and retching, (Case 2).

Vomiting.

Vomiting.

Vomiting (after thirty minutes).

Excessive vomiting.

Vomiting (after six hours), followed immediately by sleep for several hours.

Threw her food up within half an hour after eating (soon after taking).

Vomiting of undigested food, which had been taken twelve hours before.

Vomiting of whitish watery substances.

He often spat out of vomited mucus.

Vomiting of mucus after noon, (Case 5).

Vomiting of bile and mucus.

Vomiting of bile, with much straining, trembling of the limbs, cold sweat, etc.

Vomiting of a large quantity of dark bluish-red fluid (containing the berries), followed by loss of consciousness and delirium.

Vomiting, in the evening, (Case 5).

Vomiting, which often occurs in the evening or at night.

Violent vomiting of food, often without nausea or straining, especially after meals.

Vomiting after drinking milk, followed by slight amelioration.

Vomiting after eating or drinking (second day).

Vomiting and profuse sweat.

Vomiting, diarrhoea vertigo, and cramps.

Difficulty in exciting vomiting.

He did not vomit after fourteen grains of tartar emetic, and did not even feel nauseated by it.

Stomach.

Inflammation of the stomach (post-mortem).

Region of stomach is distended but painless. The pit of the stomach and hypogastric zone were swollen and tense.

After lying down in the evening in bed, distended epigastrium, with tensive pain in the stomach.

He lay upon his stomach, with the head the pit of the stomach, which always makes him cough.

Feeling of emptiness in the stomach (three hours, after gr. 1/4).

Distress in the stomach (after three-quarters of an hour).

Pain in the stomach (two cases). sharp pain over the stomach (after four and a half hours). violent stomachache, lasting a short time.

Severe pain in stomach (mother and child, within an hour).

Pain in stomach, with slight nausea (immediately).

Excruciating pains about the pit of the stomach.

At night, periodical pains at the pit of the stomach, with tremor.

Burning in the stomach.

Burning of the stomach, every time she took a dose.(*See S.1078*).

Sensation as if there were burning not balls in the stomach, and something acid and corrosive in the pylorus.

Burning pain at the orifice of the stomach.

Burning in the stomach and oesophagus, with desire to vomit.

Heartburn (when smoking); a scraping, burning, smarting sensation remains long after, at the commencement of the throat and upper part of the larynx (after two hours).

After eating, the stomach and abdomen feel swollen and oppressed. While walking, frequently a squeezing in the scrobiculus cords, a sort of crampy sensation, which obliges him to draw a deep breath.

Cramp pains in stomach and bowels (mother and child, within an hour).

After eating a very little food, a peculiar contractive sensation in the stomach.

Spasms in the stomach, like cramp.

Long-lasting spasm of the stomach, always during the midday meal.

Spasmodic pressure on the stomach.

A pressure in the pit of the stomach, in part gnawing.

Hard pressure in the stomach after eating, and also later.

Distress as if caused by digestion (after twenty minutes).

Violent pressure at the pit of the stomach, felt only in walking; it forces him to move slowly (after forty-eight hours).

Violent pressure in the stomach, with inclination to vomit.

Sensation of a bar pressing on the stomach and precordial region, with crampy and contractive pains, often with inclination to vomit, headache, epistaxis, trembling of the limbs, and great weakness.

Shootings at the pit of the stomach.

Violent shooting cutting pain in the pit of the stomach, forcing one to bend the body backwards, and to hold one’s breath.

Pinching right across the epigastrium and downwards as if in the colon.

Region of stomach sensitive to touch.

Painfulness of the epigastric zone to touch.

Pulsations, uneasiness, and feeling of inflammation if the stomach.

Painless throbbing and beating at the pit of the stomach.

Abdomen

Hypochondria.

Fulness below the short ribs when stooping; fulness at the pit of the stomach and darkness before the eyes (after four days).

The abdomen is tense round the ribs.

When pressing on the epigastrium, pain as if the hypochondria were being pressed out.

Belladonna increases the secretion of bile.

Swollen, painful liver, presenting swellings, like abscesses. Heaviness and pulsations in the hepatic region, with sensation of swelling in that part, and inclination to lean to the left side and to draw up the right shoulder.

Cramps of the liver, involving the chest and exciting paroxysms of cough and suffocation.

Pulsative pains, with anxiety at the liver, extending to the epigastrium.

Pinching laterally in the abdomen, in the hepatic region, so that in attempting to rise from his seat, he could not for pain.

Dull shootings in the right side of the abdomen near the false ribs.

Sensation of inflammation and swelling of the spleen.

Sharp pain in the splenic region (after six hours).

Pulsative, crampy, and deep seated pains in the region of the spleen.

Umbilical Region.

A constriction of the belly in the umbilical region, as if a ball or lump were forming.

Along with the sensation of distension of the abdomen, constrictive pain below the umbilicus, which comes in jerks, and forces one to lean forward bent double (after four hours). Soon after a stool, a tensive sensation below the umbilicus, for only a few moments (second day).

Squeezing and clawing around the umbilicus, so that he was obliged to bend forwards.

A squeezing together in the umbilical region, more in the middle of the day and in the afternoon.

After eating, violent pinching below the umbilicus, immediately under the abdominal walls (after two and a half hours).

Griping about the navel (after quarter of an hour).

Dull stabs, as with a knife, between the right hip and the umbilicus (after twelve hours).

From the region of the navel, round the left hip as far as the lumbar vertebrae, a shooting stab, as if in one thrust, which terminated with great painfulness in the latter region (after three-quarters of an hour).

Itching shootings in the umbilicus, which disappear on rubbing it (after one hour).

In General.

Inflammation of the upper part of the abdomen (post-mortem).

Abdomen somewhat distended.

Distended, yet neither hard nor painful abdomen.

Distension of the abdomen, with rolling or grumbling of the intestines on the left side.

After a confined motion, distension of the abdomen and heat of head, (Case 14).

Distension of the abdomen, and transient pains in the abdomen.

The abdomen is meteorically distended, the diaphragm pushed forcibly upwards (after five hours).

Meteorism.

Great meteorism.

Meteorism of the belly, with constipation, in one case subsiding and recurring with the delirium.

Distended, hard abdomen.

The abdomen distended and very hard.

Inflammatory swelling of the abdomen.

Swelling of abdomen, formation of flatulence, and pinching in umbilical region.

Swelling of the belly, and aphthae in the throat. The abdomen swollen, the pulse small and frequent.

TF Allen
Dr. Timothy Field Allen, M.D. ( 1837 - 1902)

Born in 1837in Westminster, Vermont. . He was an orthodox doctor who converted to homeopathy
Dr. Allen compiled the Encyclopedia of Pure Materia Medica over the course of 10 years.
In 1881 Allen published A Critical Revision of the Encyclopedia of Pure Materia Medica.