PLUMBUM



Violent thirst. Very great thirst. Great thirst, etc.

Considerable thirst preceded the soreness of mouth, especially in the evening. A little thirsty feverish. Moderate thirst, etc. Thirst, even in the morning (fourth day). Thirst, after dinner (very unusual). Great desire for cold drinks. Much thirst for cold water. Absence of thirst, etc. Dread of all drinks. Eructations. Eructations, etc. Frequent eructations, etc. Frequent tiresome eructations, and violent hiccough. Frequent eructations and borborygmi. Frequent eructations and vomiting. Frequent inodorous eructations.

Extraordinarily frequent eructations, with a sensation in the mouth as after eating sugar. Eructations, nausea, and vomiting, especially at the end of the paroxysms of colic. Frequent eructations, affording momentary relief, and feeling like something sweet rising into the mouth. Frequent offensive eructations, sui generis. Frequent eructations tasting of the food (after half an hour). Eructations of an offensive odor (after two hours and a half). Sweetish eructations,; (fourth day). Uprisings of sweet water, with emptiness of the stomach.

Sweetish uprisings into the throat (after half an hour). Sweetish eructations, as if about to vomit, over a hundred times in two hours. Uprisings of tasteless water (after a quarter of an hour). Sour uprisings (after two hours and a half). Distressing eructations. Eructations of a strange taste. Eructations of gas after breakfast (after a quarter of an hour). The gas eructated of a bitter fetid smell and taste. Eructations of gas and nausea, in the evening before going to sleep (seventh day). Ineffectual attempts to eructate, followed by yawning (after half an hour). Empty eructations, followed by burning in the stomach, soon disappearing (after a quarter of an hour). Empty risings, eructations. Hiccough. Hiccough once (after five hours). Hiccough. Paroxysmal hiccough, frequently repeated. Violent hiccough, occasionally. Frequent hiccough.

Nausea and Vomiting. Nausea, etc. Frequent nausea. Nausea (with the colic). Almost constant nausea. Violent nausea and vomiting of a blackish-yellow substance, soon.

Constant and very fatiguing nausea. Constant nausea. Frequent nausea, without vomiting. Nausea, without vomiting, etc. Distressing sickness and vomiting of a yellowish-green fluid. Nausea and anxiety (second day).

After every meal, uneasiness and nausea. Occasional nausea, sometimes followed by vomiting of food. They complained also of feeling sick at the stomach. Slight nausea, which continued several days, with a load at the pit of the stomach. Much sickness, and frequent vomiting. Nausea, before the colic. Nausea and qualmishness in the stomach, soon disappearing (after two hours). Qualmishness. Qualmishness and uprisings as far as the chest (after two hours and a quarter).

Nausea an vomiting, for two months. Nausea and vomiting, frequently present, the latter symptom being most distressing, the stomach in some cases rejecting almost everything. Occasional nausea and vomiting, for a year past.

Severe nausea and vomiting. Nausea, and vomiting of bilious matter. Frequent nausea and vomiting. Almost constant nausea, with vomiting of porraceous aeruginous matters. Nausea, with vomiting of a little green, thick substance. Nausea, with vomiting, at long intervals, of a few spoonfuls of greenish matter. Nausea and vomiting, immediately. Nausea and vomiting, etc. Frequent inclination to vomit, and occasionally greenish matter was ejected from the stomach. Incessant inclination to vomit. Anxious wish to vomit. Incessant inclination to vomit. Frequent and painful efforts to vomit, which he often sought to reinforce by putting his fingers in his mouth. Frequent empty retching, with eructations of thin white mucus or greenish bitter fluid. Retching. Frequent retching. Violent retching (after one week). Retching and vomiting at times. Inclination to vomit, and aversion. Extreme efforts to vomit, that were almost convulsive. Vomiting, etc. Frequent vomiting, etc. Frequent vomiting, in the morning.

Frequent vomiting, though without pain at the epigastrium.

Violent vomiting (after fifteen minutes). Excessive vomiting, Constant vomiting, etc. Frequent vomiting of grass-green substances. Obstinate vomiting. Incessant vomiting until fecal matter is evacuated through the mouth. Constant vomiting, with obstinate constipation. Vomiting that could not be quieted. Vomits several times during the day, producing for the time, hard lumps in the region of the stomach, which, however, disappear on friction being applied. Frequent an tormenting vomitings. Violent of everything taken into the stomach. Difficult vomiting. Violent vomiting, which continued almost without intermission for nearly six hours (after five minutes); mixed with the contents of the stomach a little blood was occasionally rejected. Vomiting with the abdominal pain, for four days. Vomiting and frequent retching. Nothing would remain on their stomach, even for a moment, for nearly six weeks. Nothing would remain on his stomach but ice, and for a short time only he could retain small quantities of Brand’s essence of chicken and turtle jelly.

Vomiting that does not relieve the patient. Vomiting, especially with sticking pains. Vomiting of food. Vomiting thirty or forty times a day. Vomiting soon after eating (during the colicky paroxysms). Vomiting every day, preceded by nausea, and consisting only of a clear, rather acid, fluid, or else of bile.

Ill for three weeks; she vomited constantly, not being able to retain any food; there was also constant nausea, and even when no food was taken, there was still frequent vomiting of a greenish watery fluid; she vomited very much in the night, especially the early morning. Constant vomiting, so that she could not take the least food. Constant vomiting of all food. Vomiting, accompanied by colic. Difficult vomiting, attended with great anxiety. Food produced great distress and frequently vomiting, so much so, that he often took no supper.

Severe attacks of vomiting. About five weeks ago she began to vomit everything she took, whether liquid or solid, and the vomiting has continued ever since (in one case), (after eleven months). The stomach has not retained anything for a fortnight.

Bilious constant nausea. Frequent bilious vomiting. Vomiting of a bitter, bilious, slightly green matter. Frequent difficult vomiting of mucus and bile. Vomiting of bilious yellow substance like green vitriol. Frequent bilious vomiting, preceded by nausea. Vomiting a brownish liquid streaked with blood (fourth day). Vomiting of a greenish watery fluid. Difficult vomiting of a bitter green substance (with the colic).

Frequent greenish vomiting. Greenish, very bitter vomiting.

Almost daily vomiting of a green, bilious fluid. Vomiting, only excited by the greatest efforts, of dark-green, very bitter matter, depositing a very copious, thick, slimy sediment. Vomiting of green, thick and very bitter substances. Frequent vomiting of a deep-green substance, leaving a very bitter taste in the mouth and oesophagus; two basinfuls were ejected during the day and night, only a little at a time. Frequent green watery vomiting, followed by a little momentary relief.

Greenish vomiting. Several times vomited yellow mucus and bilious matter. The substance vomited tasted like liquorice. Fecal vomiting, with violent colic and obstinate constipation. Vomiting of a yellowish offensive substance, with the most violent colic. Constant vomiting of a substance like corroded copper (vomitus aeruginous).

Vomiting of blackish-yellow substances, soon. Constant vomiting of a blackish substance. Sometimes vomiting of a little slimy matter, like white of egg. Vomiting of a stringy substance. Vomiting of matter containing small whitish lumps, probably consisting of white lead. Bloody vomiting. Vomited a considerable quantity of blood (eighteenth day). All food is immediately vomited with traces of blood. Even gum-water is not retained more than five or six minutes, and aggravates the pains. Stomach rejected all kinds of food; frequently ejected a greenish fluid. Stomach. Epigastrium tender. Epigastrium tense and hard. Epigastrium region very sensitive. Sensation of emptiness of fasting in the stomach, frequently (after a quarter of an hour). Discomfort in the stomach, without qualmishness (after a quarter of an hour). Indescribable sensation of depression and distress at the pit of the stomach (immediately). Epigastrium depressed. Constriction about the epigastric region. Sense of constriction about the epigastrium and throat.

Constriction of the stomach. Contractive sensation in the stomach (after six hours). Tightness of the epigastrium. Tightness in the pit of the stomach. Sensation of fullness in the stomach. After eating he felt swollen. Taking nourishment does not cause pain, but only a sensation of uneasiness and of weight; digestion takes place very slowly. Pressure has no effect on the epigastric pain. Pressure and tightness about the stomach (after three-quarters of an hour). Violent pressure in the epigastric region. Pressure in the stomach, as if it were pressed by a hundredweight. Pressure in the stomach, as from much undigested food, with a feeling of heaviness in the occiput, aggravated by moving the head, after a very moderate dinner lasting till very late in the evening. Pressure in the stomach. Pressure in the stomach, after eating.

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.