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Approach to the Child with Nausea and Vomiting

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Title: Approach to the Child with Nausea and Vomiting


1
Approach to the Child with Nausea and Vomiting
  • by Dr.Ryan Al.Ghanemi

2
Introduction
  • Nausea The unpleasant sensation of the imminent
    need to vomit, usually referred to the throat or
    epigastrium a sensation that may or may not
    ultimately lead to the act of vomiting.
  • VomitingForceful oral expulsion of gastric
    contents associated with contraction of the
    abdominal and chest wall musculature.
  • RegurgitationThe act by which food is brought
    back into the mouth without the abdominal and
    diaphragmatic muscular activity that
    characterizes vomiting.

3
Introduction
  • A standardized approach is not recommended
    because it may be caused by many pathologic
    states involving several systems (including
    gastrointestinal, neurologic, renal, and
    psychiatric).
  • The best course of action should be dictated by
    the medical history.

4
Neurophysiology
  • Nausea and vomiting are innate responses that
    induce a learned and conditioned aversion to
    ingested toxins
  • There are four major pathways by which nausea and
    vomiting are induced.
  • Vagal afferents
  • Area postrema
  • Vestibular system
  • Amygdala

5
Vagal Afferents
  • Abdominal vagal afferents are involved in the
    emetic response.
  • Can be evoked by either mechanical or
    chemo-sensory sensations.
  • Examples of sensations that trigger this pathway
    include overdistension, food poisoning, mucosal
    irritation, cytotoxic drugs, and radiation.

6
Area Postrema
  • Its a chemoreceptor trigger zone. Anatomically,
    this region is located at the caudal extremity of
    the floor of the fourth ventricle.
  • Its a permeable blood-brain barrier region in
    which systemic chemicals act to induce emesis can
    reach
  • This area contains receptors for neuroactive
    compounds such as dopamine, morphine,
    acetylcholine, endorphin, and many others

A diagram summarizing the pathways involved in
emesis. Rache Nucleus Rache, AP area postrema,
IV 4 th ventricle, 5-HT 5-hydroxytryptamine
(serotonin), EC enterochromaffin cell, GI
gastrointestinal.
7
Vestibular System
  • It involved in the emetic response to motion
  • Exacerbated by visual sensations, Irritation or
    labyrinthine inflammation.

8
Somatomotor Events
  • The diaphragm descends and the intercostal
    muscles contract while the glottis is closed.
  • The abdominal muscles contract and the gastric
    contents are forced into upper gastric vault and
    lower esophagus.
  • The abdominal muscle relaxes and the esophageal
    refluxate empties back into the gastric vault.
  • Several cycles of retching, each more rhythmical
    and forceful in nature, occur, with shorter
    intervals in between.
  • Abdominal contraction associated with elevation
    of diaphragms results in forceful expulsion of
    gastric contents.

9
Diagnosis by Age
10
Diagnosis by Age
11
Neonates Young Infants
  • Forceful and repeated vomiting in newborns is not
    normal and should be taken seriously,
    particularly if there are other signs of illness
    (eg, fever, weight loss, or feeding refusal).
  • The most frequent diagnostic considerations are
    gastroesophageal reflux, pyloric stenosis, and
    intestinal obstruction.
  • it may be sepsis, excessive feeding volume, or
    increased intracranial pressure.
  • Although much less common, inborn errors of
    metabolism also can present with vomiting.

12
Neonates Young Infants
13
Gastroesophgeal Reflux Disease
  • Physiologic reflux in newborns and infants is
    common, and is characterized by effortless
    regurgitation in an othewise healthy infant (a
    "happy spitter").
  • A minority of infants who regurgitate have
    pathological gastroesophageal reflux.
  • No features definitively identify these infants,
    but they may have recurrent fussiness or
    irritability and feeding aversion.
  • These symptoms are thought to result from pain
    caused by esophageal acid exposure.

14
Gastroesophgeal Reflux Disease
  • Bradycardia or cyanotic episodes also may occur,
    particularly in preterm or neurologically
    impaired infants.
  • Poor weight gain despite an adequate intake of
    calories should prompt evaluation for causes of
    vomiting and weight loss other than GERD.

15
Milk protein Induced Enteritis
  • Intolerance of dietary proteins (most commonly
    milk protein) typically manifest as colitis,
    presenting with bloody stools.
  • However, in some infants the dietary protein
    causes an enteritis, with or without associated
    colitis, and affected infants may present with
    vomiting.

16
Intestinal Obstruction
  • Causes of intestinal obstruction that present
    during early infancy include
  • Malrotation with or without volvulus
  • Hirschsprung disease.
  • Intussusception
  • Intestinal atresia
  • Pyloric stenosis

17
Intestinal Obstruction
  • Intestinal obstruction frequently causes bile
    staining in the vomitus.
  • Bile-stained vomitus should be treated as a
    life-threatening emergency, although it can be
    seen occasionally in infants without bowel
    obstruction.
  • Vomiting that is not bile-stained may be caused
    by proximal obstruction, such as pyloric
    stenosis, upper duodenal stenosis, gastric
    volvulus, or annular pancreas.

18
Intestinal Obstruction
  • If intestinal obstruction is suspected, the
    specific diagnosis often can be suggested by the
    patient's history and with appropriate radiologic
    imaging.
  • Plain radiographs of the abdomen generally
    provide a rapid assessment of possible bowel
    obstruction with relatively little radiation
    exposure.
  • Abdominal ultrasound provides high sensitivity
    and specificity for detecting intussusception.

19
Pyloric Stenosis
  • Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis (IHPS) is
    a condition of hypertrophy of the pylorus, with
    elongation and thickening, eventually progressing
    to near-complete obstruction, of the gastric
    outlet.
  • It occurs in approximately 3 in 1,000 live
    births.
  • More commonly in males (41 to 61).
  • Approximately 30 percent of cases occur in
    firstborn children.

20
Pyloric Stenosis
  • The classic presentation of IHPS is the three- to
    six-week-old baby who develops immediate
    postprandial, non-bilious, often projectile
    vomiting and demands to be re-fed soon
    afterwards(a "hungry vomiter").
  • In the past, patients were classically described
    as being emaciated and dehydrated with a palpable
    "olive-like" mass at the lateral edge of the
    rectus abdominus muscle in the right upper
    quadrant of the abdomen.

21
Pyloric Stenosis
  • Laboratory evaluation classically showed a
    hypochloremic, metabolic alkalosis resulting from
    the loss of large amounts of gastric hydrochloric
    acid, the severity of which depended upon the
    duration of symptoms prior to initial evaluation.
  • The diagnosis is made by ultrasound examination
    of the abdomen.

22
Hirschsprung Disease
  • Usualy diagnosed in the neonatal period.
  • Patients present with symptoms of distal
    intestinal obstruction bilious emesis, abdominal
    distension, and failure to pass stool.

23
Hirschsprung Disease
  • The diagnosis can be suggested by a delay in
    passage of the first meconium (greater than 48
    hours of age).
  • Affected children may also present initially with
    enterocolitis, a potentially life threatening
    illness in which patients have a sepsis-like
    picture with fever, vomiting, diarrhea, and
    abdominal distension, which can progress to toxic
    megacolon.

24
Older Infants Children
  • By far, the most common is gastroenteritis.
  • However, GERD, gastroparesis, mechanical
    obstruction, anaphylaxis, Munchausen syndrome by
    proxy (factitious disorder by proxy),
    intracranial masses, peptic ulcer disease, and
    cyclic vomiting also may be diagnostic
    considerations.
  • Adrenal crisis and anaphylaxis should be
    considered in children with disproportionate
    hypotension and/or predisposing factors.

25
Older Infants Children
26
Gasteroparesis
  • It is the condition of impaired emptying of
    gastric contents into the duodenum in the absence
    of a mechanical obstruction this may cause
    postprandial vomiting.
  • In gastroparesis the vomiting usually occurs many
    hours after ingestion of food, a characteristic
    that differentiates this entity from GER or
    rumination syndrome, in which the emesis is
    during or immediately after eating.

27
Gasteroparesis
  • The following conditions may cause gastroparesis
  • Surgery with vagus nerve damage (eg,
    fundoplication)
  • Use of drugs such as opioids or anticholinergics
  • Metabolic disturbances such as hypokalemia,
    acidosis, or hypothyroidism
  • Eosinophilic gastroenteropathy
  • Neuromuscular disorders such as cerebral palsy,
    diabetes mellitus, pseudo-obstruction and
    muscular dystrophy
  • Viral illness (postviral gastroparesis)
  • In most cases, the symptoms resolve
    spontaneously within 6 to 24 months.

28
Intussusception
  • It is the most common cause of intestinal
    obstruction in infants between 6 and 36 months of
    age.
  • typically patients develop the sudden onset of
    intermittent, severe, crampy, progressive
    abdominal pain, accompanied by inconsolable
    crying and drawing up of the legs toward the
    abdomen.
  • The episodes become more frequent and more severe
    over time.

29
Intussusception
  • Vomiting may follow episodes of abdominal pain.
    Initially emesis is non-bilious, but it may
    become bilious as the obstruction progresses.
  • A sausage-shaped abdominal mass may be felt in
    the right side of abdomen. As symptoms progress,
    increasing lethargy develops, which can be
    mistaken for meningoencephalitis.

30
Intussusception
  • In up to 70 percent of cases, the stool contains
    gross or occult blood.
  • In infants, intussusception may present as
    lethargy, with or without vomiting or rectal
    bleeding.
  • In young infants, intussusception is more often
    caused by a pathological lead point, such as
    Meckel diverticulum or a duplication cyst.

31
Infections
  • Pharyngitis (particularly streptococcal
    pharyngitis).
  • Urinary tract infections frequently present with
    nausea and/or vomiting.

32
Intracranial Hypertension
  • Brain tumors and other intracranial masses can
    cause nausea, vomiting, or both, by increasing
    the intracranial pressure at the area postrema of
    the medulla.
  • Several characteristics suggest tumor-associated
    emesis, such as triggering emesis by an abrupt
    change in body position, neurogenic nausea and
    other neurologic symptoms such as headache or
    focal neurologic deficit these signs and
    symptoms may be subtle.

33
Intracranial Hypertension
  • Idiopathic intracranial hypertension refers to
    increased intracranial pressure (ICP) with normal
    cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) content, normal
    neuroimaging, the absence of neurologic signs
    except cranial nerve VI palsy, and no known
    cause.
  • The clinical manifestations of idiopathic
    intracranial hypertension vary with age.
  • Younger children, for example, who cannot
    complain of headache or visual impairment, may
    present with irritability, sleep, or behavior
    disturbance.
  • In older children, headache is a more common
    chief complaint in older children and frequently
    is described as being pulsatile, occasionally
    awakening the child from sleep. Associated nausea
    or vomiting may be present, as may neck or
    retroocular pain that is worse with eye movement.

34
Munchausen Syndrome by Proxy
  • Also known as factitious disorder by proxy,
    Meadow syndrome, and proxy factitia
  • Its consists of fabricating or inducing illness
    in a child in order to get attention.
  • The patient may have a history of frequent
    recurrent illnesses without a clear etiology

35
Adolescents
  • In addition to the disorders affecting children
    listed above, some of the more common causes
    include gastroenteritis, appendicitis,
    inflammatory bowel disease, pregnancy, and toxic
    ingestions.

36
Clinical Approach
37
Clinical Approach
38
Clinical Approach
39
Clinical Approach
40
Clinical Approach
  • A detailed history and astute clinical acumen are
    necessary to narrow down the diagnostic
    possibilities.
  • The appropriate urgency depends on duration of
    illness, overall clinical status of the patient
    (especially hydration, circulatory, and
    neurologic status) and associated findings on the
    physical examination and history.

41
Clinical Approach
  • Prolonged vomiting (gt12 hours in a neonate, gt24
    hours in children younger than two years of age,
    or gt48 hours in older children) should not be
    ignored. Screening laboratory tests should
    include Additional testing should be based
    upon the history and physical examination
  • complete blood count
  • electrolytes,
  • blood urea nitrogen,
  • amylase, lipase,
  • liver function tests,
  • urinalysis, urine culture, and stool studies for
    occult blood, leukocytes, and parasites.

42
Clinical Approach
  • Clues on physical examination  Certain physical
    findings may offer diagnostic clues that can aid
    in narrowing the differential diagnosis
  • A tense, bulging fontanelle in a neonate or
    young infant should increase the
  • level of suspicion for meningitis.
  • Projectile vomiting in an infant three to six
    weeks of age suggests pyloric
  • stenosis as a diagnosis.
  • Ambiguous genitalia and/or hyperkalemia suggest
    the possibility of
  • adrenal crisis (usually due to congenital adrenal
    hyperplasia),.
  • Headache, positional triggers for vomiting, lack
    of nausea, and/or
  • vomiting on awakening should suggest the
    possibility of intracranial hypertension

43
Clinical Approach
  • An unusual odor emanating from the
    patient should prompt an
  • investigation for metabolic causes of vomiting.
  • Marked distension, visible bowel loops, absent
    bowel sounds, green or
  • yellow bile, or increased "rumbling" bowel
    sounds ("borborygmi") should raise
  • suspicion for intestinal obstruction.
  • Enlarged parotid glands in an adolescent should
    raise suspicion for bulimia
  • Vomiting in association with trauma should
    prompt imaging studies to rule
  • out intracranial or intraabdominal injury.
  • Hypotension disproportionate to the apparent
    illness and/or hyperkalemia
  • suggests the possibility of adrenal crisis

44
Laboratory Investigations
45
Referrals
  • When to refer the patient?
  • Patients should be referred to a pediatric
    gastroenterologist or other appropriate
    specialist (eg, pediatric surgeon, neurologist)
    when there are symptoms or physical findings that
    are of particular concern.
  • These include an abnormal neurologic exam,
    peritoneal signs on abdominal examination, severe
    abdominal pain, gastrointestinal bleeding, or
    significant weight loss.
  • Immediate pediatric surgical consultation is
    warranted if appendicitis, bowel obstruction, or
    bowel perforation are suspected.

46
Treatment
  • Treatment should be directed toward the
    underlying etiology.
  • Electrolyte abnormalities, metabolic
    abnormalities, or nutritional deficiencies should
    be corrected.
  • Cognitive-behavioral interventions are useful for
    vomiting associated with functional dyspepsia,
    adolescent rumination syndrome, and bulimia.
  • Prokinetic medications such as metoclopramide,
    domperidone (where available), and erythromycin
    are beneficial when there are abnormalities in
    esophago-gastric motility.
  • Antiemetics, which are useful in persistent
    vomiting to avoid electrolyte abnormalities or
    nutritional sequelae, typically have not been
    recommended in the case of vomiting of unknown
    etiology. These agents are contraindicated in
    infants .
  • Likewise, they are not indicated for anatomic
    abnormalities or surgical abdomen.

47
Treatment
48
Clinical Approach
  • Instead, antiemetics are most useful for motion
    sickness, postoperative vomiting, cyclic vomiting
    syndrome, and gastrointestinal motility disorders
    .
  • In addition, a double-blind study suggests that
    single dose ondansetron may facilitate oral
    rehydration in children with gastroenteritis who
    are unable to tolerate oral intake.
  • During the last two decades, there have been
    considerable advances in the development of
    antiemetics. These include the emergence of
    5-hydroxytryptamine 3 receptor antagonists
    (Ondansetron, Granisetron), which have one
    primary site of antagonism and have helped in the
    treatment of post-operative nausea and vomiting
    and chemotherapy-associated emesis.
  • These include neurokinin 1 receptor antagonists
    that likely mediate nausea and vomiting triggered
    by chemotherapeutic agents, motion, gastric
    irritants, and other stimuli .

49
Alternative Medicine
  • There is some evidence for efficacy of some
    nutraceuticals, such as ginger for functional
    dyspepsia and other motility disorders.
  • Hypnotherapy is often helpful for treatment of
    anticipatory nausea and vomiting (eg, prior to
    chemotherapy).

50
THANKS A LOT!
DR. Ryan Al.Ghanemi
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