Title: Nausea and Vomiting
1Nausea and Vomiting
2Objectives
- To get a detailed history and associated symptoms
- To get the DD
- To recognize and treat typhoid
3Case Report
- A 29 year old woman G1/P0/Ab0 complains of
severe, recurrent vomiting, worse in the morning
but sometimes in the later part of the day, and
failure to gain weight. She is in her 13th week
of pregnancy. Her past medical history is
negative except for obsessive-compulsive
disorder. - What is her diagnosis?
4Terminology
- Nausea from the Latin naus ( a ship) a very
unpleasant sensation that one may soon vomit - Retching muscular activity of the abdomen and
thorax, often voluntary, leading to forced
inspiration against a closed mouth and glottis
without oral discharge of gastric contents
(dry heaves) - Vomiting involuntary contractions of the
abdominal, thoracic and GI (smooth) muscles
leading to forceful expulsion of stomach contents
from the mouth
5Terminology, contd
- Regurgitation effortless return of esophageal or
gastric contents into the mouth unassociated with
nausea or involuntary muscle contractions. - Rumination food that is regurgitated in the
postprandial period, re-chewed and then
re-swallowed
6VOMITING PATHWAYS
Ipecac syrup
7Common etiologies of nausea and vomiting
- GI tract disorders
- toxins, infections, obstruction, inflammation,
motility disorders - Non-GI infections
- liver, CNS, renal, pneumonia, others
- Pregnancy
- Visceral inflammation
- pancreas, GB, peritoneum
- Myocardial ischemia or infarction
- Other CNS disorders
- migraine, neoplasm, bleed
- Vestibular disorders
- Metabolic/endocrine
- DKA, uremia, adrenal insufficiency, hyper- or
hypothyroidism, hyper- or hypoparathyroidism - Alcohol intoxication
- Psychogenic
- Radiation exposure
- Medications
8Clues to psychogenic vomiting
- Usually female and often young
- May deny or minimize nausea
- Rarely occurs in public or in front of others
- Co-existent eating disorder, laxative abuse,
diuretic abuse common - Psychological disturbances common
- Complications of vomiting may be present
9Surreptitious vomiting when to suspect it
- Unexplained weight loss
- Co-existent eating disorder or other
psychological condition - Co-existent laxative and/or diuretic abuse
- Electrolyte and/or acid-base disturbances
consistent with vomiting, including hypo- - kalemic nephropathy
- Emetic complications (with denial of vomiting)
10Medications that often cause nausea and vomiting
- Cancer chemotherapy
- e.g. cisplatin
- Analgesics
- e.g. opiates, NSAIDs
- Anti-arrythmics
- e.g., digoxin, quinidine
- Antibiotics
- e.g., erythromycin
- Oral contraceptives
- Metformin
- Anti-parkinsonians
- e.g., bromcryptine, L-DOPA
- Anti-convulsants
- e.g., phenytoin, carbamazepine
- Anti-hypertensives
- Theophylline
- Anesthetic agents
11Complications of Vomiting
- Nutritional
- adults weight loss kids failure to gain
- Cutaneous (petechia, purpura)
- Orophayngeal (dental, sore throat)
- Esophagitis/ esophageal hematoma
- GE Junctional M-W tears rupture (Boorhaaves)
- Metabolic electrolyte, acid-base, water
- Renal prerenal azotemia ATN hypokalemic
nephropathy
12Post-emetic purpura (mask phenomenom)
Cutis, 1986
13Nausea and Vomiting Key Historical Questions
- How long?
- Relationship to meals?
- Contents of vomitus?
- Associated symptoms
- pain in chest or abdomen, fever, myalgias,
diarrhea, vertigo, dizziness, headache, focal
neurological symptoms, jaundice, weight loss - Diabetes?
- When was last menstrual period?
14Nausea and Vomiting Key Physical Findings
- Vital signs
- BP and pulse tilt test
- Cardiopulmonary exam
- Abdominal exam
- Rectal exam
- Neurological exam including funduscopic exam
(papilledema)
15Laboratory studies guided by history and physical
- Electrolytes, glucose, BUN/creatinine
- Calcium, albumin, total serum proteins
- Complete blood count (CBC)
- Liver Function Tests
- Pregnancy test
- Urinalysis
- Serum lipase ? amylase
16Radiology studies guided by history and physical
- Plain abdominal films
- Abdominal sono or CT if pain is key feature
- Head CT or MRI if severe headache, papill-edema,
marked hypertension, altered mental status, or
focal neurological findings - EGD or upper GI to separate GOO or high duodenal
obstruction from gastroparesis - Radiopaque marker emptying studies or
radionuclide scintigraphy, esp. if diabetic
17Radio-opaque markers still in the stomach 6 hours
after meal in a diabetic with nausea
18ALGORITHMIC APPROACH
or marker
19Treatment of nausea and vomiting
- 1. Treat complications regardless of cause
- e.g., replace salt, water, potassium losses
- 2. Identify and treat underlying cause, whenever
possible - 3. Provide temporary symptomatic relief of the
symptoms - 4. Use preventive measures when vomiting is
likely to occur (e.g., cancer chemotherapy,
parenteral opiate administration)
20Drugs with anti- emetic prop-erties and known
mechanisms
- Antihistamines, e.g., meclizine (AntivertR)
- esp. for vestibular disorders
- Anticholinergics, e.g., scopolamine (Transderm
ScopR, DonnatalR) - esp. for vestibular and GI disorders
- Dopamine antagonists, e.g.,metoclopramide
(ReglanR) or prochlorperazine (CompazineR) - esp. for GI disorders
- Selective serotonin-3 (5HT3) RAs, e.g.,
odansetron, granisetron, dolasetron - esp. to prevent chemotherapy-induced
nausea/vomiting
21Drugs with anti-emetic properties (continued)
- Multiple mechanisms of action
- Promethazine (PhenerganR)
- dopamine antagonist
- H1 antihistamine
- anticholinergic
- CNS sedative
- prevention of opiate-induced nausea and vomiting
- Hydroxyzine (AtaraxR, VistarilR)
- H1 antihistamine
- anticholinergic
- CNS sedation
- prevention of opiate-induced nausea and vomiting
22Drugs with anti-emetic properties (continued)
- Uncertain mechanism of action
- Trimethobenzamide (TiganR)
- blocks apomorphine-induced emesis in dogs
- does not block emesis from p.o. CuSO4 in dogs
- ? probably acts in the chemoreceptor trigger zone
(CTZ) of the medulla oblongata - Bismuth subsalicylate (Pepto-BismolR)
-
23Adjunctive antiemetic agents
- Dexamethasone (DecadronR)
- along with other anti-emetics for prevention of
cancer chemotherapy-induced emesis - Dronabinol (MarinolR)
- for prevention of cancer chemotherapy-induced
emesis refractory to other agents - also for anorexia and weight loss in AIDS
24Summary
- Nausea and vomiting are features of many GI and
non-GI diseases and disorders. - Regardless of its cause, treatment of nausea and
vomiting should initially focus on replacing
volume and electrolyte deficits. Later on,
nutritional deficits must be addressed. - Regardless of its cause, nausea and vomiting can
cause several life-threatening GI and non-GI
complications. - Elucidation of the cause is often possible, and
treatment of the underlying cause will usually be
successful. - Effective symptomatic therapies for nausea and
vomiting are available when the cause is unclear
or when the treatment of the underlying cause
takes time to work.
25Follow up on Case Report
- The patient was diagnosed with hyperemesis
gravidarum. - Her TSH was undetectable, her free T4 and serum
T3 were markedly elevated. - Her symptoms resolved in a few weeks, without
recurrence.
Goodwin et al. Transient hyperthyroidism and
hyperemesis gravidarum. Am J Obstet Gynecol 167
648, 1992 and J. Clin Endocrin Metab 75 1333,
1992