Nausea and Vomiting
last authored:
Introduction
dehydration
aspiration
electrolyte abnormalities and
bleeding:
The Case of...
return to top
Differential Diagnosis
gastrointestinal
- viral gastroenteritis
- bacterial gastroenteritis
- obstruction (intussusception, volvulus)
- appendicitis
- hepatitis
- ulcers
- pancreatitis
- cholecystitis
- inflammatory/IBD
- impaired motility
- gastroperesis
- gastroesophageal reflux (very common in infants)
- foreign body
- food allergy
- celiac disease
endocrine/metabolic
- pregnancy
- Addison's
- DKA
- hypercalcemia
- uremia
|
other
- UTI, pyelonephritis
- nephrolithiasis
- otitis media
- pneumonia
- bulemia
- psychgenic (rumination syndrome)
drugs
- antibiotics (esp erythromycin)
- chemotherapy
- toxins (lead)
- digoxin
- theophylline
neurological
- labyrinthitis
- Meniere's Disease
- meningitis
- neoplasm
- migraines
- glaucoma
|
Neonatal vomiting
pyloric stenosis (incidence 1:500)
malrotation of the intestine (incidence 1:500)
tracheoesophageal fistula (incidence 1:3000-4500)
duodenal atresia (incidence 1:10,000): can be bilious; air-fluid levels on AXR
Pediatric
return to top
History and Physical Exam
History
HPI:
- onset, duration, severity
- early morning - pregnancy, uremia, raised ICP
- associated symptoms: fever, abdominal pain, diarrhea, headaches, coughing
- contents: bloody, bilious, food
Ask about sick contacts
Pediatric
Physical Exam
vitals
abdominal exam: tenderness, distention, masses
hydration status (pediatrics)
return to top
Investigations
- lab investigations
- diagnostic imaging
Lab Investigations
bloodwork
- CBC
- electrolytes
- BUN, creatinine
- ESR
- blood gases
- amylase, lipase
- urine, blood, stool C&S
Diagnostic Imaging
Imaging should be guided by clinical suspicion.
barium swallow (upper GI series): malrotation, other causes of obstruction, reflux
endoscopy: GI bleed
Abdominal X Ray
return to top
Management
Rehydration
Treat the cause of vomiting while you also treat the symptoms and complications.
Medications
Anti-histamine
dopamine
- haldol (central), peripheral
anticholinergic
seritonergic
return to top
Pathophysiology
nucleus of solitary tract
gag reflex is CN IX and X
area postrema responds to blood-borne agents
Stomach, LES relaxes
return to top
The Case of...
return to top
Additional Resources
return to top
Topic Development
created: DLP, Aug 09
authors: DLP, Aug 09
editors:
reviewers:
return to top