Nausea and Vomiting Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards

1
Q

Nausea definition

A

Unpleasant sensation of being about to vomit

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2
Q

Vomiting

A

Forceful discharge of gastric content thru the mouth, can occur with or without nausea

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3
Q

Retching

A

Vomiting but with absence of expulsion fo gastric content (dry heaving)

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4
Q

Regurgitation and rumination

A

Gentle return of small amounts of food or secretions from the esophagus to the pharynx or the stomach into the hypopharynx respectively

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5
Q

4 afferent pathways of vomiting

A
  • CNS
  • chemoreceptor trigger zone
  • vestibular system
  • visceral nervous system
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6
Q

CNS pathway of vomiting common triggers (4)

A
  • distension of the hollow viscus (cn x stimulation)
  • pharyngeal stimuli (X, V, and IX)
  • increased intracranial pressure
  • MI
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7
Q

3 Phases of vomiting

A

1) nausea, sweating, salivation (parasympathetic and sympathetic)
2) retching (motor system deep breath/breath hold to block the glottis, reverse peristalsis begins from the mid intestines)
3) posturing, contraction of abdominal muscles, and ejection

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8
Q

Approach to a patient with nausea and vomiting (PE and potential labs) (6)

A
  • what is their hydration status (orthostatic VS)
  • neuro exam
  • EKG and troponin
  • CBC
  • BUN and creatinine
  • pregnancy test
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9
Q

Imaging for nausea and vomiting (5)

A
  • xray
  • ultrasound
  • ERCP
  • CT scan
  • endoscopy
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10
Q

Chronic vs acute nausea and vomiting

A

Chronic lasts longer than 7 days

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11
Q

Most common cause of acute episodes of vomiting and treatment (1)

A

Viral gastroenteritis, supportive care and hydration

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12
Q

Common nausea medications and their classes (4)

A

Transdermal scopolamine (anticholinergic)
Promethazine (H1 antihistamine)
Metoclopramide (dopamine receptor antagonist)
ondansetron/zofran (5HT3-antagonist)

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13
Q

Gastroenteritis treatment options (2)

A
  • metoclopramide 1st line

- ondansetron 2nd line

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14
Q

Post op nausea and vomiting treatment options (2)

A
  • ondansetron for prevention

- metoclopramide

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15
Q

Pregnancy induced nausea treatment options (2)

A
  • doxylamine

- ondansetron

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16
Q

Migraine headache treatment options (2)

A
  • metoclopramide

- oral antiemetics

17
Q

Vestibular nausea treatment options (2)

A
  • antihistamines

- anticholinergics

18
Q

Functional chronic nausea and vomiting and treatment (1)

A

Unexplained vomiting at least once a week that is NOT cyclical, treated often with low dose tricyclic antidepressants

19
Q

Gastroparesis (diabetic, post viral or idiopathic) and treatment (3)

A

Symptoms suggestive of obstruction (food not moving thru intestine or emptying of stomach within an hour), treated with dietary modification and metoclopramide or erythromycin

20
Q

Cyclic vomiting syndrome

A

Stereotypical incapacitating attacks often with specific triggers, have prodromal phase with distinct aura then associated with severe abdominal pain, pallor, excess salivation and intense thirst

21
Q

Cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome

A

Condition where severe bouts of nausea and vomiting occur mainly in daily long term users of marijuana due to effect it has on intestinal receptors (which opposes the brain effect), begins with prodromal phase (early morning nausea and abdominal pain) then hyperemetic phase (hot showers ease!!!) and recovery phase (goes away), treated with cessation

22
Q

Complications of vomiting (6)

A
  • dehydration
  • hypokalemia
  • metabolic acidosis
  • aspiration
  • mallory weiss tear
  • ruptured esophagus (boerhaave’s syndrome)
23
Q

Mackler’s triad for boerhaave syndrome

A
  • chest pain
  • vomiting
  • subcutaneous emphysema due to rupture