Nausea and Vomiting Lecture Powerpoint Flashcards
Nausea definition
Unpleasant sensation of being about to vomit
Vomiting
Forceful discharge of gastric content thru the mouth, can occur with or without nausea
Retching
Vomiting but with absence of expulsion fo gastric content (dry heaving)
Regurgitation and rumination
Gentle return of small amounts of food or secretions from the esophagus to the pharynx or the stomach into the hypopharynx respectively
4 afferent pathways of vomiting
- CNS
- chemoreceptor trigger zone
- vestibular system
- visceral nervous system
CNS pathway of vomiting common triggers (4)
- distension of the hollow viscus (cn x stimulation)
- pharyngeal stimuli (X, V, and IX)
- increased intracranial pressure
- MI
3 Phases of vomiting
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
Approach to a patient with nausea and vomiting (PE and potential labs) (6)
- what is their hydration status (orthostatic VS)
- neuro exam
- EKG and troponin
- CBC
- BUN and creatinine
- pregnancy test
Imaging for nausea and vomiting (5)
- xray
- ultrasound
- ERCP
- CT scan
- endoscopy
Chronic vs acute nausea and vomiting
Chronic lasts longer than 7 days
Most common cause of acute episodes of vomiting and treatment (1)
Viral gastroenteritis, supportive care and hydration
Common nausea medications and their classes (4)
Transdermal scopolamine (anticholinergic)
Promethazine (H1 antihistamine)
Metoclopramide (dopamine receptor antagonist)
ondansetron/zofran (5HT3-antagonist)
Gastroenteritis treatment options (2)
- metoclopramide 1st line
- ondansetron 2nd line
Post op nausea and vomiting treatment options (2)
- ondansetron for prevention
- metoclopramide
Pregnancy induced nausea treatment options (2)
- doxylamine
- ondansetron