Vomiting Flashcards

1
Q

Common causes of vomiting

A
  • Gastro-oesophageal reflux (common)
  • Feeding problems
    • Force-feeding
    • Over feeding
  • Infection (fever)
    • Viral gastroenteritis (diarrhoea)
    • Respiratory tract (cough, runny nose)
      • Whooping cough (pertussis)
    • Urinary tract
    • Meningitis
  • Dietary protein intolerances
  • Intestinal obstruction
    • Pyloric stenosis (projectile at 2-7 weeks)
    • Atresia (duodenal) - Congenital absence or narrowing
    • Intussusception
    • Malrotation
    • Volvulus
    • Strangulated inguinal hernia
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2
Q

Red flag symptoms of vomiting

A
  • Bile stained vomit
    • Intestinal obstruction
  • Haematemesis (red/coffee-grounds?)
    • Oesophagitis
    • Peptic ulceration
    • Oral/nasal bleeding
  • Projectile vomiting (in first few weeks of life)
    • Pyloric stenosis (hungry after vomiting)
  • Vomiting after paroxysmal coughing
    • Pertussis
  • Abdominal pain
    • Surgical abdomen
  • Abdominal distension
    • Intestinal obstruction (including strangulated inguinal hernia)
  • Hepatosplenomegaly
    • Chronic liver disease
  • Blood in stool
    • Intussusception
    • Gastroenteritis (salmonella or camylobacter)
  • Severe dehydration / shock
    • Severe gastroenteritis
    • Systemic infection (UTI, meningitis)
    • Diabetic ketoacidosis
  • Bulging fontanelle or seizures
    • Raised intracranial pressure
  • Failure to thrive
    • Reflux
    • Coeliac
    • Other chronic gastrointestinal conditions
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3
Q

Vomiting history

A

*Start from the head and work down*

  • Does the child have a good appetite?
  • Vomiting
    • How much?
    • Are they hungry afterwards?
    • Is it forceful or effortless?
    • Is it related to feeds?
    • What does it contain? Ask about coffee-grounds or other appearances of the vomit. (Bile-stained vomiting in an infant always indicates obstruction and must be considered as pathological.)
  • Does the child suffer from abdominal pain?
  • Does the child ever have a bloated abdomen?
  • Are there any urinary symptoms?
  • Ask about bowel habit—is the child constipated?
  • Have there been any frequent or loose stools? Are the stools particularly offensive (suggests malabsorption).
  • Is there a relevant FHx (e.g. Coeliac or inflammatory bowel disease)?
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4
Q

Vomiting history 2

A
  • Vomit
    • Duration
    • Frequency
    • Projectile
    • Bilious/non-bilious
    • Presence of blood
    • Relation to feeds
    • Exacerbated by position (GORD)
  • Associated symptoms of infection
    • Diarrhoea
    • Fever
    • Abdominal pain
    • Headache (↑ ICP)
    • Cough
    • Urinary symptoms
  • Relation to food ingestion
    • Cow’s milk (associated with atopy)
    • Egg
    • Diet history
      • Breast/bottle
      • Age of weaning
  • History of recurrent episodes of severe vomiting with periods of being well in between?
  • Contact with illness/travel?
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