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7. Nausea and
Vomiting / M.C.
Champion
Barf,
upchuck, bring up.
Nausea is a
psychic as well as physical experience and defies precise definition.
Vomiting is evacuation of the stomach contents through the mouth. Nausea
normally precedes vomiting. There can be associated tachycardia,
hypersalivation, waterbrash and excessive perspiration.
A variety
of stimuli may produce nausea (labyrinthine stimulation, pain, unpleasant
memories). The neural pathways mediating nausea are not known, but
evidence suggests that they are the same pathways that mediate vomiting.
During nausea, gastric tone and peristalsis are reduced. The tone of the
duodenum and proximal jejunum tends to be increased, with frequent reflux
of duodenal contents into the stomach.
Vomiting
occurs as the gastric contents are forcefully brought up to and out of the
mouth. This occurs by forceful sustained contraction of the abdominal
muscles at a time when the cardia of the stomach is raised and open and
the pylorus is contracted. Elevation of the cardia eliminates the
intra-abdominal portion of the esophagus and relaxes the lower esophageal
sphincter. This allows the stomach contents to enter the esophagus. The
act of vomiting is completed with rapid upward displacement of the
diaphragm and reversal of thoracic pressure from negative to positive. The
glottis closes, the soft palate rises, the mouth opens and the stomach
contents are expelled. The control of vomiting consists of two
anatomically and functionally separate units, a vomiting center and a
chemoreceptor trigger zone. The vomiting center is in the reticular
formation of the medulla and is excited directly by visceral afferent
impulses (sympathetic and vagal) arising from the gastrointestinal tract
and other peripheral trigger areas. These trigger areas are found in the
pharynx, cardiac vessels, peritoneum, bile ducts, cortex and stomach. The
chemoreceptor trigger zone is on the floor of the fourth ventricle, on the
blood side of the blood-brain barrier. The chemoreceptor trigger zone is
unable to cause vomiting without an intact vomiting center.
| 7.4 History and Physical |
page 13 |
Patients
may complain of nausea and hypersalivation. With gastrointestinal causes
of the nausea (and vomiting) there may be associated symptoms of heartburn
or epigastric pain. Prior to vomiting, patients may retch (spasmodic,
abortive respiratory movements with the glottis closed).
History-taking
should probe for precipitating factors, other symptoms that suggest the
underlying cause, drug use and dietary habits. The history should also
explore psychological trauma or disturbances of body image suggestive of
anorexia nervosa.
Physical
examination is often normal. An abdominal mass may point to an underlying
cause (e.g., gastric carcinoma). Prolonged vomiting may cause dehydration.
| 7.5 Differential Diagnosis |
page 14 |
Prolonged
nausea, by itself, rarely has an organic origin. There are many causes of
nausea and vomiting, including intracerebral problems (e.g.,
hydrocephalus, brain tumor), stimulation of the peripheral trigger areas
(e.g., severe chest pain, pain from kidney stones), systemic disease
(malignancy), medications and pregnancy. Upper gastrointestinal diseases (esophagitis,
peptic ulcer disease, gastric carcinoma) are common. Early morning nausea
and vomiting suggest pregnancy, gastroesophageal reflux disease, alcohol
withdrawal, a metabolic cause (e.g., uremia) or a psychogenic origin.
| 7.6 Approach to Diagnosis and
Management |
page 14 |
In
approaching a patient with nausea and vomiting, one should look for and
correct any underlying causes. Prolonged vomiting may cause dehydration
and the patient may need to be rehydrated intravenously. Medications
should be discontinued.
There are
many drugs that have anti-emetic actions. Antihistamines act on the
vestibular apparatus as well as on the chemoreceptor trigger zone.
Phenothiazines also exert their action on the chemoreceptor trigger zone.
Metoclopramide and domperidone are both anti-emetics and gastric
prokinetics (which stimulate the stomach to empty). Domperidone exerts its
action on the chemoreceptor trigger zone, whereas metoclopramide also
crosses the blood-brain barrier and affects the vomiting center. Cisapride,
a newer gastric prokinetic, has no effect on the chemoreceptor trigger
zone or vomiting center. Like the other prokinetic agents, it may improve
nausea and vomiting if they are due to gastric stasis or gastroparesis.
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