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Chapters in Gastrointestinal Disorders
  • Symptoms of GI Disorders
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  • Acute Abdomen and Surgical Gastroenterology
  • Esophageal and Swallowing Disorders
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  • Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Topics in Symptoms of GI Disorders
  • Overview of GI Symptoms
  • Chronic and Recurrent Abdominal Pain
  • Dyspepsia
  • Hiccups
  • Lump in Throat
  • Nausea and Vomiting
  • Rumination
  • Constipation
  • Diarrhea
  • Gas-Related Complaints
 

Nausea and Vomiting

inShare0

Nausea and Vomiting in Adults: A Merck Manual of Patient Symptoms podcast

(For nausea and vomiting in infants and children, see Nausea and Vomiting in Infants and Children.)

Nausea, the unpleasant feeling of needing to vomit, represents awareness of afferent stimuli (including increased parasympathetic tone) to the medullary vomiting center. Vomiting is the forceful expulsion of gastric contents caused by involuntary contraction of the abdominal musculature when the gastric fundus and lower esophageal sphincter are relaxed.

Vomiting should be distinguished from regurgitation, the spitting up of gastric contents without associated nausea or forceful abdominal muscular contractions. Patients with achalasia or rumination syndrome or a Zenker diverticulum may regurgitate undigested food without nausea.

Complications:

Severe vomiting can lead to symptomatic dehydration and electrolyte abnormalities (typically a metabolic alkalosis with hypokalemia) or rarely to an esophageal tear, either partial (Mallory-Weiss) or complete (Boerhaave syndrome). Chronic vomiting can result in undernutrition, weight loss, and metabolic abnormalities.



Etiology

Nausea and vomiting occur in response to conditions that affect the vomiting center. Causes may originate in the GI tract or CNS or may result from a number of systemic conditions (Table 5: Some Causes of Nausea and VomitingTables).

The most common causes are the following:

  • Gastroenteritis
  • Drugs
  • Toxins

Cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS) is an uncommon disorder characterized by severe, discrete attacks of vomiting or sometimes only nausea that occur at varying intervals, with normal health between episodes and no demonstrable structural abnormalities. It is most common in childhood (mean age of onset 5 yr) and tends to remit with adulthood. CVS in adults is often due to chronic marijuana (cannabis) use.

Table 5

PrintOpen table in new window Open table in new window
Some Causes of Nausea and Vomiting

Cause

Suggestive Findings*

Diagnostic Approach

GI disorders

Bowel obstruction

Obstipation, distention, tympany

Often bilious vomiting, abdominal surgical scars, or hernia

Flat and upright abdominal x-rays

Gastroenteritis

Vomiting, diarrhea

Benign abdominal examination

Clinical evaluation

Gastroparesis or ileus

Vomiting of partially digested food a few hours after ingestion

Often in diabetics or after abdominal surgery

Flat and upright abdominal x-rays

Succussion splash

Hepatitis

Mild to moderate nausea for many days, sometimes vomiting

Jaundice, anorexia, malaise

Sometimes slight tenderness over the liver

Serum aminotransferases, bilirubin, viral hepatitis titers

Perforated viscus or other acute abdomen (eg, appendicitis, cholecystitis, pancreatitis)

Significant abdominal pain

Usually peritoneal signs

See Acute Abdominal Pain

Toxic ingestion (numerous)

Usually apparent based on history

Varies with substance

CNS disorders

Closed head injury

Apparent based on history

Head CT

CNS hemorrhage

Sudden-onset headache, mental status change

Often meningeal signs

Head CT

Lumbar puncture if CT is normal

CNS infection

Gradual-onset headache

Often meningeal signs, mental status change

Sometimes petechial rash* due to meningococcemia

Head CT

Lumbar puncture

Increased intracranial pressure (eg, caused by hematoma or tumor)

Headache, mental status change

Sometimes focal neurologic deficits

Head CT

Labyrinthitis

Vertigo, nystagmus, symptoms worsened by motion

Sometimes tinnitus

See Dizziness and Vertigo

Migraine

Headache sometimes preceded or accompanied by a neurologic aura or photophobia

Often a history of recurrent similar attacks

In patients with known migraine, possible development of other CNS disorders

Clinical evaluation

Head CT and lumbar puncture considered if evaluation is unclear

Motion sickness

Apparent based on history

Clinical evaluation

Psychogenic disorders

Occurring with stress

Eating food considered repulsive

Clinical evaluation

Systemic conditions

Advanced cancer (independent of chemotherapy or bowel obstruction)

Apparent based on history

Clinical evaluation

Diabetic ketoacidosis

Polyuria, polydipsia

Often significant dehydration

With or without history of diabetes

Serum glucose, electrolytes, ketones

Drug adverse effect or toxicity

Apparent based on history

Varies with substance

Liver failure or renal failure

Often apparent based on history

Often jaundice in advanced liver disease, uremic odor in renal failure

Laboratory tests of liver and renal function

Pregnancy

Often occurring in morning or triggered by food

Benign examination (possibly dehydration)

Pregnancy test

Radiation exposure

Apparent based on history

Clinical evaluation

Severe pain (eg, due to a kidney stone)

Varies with cause

Clinical evaluation

*Sometimes forceful vomiting (caused by any disorder or condition) causes petechiae on the upper torso and face, which may resemble those of meningococcemia. Patients with meningococcemia are usually very ill, whereas those with petechiae caused by vomiting often appear otherwise quite well.

Some Causes of Nausea and Vomiting

Cause

Suggestive Findings*

Diagnostic Approach

GI disorders

Bowel obstruction

Obstipation, distention, tympany

Often bilious vomiting, abdominal surgical scars, or hernia

Flat and upright abdominal x-rays

Gastroenteritis

Vomiting, diarrhea

Benign abdominal examination

Clinical evaluation

Gastroparesis or ileus

Vomiting of partially digested food a few hours after ingestion

Often in diabetics or after abdominal surgery

Flat and upright abdominal x-rays

Succussion splash

Hepatitis

Mild to moderate nausea for many days, sometimes vomiting

Jaundice, anorexia, malaise

Sometimes slight tenderness over the liver

Serum aminotransferases, bilirubin, viral hepatitis titers

Perforated viscus or other acute abdomen (eg, appendicitis, cholecystitis, pancreatitis)

Significant abdominal pain

Usually peritoneal signs

See Acute Abdominal Pain

Toxic ingestion (numerous)

Usually apparent based on history

Varies with substance

CNS disorders

Closed head injury

Apparent based on history

Head CT

CNS hemorrhage

Sudden-onset headache, mental status change

Often meningeal signs

Head CT

Lumbar puncture if CT is normal

CNS infection

Gradual-onset headache

Often meningeal signs, mental status change

Sometimes petechial rash* due to meningococcemia

Head CT

Lumbar puncture

Increased intracranial pressure (eg, caused by hematoma or tumor)

Headache, mental status change

Sometimes focal neurologic deficits

Head CT

Labyrinthitis

Vertigo, nystagmus, symptoms worsened by motion

Sometimes tinnitus

See Dizziness and Vertigo

Migraine

Headache sometimes preceded or accompanied by a neurologic aura or photophobia

Often a history of recurrent similar attacks

In patients with known migraine, possible development of other CNS disorders

Clinical evaluation

Head CT and lumbar puncture considered if evaluation is unclear

Motion sickness

Apparent based on history

Clinical evaluation

Psychogenic disorders

Occurring with stress

Eating food considered repulsive

Clinical evaluation

Systemic conditions

Advanced cancer (independent of chemotherapy or bowel obstruction)

Apparent based on history

Clinical evaluation

Diabetic ketoacidosis

Polyuria, polydipsia

Often significant dehydration

With or without history of diabetes

Serum glucose, electrolytes, ketones

Drug adverse effect or toxicity

Apparent based on history

Varies with substance

Liver failure or renal failure

Often apparent based on history

Often jaundice in advanced liver disease, uremic odor in renal failure

Laboratory tests of liver and renal function

Pregnancy

Often occurring in morning or triggered by food

Benign examination (possibly dehydration)

Pregnancy test

Radiation exposure

Apparent based on history

Clinical evaluation

Severe pain (eg, due to a kidney stone)

Varies with cause

Clinical evaluation

*Sometimes forceful vomiting (caused by any disorder or condition) causes petechiae on the upper torso and face, which may resemble those of meningococcemia. Patients with meningococcemia are usually very ill, whereas those with petechiae caused by vomiting often appear otherwise quite well.

Evaluation

History:

History of present illness should elicit frequency and duration of vomiting; its relation to possible precipitants such as drug or toxin ingestion, head injury, and motion (eg, car, plane, boat, amusement rides); and whether vomitus contained bile (bitter, yellow-green) or blood (red or “coffee ground” material). Important associated symptoms include presence of abdominal pain and diarrhea; the last passage of stool and flatus; and presence of headache, vertigo, or both.



Review of systems seeks symptoms of causative disorders such as amenorrhea and breast swelling (pregnancy), polyuria and polydipsia (diabetes), and hematuria and flank pain (kidney stones).



Past medical history should ascertain known causes such as pregnancy, diabetes, migraine, hepatic or renal disease, cancer (including timing of any chemotherapy or radiation therapy), and previous abdominal surgery (which may cause bowel obstruction due to adhesions). All drugs and substances ingested recently should be ascertained; certain substances may not manifest toxicity until several days after ingestion (eg, acetaminophen Some Trade Names
GENAPAP
TYLENOL
VALORIN
Click for Drug Monograph
, some mushrooms).



Family history of recurrent vomiting should be noted.



Physical examination:

Vital signs should particularly note presence of fever and signs of hypovolemia (eg, tachycardia, hypotension, or both).



General examination should seek presence of jaundice and rash.



On abdominal examination, the clinician should look for distention and surgical scars; listen for presence and quality of bowel sounds (eg, normal, high-pitched); percuss for tympany; and palpate for tenderness, peritoneal findings (eg, guarding, rigidity, rebound), and any masses, organomegaly, or hernias. Rectal examination and (in women) pelvic examination to locate tenderness, masses, and blood are essential.



Neurologic examination should particularly note mental status, nystagmus, meningismus (eg, stiff neck, Kernig sign or Brudzinski sign), and ocular signs of increased intracranial pressure (eg, papilledema, absence of venous pulsations, 3rd cranial nerve palsy) or subarachnoid hemorrhage (retinal hemorrhage).



Red flags:

The following findings are of particular concern:



  • Signs of hypovolemia
  • Headache, stiff neck, or mental status change
  • Peritoneal signs
  • Distended, tympanitic abdomen

Interpretation of findings:

Many findings are suggestive of a cause or group of causes (Table 5: Some Causes of Nausea and VomitingTables).



Vomiting occurring shortly after drug or toxin ingestion or exposure to motion in a patient with an unremarkable neurologic and abdominal examination can confidently be ascribed to those causes, as may vomiting in a woman with a known pregnancy and a benign examination. Acute vomiting accompanied by diarrhea in an otherwise healthy patient with a benign examination is highly likely to be infectious gastroenteritis; further assessment may be deferred.



Vomiting that occurs at the thought of food or that is not temporally related to eating suggests a psychogenic cause, as does personal or family history of functional nausea and vomiting. Patients should be questioned about the relationship between vomiting and stressful events because they may not recognize the association or even admit to feeling distress at those times.



Testing:

All females of childbearing age should have a urine pregnancy test. Patients with severe vomiting, vomiting lasting over 1 day, or signs of dehydration on examination should have other laboratory tests (eg, electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, glucose, urinalysis, sometimes liver tests). Patients with red flag findings should have testing appropriate to the symptoms (Table 5: Some Causes of Nausea and VomitingTables).



The assessment of chronic vomiting usually includes the previously listed laboratory tests plus upper GI endoscopy, small-bowel x-rays, and tests to assess gastric emptying and antral-duodenal motility.



Treatment

Specific conditions, including dehydration, are treated. Even without significant dehydration, IV fluid therapy (0.9% saline 1 L, or 20 mL/kg in children) often leads to reduction of symptoms. In adults, various antiemetics are effective (Table 6: Some Drugs for VomitingTables). Choice of agent varies somewhat with the cause and severity of symptoms. Typical use is the following:

  • Motion sickness: Antihistamines, scopolamine Some Trade Names
    TRANSDERM SCOP
    Click for Drug Monograph
    patches, or both
  • Mild to moderate symptoms: Prochlorperazine Some Trade Names
    COMPAZINE
    Click for Drug Monograph
    or metoclopramide Some Trade Names
    REGLAN
    Click for Drug Monograph
  • Severe or refractory vomiting and vomiting caused by chemotherapy: 5-HT3 antagonists

Obviously, only parenteral agents should be used in actively vomiting patients.

For psychogenic vomiting, reassurance indicates awareness of the patient's discomfort and a desire to work toward relief of symptoms, regardless of cause. Comments such as “nothing is wrong” or “the problem is emotional” should be avoided. Brief symptomatic treatment with antiemetics can be tried. If long-term management is necessary, supportive, regular office visits may help resolve the underlying problem.

Table 6

PrintOpen table in new window Open table in new window
Some Drugs for Vomiting

Drug

Usual Dose

Comments

Antihistamines

Dimenhydrinate Some Trade Names
DRAMAMINE
TRIPTONE
Click for Drug Monograph

50 mg po q 4–6 h

Used to treat vomiting of labyrinthine etiology (eg, motion sickness, labyrinthitis)

Meclizine Some Trade Names
ANTIVERT
BONINE
Click for Drug Monograph

25 mg po q 8 h

5-HT3antagonists

Dolasetron Some Trade Names
ANZEMET
Click for Drug Monograph

12.5 mg IV at onset of nausea and vomiting

Used to treat severe or refractory vomiting, or vomiting caused by chemotherapy

Possible adverse effects: Constipation, diarrhea, abdominal pain

Granisetron Some Trade Names
KYTRIL
Click for Drug Monograph

1 mg po or IV tid

Ondansetron Some Trade Names
ZOFRAN
Click for Drug Monograph

4–8 mg po or IV q 8 h

Palonosetron

Prophylaxis: 0.25 mg IV as a single dose 30 min before chemotherapy

Other drugs

Aprepitant Some Trade Names
EMEND
Click for Drug Monograph

125 mg po 1 h before chemotherapy on day 1, then 80 mg po daily in the morning on days 2 and 3

When used with ondansetron Some Trade Names
ZOFRAN
Click for Drug Monograph
, 32 mg IV 30 min before chemotherapy on day 1 only

When used with dexamethasone Some Trade Names
DECADRON
DEXASONE
HEXADROL
Click for Drug Monograph
12 mg po 30 min before chemotherapy on day 1 and 8 mg po daily in the morning on days 2, 3, and 4

Used with highly emetogenic chemotherapy regimens

Possible adverse effects: Somnolence, fatigue, hiccups

Metoclopramide Some Trade Names
REGLAN
Click for Drug Monograph

5–20 mg po or IV tid to qid

Used to treat initial treatment of mild vomiting

Perphenazine Some Trade Names
TRILAFON
Click for Drug Monograph

5–10 mg IM or 8–16 mg po daily in divided doses; maximum dose 24 mg/day

—

Prochlorperazine Some Trade Names
COMPAZINE
Click for Drug Monograph

5–10 mg IV or 25 mg per rectum

—

Scopolamine Some Trade Names
TRANSDERM SCOP
Click for Drug Monograph

1-mg patch worn for up to 72 h

Used to treat motion sickness

Possible adverse effects: Diminished sweating, dry skin

Some Drugs for Vomiting

Drug

Usual Dose

Comments

Antihistamines

Dimenhydrinate Some Trade Names
DRAMAMINE
TRIPTONE
Click for Drug Monograph

50 mg po q 4–6 h

Used to treat vomiting of labyrinthine etiology (eg, motion sickness, labyrinthitis)

Meclizine Some Trade Names
ANTIVERT
BONINE
Click for Drug Monograph

25 mg po q 8 h

5-HT3antagonists

Dolasetron Some Trade Names
ANZEMET
Click for Drug Monograph

12.5 mg IV at onset of nausea and vomiting

Used to treat severe or refractory vomiting, or vomiting caused by chemotherapy

Possible adverse effects: Constipation, diarrhea, abdominal pain

Granisetron Some Trade Names
KYTRIL
Click for Drug Monograph

1 mg po or IV tid

Ondansetron Some Trade Names
ZOFRAN
Click for Drug Monograph

4–8 mg po or IV q 8 h

Palonosetron

Prophylaxis: 0.25 mg IV as a single dose 30 min before chemotherapy

Other drugs

Aprepitant Some Trade Names
EMEND
Click for Drug Monograph

125 mg po 1 h before chemotherapy on day 1, then 80 mg po daily in the morning on days 2 and 3

When used with ondansetron Some Trade Names
ZOFRAN
Click for Drug Monograph
, 32 mg IV 30 min before chemotherapy on day 1 only

When used with dexamethasone Some Trade Names
DECADRON
DEXASONE
HEXADROL
Click for Drug Monograph
12 mg po 30 min before chemotherapy on day 1 and 8 mg po daily in the morning on days 2, 3, and 4

Used with highly emetogenic chemotherapy regimens

Possible adverse effects: Somnolence, fatigue, hiccups

Metoclopramide Some Trade Names
REGLAN
Click for Drug Monograph

5–20 mg po or IV tid to qid

Used to treat initial treatment of mild vomiting

Perphenazine Some Trade Names
TRILAFON
Click for Drug Monograph

5–10 mg IM or 8–16 mg po daily in divided doses; maximum dose 24 mg/day

—

Prochlorperazine Some Trade Names
COMPAZINE
Click for Drug Monograph

5–10 mg IV or 25 mg per rectum

—

Scopolamine Some Trade Names
TRANSDERM SCOP
Click for Drug Monograph

1-mg patch worn for up to 72 h

Used to treat motion sickness

Possible adverse effects: Diminished sweating, dry skin

Key Points

  • Many episodes have an obvious cause and benign examination and require only symptomatic treatment.
  • Be alert for signs of an acute abdomen or significant intracranial disorder.
  • Always consider pregnancy in females of childbearing age.

Last full review/revision November 2013 by Norton J. Greenberger, MD

Content last modified November 2013

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In This Topic
Gastrointestinal Disorders
Symptoms of GI Disorders
Nausea and Vomiting
Complications
Etiology
Evaluation
History
Physical examination
Red flags
Interpretation of findings
Testing
Treatment
Key Points
Back to Top
Helpful Resources
  • Clinical CalculatorsConversion TablesDrug TablesNormal Laboratory ValuesSelected SitesAbbreviations
book mobile app translations
Merck Promo