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Vomiting & Nausea
“Vomiting is a
weekend issue around here with all the frat parties. A good friend holds
your hair back when you’ve really drank too much.”
Lisa
B., University of Iowa
Signs & Symptoms
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Vomiting is throwing up the stomach’s
contents. Dry heaves may precede or follow vomiting. |
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Nausea is when you feel like you’re
going to throw up. |
Causes
Common causes of nausea and vomiting are:
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Viruses in the intestines. |
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Some medications, such as certain
antibiotics or birth control pills |
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Spoiled food |
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Eating or drinking too much |
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Motion sickness |
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Morning sickness in pregnant females |
Some medical
conditions cause vomiting, too. These include:
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Labrynthitis. This is inflammation of an
area in the ear that usually results from an upper respiratory
infection. |
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A concussion from a head injury. After
falling from a loft, for example, dry heaves or vomiting could be a sign
of a more serious injury. |
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Stomach ulcers |
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Hepatitis. This is inflammation of the
liver. |
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Meningitis. This is inflammation of
membranes that cover the brain and spinal cord. |
{Note:
Nausea and vomiting can be signs of having a date rape drug. See information
on date rape drugs.}
Treatment
Treatment for nausea and/or vomiting depends
on the cause.
Questions to Ask
| Besides vomiting, do you have
signs of meningitis? |
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| After a recent case of the flu or chicken pox with
sudden, repeated vomiting, are other signs of
Reye’s Syndrome present? |
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| Do dry heaves and/or vomiting occur after a recent
head injury or do you vomit true, red blood? |
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With vomiting, are any signs of
drug or alcohol poisoning
present?
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| After repeated vomiting, do you have
signs of dehydration? |
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| With vomiting, do you have signs of an acute
kidney infection? |
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| With nausea or vomiting, do the whites of your
eyes or does your skin look yellow? |
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| With nausea or vomiting, do you have
signs of a bladder infection? |
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| Do you have stomach pain that lasts for more than
2 hours, interferes with your activities, and keeps hurting after you
vomited? |
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| Do you induce vomiting after overeating or to lose
weight? |
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| Are you vomiting medicine that is necessary for
you to take? (Asthma medicines are examples.) |
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For Vomiting:
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Don’t eat solid foods. Don’t drink milk. |
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Drink clear liquids (water, sport
drinks, such as Gatorade, flat cola and ginger ale, etc.). Take small
sips. Drink only 1 to 2 ounces at a time, but drink frequently. Stir any
carbonated beverages to get all the bubbles out before sipping them.
Suck on ice chips if nothing else will stay down. |
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Gradually return to regular diet, but
wait about 8 hours from the last time you vomited. Start with foods like
dry toast, crackers, rice, and other foods that are easy to digest. |
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Don’t smoke, drink alcohol, or take
aspirin. |
For Nausea Without
Vomiting:
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Drink clear liquids. Eat small amounts
of dry foods, such as soda crackers, (if tolerated). |
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Avoid things that irritate the stomach,
such as alcohol, aspirin, spicy, and fried foods. |
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For motion sickness, use an over-the-
counter antinausea medicine, such as Dramamine. Follow package
directions. Or use Sea-Bands, a wrist band product that uses
accupressure on a certain point on the wrist to control motion sickness.
Sea-Bands are available in sporting good stores and drugstores. |
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