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Antiemetics

Drugs in medicine

Drugs in medicine

Introduction

Antiemetics are widely used on a daily basis both in and out of hospital. Nausea is a common symptom that you will be expected to manage appropriately, in much the same way as effectively managing pain. This article runs through a step wise approach to understanding why nausea happens, and thus the best way to manage it effectively.

Physiology of Nausea and Vomiting

Vomiting is the emptying of upper GI tract contents, and is a feature of the body’s defence against toxin ingestion.
Nausea is the unpleasant sensation that is often a prodrome to vomiting itself.

This causes vomiting through:

The causes of nausea are complex and multifactorial, but are most easily understood when broken down into 3 categories, based on the afferent inputs to the vomiting centre:

  1. Visceral Stimulation
  2. Chemoreceptor Trigger Zone (CTZ)
  3. Higher cortical inputs (including vestibular system)

Visceral Stimulation

CTZ

Higher Neurological Inputs

Causes of Nausea and Vomiting

Before treating you should always have considered a cause, as nausea can be a symptom of a disease process.
The above physiology provides a good model for thinking about causes

Visceral

  1. Obstructions: Small bowel obstruction, pyloric obstruction
  2. Inflammatory: Pancreatitis, cholecystitis, appendicitis
  3. Mechanical: gastroperesis,
  4. Enteric infection: Viral or bacterial
  5. Cardiac: Don’t forget MI as a cause

CTZ

  1. Drugs: Opiates, Antibiotics, cytotoxics, NSAIDs
  2. Metabolic: High Calcium, Low sodium, Uraemia, DKA, Pregnancy
  3. Toxins: Alcohol

Higher neurological

  1. Vestibular: Vertigo, Meniere’s disease.
  2. Intracranial: Raised intracranial pressure, Infection
  3. Psychological: Fear, anticipatory,
  4. Sensory: Smell, taste, Pain (can be a trigger in itself)

                 

Antiemetic Therapy

Antihistamines

E.g: Cyclizine, Promethazine

Side effects:

My favourite: Cyclizine (50mg) 8 hourly. IV, IM, or Oral route
A good starting point if not contraindicated, with multiple routes of administration.

Antimuscarinics

E.g. Hyoscine hydrobromide (a.k.a. scopolamine)

Side effects:

Dopamine Receptor Antagonists

Phenothiazines and related drugs (the anti-psychotics)

e.g. Chlorpromazine, Prochlorperazine, Haloperidol

Metoclopramide

Domperidone

Side Effects:

My Favourite: Metoclopramide (10mg) 8 hourly. IV, IM, or Oral
Better action for visceral causes of nausea.

5HT3 Receptor Antagonists

E.g. Ondansetron, granisetron

Side effects:

Dexamethasone

Using Antiemetics

Now that we’ve learnt all about the cause of nausea, and the different drug classes available, it’s easier to work out how to treat different presentations.

1. Pregnancy associated nausea

2. Drug Induced

3. Post operative

4. Motion sickness

References

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