| Literature DB >> 20633258 |
J K Jueckstock1, R Kaestner, I Mylonas.
Abstract
Up to 90% of pregnant women experience nausea and vomiting. When prolonged or severe, this is known as hyperemesis gravidarum (HG), which can, in individual cases, be life threatening. In this article the aetiology, diagnosis and treatment strategies will be presented based on a selective literature review. Treatment strategies range from outpatient dietary advice and antiemetic drugs to hospitalization and intravenous (IV) fluid replacement in persistent or severe cases. Alternative methods, such as acupuncture, are not yet evidence based but sometimes have a therapeutic effect.In most cases, the condition is self limiting and subsides by around 20 weeks gestation. More severe forms require medical intervention once other organic causes of nausea and vomiting have been excluded. In addition, a psychosomatic approach is often helpful.In view of its potential complexity, general practitioners and obstetricians should be well informed about HG and therapy should be multimodal.Entities:
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Year: 2010 PMID: 20633258 PMCID: PMC2913953 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-8-46
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Figure 1Differential diagnosis of nausea and vomiting.
Figure 2Differential diagnosis of nausea and vomiting in respect to abdominal symptoms.
Diseases associated with nausea and vomiting during pregnancy (alphabetical order), adapted from reference [2].
| Causes | Differential diagnosis |
|---|---|
| Appendicitis | |
| Diaphragmatic hernia | |
| Gastroenteritis | |
| Hepatic or cholecystic disorders | |
| Hepatitis | |
| Ileus and subileus | |
| Pancreatitis | |
| Stomach cancer | |
| Stomach ulcer or duodenal ulcer | |
| Addison's disease | |
| Diabetic ketoacidosis | |
| Hyperthyroidism | |
| Porphyria | |
| Thyrotoxicosis | |
| Korsakoff's psychosis | |
| Migraine | |
| Vestibular disorders | |
| Wernicke's encephalopathy | |
| Acute fatty liver | |
| Emesis gravidarum (<5 ×/day) | |
| Hyperemesis gravidarum (>5 ×/day) | |
| Multiple pregancy | |
| Pre-eclampsia | |
| Premature contractions | |
| Degenerative uterine fibroids | |
| Nephrolithiasis | |
| Pyelonephritis | |
| Uremia | |
| Drug poisoning | |
| Food poisoning | |
| Iron medication | |
Figure 3Multimodal character of treatment strategies in hyperemesis gravidarum, adapted from reference [2].
Antiemetic agents and supposed dosage in hyperemesis gravidarum, adapted from references [13,62,98]
| Food and Drug Admnistration category | Medication | Administration | Suggested dosage |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pyridoxine (vitamin B6) | Oral | 20 mg 3 × per day (max. dose: 200 mg per day) | |
| Doxylamine | Oral | 25 mg at night and 12.5 mg in the morning accompanied by 10 mg of pyridoxine (maximum dose: 80 mg per day) | |
| Ondansetron | Oral/intravenously (IV) | 4-8 mg 2-3× per day/2-4 mg every 6-8 h or 8 mg every 12 h IV | |
| Metoclopramide | Oral | 5-10 mg 3-4 × per day | |
| Meclizine | Oral/rectal | 25-100 mg 2-4 × per day/1 × per day | |
| Diphenhydramine | Oral/IV | 25-50 mg every 6-8 h | |
| Dimenhydrinate | Oral/IV/rectal | 50 mg 3-4× per day/62 mg 2× per day/1-3× per day | |
| Promethazine | Oral/IV | 12.5-25 mg up to 6 × per day | |
| Prochlorperazine | Rectal | 25 mg per day or 2× per day | |
| Prednisolone | Oral | 40-60 mg per day reducing by half every 3 days | |
| - | Ginger | Oral (biscuits, confectionary, crystals, powder, tablets, capsules, fresh ginger) | Up to 1 g per day in divided doses |
Recommended procedure for substitution of vitamins during total parenteral nutrition (personal communication Ramsauer and Vetter, Berlin, Germany).
| Parenteral nutrition via peripheral venous access | ||
|---|---|---|
| 500 mL glucose-infusion 5% | • 200 mg vitamin B1 (thiaminchloride), | 50 mL/h |
| 500 mL glucose-infusion 40% | • 200 mg vitamin B1(thiaminchloride), | 50 mL/h |