management of nausea & vomiting

28
Management of Nausea & Vomiting Dr Iain Lawrie Specialist Registrar in Palliative Medicine

Upload: dallon

Post on 05-Jan-2016

168 views

Category:

Documents


4 download

DESCRIPTION

Management of Nausea & Vomiting. Dr Iain Lawrie Specialist Registrar in Palliative Medicine. Gut Mucosa. Vestibular Apparatus. D 2 5-HT 3 ACh. Cortical Structures. Chemoreceptor Trigger Zone. D 2 5-HT 3 Ach. Vomiting Centre. H 1 5-HT 2 ACh. Vomit. H 1 , ACh. Gut Mucosa. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Management ofNausea & Vomiting

Dr Iain LawrieSpecialist Registrar

in Palliative Medicine

Page 2: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Vomit

Vomiting Centre

Cortical Structures

Gut Mucosa

Vestibular Apparatus

D2 5-HT3 ACh

H1 5-HT2 ACh

Chemoreceptor Trigger Zone

D2 5-HT3 Ach

H1, ACh

Page 3: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Vomit

Vomiting Centre

Cortical Structures

Gut Mucosa

Vestibular Apparatus

D2 5-HT3 ACh

H1 5-HT2 ACh

H1 AChMotion

Emotions, sights, smells,

raised ICP

GI obstruction, bowel colic, tumour mass,

constipation

Chemoreceptor Trigger Zone

D2 5-HT3 AChDrugs, toxins,

uraemia, hypercalcaemia

Page 4: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Vomit

Vomiting Centre

Cortical Structures

Gut Mucosa

Vestibular Apparatus

D2 5-HT3 ACh

H1 5-HT2 ACh

H1 AChMotion

Emotions, sights, smells,

raised ICP

GI obstruction, bowel colic, tumour mass,

constipation

Chemoreceptor Trigger Zone

D2 5-HT3 AChDrugs, toxins,

uraemia, hypercalcaemia

Metoclopramide, Levomepromazine

Granisetron

Haloperidol Metoclopramide

Levomepromazine Granisetron

Dexamethasone

Cyclizine, Hyoscine HBr

Cyclizine, Levomepromazine, Hyoscine HBr

Page 5: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Factors to consider

Mechanism of action of anti-emetic drugs

Response to anti-emetics already given Combinations of drugs should have

different actions Levomepromazine has multiple

receptor affinities

Page 6: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Factors to consider

Effects of anti-emetics on GI motility (prokinetic / antikinetic)

Adjuvant use of anti-secretory drugs Adjuvant use of corticosteroids Adverse effects of drugs Cost of drugs

Page 7: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Management

Correct reversible causes stop gastric irritant drugs treat gastritis

• PPIs / antacids treat cough

• antitussive treat constipation

• laxatives

Page 8: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Management

Raised ICP- steroids / radiotherapy

Anxiety Hypercalcaemia

- rehydration +/- bisphosphonates

Page 9: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Causes of drug-induced N&V Gastric irritation

Gastric stasis

CTZ stimulation

5HT3-receptor stimulation

Antibiotics, iron, NSAIDs

Antimuscarinics, opioids, TCA

Antibiotics, cytotoxics, digoxin

Antibiotics, cytotoxics, SSRIs

Page 10: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

What if it’s not working?

Is it being absorbed? Is the dose optimum? Do you have the correct cause? Most anti-emetics can be given SC Doses usually the same PO, SC and IV

Page 11: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Prescribing an anti-emetic

Choice depends on cause of N&V Give regularly Alternative to oral route if unable to

absorb- subcutaneous stat doses- continuous subcutaneous infusion (driver)- rectal route

Page 12: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Anti-emetics – dopamine antagonists Haloperidol (D2)

Metoclopramide (D2, 5-HT3, 5-HT4 agonist) Prochlorperazine (D2) Domperidone (D2) Levomepromazine (D2, ACh, H1, 5-HT3)

Side effects- EPSE- sedation in higher doses- reduce seizure threshold

Page 13: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Anti-emetics – histamine antagonists Cyclizine (H1, ACh) Levomepromazine (D2, ACh, H1, 5-HT3)

Side effects- drowsiness- anticholinergic effects- postural hypotension

Page 14: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Anti-emetics - anticholinergics Hyoscine butylbromide (ACh) Hyoscine hydrobromide (ACh) Cyclizine (ACh) Levomepromazine (D2, ACh, H1, 5-HT3)

Side effects- sedation- anticholinergic effects

Page 15: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Anti-emetics - prokinetics

Metoclopramide (D2, 5-HT3, 5-HT4 agonist)

Domperidone (D2)

Side effects:- colic- EPSE (not domperidone – doesn’t cross BBB)

Page 16: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Anti-emetics – serotonin antagonists Ondansetron, granisetron, tropisetron

Side effects- constipation

Place in palliative care- obstruction / stretch- resistant N&V

Page 17: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Anti-emetics - steroids

Dexamethasone Reduce permeability of BBB & area postrema

to emetogenic substances Reduce neuronal content of GABA in the

brain stem Reduce leuenkephalin release Reduce oedema around lesion or tumour

Page 18: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Gastric stasis & irritation

Nausea made worse by eating Large volume vomits Early fullness & bloating Belching & reflux Hiccups Epigastric fullness & tenderness

Page 19: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Gastric stasis & irritation

1st line metoclopramide

Adjuncts- antiflatulent- PPI- stop irritant drugs

Page 20: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Bowel obstruction without colic Variable nausea Vomiting dependent on site of

obstruction Abdominal distension Background aching pain Constipation Absent or ‘hyperactive’ bowel sounds

Page 21: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Bowel obstruction without colic 1st line metoclopramide 2nd line cyclizine or haloperidol

(substitute)

Adjuvants- diamorphine- octreotide- docusate- steroids

Page 22: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Bowel obstruction with colic

Symptoms as before, but with colicky pains

1st line cyclizine OR haloperidol PLUS buscopan

2nd line cyclizine AND haloperidol OR levomepromazine

Adjuvants- diamorphine, octreotide, docusate

Page 23: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Chemical induced N&V

Significant nausea Variable vomiting Few other GI symptoms Evidence of presence

i.e. new drug started, biochemistry results

1st line haloperidol / metoclopramide 2nd line ADD cyclizine OR substitute

levomepromazine

Page 24: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Raised intracranial pressure

Known intracerebral tumour Early morning headaches Predominant nausea Intermittent vomiting Papilloedema Neurological deficit Seizures

Page 25: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Raised intracranial pressure

1st line dexamethasone & cyclizine

2nd line ADD haloperidol

3rd line 5-HT3 antagonist (substitute)

Page 26: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Motion / movement related N&V Nausea & vomiting worse on movement Can be associated with cranial nerve

lesions and base of skull metastases

1st line cyclizine

2nd line hyoscine hydrobromide

Page 27: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Indeterminate N&V

1st line haloperidol OR cyclizine

2nd line haloperidol AND cyclizine

3rd line levomepromazine (substitute)

4th line consider metoclopramide, dexamethasone, 5HT3 antagonist

Page 28: Management of Nausea & Vomiting

Summary

Try to determine the cause wherever possible

1/3 of patients will need more than one anti-emetic

Eliminate reversible causes

Continue anti-emetic indefinitely if cause is not self-limiting