Nausea and vomiting at the end of life
From IDWiki
Differential Diagnosis
- Head
- Increased ICP
- Meningeal irritation
- Anxiety
- Vestibular disorders
- Gastrointestinal
- Esophageal: GERD, thrush
- Gastric
- Gastric irritation
- Gastric stasis
- Obstruction
- Infection
- Organ failure
- Renal failure
- Liver failure
- Other causes
- Medications
- Hypercalcemia
- Tumour-induced
- Sepsis
Pathophysiology
- Four pathways
- Vestibular system
- Causes: motion, labyrinth disorders
- Receptors: muscarinic acetylcholinergic and H1 histamine receptors
- Chemoreceptor trigger zone (area outside blood-brain barrier)
- Causes: drugs, metabolic products, bacterial toxins
- Receptors: central D2 dopamine receptors (most important), 5HT3 serotonin receptors, and NK1 receptors
- Cortex
- Causes: sensory input, anxiety, meningeal irritation, increased ICP
- Peripheral pathways
- Causes: mechanical stretch, chemotherapy, radiotherapy, GERD, candida, metastases, local drugs or toxins
- Receptors: 5HT3 serotonin receptors (GI tract), mechanoreceptors and chemoreceptors in GI tract
- Vestibular system
Management
- Metabolic: D2 antagonist (e.g. haldol, metoclopramide)
- Chemotherapy: D2 antagonist (e.g. haldol, metoclopramide)
- Increased ICP: dexamethasone
- Obstruction: general surgery consult or medical management (AAAH)
- Anti-emetic
- Neuroleptics: haloperidol 0.5-2mg po/sc up to q1h prn
- If partial: metoclopramide 5-10mg po/sc QID
- Analgesic
- Opioids
- Anti-spasmodics: buscopan 10mg po/sc q6h (antikinetic)
- Anti-secretory
- Somatostatin analogues: octreotide 100-500 mcg sc TID
- Anticholinergics: scopolamine, buscopan
- Anti-inflammatory
- Dexamethasone 4mg po/sc daily to QID
- Decreases edema around obstruction to allow passage of some stool
- Hydration
- Anti-emetic