Nausea and vomiting: Information for clinicians

Nausea and vomiting are very distressing symptoms. Without effective treatment people can rapidly decline through an inability to eat resulting in weakness, fatigue and often depression.

Identifying the cause leads to better success in controlling symptoms. Often there are multiple minor causes that tip the threshold into feeling sick.

Red flags

Exclude bowel obstruction

Key clinical features to assess in the community
  • Review underlying diagnosis and recent treatment (e.g. site of tumours, organ failure, recent chemo)
  • Medication review (see table below)
  • Severity eg inability to take usual oral medication
  • Overall condition: signs of dehydration or infection (UTI, chest infection, oral candida) 
  • Abdominal and rectal exam for constipation, ascites, masses, bowel sounds, tender epigastrium
  • Assessment of anxiety levels as this can be a cause of nausea
  • Associated symptoms eg headache suggesting a cerebral cause
An initial approach to treatment
  • Stop or reduce dose of offending drugs 
  • Blood tests for a metabolic cause 
  • Urinalysis to exclude infection
  • Antiemetics (Metoclopramide is a good first antiemetic to try)
  • Give antiemetics regularly rather than PRN
  • Once people feel sick, retroperistalsis may have started, and subcutaneous route better than oral
  • Consider more specific treatments US/scans according to cause - see table below
  • Nutritional and hydration advice can be very effective 
  • Is patient safe to keep at home - inpatient care/tests needed for dehydration, diagnosis, electrolyte abnormalities 
Top tips
  • Beware worsening colic (or vomiting) with prokinetics - suggests bowel obstruction 
  • Levomepromazine has a broad spectrum of action but is sedating at doses > 12.5mg/24h 
  • Ondansetron can cause constipation
  • Metoclopramide can cause neurological side effects e.g. akathisia/restlessness 
  • 25% cases may need 2 anti-emetics
  • Olanzapine is an alternative broad-spectrum antiemetic starting in doses of 2.5mg OD
  • Prochlorperazine (in buccal form Buccastem) is useful at home if no injections are available
  • Bland food, avoid cooking smells, and some complementary approaches eg Sea Bands may help
  • Crushed ice can be incredibly helpful for nausea
Specialist care
  • Advice on combination antiemetics
  • Abdominal CT scan and ultrasound are useful if symptoms persist

Specific treatments according to cause:

Cause

Clinical Features

Initial approach to treatment

Drugs e.g. opioids*, antibiotics, SSRIs, NSAIDs,  steroids, chemotherapy

 

*If dose of opioid is stable, it is unlikely to be the cause of nausea 

Constant background nausea 

Stop/reduce dose of offending drugs

Consider gastroprotection with PPI 

Haloperidol Oral/subcutaneous dose: 0.75mg -1.5 mg once or twice daily, up to 5 mg daily. Syringe pump:2.5mg–5 mg/24 hrs

Metoclopramide Oral/subcutaneous dose: 10 mg 3-4 x/24 hrs.   Syringe pump : 30–40 mg /24 hours

Ondansetron for chemo nausea. Oral/subcutaneous dose 4mg-8mg bd

Metabolic causes

renal failure, liver failure, hypercalcaemia, hyponatraemia

Co-existent delirium may suggest metabolic cause

Haloperidol as above

Hypercalcaemia will need IV hydration and bisphosphonates if appropriate to admit

 

Gastric stasis, and severe constipation

Large volume vomit, relief of symptoms after vomiting, oesophageal reflux, hiccups. 

Stop/reduce  anticholinergic drugs such as Buscopan, tricycyclic antidepressants, Oxybutinin

Use prokinetic antiemetics: e.g. Domperidone 10mg tds orally or Metoclopramide as above

Treat constipation

Erythromycin 250mg bd may help

Physical obstruction (from tumour or external compression by ascites) 

Vomiting pattern depends on level of obstruction

If possibility of reversal – use prokinetic Metoclopramide in a syringe pump as above. Dexamethasone e.g. 8mg subcutaneously may help nausea and reduce compression.

If likely irreversible – a combination of Cyclizine +/- Haloperidol in a syringe pump

CT may help to identify level/reversibility of blockage

Toxins

e.g. ischaemic bowel, tumour products, infection

 

Levomepromazine

Oral or subcutaneous dose: 6.25 mg 8 hourly. Syringe pump dose: 12.5 mg-25mg /24 hrs

Raised intracranial pressure

Effortless vomiting, often in the morning, associated with headache and papilloedema

Cyclizine Oral dose: 25–50 mg up to 150mg/24hrs Subcutaneous dose: 25mg up to 100mg/24 hrs

Syringe pump dose: Up to 100mg /24 hrs

CT head plus Dexamethasone /oncology review

Motion-associated nausea

Nausea or sudden vomiting on movement (eg turning in bed) 

For vestibular disturbance (eg diseases of the inner ear and motion sickness): Cyclizine as above

Anxiety-related nausea

Nausea may be triggered by a previous stimulus

CBT (cognitive behavioural Therapy) may help

Lorazepam 0.5mg orally can be tried

 

Recommended Resources

North West London ICS - Palliative and end of life care

Published 1st July 2022

Scottish Palliative Care Guidelines - Nausea and vomiting

Published 15th April 2021

Wessex Palliative Physicians - The Palliative Care Handbook

Published 1st January 2019

PANG Guidelines Physical Symptoms and Signs - Nausea and vomiting

Published 16th October 2016

BMJ: Clinical Review Nausea and vomiting in palliative care

Published 3rd December 2015

Share

Downloads

Related Services

Pharmacies

Alpha Chemist
Close

A community pharmacy which stocks common palliative medicines to support people being cared for at home

Address: 480 Church Road, Northolt, Middlesex, UB5 5AU

Opening hours: Monday and Tuesday 9.00am to 6.00pm. Wednesday 9.00am to 5.30pm. Thursday and Friday 9.00am to 6.00pm. Saturday 9.00am to 1.00pm

Anmol Pharmacy
Close

Anmol Pharmacy

T. 020 8606 9269

W. http://www.anmolpharmacy.co.uk/

A community pharmacy which stocks common palliative medicines to support people being cared for at home

Address: 97 North Road, Southall, UB1 2JW

Opening hours: Monday to Saturday 9.00am to 9.00pm

Ariana Pharmacy
Close

Ariana Pharmacy

T. 020 8575 6600

W. https://www.arianapharmacy.co.uk/

A community pharmacy which stocks common palliative medicines to support people being cared for at home

Address: 472 Greenford Road, Greenford, UB6 8SQ

Opening hours: Monday and Tuesday 9.00am to 9.00pm. Wednesday to Friday 9.00am to 8.00pm. Saturday 9.00am to 7.00pm. Sunday 10.00am to 4.00pm

Asda In-Store Pharmacy
Close

Asda In-Store Pharmacy

T. 020 8951 9119

A community pharmacy which stocks common palliative medicines to support people being cared for at home

Address: Park Royal Industrial Est, 2-20 Western Road, NW10 7LW

Opening hours: Monday to Saturday 9.00am to 8.00pm. Sunday 11.00am to 5.00pm

Banks Chemist
Close

A community pharmacy which stocks common palliative medicines to support people being cared for at home

Address: 59 Old Oak Common Lane, East Acton London W3 7DD

Opening hours: Monday to Friday 9.00am to 6.30pm. Saturday 9.00am to 2.00pm

Gill Chemist
Close

Gill Chemist

T. 020 8571 1555

A community pharmacy which stocks common palliative medicines to support people being cared for at home

Address: 31-33 King Street, Southall, UB2 4DG

Opening hours: Monday to Friday 9.00am to 8.00pm. Saturday 9.00am to 7.00pm. Sunday 12.00pm to 7.00pm

Lymphoedema services

British Lymphology Society
Close

British Lymphology Society

W. https://www.thebls.com/directory/london

The British Lymphology Society provides a directory of Lymphoedema treatment services.

Use the website address above to find your local services.

LymphConnect
Close

LymphConnect is an online platform developed to help manage lymphoedema or lipoedema, understand more about the condition, share experiences and get support and advice.

 

Palliative care teams

Community Palliative Care Team - based at Meadow House Hospice
Close

Community Palliative Care Team - based at Meadow House Hospice

T. 020 8967 5179

W. https://www.lnwh.nhs.uk/meadow-house-hospice/#community-palliative-care-team

The Community Specialist Palliative Care Nurse Team provides advice and visiting to palliative care patients in Ealing and Hounslow. The team are based at Meadow House Hospice.

The team will visit patients with progressive life limiting illness in their own homes. They provide specialist advice around pain and symptom control and support for patients, their families, and carers during the last stages of illness. They also support patients wishing to die at home through coordination with GPs and hospital teams.

The team is comprised of medical consultants, specialist nurses, physiotherapists, occupational therapists, social workers, a bereavement support officer and a patient and carer advocacy worker

The team can be contacted for referrals Monday to Friday 9.00am to 5.00pm.

Between Monday to Friday 5.00pm and 8.30am, the Out of Hours Telephone Advice line 020 8102 5000 takes calls. Weekends and Bank Holidays 5.00pm to 9.00am.

Referral form for clinician use only.

Community Specialist Palliative Care Referral Form V4.2 (DOCX)
Meadow House Hospice Inpatient Unit
Close

Meadow House Hospice Inpatient Unit

T. 0208 967 5179

W. http://meadowhouse.lnwh.nhs.uk

Meadow House Hospice provides inpatient palliative care services to the residents of Ealing.

The hospice has a 15 bedded inpatient unit supported by a team of dedicated staff providing 24/7 specialist support to patients and their family members. Patients with a progressive life limiting illness can be admitted for symptom management or end of life care.

Patients have a safe, dignified space of their own and the flexibility to spend time alone or in company, surrounded by their possessions and the people they care about. The hospice also has an extensive garden area that provides a quiet and reflective environment for both patients and family members.

Please contact the hospice Monday to Friday 8.30am to 4.30pm and during the weekend 9.00am to 5.00pm on 0208 242 5817.

There is a 24 hour telephone support line to the hospice ward on 0208 967 5597.

Bereavement services to support family members, friends and carers connected to a loved one who was cared for by the Hospice, can be contacted via main switchboard.  

Referral form for clinician use only.

Community Specialist Palliative Care Referral Form V4.2 (DOCX)
Planned Night End of Life Care
Close

Planned Night End of Life Care

T. 0203 370 2208

This is an overnight service and is provided by Marie Curie via Meadow House Hospice for residents of Ealing and Hounslow. This service provides one to one overnight nursing support, symptom control, management of pain, emotional and practical support for patients in their last few weeks of life.

Referrals are made via Local Clinical Coordination Centre Monday to Sunday from 10.00pm to 7.00am.

Marie Curie Planned Night Services Referral Form (DOCX)

Cancer services

Marie Curie
Close

Marie Curie

T. 0800 090 2309

W. https://www.mariecurie.org.uk/

Marie Curie provide support for patients and carers through terminal illness.

Find information and support through the telephone helpline and online chat via their website.

Other services include Marie Curie nurses, Hospice care, helper and companion services.

Young lives vs Cancer
Close

Young lives vs Cancer

W. https://www.younglivesvscancer.org.uk/

Young lives vs Cancer support young people under 25 with cancer, and their families, to get the help they need during their cancer treatment and beyond, including bereaved families living with emotional distress. 

Overnight/weekend services

Planned Night End of Life Care
Close

Planned Night End of Life Care

T. 0203 370 2208

This is an overnight service and is provided by Marie Curie via Meadow House Hospice for residents of Ealing and Hounslow. This service provides one to one overnight nursing support, symptom control, management of pain, emotional and practical support for patients in their last few weeks of life.

Referrals are made via Local Clinical Coordination Centre Monday to Sunday from 10.00pm to 7.00am.

Marie Curie Planned Night Services Referral Form (DOCX)
Rapid Response End of Life Care Service
Close

Rapid Response End of Life Care Service

T. 0208 967 5126

Marie Curie Rapid Response Service provides short term palliative nursing interventions, symptom control, management of pain, advice, emotional and practical support to the residents of Ealing and Hounslow. This service is based at Meadow House Hospice.

The service can be contacted Monday to Sunday from 6.00pm to 7.00am.

Rapid Response Referral Form (DOCX)

Related Articles

13th March 2025

Nausea and vomiting: Information for patients and carers

Feedback