“My roommate was real sick. She was throwing up and was real embarrassed because we had a community bathroom. It was pretty gross. But I told her we all get sick.”
– Tala E., University of Michigan
Medical conditions that cause vomiting include: Labyrinthitis (inflammation of an area in the ear that usually results from an upper respiratory infection); stomach ulcers; hepatitis; meningitis; and a concussion from a head injury. For example, after falling from a loft, dry heaves or vomiting could be a sign of a concussion.
{Note: Nausea and vomiting can be signs of having a date rape drug.}
Treatment for nausea and/or vomiting depends on the cause.
Besides vomiting, do you have signs and symptoms of meningitis?
After a recent case of the flu or chicken pox with sudden, repeated vomiting, are other signs of Reye’s Syndrome present?
Do dry heaves and/or vomiting occur after a recent head injury or do you vomit true, red blood?
With vomiting, are any signs of alcohol poisoning present?
After repeated vomiting, do you have signs of dehydration?
With vomiting, do you have symptoms of an acute kidney infection?
With nausea or vomiting, do the whites of your eyes or does your skin look yellow?
With nausea or vomiting, do you have symptoms of a bladder infection?
Do you have stomach pain that lasts for more than 2 hours, interferes with your activities, and keeps hurting after you vomited?
Do you induce vomiting after overeating or to lose weight?
Are you taking medicines that don’t work if you vomit (e.g., asthma medicines)?