Emetics
Content
• Emesis
• Regurgitation,
Rumination and Bulimia
• Pathophysiology
of emesis
Objectives
At the end of this
lecture, student will be able to
• Explain
the difference between Regurgitation, Rumination and Bulimia
• Describe
the pathophysiology of vomiting
• Explain
about emetics
Vomiting
• Vomiting
is often preceded by nausea and may be accompanied by retching
• Vomiting
can be a valuable physiological response to the ingestion of a toxic substance
such as alcohol
• It
is also an unwanted side effect of many clinically used drugs, mainly cancer
chemotherapy, opioids, general anesthetics.
It is important to differentiate vomiting from
Regurgitation, Rumination and Bulimia.
Pathophysiology
• Complex
interactions between central and peripheral pathways.
• The
most imp areas involved peripherally are the gastric mucosa and smooth muscle
(the enteric brain) and the afferent pathways of the vagus and sympathetic
nerves.
• The
significant areas involved centrally are the area postrema, the Chemo receptor
Trigger zone (CTZ), the nucleus tractus solitarus (NTS) and the vomiting
centre.
From
pharmacotherapeutic point of view, the most imp aspect of this complex
pathophysiology is the variety of receptors involved including:
- Histaminergic
(H1)
- Cholinergic
(Muscarinic M1)
- Dopaminergic
(D2)
- Serotonergic
(5HT3)
- Neurokinin-1
(NK1) receptors
In the clinical
situation, this becomes target for various drugs directed at controlling the
symptoms.
Emetics
• The
most commonly used emetics are Ipecac and Apomorphine.
• Induced
emesis is the preferred means of emptying the stomach in awake patients who
have ingested a toxic substance or have recently taken a drug overdose.
• Vomiting blood is often caused by
ulcers, ruptured blood vessels, and stomach bleeding. It can also be caused by
some forms of cancer
• Emesis
should not be induced if patient has CNS depression or has ingested certain
volatile hydrocarbons or caustic substances
• Frequent vomiting not related to any
of these causes may be a symptom of cyclic vomiting syndrome.
• This condition is characterized by
vomiting for up to 10 days.
• It is usually coupled with nausea
and extreme lack of energy. It mainly occurs during childhood
• Ipecac
syrup(15-30 ml in adults, 10-15 ml in children, 5 ml in infants) is
prepared from the dried rhizome and roots of Cephaelis ipecacuanha or Cephaelis
acuminata, plants from Brazil and Central America
• Ipecac
- stimulates the CTZ in the medulla & acts directly on the gastric mucosa -
take w/ water (not milk or carbonation)
• Onset
in 15 to 30 min.
• Toxic
if absorbed Ã
give charcoal.
• S/E: Hypotension, tachycardia, chest pain
,diarrhea, sedation, lethargy
• Have
alkaloid emetine as active principal ingredient
• Acts
directly on CTZ and indirectly by irritating gastric mucosa
• The chemoreceptor trigger zone at
the base of the fourth ventricle has numerous dopamine receptors
• Serotonin 5-HT3 receptors,opioid
receptors acetylcholine receptors and receptors for substance P
• Stimulation of different receptors
are involved in different pathways leading to emesis, in the final common
pathway substance P appears involved
• It
is cardio toxic if absorbed and causes cardiac conduction disturbances, atrial
fibrilation, or fatal myocarditis
• If
emesis does not occur, gastric lavage using a nasogastric tube must be
performed
• Dehydration is the most common
complication related to vomiting. Vomiting causes your stomach to expel not
only food but fluids
• It
should be available in every household for emergency use.
• Less
dependable than parenteral apomorphine
• Takes
15 min or more for its effect, but is safer
• The vagal and enteric nervous
system inputs transmit information regarding the state of
the gastrointestinal system.
• Irritation of the GI mucosa by
chemotherapy, radiation, distention, or acute infectious gastroenteritis activates
the 5-HT3 receptors of these inputs.
• Apomorphine,
a derivative of morphine, acts as dopaminergic agonist directly on CTZ.
• Injected
i.m./s.c. In a dose of 6 mg, induces
vomiting within 5 min.
• Oral
use not recommended as emetic dose is larger.
• The CNS mediates vomiting
that arises from psychiatric disorders and stress from higher brain centers
• More
effective if water is first administered before oral or s.c. dosing.
• Excessive
dosage may cause respiratory depression and circulatory collapse.
• Opioid
antagonists (naloxone) usually reverse the depressant actions of apomorphine.
• Not
frequently used as emetic.
Summary
• Vomiting is a complex reflex
activity.
• Emetic drug or vomiting drug are
those drug which is responsible for the vomiting.
• Emetic drug is apply when an
undesirable like poison has been injected.
• When an individual has consumed certain toxic substances and must be expelled before absorption
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