Nausea common after chemo
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) — Nausea and vomiting occurring the week after cancer chemotherapy is common, despite the use of so-called “anti-emetics” to control nausea and vomiting, and can adversely affect quality of life. And nausea appears to have a greater negative impact than vomiting does.While it may seem “self-evident” that nausea and vomiting after chemotherapy have a negative effect on life, few studies have actually quantified this adverse effect of treatment, doctors explain in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.
In nearly 300 cancer patients, Dr. Brigitte Bloechl-Daum from the Medical University of Vienna, and colleagues analysed the prevalence and impact of acute nausea and vomiting occurring in the first 24 hours after chemotherapy and delayed nausea and vomiting occurring two to five days post-chemotherapy.
Most patients received anti-emetic treatments prior to chemotherapy, as is recommended. Despite this, however, vomiting was reported by more than one third of patients (36.4 percent).
In roughly 13 percent, vomiting occurred in the first 24 hours after treatment, whereas 32 percent suffered delayed vomiting.