Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neurologist.
The answer to your question is gastroenterologist and then also neurologist. Neurologist will check a brain MRI with and without contrast and if that is clear (and there’s no GI cause identified) this is very possibly a pediatric migraine phenomenon.
This ^
I would try protein bars first personally. The blood sugar thing is so common.
No it actually isn’t. It’s a common misconception. Most non-diabetic people don’t suffer from “low blood sugar” ever, they just think they do, and frequent vomiting from “low blood sugar” in a non-diabetic isn’t common AT ALL.
Anonymous wrote:This sounds a lot like my 24 year old. She would eat a snack of apples/peanut butter, nuts, or something substantial-ish before bed [like around 10 ish if getting up around 7am] and would also keep juice boxes in her nightstand. She would have a juice box when she woke up before sitting/getting up. It helped a lot. The nausea is/was always much worse the earlier she had to get up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neurologist.
The answer to your question is gastroenterologist and then also neurologist. Neurologist will check a brain MRI with and without contrast and if that is clear (and there’s no GI cause identified) this is very possibly a pediatric migraine phenomenon.
This ^
I would try protein bars first personally. The blood sugar thing is so common.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Neurologist.
The answer to your question is gastroenterologist and then also neurologist. Neurologist will check a brain MRI with and without contrast and if that is clear (and there’s no GI cause identified) this is very possibly a pediatric migraine phenomenon.
This ^
Anonymous wrote:Neurologist.
The answer to your question is gastroenterologist and then also neurologist. Neurologist will check a brain MRI with and without contrast and if that is clear (and there’s no GI cause identified) this is very possibly a pediatric migraine phenomenon.
Anonymous wrote:But there’s also the overarching sensitivity to motion, like with long car rides, right? The mornings he misses the bus - does he get there by quick car ride (and no nausea)? What happens in the afternoon, commute-wise?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:So no other odd symptoms - weught loss, fainting, dizzy, headache?
The vomitting triggered by motion is sort of understandable especially if dh was similar as a teen, BUT the vomiting and naseau daily(!) is not normal. Does it happen only during the school year?
OP here. He doesn't have any of those symptoms. Just the time-sensitive nausea. It only happens on school days, and only when he gets up early enough to catch the bus (which suggests something psychological but he likes riding the bus, so I think it is more the getting up early that is the issue).
If the common denominator for nausea is travel by school bus or long travel by car, then maybe it’s an equilibrium issue. And maybe the vomiting en route to the bus is (subconscious) anticipatory nausea for the upcoming bus trip.
Or…like everyone else already said, he he just needs a protein bar. 😁
Anonymous wrote:Perhaps there's an attention-seeking aspect to the naseau?
Given the weird title of your post (you couldn't have just said "15 yr old with daily naseau" ?) the apple doesn't fall far from the tree.