Nausea? Thick saliva?
We are in week 5 of 7 of radiation with 3 chemo cycles for tonsil cancer, Stage IVA. Steve's 2nd of 3 chemo treatments was Nov. 12th and he has barely had ANYTHING to eat or drink since due to nausea. He's gone in for IV hydration 3 times. He's tried Compazine, Zofran, Ativan both via oral and IV and hasn't had relief. Last night, he went for an acupuncture treatment. He's down 15 lbs and was already thin to begin with. He has a PEG but since he's nauseated, he's not using that either. The hospital gave him Ensure and Instant Carnation for the calories but he didn't tolerate it well and, like some of you have posted, those are empty calorie drinks without much nutrient content and heavy on the dairy which makes the saliva thicker, which leads me to the 2nd part of the post. Oh and a RN yesterday gave him a Rx for a Fenergan suppository which he may be using this weekend. Back to the saliva...
I'm wondering if part of the nausea is being caused by the thick saliva from the radiation. He's rinsing with a salt/peroxide/water rinse as directed but without much relief. I'm searching for help and haven't found much other than the usual - eat small meals, rinse, etc.
Anyone here find something that worked/helped? Thank you for ANY words of advice. I made him the Magic Mineral Broth from here last week but he hasn't tried it yet.
Traci
Comments
-
I hear you
David has had many of the same problems and to date what has helped the most is he got a PICC line and he is doing IV fluids at home seven days a week. Not having to put water in his tube in addition to the food has helped a lot. Also they changed his feed to something called Two Cal. It has 437 calories per can. They have added Raglan four times a day to get things moving through his stomach. There is also a nausea patch that helped tremendously, except he got blurred vision and had to stop using it. The saliva has been a problem, but our insurance is paying for a suction machine and that has been great. I hope something I have said may be helpful to your husband.0 -
My husband also had alot ofVivianLee5689 said:I hear you
David has had many of the same problems and to date what has helped the most is he got a PICC line and he is doing IV fluids at home seven days a week. Not having to put water in his tube in addition to the food has helped a lot. Also they changed his feed to something called Two Cal. It has 437 calories per can. They have added Raglan four times a day to get things moving through his stomach. There is also a nausea patch that helped tremendously, except he got blurred vision and had to stop using it. The saliva has been a problem, but our insurance is paying for a suction machine and that has been great. I hope something I have said may be helpful to your husband.
My husband also had alot of nausea after his second Cisplatin. He also had to go in for fluids several times which is very wise of you to do. Definitely keep up with the hydration. He didn't or hasn't had too much mucous issues , I am guessing because the back of his throat was not radiated. We just finished radiation yesterday so he definitely is not feeling too great. I hope your husband finds the right combo of drugs to help. Also, dont' hesitate to call drs whenever you need them. And, one other thing, follow your gut...if you think something isn't right and needs to be addressed you are usually right.0 -
script nutrition products
you don't say what kind of chemo, but often that is the source of nausea.
Ensure is not exactly empty calories without nutrients. but there are plenty of alternatives for longer-term nutrition.
your doc can give you a prescription for products such as Jevity or Osmolite (from Abbott), and I believe Nestle has a product too. any product might be difficult until the nausea passes, but they are meant to provide nutrition for long-term tube feeding.
I gained back 20 lbs. from an exclusively Osmolite diet.
blessings to you both.0 -
question about meds
Has he tried taking all these drugs together, or is he just trying them individually. It is almost certainly the chemo giving him the fits right now, but mutidrug therapy will work if pushed hard enough. Try emend, zophran, compazine and phernergan together. That isn't over the top under current circumsstances. And by all means, go get hydrated yet again. Through this time, some need it every day.
Pat0 -
Cisplatinblackswampboy said:script nutrition products
you don't say what kind of chemo, but often that is the source of nausea.
Ensure is not exactly empty calories without nutrients. but there are plenty of alternatives for longer-term nutrition.
your doc can give you a prescription for products such as Jevity or Osmolite (from Abbott), and I believe Nestle has a product too. any product might be difficult until the nausea passes, but they are meant to provide nutrition for long-term tube feeding.
I gained back 20 lbs. from an exclusively Osmolite diet.
blessings to you both.
Oops - forgot to mention the chemo cocktail is Cisplatin, so yes, it's known to be a nausea cause. Thanks, blackswampboy.
Traci0 -
Antiemeticslongtermsurvivor said:question about meds
Has he tried taking all these drugs together, or is he just trying them individually. It is almost certainly the chemo giving him the fits right now, but mutidrug therapy will work if pushed hard enough. Try emend, zophran, compazine and phernergan together. That isn't over the top under current circumsstances. And by all means, go get hydrated yet again. Through this time, some need it every day.
Pat
Thanks, Pat. They had him alternating the Zofran and Compazine every 4 hrs with no relief. They are delivering Emend thru IV at each chemo cycle but have not tried outside of the infusion days.
Traci0 -
YuckTRAD said:Antiemetics
Thanks, Pat. They had him alternating the Zofran and Compazine every 4 hrs with no relief. They are delivering Emend thru IV at each chemo cycle but have not tried outside of the infusion days.
Traci
I didn't get hit this hard by chemo, but my Thanksgiving lasgt year was pretty lousy. Nothing tasted good, queasy stomach. I didn't eat but a few bites. Not very much fun. The best thing is it gets better. I'd just keep calling and talking to the team, going back, whatever it takes. The squeaky wheel gets the grease on this.0 -
I didn't suffer from the mucous as much as
so many others on here did...I think it was because of the amifostine I had before each rad...I know I've heard others say tho, that choking the stuff up leads to gagging which leads to throwing up...not a fun time at all. When I did have the little mucous problem that I did, the Onc suggested Musinex...I've heard it's helped some, and others it didn't, but at least it's easy to get. I never tried it, I bought it, but the mouths sores were standing between me and possible relief.
Ask your Onc about getting the Emend packets...they gave me two packets (4 pills) for after each chemo...one pill each morning before I'd start the Zophran/Compazine/Atavan regime for the rest of the day. My insurance paid for 3/4 of the cost (they're expensive)...but they sure helped me out.
Hope he'll give the Magic Broth a try...it really helped me with strength, and it went down like silk...I was shocked at what that broth did for me.
p0 -
Ensure Plus...
Like mentioned by
BSB, I wouldn't say that Ensure Plus is empty calories with no nutirent...
Actually Ensure Plus has 350 calories, 13 g of protein, 24 essential vitamins and minerals, and Omega-3s.
I can definitely think of worse to put into you...
But even so, I myself was not really worried much at all what I put in me other than getting calories min and surviving treatment.
I could deal with the other later, gotta make it through first, and survive.
Which leads me to your comments about lack of liquids, calories, and even having a PEG.
Somehow you need to communicate enough with your MD's and find something that works.
Unfortunately sometimes, it's just a matter of doing what is needed to get them in and keep them in.
Like P51 mentioned, I too had Emend on my big chemo days...Cisplatin, Taxotere and 5FU..., but it's only for those first few days.
Best,
John0
Discussion Boards
- All Discussion Boards
- 6 CSN Information
- 6 Welcome to CSN
- 121.8K Cancer specific
- 2.8K Anal Cancer
- 446 Bladder Cancer
- 309 Bone Cancers
- 1.6K Brain Cancer
- 28.5K Breast Cancer
- 397 Childhood Cancers
- 27.9K Colorectal Cancer
- 4.6K Esophageal Cancer
- 1.2K Gynecological Cancers (other than ovarian and uterine)
- 13K Head and Neck Cancer
- 6.4K Kidney Cancer
- 671 Leukemia
- 792 Liver Cancer
- 4.1K Lung Cancer
- 5.1K Lymphoma (Hodgkin and Non-Hodgkin)
- 237 Multiple Myeloma
- 7.1K Ovarian Cancer
- 61 Pancreatic Cancer
- 487 Peritoneal Cancer
- 5.5K Prostate Cancer
- 1.2K Rare and Other Cancers
- 539 Sarcoma
- 730 Skin Cancer
- 653 Stomach Cancer
- 191 Testicular Cancer
- 1.5K Thyroid Cancer
- 5.8K Uterine/Endometrial Cancer
- 6.3K Lifestyle Discussion Boards