Digestive · Symptom
Nausea and vomiting
Also called: throwing up, queasy
Acute nausea and vomiting is most often viral gastroenteritis, food poisoning, migraine, pregnancy, or a medication side effect. Clindle evaluates over video, treats with ondansetron (Zofran) or promethazine, addresses dehydration with oral rehydration guidance, and identifies anything pointing to a more serious cause — bowel obstruction, pancreatitis, pyelonephritis, or pregnancy. Vomiting blood, inability to keep liquids down for 24 hours, severe abdominal pain, or signs of dehydration (no urine, dizziness on standing) means in-person care.