Managing your child’s treatment-related nausea
Treatment-related nausea is an unpleasant side effect that can occur before, during, or after cancer treatments such as chemotherapy and radiation. Antiemetic medications are typically used to treat nausea and vomiting, but there are other strategies that can help.
Dr. Kristen Uhl, of Pediatric Psychosocial Oncology at Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center, specializes in pediatric pain management and coping with chronic illness. She recommends trying the following strategies with your child to help alleviate nausea.
Lifestyle changes
- Eat small meals throughout the day, about every three hours.
- Choose cold or room-temperature foods.
- Try drier foods (like crackers, pretzels, or cereal).
- Avoid spicy, sweet, or greasy foods.
- Stay away from foods with strong smells.
- Avoid lying down immediately after meals.
- Drink clear fluids between meals.
Relaxation techniques
- Try belly breathing (diaphragmatic breathing).
- Try guided imagery, which promotes relaxation by focusing on memories, dreams, or fantasies to refocus attention away from a stressful situation. A clinician has the patient choose a meaningful image or idea. During a 10- to 20-minute session, the patient is guided to hear, see, taste, smell, touch, or move while thinking about an imagined activity.
- Use progressive muscle relaxation.
- Consider hypnosis.
- Try biofeedback.
- Download phone (or tablet) relaxation apps.
Complimentary strategies
- acupuncture or acupressure
- aromatherapy
Get more resources and guidance for helping your child cope with cancer treatment from Parents Together.
Learn more about childhood cancer at the Dana-Farber/Boston Children’s Cancer and Blood Disorders Center.
Related Posts :
-
Exposing a tumor’s antigens to enhance immunotherapy
Successful immunotherapy for cancer involves activating a person’s own T cells to attack the tumor. But some tumors have ...
-
Combining CAR-T cells and inhibitor drugs for high-risk neuroblastoma
Chimeric antigen receptor (CAR)-T cell therapy is a potent emerging weapon against cancer, altering patients’ T cells so they ...
-
Could a GI bug’s toxin curb hard-to-treat breast cancer?
Clostridium difficile can cause devastating inflammatory gastrointestinal infections, with much of the damage inflicted by a toxin the bug produces. ...
-
Making immunotherapy safe for AML
Acute myeloid leukemia (AML), the second most common leukemia in children, is hard to treat and has a five-year survival ...