Pictures from Google Image Search

Antiemetics

Gale Encyclopedia of Cancer | 2002 | | Copyright 2002, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Antiemetics

Definition

Antiemetic drugs are drugs used to combat nausea and vomiting .

Purpose

Antiemetic drugs are used to prevent vomiting (emesis) in chemotherapy patients and postoperative patients. Aside from the difficulty of maintaining proper nutrition and a healthy weight, chronic vomiting can result in dehydration, which can be a medical emergency. Following are descriptions of antiemetic drugs in use as of 2001.

Description

Promethazine

Promethazine is also known as phenergan and mepergan. It is also used to treat motion sickness, reduce allergic symptoms, and for sedation. It is one of the drugs of the phenothiazine type. In addition to other qualities, it is an antihistamine.

Prochlorperazine

Prochlorperazine is also known as compazine. Like promethazine, it is a member of the class of phenothiazines. Unlike promethazine, however, prochlorperazine also belongs to the class of drugs known as antipsychotics, or neuroleptics. Antipsychotic drugs are used to treat psychoses and other psychiatric disorders. In addition to its use as an antiemetic and anti-psychotic drug, prochlorperazine is also used to treat non-psychotic anxiety.

Serotonin receptor antagonists

The serotonin receptor antagonists include granisetron (kytril), dolasetron (anzemet), and ondansetron (zofran). These drugs are used for postoperative nausea and emesis as well as nausea and vomiting associated with chemotherapy, and are often used in combination with a corticosteroid. Ondansetron is approved for nausea and vomiting associated with radiation therapy .

Dronabinol

Dronabinol (marinol) is used to combat anorexia in AIDS patients, and emesis in cancer patients who haven't responded to other antiemetics. Marinol is the synthetic or extracted form of the active ingredient found in marijuana .

Other antipsychotic (neuroleptic) drugs

The other neuroleptic (antipsychotic) drugs used to treat nausea and emesis are droperidol (inapsine), haloperidol (haldol), chlorpromazine (thorazine), and perphenazine (trilafon). One other antipsychotic, triethylperazine (torecan or norzine), was used as an antiemetic, but is no longer widely available. Some of the antipsychotics are also used to treat aggressive or violent behavior or intractable hiccups (chlorpromazine). These drugs are similar to prochlorperazine in terms of their actions and potentially severe side effects.

There are some additional precautions and side effects associated with each of these drugs. Patients should be sure to notify their physician of any health concerns (including pregnancy) or medications they are taking. Patients should also ask about potential side effects for each individual medication before receiving any of these drugs.

Dosage

Promethazine

Promethazine is given in doses of 12.5 to 25 mg every 4 hours if injected into the muscle or as a suppository. As a syrup, 25 mg should be given every 4 to 6 hours. Doses for children vary by age, weight, and severity of condition.

Prochlorperazine

Generally, the dose is 5 to 10 mg, 3 to 4 times per day. However, the effect of medication varies widely from patient to patient, so the dose should be tailored to each individual. Prochlorperazine is available as a syrup, tablet, 25 mg slow-release capsule, and in injectable form.

Dronabinol

The effective dose of dronabinol varies widely from patient to patient and should be monitored and tested by the physician. The basic dose is 5mg/m 2 given 4 to 6 times per day.

Precautions

Promethazine

Patients with cardiovascular disease or impaired liver function should either use this drug with caution or not at all. Children should also use this drug cautiously for two reasons. First, some side effects may suggest, or mask, underlying disease, such as Reye's syndrome. Second, large doses of this drug, or any antihistamine, may cause convulsions, hallucinations, or death in children. Patients taking this medication should not drive, operate heavy machinery, or engage in any hazardous activity while under the influence of this drug. This drug has not been established as safe for use during pregnancy, or in nursing mothers.

Prochlorperazine

Persons allergic to any other phenothiazine (such as promethazine) should not take prochlorperazine. Patients who have heart problems, glaucoma or bone marrow depression should take this drug with caution, or not at all, and inform their physician of their condition. Persons who will be around high temperatures should also avoid this drug. In addition, persons who experience seizures should be aware that administration of this drug makes seizures more likely.

Breast cancer patients may wish to avoid this drug because it increases levels of prolactin in the blood. Increased prolactin may help some types of breast cancer to thrive.

Prochloroperazine, like promethazine, may mask symptoms of Reye's disease in children. It may also mask symptoms of intestinal obstructions or brain disease. In addition, children who are acutely ill, under two years of age, or under 20 pounds should not be given this drug.

This drug has not been established as safe for use during pregnancy and is found in the breast milk of lactating mothers. Therefore, caution should be used when administering this drug to pregnant women and extreme caution should be used when administering to nursing women.

Serotonin receptor antagonists

Patients with allergies to any drug in this category should not take any other drug in this category. Also, patients with hypokalemia, hypomagnesia, or certain heart problems should avoid taking these drugs. The effect of these drugs on the children or fetuses of nursing or pregnant mothers is not known, so they should be used with caution.

Dronabinol

Dronabinol is inadvisable for patients with a known allergy to either sesame oil or any part of the cannabis plant. Patients taking this drug should not drive, operate heavy machinery, or engage in hazardous tasks until used to this medication.

This medication also should be used cautiously, if at all, for persons with depression, mania, or schizophrenia, elderly patients, patients with cardiac disorders, and for pregnant and nursing women. It is especially inadvisable for nursing women, since marinol is concentrated in the breast milk.

Side effects

Promethazine

Patients taking promethazine may experience a large number of side effects, including drowsiness, ringing in the ears, a lack of coordination, problems with vision, fatigue , euphoria, nervousness, tremors, seizures, a cata-tonic-like state, and hysteria. These effects are usually reversible. At high doses, patients may also exhibit extrapyramidal reactions. Extrapyramidal reactions can briefly be described as agitation (jitteriness, sometimes insomnia), muscle spasms, and/or pseudo-Parkinson's (a group of symptoms including, but not limited to, drooling, tremors, and a shuffling gait).

Patients may also experience rashes, asthma, jaundice, abnormally low production of white blood cells, and abnormalities in how fast or slow their heart beats. Patients may sometimes experience unusual side effects not known as typical for the medication they are taking. These should be reported to the physician.

Prochlorperazine

Prochlorperazine has many side effects, including low blood pressure, dizziness, blurred vision, skin reactions, jaundice, lack of production of white cells, damage to the DNA in sperm, problems in the regulation of body temperature, impotence, amenorrhea (a lack of menstruation), and gynecomastia (the growth of female-like breasts in males). However, the most severe side effects stem from damage to the brain. Patients may suffer from extrapyramidal reactions. These symptoms may be reversed by treating the patient with drugs effective in treatment of Parkinson's patients (except levodopa). A reduction or elimination in the amount of the antipsychotic medication may also be necessary to eliminate these symptoms.

Two other (rare) disorders, tardive dyskinesia and neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS), are also associated with antipsychotic drug use. Patients with NMS have high temperatures, rigid muscles, an altered mental state, and symptoms such as excessive sweating and irregular blood pressure or heart rhythm. Patients with NMS usually respond to treatment. Patients with tardive dyskinesia have involuntary movement of muscles in the chest, arms, and legs, or in the muscles in and around the face (including the tongue). Tardive dyskinesia may be irreversible.

Serotonin receptor antagonists

Side effects include rashes, increased sweating, problems with taste or vision, flushing, agitation, sleep disorder, depersonalization, headache, fatigue, nausea, weakness, abdominal pain, constipation, diarrhea , hypertension, dizziness, chills and shivering, and dry mouth. Patients may also have abnormal liver function tests.

Dronabinol

Possible side effects are fatigue, weakness, abdominal pain, nausea, vomiting, heart palpitations, fast heart rate, facial flushing, amnesia, anxiety, an abnormal mental state, depersonalization, confusion, dizziness, and euphoria.

Interactions

Promethazine

Promethazine interacts with central nervous system depressants, like alcohol and barbiturates. Therefore, the physician should alerted to any medications the patient is taking, and doses of the drugs should be adjusted accordingly. Alcohol should be avoided. It has not been proven, but promethazine may interfere with the action of epinephrine.

Prochlorperazine

Like promethazine, prochlorperazine should be used cautiously, or not at all, with central nervous system depressants like alcohol and barbiturates. Prochlorperazine has also been shown to interact with anticonvulsant medication, guanethidene, propanolol, thiazide diuretics, and oral anticoagulants (like warfarin and coumadin).

Serotonin receptor antagonists

These drugs may have very negative effects on the patient when combined with diuretics, anti-arrhythmia drugs, or high doses of anthracycline.

Dronabinol

Dronabinol interacts with the antiemetic prochlorperazine synergistically. Therefore, the use of these two drugs in combination results in a greater antiemetic effect. Patients taking central nervous system depressants, such as barbiturates or alcohol should notify their physician before taking marinol, since marinol may increase their effect. Although no drugs have been shown to interact with marinol, many drugs similar to marinol do interact with a number of other drugs, including central nervous system depressants such as alcohol or barbiturates, or drugs like flouxetine or disulfiram. Again, the physician should alerted to any medications the patient is taking before beginning a course of dronabinol.

See Also Corticosteroids; Lorazepam; Metoclopramide; Scopolamine

Michael Zuck, Ph.D.

KEY TERMS

Depersonalization

An alteration in the perception of self.

Tardive dyskinesia

A disorder brought on by antipsychotic medication use, and is characterized by uncontrollable muscle spasms.

Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.

  • MLA
  • Chicago
  • APA

Zuck, Michael. "Antiemetics." Gale Encyclopedia of Cancer. The Gale Group Inc. 2002. Encyclopedia.com. 2 Dec. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

Zuck, Michael. "Antiemetics." Gale Encyclopedia of Cancer. The Gale Group Inc. 2002. Encyclopedia.com. (December 2, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3405200046.html

Zuck, Michael. "Antiemetics." Gale Encyclopedia of Cancer. The Gale Group Inc. 2002. Retrieved December 02, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1G2-3405200046.html

Learn more about citation styles

Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research

(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)

NOLA.com Real Estate Driving Home Sales.
PR Newswire; 7/5/2007; 700+ words ; ...estate market has a new driving force, NOLA.com. This weekend when house hunters...map. A quick visit to http://www.nola.com/realestate provides all the tools...source destination. http://www.nola.com/realestate even helps with decision...
Nola Fest Party, Webcast to Celebrate New Orleans Spirit.
PR Newswire; 10/26/2005; 700+ words ; NEW ORLEANS, Oct. 26 /PRNewswire/ -- NOLA.com announces its first annual NOLA FEST and invites the New Orleans community to a...guests celebrate their return to the city, live on NOLA.com. On Saturday, the party continues to the...
NOTHING'S QUITE AS BAD AS "NOLA".(EVERYDAY MAGAZINE)
Newspaper article from: St Louis Post-Dispatch (MO); 8/29/2003; ; 700+ words ; ...intended audience. And then along comes a "Nola." You could easily spend a lifetime in...act that tries in vain to be shocking, "Nola" is not willfully bad, like "Freddy...fate is sealed in the first few minutes. Nola (the big-eyed and pigtailed Emmy Rossum...
NOLA.com to carry live broadcast of Pontchartrain All-Star Basketball Classic.
News Wire article from: PRWeb; 3/18/2009; 556 words ; ...PRWeb.com via COMTEX) -- On Sunday March 22nd, NOLA.com (http://www.nola.com)will be broadcasting LIVE on the internet...committee hosted a senior selection voting ballot on NOLA.com to invite community input into the selection...
Na Na Na Na Nola: The restaurant with nine lives--okay, five so far--cooks on.
Newspaper article from: Philadelphia Weekly; 9/4/2002; 700+ words ; ...lives--okay, five so far--cooks on. NOLA 414 S. Second St. 215.574.1687 Cuisine...Fri-Sat The sign in the window says "Nola Restaurant and Voodoo Lounge." Voodoo...guess. What else could account for why Nola is still in existence mere blocks from...
CHANGING ROOMS; Nola Napier-Wilson loves re-decorating..a can of paint, a few hours, and she has a whole new home.(Features)
Newspaper article from: The Mirror (London, England); 9/19/1998; ; 700+ words ; IF Nola Napier-Wilson has a weakness, it's not...arrived." Once the children started school, Nola's enthusiasm for painting took her on a...The sitting room is mellow and welcoming. Nola painted the wall units in soft blue, green...
NOLA.com Presents Live Chat With a West Bank Israeli Settlement Resident Monday, Oct. 16 at 12 CDT.
PR Newswire; 10/13/2000; 488 words ; ...buses. On Monday, October 16 at 12 noon CDT, NOLA.com will offer a live chat with Leah (not...Joseph's Tomb. The URL is http://www.nola.com/chat. Leah, the friend of a NOLA.com producer, will provide first-hand information...
Court Watch NOLA says 'slow motion' district attorneys clog courts with old cases
Newspaper article from: New Orleans CityBusiness; 10/26/2007; ; 700+ words ; Court Watch NOLA has monitored 300 cases in the New Orleans...Karen Herman, coordinator of Court Watch NOLA. More than 68 percent of the time, court...discovery stage." Herman said Court Watch NOLA has not witnessed a single completed case...
Nola Mae Jeanette Holbrook
Newspaper article from: Yakima Herald-Republic; 2/10/2007; ; 700+ words ; Keith & Keith Funeral Home YAKIMA - Nola Mae Jeanette Holbrook, 60, surrounded...Fox; and step-daughter, Jana Tweten. Nola was born in a small cabin by Archie Creek...resided at the Ahtanum farm labor camp. Nola was paid five cents daily which she would...
Campbell, Nola
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 9/24/2009; 610 words ; Campbell, Nola Age 76 years. Nola Campbell died on Sept. 23, 2009, at home with the Hospice program...76 years young and lived in Wisconsin all her life. She was born Nola Linnea Simonis to Herman and Evelyn Simonis in Marathon County...

Related entries from encyclopedias, dictionaries, and thesauruses

Malone, Nola Langner 1930-2003 (Nola Langner)
Book article from: Something About the Author MALONE, Nola Langner 1930-2003 (Nola Langner) OBITUARY NOTICE — See index for SATA sketch...that she illustrated. Many of these were written under the name Nola Langner, including Miss Lucy (1969), which was named a New...
Nola
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Nola , town (1991 pop. 32,613), in Campania, S...industries. An Etruscan stronghold as early as 500 BC, Nola flourished after passing (c.316 BC) to Rome and...where Christian martyrs are buried. Augustus died at Nola in AD 14.
António Sebastião Ribeiro de Spínola
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition ...Sebastião Ribeiro de Spínola , 1910-96, Portuguese army officer and...more radical direction. Spínola's attempt to rally support against them...he resigned as president. Spínola became a focal point for the opposition...
Spínola, António de
Book article from: A Dictionary of Contemporary World History Spínola, António de (b. 11 Apr. 1910, d. 13 Aug. 1996). Portuguese general Born in Estremoz, he rose through the ranks...
Rossum, Emmy 1986
Book article from: Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television ...Vicky Amonte, Passionada , Samuel Goldwyn, 2002. Katie Markum, Mystic River , Warner Bros., 2003. Nola Keynes (title role), Nola , Fireworks Pictures/Samuel Goldwyn, 2003. Christine, The Phantom of the Opera (musical; also known...

Find thousands of answers for hundreds of subjects at Smart QandA .

All answers verified by trusted sources at Encyclopedia.com

Try Smart QandA now!

For students and teachers!

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including:

Encyclopedia.com provides students and teachers facts, information, and biographies from verified, citable sources, including: