Postoperative nausea and vomiting in adults

Warning

NHS Borders guidelines for managing postoperative nausea and vomiting in adult patients.

Prophylaxis should be considered for patients at risk. Risk factors include:

Patient factors

  • previous PONV
  • motion sickness
  • female
  • obesity
  • hiatus hernia
  • anxiety
  • prolonged fast

Surgical Factors

  • intra-abdominal
  • pelvic
  • middle ear
  • strabismus
  • laparoscopic surgery
  • tonsillectomy (where there may be ingestion of blood)
  • ambulatory orthopaedic surgery (up to 40% in arthroscopy)

Anaesthetic Factors

  • opioids
  • N2O
  • excessive gastric gas (from 'hand-bagging' to maintain airway)

Post op Factors

  • pain
  • opioids
  • hypotension
  • dehydration
  • ileus
  • hypoxia
  • hypercapnoea
  • delayed return to enteral nutrition
  • hypopglycaemia

  • minimise risk factors where possible
  • consider pre-operative oral ranitidine 150mg and/or sodium citrate 0.3M 30ml for patients with a significant hiatus hernia
  • consider anaesthetic technique using TIVA, where appropriate to reduce risk of PONV depending on the number of unavoidable risk factors:

No riskPost-op

Ondansetron 4mg IM 8 hourly prn or

Metoclopramide 10mg IM/IV 8 hourly prn or

Prochlorperazine 12.5mg IM 8 hourly prn

Low risk Intra-op   

Prophylactic dexamethasone 3.3mg or

Ondasetron 4mg IV

Post-op

Rescue ondansetron 4mg IM/IV 8 hourly prn or

Metoclopramide 10mg IM/IV 8 hourly prn or

Prochlorperazine 12.5mg IM 8 hourly prn

High riskPre-opOndansetron 4mg PO or cyclizine 50mg PO
Intra-op 

Prophylactic ondansetron 4mg IV

Prophylactic dexamethasone 6.6mg IV

Prophylactic cyclizine

Post-op

Ondansetron 4mg IM/IV 8 hourly

Rescue cyclizine 50mg IM/IV 8 hourly prn or

Prochlorperazine 12.5mg IM 8 hourly prn

For persistent PONV unresponsive to the above therapy consider:

  • metoclopramide 10mg IM/IV 8 hourly as needed
  • dexamethasone 6.6mg IV 8  hourly as needed
  • NB there is good evidence to support the fact that metoclopramide (in usual clinical doses) confers no prophylactic antiemetic effect
  • an antiemetic prescription should accompany any opioid prescription
  • PONV is multifactorial in origin, therefore multimodal antiemetic therapy may be more effective and reduce side effects
  • if local anaesthetic blocks used then consider dexamethasone, as the dual action of prolongation of block (improved analgesia) and antiemesis may be favourable

Editorial Information

Last reviewed: 28/02/2022

Next review date: 28/02/2025

Author(s): Smith S.

Version: 3

Author email(s): Shona.smith@borders.scot.nhs.uk.

Reviewer name(s): Smith S.

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