cyclic-vomiting-syndrome

Understanding Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome in Kids

What is Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome?

Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome (CVS) is a functional gastrointestinal disorder where children experience sudden, repeated episodes of severe vomiting that start and stop abruptly, with symptom-free periods in between.​

Unlike typical stomach bugs, CVS episodes follow a predictable pattern lasting hours to days, then complete recovery. Most common in children aged 2-7 years, but can persist into adolescence or adulthood.​

Prevalence: Affects 1-2% of school children; often underdiagnosed because parents think it’s “just another stomach virus”.​

The Classic CVS Pattern in Kids

Typical episode sequence:[web://114]​

  1. Prodrome phase (30-60 mins): Nausea, pale skin, quiet withdrawal, abdominal pain
  2. Vomiting phase (hours-days): 4-6 vomits/hour, can’t keep water down
  3. Recovery phase: Sleep → wakes up completely normal

Key feature: Normal periods between attacks (weeks to months). No vomiting, good appetite, normal growth.

Why CVS is Different from Regular Vomiting

Regular Vomiting Cyclic Vomiting Syndrome
Diarrhea common Vomiting only
Fever often present Afebrile
Gradual onset Explosive onset
Contagious contacts No sick contacts
Lasts 1-2 days 1-10 days
Poor recovery Complete recovery

Common Symptoms During CVS Episodes

During attacks:​

  • Intense nausea (worst part for kids)
  • Vomiting bile/water 4-12 times/hour
  • Pallor (ghost-white appearance)
  • Abdominal/stomach pain (50-70% cases)
  • Lethargy (kids want to lie still)
  • Headache, dizziness in older kids

Between episodes: Completely normal – eating, playing, growing well.

Age Groups Affected

Age CVS Characteristics
Toddlers (2-5 yrs) Most common; can’t describe nausea
School age (6-12 yrs) Abdominal pain prominent; motion triggers
Teens Migraine association; stress triggers

Potential Triggers (What Sets Off CVS)

Identified triggers:​

  • Infections: Colds, sinusitis
  • Emotional stress: Excitement, school anxiety
  • Fasting: Skipping meals, travel sickness
  • Hot weather: Common in India summers
  • Certain foods: Cheese, chocolate, MSG
  • Lack of sleep: Exhaustion/overstimulation

Motion sickness history in 60-70% CVS kids.​

The Migraine-CVS Connection

70-80% CVS children have family history of migraine or develop migraines later.​

Why? Both involve brain-gut hypersensitivity:

  • Abnormal brainstem signaling
  • Mitochondrial dysfunction (energy production)
  • Neurotransmitter imbalance

CVS considered “abdominal migraine” in some kids.

Diagnosis: Ruling Out Other Causes

Diagnostic criteria (3+ episodes):​

  1. Episodic vomiting (≥3 episodes in 6 months)
  2. Stereotypical episodes (same pattern each time)
  3. Normal between episodes
  4. No structural/metabolic cause

Tests to exclude other causes:

  • Blood tests (electrolytes, glucose)
  • Abdominal ultrasound
  • Urine for ketones
  • EEG if seizures suspected

Acute Episode Management (Emergency Care)

ABC protocol for parents/doctors:​

A – Assessment:

  • Dehydration signs (dry mouth, no tears)
  • Lethargy level

B – Benzodiazepines:

  • Ondansetron (anti-vomit) first line
  • Lorazepam if prolonged

C – Carbohydrates:

  • Electrolyte solutions when tolerated
  • High carb diet prevents ketosis

Hospital admission criteria: >12 vomits/24hrs, dehydration, lethargy.

Preventive Strategies (Between Episodes)

Lifestyle measures:​

  1. Regular meals: Every 3-4 hours, high carb
  2. Sleep schedule: Consistent bedtime
  3. Stress management: Early bed if excitement
  4. Hydration: Electrolyte drinks during hot weather
  5. Trigger diary: Track patterns

Medications (for frequent episodes):

  • Propranolol (migraine prevention)
  • Cyproheptadine (appetite/stabilizer)
  • Amitriptyline (nerve stabilizer)

CVS Treatment Ladder

Frequency Treatment
1-2x/year Lifestyle + rescue meds
4-6x/year + Preventive medication
>6x/year Specialist referral + combos

Indian Context Challenges

Hot climate worsens dehydration during episodes
Irregular meals common in schoolchildren
Stigma around “functional disorders”
Access to pediatric gastroenterologists varies

Parent education crucial for recognition and management.

Long-term Outlook

  • Good prognosis: 50-60% outgrow CVS by teens
  • 30% develop migraines
  • 10-20% persist into adulthood

Early recognition prevents unnecessary tests and parental stress.

When to Seek Emergency Care

Red flags during episodes:

  • Vomiting >24 hours without improvement
  • Blood in vomit/stool
  • Severe headache/neck stiffness
  • Seizure-like activity
  • Extreme lethargy/unresponsiveness

 

Support for Parents

You’re not alone – CVS affects 1-2% kids worldwide
Normal growth expected despite episodes
Episodes predictable once pattern recognized
Most outgrow by adolescence

FAQs

  1. How do I know if it’s CVS vs stomach flu?
    CVS episodes are stereotypical (same pattern), no fever/diarrhea, complete recovery between attacks. Flu varies each time, has fever/contacts. Keep episode diary for 3 attacks.​
  2. Can diet cure CVS in kids?
    Diet helps prevent (regular meals, avoid triggers) but doesn’t cure. High carb, frequent small meals reduce attacks. Cheese/chocolate common triggers.​
  3. When does CVS go away in children?
    50-60% outgrow by teens. Earlier if mild/infrequent. Migraine may develop instead. Consistent preventive measures improve long-term outcomes.​

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *