
OUR resident specialist and NHS GP, Dr Zoe Williams, shares her expert advice. Today, Dr Zoe helps a reader whose granddaughter is suffering from bouts of nausea. 2 Email your health queries to Dr Zoe Williams at health@thesun.
co.uk Credit: Olivia West 2 A reader whose granddaughter is suffering from bouts of nausea has written in Credit: Getty Q: MY nine-year-old granddaughter has been suffering from constant bouts of nausea and sickness for the past four months. She has missed a lot of school but is otherwise in good health.
She has seen her GP twice and been checked over in the children’s ward but a cause has yet to be identified. What questions should we ask the health professionals? READ MORE FROM DR ZOE ASK DR ZOE I sweat profusely when I eat hot food - it feels like my BLOOD is on fire, help! ASK DR ZOE I'm covered in seborrheic keratoses - can it give you back ache? A: I’m so sorry to hear that your granddaughter is experiencing this. It reassures me that she has been thoroughly checked over by her GP and hospital specialists, as that would suggest they have ruled out any serious underlying conditions.
But it must be awful for her and the family to be going through this without any understanding of why. Has anyone mentioned cyclical vomiting syndrome (CVS)? Most read in Health REST EASY The 9 ways to shrug off a bad night’s sleep - from morning sex to an apple 'Medical misogyny' Nine of ten women have felt palmed off by GP when seeking medical advice SILENT KILLER My daughter died months after being diagnosed with 'easy-to-dismiss' cancer BRAIN DIET The 50p food to reduce your risk of dementia..
. plus 5 other brain-boosting snacks I can’t make a diagnosis just from your question but it could be something worth discussing with her doctors. The NHS website and cvsa.
org.uk both have information on it. This Morning’s Dr Zoe rushed to A&E and ‘writes an emergency will’ in hospital bed after terrifying health battle CVS is characterised by recurrent, explosive bouts of vomiting and it tends to start in childhood.
The key would be the pattern. CVS tends to have bouts of vomiting lasting hours to days which resolve on their own, followed by a period being totally symptom-free, which typically lasts for weeks to months. There can sometimes be triggers, such as stress, fatigue, or skipping meal, so keeping a diary to try to identify a pattern can be helpful.
I had the worst itchy scalp and dandruff so gave up washing my hair - it hasn’t been shampooed for A YEAR.