What can you take for nausea and upset stomach

Treatments for Nausea and Vomiting

Our Digestive Health Center experts deliver personalized treatments for nausea and vomiting. We address the physical and possible neurologic causes of your condition. Using a team approach, we deliver seamless care based on your unique needs.

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Your treatment may include:

  • Medication: Taking anti-nausea and anti-anxiety medications may help relieve your symptoms.
  • Medical nutrition therapy: Working with experts from Nutrition Services who specialize in helping patients with gastrointestinal disorders, we help you find foods that are less likely to trigger nausea. You may also need to start eating smaller meals and bland foods.
  • Oral rehydration therapy: Drinking a rehydration solution can help you replace lost minerals and body fluids, if your nausea causes frequent vomiting.
  • Total parenteral nutrition: Getting all the nutrition you need from special fluids you receive through a catheter (thin, spaghetti-like tube) in your vein, total parenteral nutrition can help you if your intestines need time to heal or your stomach has lost its ability to absorb nutrients from food taken by mouth.
  • Tube feeding: Helping you get adequate nutrition when your body is not getting enough nutrients from food by mouth, tube feeding works by delivering specially formulated liquid nutrition directly to your stomach through a special tube, also known as a percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) tube.

Many people are able to feel better with simple remedies, such as:

  • Drinking beverages known to settle the stomach, such as ginger ale or chamomile tea
  • Avoiding caffeinated beverages that can upset your stomach, such as cola or coffee
  • Drinking lots of clear liquids to stay hydrated
  • Eating small meals, which allow your stomach to digest foods more gradually
  • Eating a bland diet with foods that are easy for your stomach to digest, such as plain rice and bananas
  • Avoiding foods that can upset your stomach such as spicy, fried, and processed foods
  • Taking over-the-counter medications, such as antacids, pink bismuth, and motion sickness medication

Our general gastroenterology experts will tell you which remedies may work best for your symptoms, including special techniques and support to help you make changes in your diet, if necessary.

This product contains fructose and should not be taken by persons with hereditary fructose intolerance (HFI). Do not use if you have

  • Allergic reactions to any of the ingredients in this product

Ask a doctor before use if you have

  • Diabetes

Stop use and ask a doctor if

  • Symptoms persist, return or get worse

If pregnant or breast-feeding, ask a health professional before use.
Keep out of reach of children. In case of overdose, get medical help or contact a Poison Control Center right away (1-800-222-1222).For relief of nausea due to upset stomach from intestinal flu, stomach flu, and food or drink indiscretions.

Stomachaches are so common that everyone experiences them at one point or another. There are dozens of reasons why you might get a tummy ache. Most causes aren’t serious and the symptoms pass quickly. Generally, there’s no need to look further than your kitchen for a solution.

What can you take for nausea and upset stomach

A bar is probably the last place you’d think to look for relief from nausea, but many people swear by five or six drops of cocktail bitters mixed into a cold glass of tonic, club soda, or ginger ale.

Most common bitters brands contain a blend of herbs such as cinnamon, fennel, mint, and ginger. These ingredients may be why bitters help ease nausea in some people.

Want to try it? These are a few of our favorites:

  • Angostura Aromatic Bitters
  • Peychaud’s Bitters
  • Q Tonic Water
  • Q Drink Club Soda

Every parent of a toddler knows about the bananas, rice, applesauce, and toast (BRAT) diet to calm an upset stomach. It can help nausea or diarrhea.

BRAT contains low-fiber, high-binding foods. None of these foods contain salt or spices, which can further aggravate symptoms. This bland diet is a go-to for when you’re feeling sick but still have to eat something. Try overcooking the toast — the charred bread is thought to reduce nausea.

Peppermint is often cited as a helpful fix for nausea and upset stomach because the menthol in its leaves is a natural analgesic, or pain reliever.

Try:

  • brewing a cup of peppermint or spearmint tea
  • sniffing peppermint extract
  • sucking on a minty candy
  • chewing on the leaves themselves

This should keep stomach pangs at bay and alleviate feelings of nausea.

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If you can stomach it, try taking this acidic pantry staple by the tablespoon to neutralize an upset stomach. Too strong? Mix a tablespoon with a cup of water and a teaspoon of honey, and sip it slowly.

The acids in apple cider vinegar may help decrease starch digestion, allowing the starch to get to the intestines and keep the bacteria in the gut healthy. Some people take a spoonful each day as a preventive measure.

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Stomach problems sometimes do indicate a more serious problem. Prolonged vomiting puts you at risk for dehydration. Drinking small sips of water can help prevent dehydration. Go see a doctor if you are having trouble keeping water down for longer than six hours. You should also call your doctor if you experience nausea or stomach pain and discomfort for more than 48 hours.

If you notice that you are consistently having stomach troubles after eating certain foods or engaging in specific activities, talk to your doctor about your symptoms at your next visit. It may be nothing, but a quick trip to your family doctor can rule out Crohn’s disease, a food allergy, or any other concerns.