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Pain Under Rib Cage After Vomiting

How do I relieve muscle pain after vomiting?

Treating back pain and vomitingTreatment for back pain and vomiting will address the underlying condition. Your doctor may prescribe antiemetics, or medications that stop vomiting.Home careHydration is important after you’ve experienced a bout of vomiting, because you lose fluids when you vomit. You can rehydrate by drinking small sips of water, ginger ale, or a clear electrolyte-containing beverage that doesn’t contain excess sugars.Waiting about six hours after a vomiting spell to eat can reduce the likelihood that you will vomit again. When you do eat, focus on soft and bland foods such as crackers or applesauce. Eating several small meals a day also helps to keep nausea at bay.Resting your back is a vital part of treating back pain. You can apply an ice pack covered in cloth for 10 minutes at a time the first three days after your back pain appears. After 72 hours, you may apply heat, its procedure. Over-the-counter pain relievers, such as ibuprofen or acetaminophen, can relieve pain after your vomiting subsides.

I'm having pain in my kidneys after vomiting.?

When you tap on your back down below your ribs does it hurt? If it does it could be that you have a kidney infection. This could also have caused the vomiting.

I had a kidney infection in 2007 and it started as a harmless UTI. Went untreated and turned into a kidney infection. I had what I thought was food poisoning.. .and then it went on and I thought I had the flu. Finally they had to hospitalize me for one week and I developed pneumonia while in the hospital.

Drink plenty of fluids. If you don't feel better in a day or so... go get checked out.

I have sharp pain and cramping under my rib cage immediately after I eat. What’s wrong with me?

“I have sharp pain and cramping under my rib cage immediately after I eat. What’s wrong with me?”Hi, what’s wrong with you is that you’re having a symptom and you’re asking a bunch of random strangers to tell you what’s causing it. If you want a responsible and helpful answer, go see a freakin’ doctor, that’s what they’re for! :-)Generally speaking: nobody, including doctors, can diagnose a medical problem from just a one-liner description of a symptom. You might think that “cramping under the rib cage” and “immediately after I eat” are enough detail for someone to determine the problem, but that is not true.For postprandial epigastric pain (that’s medical-speak for the symptom you describe), I can tell you that the textbook or “med school answer” top considerations would include (1) biliary colic (i.e. typically — though not necessarily — gallstones) and (2) a gastric ulcer. Chronic pancreatitis is also something one might think of. But — am I saying that it’s probably one of those two (or three) things? No! I can’t say that, and nobody else can either, because there’s not enough information in your question. (And you actually can’t really volunteer “enough information” — the information a doctor needs comes from asking questions systematically, doing a physical exam, and oftentimes obtaining various kinds of tests, like lab tests and imaging exams).What may surprise you is that I actually have absolutely no idea if those 2–3 things I mentioned are truly, statistically, the most common causes of postprandial epigastric pain, and most likely your doctor has no idea either, unless maybe if they happen to be a gastroenterologist (a digestive system specialist).But that doesn’t matter, because what your doctor actually needs to know is how to figure out what is causing this symptom in you. The symptom you describe can be caused by literally dozens of possibilities, not just the few that I mentioned.So, go see a doctor. Cheers! :-)

Is it possible to bruise your ribs from profuse vomiting?

I have terrible insurance, and sadly I work for insurance company United Healthcare, so I don't want to spend money on deductible to just have a doctor laugh at me. I vomited 11 times on Sunday, at some points so hard that I couldn't move out of bed, so then next day I was weak and my ribs are sore on both sides. My grandkids got over there flu bug faster, but then vomiting again today. I am nausaus, but careful not to eat too much, just saltine crackers and sipping white soda. But just breathing deeply hurts, and laughing is really painful. Just sitting upright even hurts after an hour or so. I've thrown up plenty in my life, but never had this happen before.

Brown Blood in Vomit and Pains?

Lately, I've been finding brown blood in my vomit. It's usually a very dark brown, almost blackish, so I'm pretty sure it's not bile. I've also been having spasms of pain under my left rib cage. It comes and goes, and sometimes it takes place just above my groin and stomach.

I'm fifteen and female. I've also had bulimia for four years now, so I'm wondering if maybe that relates to this?

I'm not sure what it could be.

Thank you to those of you who answer.

Severe vomiting with dental abscess?

Actually it could be the pain meds or antibiotics but..... I had a dental abscess and before I went to the hospital and got meds I was vomiting. it turned out the pus inside it was leaking into my blood stream (yes your gums are part of all that) and was making me sick.
So obviously getting antibiotics and painmeds were important too I was suffering but all already being sick and did not want to make it worse. So this is what they did you can ask for anti sickness tablets (they can give you a shot but tablets are always nicer) which stop the vomiting they are called anti emetics ask for them. It will stop you being sick because if you are being sick you aren't keep down your medicines properly anyway. I took them and felt so much better and then of course my meds worked properly.
Dont forget to see the dentist it might go down but the infection is there and will reappear.

What might cause a chest pain after throwing up?

This is an easy one for me to answer, but it may not cover your personal situation. If it gets worse or continues please see a doctor soonest…About 12 years ago, I went to see the British comedian, Bill Bailey, doing a standup show in our country. He was brilliant, and I’ve never laughed so much before or after…As my partner and I walked out, I became aware of an aching pain down the front of my body between chest and waist. I had laughed SO much, that I had given my diaphragm a constant huge workout…!So, when I caught a nasty gastric virus eight months ago, that had my body convulsing at both ends, after I had had a shot to stop the vomiting, I was not surprised to feel the diaphragm playing up again, like a twisted unwound spring.Hopefully, that’s all yours is, and should get better with a good nights sleep. If it gets worse, go straight to your doctor.

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