PDA
















Nausea Long After Running

View Full Version : Nausea Long After Running




Mike S.
  
I have a 35? year old? female friend who has run
several marathons
(3:30 - 4:00 range) over the last few years who has just
decided to stop running due to nausea and vomiting that
sometimes lasts 2-3 days after even short runs. She has
changed her diet and tried several prescription antacids
to no avail. It apears to be a gastric reflux problem.

Any ideas what her problem may be?

Thanks.

Mike S.

Tim Downie
  
mike s. wrote:
> I have a 35? year old? female friend who has run several
> marathons
> (3:30 - 4:00 range) over the last few years who has just
> decided to stop running due to nausea and vomiting that
> sometimes lasts 2-3 days after even short runs. She has
> changed her diet and tried several prescription
> antacids to no avail. It apears to be a gastric reflux
> problem.
>
> Any ideas what her problem may be?

No, but I know a man who does. He's called a doctor and
she'd be well advised to seek one.

2 to 3 days of vomiting after short runs? That's got to
deserve investigation.

Tim

--
Remove the obvious to reply by email. Please support
rheumatoid arthritis research! Visit
http://www.justgiving.com/pfp/speyside or
http://www.justgiving.com/speyside if you're a UK tax payer.

anonymous
  
Could be parasites. Have her eat blueberries

Donovan Rebbech
  
In article <a133dd6a.0403100704.60b6fabf@posting.google.com>, mike s. wrote:
> I have a 35? year old? female friend who has run several
> marathons
> (3:30 - 4:00 range) over the last few years who has just
> decided to stop running due to nausea and vomiting that
> sometimes lasts 2-3 days after even short runs. She has
> changed her diet and tried several prescription
> antacids to no avail. It apears to be a gastric reflux
> problem.
>
> Any ideas what her problem may be?

No idea, and I'd second Tim's advice. This is *not* normal,
and it doesn't sound like any "running problem" I've heard
of (hence most runners will not be able to give a good
answer), but rather, some condition whose symptoms are
exposed by physical exertion. It does deserve medical
attention.

It is not that unusual for runners to experience sporadic
cases of nausea, but nothing even close to the degree that
you've described (which to me suggests some sort of illness,
but don't take my word for it, go ask your doc)

Cheers,
--
Donovan Rebbechi http://pegasus.rutgers.edu/~elflord/

Donovan Rebbech
  
In article <a133dd6a.0403100704.60b6fabf@posting.google.com>, mike s. wrote:
> I have a 35? year old? female friend who has run several
> marathons
> (3:30 - 4:00 range) over the last few years who has just
> decided to stop running due to nausea and vomiting that
> sometimes lasts 2-3 days after even short runs. She has
> changed her diet and tried several prescription
> antacids to no avail. It apears to be a gastric reflux
> problem.
>
> Any ideas what her problem may be?

No idea, and I'd second Tim's advice. This is *not* normal,
and it doesn't sound like any "running problem" I've heard
of (hence most runners will not be able to give a good
answer), but rather, some condition whose symptoms are
exposed by physical exertion. It does deserve medical
attention.

It is not that unusual for runners to experience sporadic
cases of nausea, but nothing even close to the degree that
you've described (which to me suggests some sort of illness,
but don't take my word for it, go ask your doc)

Cheers,
--
Donovan Rebbechi http://pegasus.rutgers.edu/~elflord/

Carlos Jones
  
On Wed, 10 Mar 2004 18:03:51 GMT, anonymous@coolgroups.com wrote:

>Could be parasites. Have her eat blueberries

Excellent idea. Perhaps she should add eye of newt or skin
of toad and cure cancer whilst she's at it?

Carlos Jones
  
On Wed, 10 Mar 2004 18:03:51 GMT, anonymous@coolgroups.com wrote:

>Could be parasites. Have her eat blueberries

Excellent idea. Perhaps she should add eye of newt or skin
of toad and cure cancer whilst she's at it?

Mike S.
  
She has been seeing a doctor, hence the mention of using
"prescription" antacids!

Are you from a strange place where all doctors are men?

"Tim Downie" <timdownie2003@obvious.yahoo.co.uk> wrote in
message news:c2nc7l$1ue37v$1@ID-81538.news.uni-berlin.de...
> mike s. wrote:
> > I have a 35? year old? female friend who has run several
> > marathons
> > (3:30 - 4:00 range) over the last few years who has just
> > decided to stop running due to nausea and vomiting
> > that sometimes lasts 2-3 days after even short runs.
> > She has changed her diet and tried several
> > prescription antacids to no avail. It apears to be a
> > gastric reflux problem.
> >
> > Any ideas what her problem may be?
>
> No, but I know a man who does. He's called a doctor and
> she'd be well advised to seek one.
>
> 2 to 3 days of vomiting after short runs? That's got to
> deserve investigation.
>
> Tim
>
> --
> Remove the obvious to reply by email. Please support
> rheumatoid arthritis research! Visit
> http://www.justgiving.com/pfp/speyside or
> http://www.justgiving.com/speyside if you're a UK
> tax payer.

Miss-G-
  
And broccoli - that helps with helicobacter no end.

<anonymous@coolgroups.com> wrote in message
news:108770b619a8f7468ddca72f8d4c0e87@news.scbiz.com...
> Could be parasites. Have her eat blueberries

Bj
  
Maybe she needs to see a different doctor or at least go
back to the one she has seen -- if the problem persists, so
should investigating it. bj

"Mike S." <jmsjunkmail@comcast.net> wrote in message news:NPOdnS8IRMYgIdLdRVn-
gQ@comcast.com...
> She has been seeing a doctor, hence the mention of using
> "prescription"
antacids!

Eno
  
Any possibility of pregnancy?

--
ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°`°º¤ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,-
,ø¤º eNo "If you can't go fast, go long." ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°-
`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º°`°º¤ø¤º°`°º¤ø,,,,ø¤º
|

Jonathan Sydenh
  
blueberries are nicer than eye of newt or skin of toad - they also have
proven benefits (look where newts and toads got Lady McB, a sub 3 thonner if
ever I saw one)
J
J
"Carlos Jones" <ancientmarathonrunners@good-old-days.co.uk> wrote in message
news:kvnu40pdek3pkaoaq07l1hqsmra60q2euo@4ax.com...
> On Wed, 10 Mar 2004 18:03:51 GMT,
> anonymous@coolgroups.com wrote:
>
> >Could be parasites. Have her eat blueberries
>
> Excellent idea. Perhaps she should add eye of newt or skin
> of toad and cure cancer whilst she's at it?

Jonathan Sydenh
  
blueberries are nicer than eye of newt or skin of toad - they also have
proven benefits (look where newts and toads got Lady McB, a sub 3 thonner if
ever I saw one)
J
J
"Carlos Jones" <ancientmarathonrunners@good-old-days.co.uk> wrote in message
news:kvnu40pdek3pkaoaq07l1hqsmra60q2euo@4ax.com...
> On Wed, 10 Mar 2004 18:03:51 GMT,
> anonymous@coolgroups.com wrote:
>
> >Could be parasites. Have her eat blueberries
>
> Excellent idea. Perhaps she should add eye of newt or skin
> of toad and cure cancer whilst she's at it?

Tim Downie
  
Mike S. wrote:
> She has been seeing a doctor, hence the mention of using
> "prescription" antacids!

In which case they're not working and she needs to go back.
Her doctor isn't psychic and unless she tells him/her,
he/she won't know that the antacids aren't working.

>
> Are you from a strange place where all doctors are men?

No, I sometimes just get tired of the he/she, him/her stuff.

It's *probably* nothing serious, but then again, we can't
tell and it would be wrong to discount an oddity like this
as just a side effect of running. As eNo has mentioned, it
would be worth making discrete enquiries about the
possibility of pregnancy.

Tim
--
Remove the obvious to reply by email. Please support
rheumatoid arthritis research! Visit
http://www.justgiving.com/pfp/speyside or
http://www.justgiving.com/speyside if you're a UK tax payer.

Tim Downie
  
Mike S. wrote:
> She has been seeing a doctor, hence the mention of using
> "prescription" antacids!

In which case they're not working and she needs to go back.
Her doctor isn't psychic and unless she tells him/her,
he/she won't know that the antacids aren't working.

>
> Are you from a strange place where all doctors are men?

No, I sometimes just get tired of the he/she, him/her stuff.

It's *probably* nothing serious, but then again, we can't
tell and it would be wrong to discount an oddity like this
as just a side effect of running. As eNo has mentioned, it
would be worth making discrete enquiries about the
possibility of pregnancy.

Tim
--
Remove the obvious to reply by email. Please support
rheumatoid arthritis research! Visit
http://www.justgiving.com/pfp/speyside or
http://www.justgiving.com/speyside if you're a UK tax payer.

Jojo
  
"mike s." <mikesn5va@attbi.com> wrote in message
news:a133dd6a.0403100704.60b6fabf@posting.google.com...
> I have a 35? year old? female friend who has run several
> marathons
> (3:30 - 4:00 range) over the last few years who has just
> decided to stop running due to nausea and vomiting that
> sometimes lasts 2-3 days after even short runs. She has
> changed her diet and tried several prescription
> antacids to no avail. It apears to be a gastric reflux
> problem.
>
> Any ideas what her problem may be?
>
> Thanks.
>
> Mike S.

Mike, has she seen an internal medicine doctor? She may need
an "emptying scan". My spouse had problems with reoccurring
nausea and vomiting (no relationship to running though) and
found out through the scan that her stomach was not emptying
properly. A change in medication has worked wonders. (she
was also taking prescription antacids and acid reducers)

jojo

Miss Anne Throp
  
Which of her problems are you referring to? The nausea
problem, or the having you as a friend problem?

Mike S.
  
Tim - thanks for your continued input on this subject ...
the thought of pregnancy had crossed my mind. I think I will
have my wife ask her that question.

"Tim Downie" <timdownie2003@obvious.yahoo.co.uk> wrote in
message news:c2q4jf$1vmb3v$1@ID-81538.news.uni-berlin.de...
> Mike S. wrote:
> > She has been seeing a doctor, hence the mention of using
> > "prescription" antacids!
>
> In which case they're not working and she needs to go
> back. Her doctor isn't psychic and unless she tells
> him/her, he/she won't know that the antacids aren't
> working.
>
> >
> > Are you from a strange place where all doctors are men?
>
> No, I sometimes just get tired of the he/she,
> him/her stuff.
>
> It's *probably* nothing serious, but then again, we can't
> tell and it
would
> be wrong to discount an oddity like this as just a side
> effect of running. As eNo has mentioned, it would be worth
> making discrete enquiries about
the
> possibility of pregnancy.
>
> Tim
> --
> Remove the obvious to reply by email. Please support
> rheumatoid arthritis research! Visit
> http://www.justgiving.com/pfp/speyside or
> http://www.justgiving.com/speyside if you're a UK
> tax payer.

Open Piper
  
mikesn5va@attbi.com (mike s.) wrote in message news:<a133dd6a.0403100704.60b6fabf@posting.google.com>...
> I have a 35? year old? female friend who has run several
> marathons
> (3:30 - 4:00 range) over the last few years who has just
> decided to stop running due to nausea and vomiting that
> sometimes lasts 2-3 days after even short runs.

She's extremely ugly, remove al mirrors within her gaze.

Mike Maxwell
  
mike s. wrote:
> I have a 35? year old? female friend who has run several
> marathons
> (3:30 - 4:00 range) over the last few years who has just
> decided to stop running due to nausea and vomiting that
> sometimes lasts 2-3 days after even short runs.

I doubt this is the problem, but just in case (or for others
who read this thread because they've had nausea after long
runs)--that used to happen to me regularly, until I started
hydrating during the run. (I wear a camelback.) The nausea
problem (the nausea always happened a few minutes after I
ended a long run) stopped as soon as I started drinking
during the run, and has never returned.

Mike McSwell

Automatic Translations (Powered by Powered by Google):
BulgarianCroatianCzechDanishDutchEnglishFinnishFrenchGermanItalianJapaneseKoreanNorwegianPolishPortugueseSpanishSwedish
Translations by vB Enterprise Translator 3.2.2