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  2. May 23, 2023 · If your baby or child has projectile vomiting that goes on for days, either due to pyloric stenosis or something else, they're in need of medical attention. You never want a baby or child —...

    • Is This Your Child's Symptom?
    • When to Call For Vomiting
    • Care Advice For Vomiting
    Vomiting (throwing up) stomach contents
    Other names for vomiting are puking, barfing and heaving

    Call 911 Now

    1. Can't wake up 2. Not moving 3. You think your child has a life-threatening emergency

    Call Doctor or Seek Care Now

    1. Dehydration suspected. No urine in over 8 hours, dark urine, very dry mouth and no tears. 2. Stomach pain when not vomiting. Exception: stomach pain or crying just before vomiting is quite common. 3. Age less than 12 weeks old with vomiting 2 or more times. Exception: normal spitting up. 4. Vomited 3 or more times and also has diarrhea 5. Severe vomiting (vomits everything) more than 8 hours while getting Pedialyte (or breastmilk) 6. Head injury within the last 24 hours 7. Weak immune syst...

    Contact Doctor Within 24 Hours

    1. All other infants (age less than 1 year) with vomiting. See Care Advice while waiting to discuss with doctor.

    What You Should Know About Vomiting:
    Formula Fed Babies - May Give Oral Rehydration Solution (ORS) for 8 Hours:
    Breastfed Babies - Reduce the Amount Per Feeding:
    Pumped Breastmilk Bottle-Fed Infants - Reduce the Amount per Feeding:
  3. Aug 25, 2017 · Projectile vomiting in infants and children has several potential causes: Pyloric stenosis is a thickening of the muscle where the stomach empties into the small...

    • Erica Hersh
    • 6
  4. / Conditions. Projectile vomiting (pyloric stenosis) Medically reviewed by Dawn Rosenberg, M.D., pediatrician. Written by Karen Miles. Photo credit: iStock.com / Qwasyx. My newborn is vomiting forcefully after feeding. What's going on? How common is pyloric stenosis? What are the risk factors for pyloric stenosis? Male, especially if firstborn.

    • Karen Miles
  5. The most common causes of vomiting in infants and neonates include the following: Acute viral gastroenteritis. Gastroesophageal reflux disease. Other important causes in infants and neonates include the following: Pyloric stenosis. Intestinal obstruction (eg, meconium ileus, volvulus, intestinal atresia, stenosis)

  6. In newborns and infants, the most common causes of vomiting include. Gastroenteritis (infection of the digestive tract) due to a virus. Gastroesophageal reflux disease. In older children, the most common cause is. Gastroenteritis due to a virus. Less common causes.

  7. Feb 26, 2018 · Projectile vomiting in infants is most often due to a condition called pyloric stenosis. This condition affects a tube in the child’s body that connects the small bowel and the stomach.

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