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Morning Sickness Zofran not gluten-free

#1 User is offline   jaimek Icon

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Posted 23 June 2006 - 05:21 AM

Hello! I am currenlty in my 11th week of pregnancy and have been having very bad morning sickness that gets progressively worse as the day goes on. I saw my obgyn yesterday and he prescribed Zofran. Unfortunately, when I called Glaxo SmithKline, they informed me that Zofran is not gluten free. Does anyone have any other suggestions for nausea/vomiting? I am also traveling this weekend and get motion sickness as well. Not looking forward to it. I know constant snacking helps but does not do the trick for me. Any help is much appreciated!!!!
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#2 User is offline   CarlaB Icon

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Posted 23 June 2006 - 05:31 AM

I found mine was much worse because of dehydration. Water wasn't enough for me, I needed electrolytes. You can drink Gatorade or make your own. One quart of water, one tsp. salt, 7 tsp. sugar.

Be sure you keep your blood sugar stable, you want protein to be part of each snack.

You should be coming to the end of it soon -- lots of people find it goes away around 12 weeks.
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#3 User is offline   cassidy Icon

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Posted 23 June 2006 - 07:57 AM

There are wrist bands called sea bands. They are next to the motion sickness medicine in drug stores. They have little plastic balls that rest on your pressure points. They really, really help. I get motion sickness from riding in a car, plane, boat, etc. I would take dramamine and it helped, but I really didn't want to take drugs. Now, I can even read on the boat! I highly recommend them. They are supposed to work for morning sickness and any kind of nausea.
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#4 User is offline   CarlaB Icon

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Posted 23 June 2006 - 08:28 AM

View Postcassidy, on Jun 23 2006, 11:57 AM, said:

There are wrist bands called sea bands. They are next to the motion sickness medicine in drug stores. They have little plastic balls that rest on your pressure points. They really, really help. I get motion sickness from riding in a car, plane, boat, etc. I would take dramamine and it helped, but I really didn't want to take drugs. Now, I can even read on the boat! I highly recommend them. They are supposed to work for morning sickness and any kind of nausea.


forgot all about those.
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#5 User is offline   taz sharratt Icon

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Post icon  Posted 23 June 2006 - 09:40 AM

View PostCarlaB, on Jun 23 2006, 05:28 PM, said:

forgot all about those.

i agree, they are a waist of money. i had severe sickness on my second child abd the only thing that seemed to help me was ginger tea and ginger biscuits ( before gluten-free). happlily baby no 3 was sickness free i didnt even realise i was P untill 16 weeks !!!! but everyone is different and my advise is try anything once that is within reason and safe. wont last for much longer.
married with 3 boys, maclain, dylan and finlay. symptoms for more than 10 years but only diagnosed may 06. lactose and casien intolerant may 06.
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#6 User is offline   Ursa Major Icon

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Posted 23 June 2006 - 01:04 PM

Taz, it seems to me that Carla meant, that she forgot about the sea bands being a GOOD idea! While they don't seem to work for everybody, they are a life saver for me. Because I don't just get car sick, but everything-that-moves sick. They are the only thing that works for me (the pills pretty much put me out of my misery, though, I sleep the whole ride, whatever I am on :huh: ).

I have heard that sea bands work well for some people with morning sickness. They cost anywhere between $15.00 and $20.00, and are well worth the money if they work. Especially because it's never entirely without risk to take medicines while pregnant.
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#7 User is offline   CarlaB Icon

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Posted 24 June 2006 - 05:52 PM

View PostUrsula, on Jun 23 2006, 05:04 PM, said:

Taz, it seems to me that Carla meant, that she forgot about the sea bands being a GOOD idea! While they don't seem to work for everybody, they are a life saver for me. Because I don't just get car sick, but everything-that-moves sick. They are the only thing that works for me (the pills pretty much put me out of my misery, though, I sleep the whole ride, whatever I am on :huh: ).

I have heard that sea bands work well for some people with morning sickness. They cost anywhere between $15.00 and $20.00, and are well worth the money if they work. Especially because it's never entirely without risk to take medicines while pregnant.


Yes, the bands helped me somewhat. I was severely dehydrated, which was part of my problem, so the bands on their own did not work, but I did always feel better with them on.
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#8 User is offline   hez Icon

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Posted 24 June 2006 - 06:13 PM

Before I knew that my pregnancy was ectopic, I had severe nausea. The only thing that helped was to eat almonds (raw) through out the day. Later I was told that almonds are good because they are high in fat, the good kind!

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#9 User is offline   Fiddle-Faddle Icon

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Posted 24 June 2006 - 07:30 PM

I feel for you--I had severe morning sickness throughout all 3 of my pregnancies.

For nibbles, almonds and rice crackers worked well for me, but the best was fresh strawberries--I ate them constantly, and they NEVER came back up. Meat and fish, on the other hand, never stayed down. Sea-bands did absolutely nothing, but try them anyway--one of my friends swears by them.

Gatorade is a good idea--it was too acidic for me, so I watered it down, like 4 parts water to 1 part gatorade, and carried it around with me everywhere I went.

I did NOT take meds during my first pregnancy because I was so afraid of the problems meds could cause--but uncontrolled hyperemesis ended up causing worse problems--I develoed preeclampsia, the baby stopped growing, I was totallyunable to gain weight (I actuallyleft the hospital after delivery 10 pounds UNDER my starting weight), and it was very hard to produce milk after that.

For pregnancies 2 and 3, I agreed to meds, and my OBGYN was GREAT about working with me to use the least amount we could get away with. I had terrible reflux (not just with pregnancy--combo of hital hernia and gluten problems that I didn't know about then). I went on Zantac and Reglan, and to control the terrible nausea, I took weeny-teeny amounts of Phenergan (which is an anti-histamine--it is Pregnancy category C, but my OBGYN said that she thought it ought to be classified as B as it was chemically similar to other antihistamines that were B. (THe first time I tried one 25-milligram pill, I slept for 17 hours straight, and said, no way, can't take this much! Then again, that was 17 hours where I didn't barf!))

Anyway, I think the standard dosage was 25 milligrams 2-4 times a day, but I cut the pills into quarters, and only took one in the morning. It was enough to let me keep most of my food down--I only barfed twice a day (like clockwork--9am and 6pm!) instead of constantly all day. I was able to gain 12 pounds with each pregnancy.

It feels awful, doesn't it? Hang in there, and see if your OBGYN will work with you to adjust things so you are comfortable. I have no idea if those meds are gluten-free or not, as I took them before I had gluten problems, but ask your pharmacist. Goo dluck! Keep us posted.
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#10 User is offline   jaimek Icon

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Posted 27 June 2006 - 07:17 AM

Well, I took Phergran this weekend to fly to Denver. Took a whole pill on the way and was completely out of it. Could barely even walk off the plane. I didn't get nauseaus though!!! Think it actually lasted in my system all weekend cause I was not sick once. I took a quarter on the way home and that did the trick without knocking me completely out. Thanks for all your advise. Hopefully this will all be over soon, as I started my 12th week yesterday :D
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#11 User is offline   jmengert Icon

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Posted 27 June 2006 - 07:20 AM

My best friend was sick through the first 5 months of her pregnancy, and her doctor told her to take extra B-6 and B-12 vitamins each night, and it helped a lot (she ended up only getting sick when she didn't take the vitamins).

I hope you begin to feel better soon!
*Julie*
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#12 User is offline   CarlaB Icon

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Posted 27 June 2006 - 08:34 AM

View Postjmengert, on Jun 27 2006, 11:20 AM, said:

My best friend was sick through the first 5 months of her pregnancy, and her doctor told her to take extra B-6 and B-12 vitamins each night, and it helped a lot (she ended up only getting sick when she didn't take the vitamins).

I hope you begin to feel better soon!


My doc told me to take one of those, can't remember which, with a half a Sominex (don't know if they're gluten free) because it's the same as a medicine that used to be given for morning sickness. I tried it, it worked, but all I did was sleep.
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#13 User is offline   KayJay Icon

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Posted 03 July 2006 - 11:32 AM

I was sick just about the whole nine months. I took Zolfran I had no idea it wasn't gluten-free! Maybe that is why I was so sick <_<
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#14 User is offline   Satori Icon

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Posted 10 July 2006 - 01:59 PM

I took a lot of Phergran while I was prego, it knocked me out at first but after a couple days of taking it around the clock I was able to function on it just fine, couldn't eat or drink but I was able to get off the bathroom floor:)
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#15 User is offline   letter2elise Icon

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Posted 11 July 2006 - 08:22 AM

I used Phenergan. I was given a prescription of oral phenergan and used that when I could keep it down. You may need the Phenergan shot. Talk to your doctor to see if this is right for you.

Also, Ener-G makes saltine like crackers that are great to eat before you get up in the morning. Makes life easier to have something in your tummy.
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