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Talk about every stage of pregnancy, from early symptoms to preparing for birth.

Hyperemesis Support

980 replies

LucindaE · 30/03/2012 12:21

We need a new thread.

This thread is for anyone suffering from the Horrors of Hyperemesis and if anyone's got bad m/s too they're welcome to join in. Hopefully sufferers will continue to get support through talking with present and past sufferers on here.

There's no such thing as TMI here - by definition with this awful illness there can't be - and feel free to moan all you like. You have reason to!

I want to thank Everyone MOH Mother of Pearl Ovaltine (once theOnly Melange (once NitNat) FluffyWhiteKittens* and so many more
for all their stirling work, and so many more that I can't name them all.

My apologies to anyone I've rudely overlooked, I daren't keep gabbling too long, or I might put off current sufferers.

Remember, when you are at your worst, the words from the Eastern story: - 'This Too Shall Pass.' It will...

Below is some brilliant information from sites.google.com/site/pregnancysicknesssos/

However, if you don't feel up to reading it now, feel free to skip it for now and have a good moan.

Hyperemesis gravidarum (HG) is a severe form of pregnancy sickness which affects between 1 and 3% of pregnant women. Historically, it was mistakenly thought to be a psychosomatic illness and women were treated as though they had a psychotic disorder. This view has been comprehensively disproven by numerous research papers in recent decades, and it is now known to be an illness of organic origin, although its causes have yet to be fully understood. There is a persistent common belief that no drugs should be given to women in the first trimester of pregnancy. This is not true. There are a number of effective anti-emetic (anti sickness) drugs which can safely be taken in early pregnancy. Unfortunately, the erroneous views that HG is a psychosomatic conditions and that no drugs are safe in the first trimester still persists in many places, shockingly, even amongst GPs and midwives. Sadly, many women still come across unsympathetic health professionals who are ignorant of current treatment methods.

How do I know if I have HG?
If you are suffering from persistent nausea and/or vomiting which is preventing you from eating and/or drinking then you may be suffering from HG. With ordinary nausea and vomiting of pregnancy (NVP), the sickness does not interfere with your ability to eat and drink enough, you should not be losing weight and you should be able to continue to care for yourself and your family although you may not be feeling too great. With HG, sufferers often need help caring for themselves, never mind look after their family. The illness can be completely debilitating for weeks or even months. If you're not sure, the HER foundation website who have a fact sheet to help you determine whether or not you are suffering from HG
www.helpher.org/mothers/hyperemesis-or-morning-sickness/index.php

Diagnosis is important as you will inevitably become dehydrated and you will need to be admitted to hospital for IV rehydration. Starvation is another risk. When your body burns fat for energy, it produces chemicals called ketones which can be detected in your urine. You can monitor your levels of starvation using ketosticks, available from pharmacies. You pee on the stick and it monitors your levels of ketones. If levels are high, you should tell your doctor or midwife. If you are worried about dehydration and ketone levels and you can't see your doctor or midwife, you can go to A&E.

Facts and Figures and FAQs

HG is worse in the first trimester for the majority of sufferers, though a significant proportion (10 ? 20%) suffer for the entire duration of the pregnancy. If you have close relatives (mothers, sisters) who have had HG, you are also at significantly higher risk of being a sufferer yourself. HG is the most common cause of hospitalisation of pregnant women in the first trimester.

Is it worse carrying a boy or a girl?
There is conflicting evidence as to whether having a boy or a girl makes HG worse, some studies say boys, some say girls.

Is it worse with twins?
Yes there is evidence that carrying more than one baby makes HG worse.

Will my baby be ok?
Babies born to HG mothers are usually absolutely fine. If you lose some weight during the first trimester the risks for the baby are low as it does not need much nutrition at this time and your body should have enough stores from before your pregnancy. However, if you continue to to lose weight due to lack of treatment or failed treatment, then there is an increased risk of low birth weight or pre-term birth. Studies show that this is a risk for women who are severely ill, are dehydrated for long periods and lose more than 10% of their body weight.

There is also growing evidence of long term health effects in some children born to mothers who suffer malnutrition in pregnancy. In some cases this is not evident until adulthood with increased risk of chronic conditions such as diabetes and hypertension.
For more information see forums.helpher.org/viewtopic.php?t=18 and www.helpher.org/hyperemesis-gravidarum/complications/fetal-programming.php

I've heard that being sick is a sign of a healthy pregnancy, is this the case with HG?
You will often be told that morning sickness is a good sign and you should be happy that you're feeling sick. This is generally the case with normal NVP, however, it is not the case with untreated HG. There is actually a higher risk of pre-term birth and low birth weight. However, continuing to feel sick may be a sign that the pregnancy is still progressing. Some women with HG who miscarried reported that the first sign was that they suddenly stopped feeling sick.

What are the treatments?
Initially you will be advised to use non-pharmacoligical strategies which are similar to the general advice given to any pregnant women suffering from nausea. These include eating little and often, eating protein-rich, low-fat meals, avoiding triggers of nausea such as strong smells and getting enough rest. You can try ginger, seabands (accupressure wristbands used for travel sickness) and extra doses of vitamin B6. Avoid getting out of bed in the morning without something in your stomach such as a tea biscuit or cracker. Some women find that these give relief in the initial stages of HG but they become ineffective once the illness is in full swing.

The next line of treatment is prescribed antiemetics such as phenergan, cyclizine, stemetil and ondansetron. For many women these work well and control the nausea and vomiting enough for them to eat and drink normally and regain some of their lost weight. Many can even return to normal life. You may find that one antiemetic on its own is not effective and you may need to try different combinations but you can discuss this with your doctor. Even with antiemetics, you will probably still need to use coping strategies such as getting extra rest, eating small frequent meals and avoiding triggers when the HG is at its peak. If you are dehydrated, you may be admitted to hospital for IV fluids. Minerals and vitamins can be added to the drip to replace any you may have lost, as well as antiemetics.

Unfortunately, antiemetics don't work for everyone. If they are ineffective, you should be referred to an obstetrician (if you haven't been already) for the next line of treatment, which will probably be steroids. These carry a small risk of cleft palate, but this will be discussed with your doctor. In a small number of cases even this is not effective and drastic treatments such as feeding with a tube directly into the stomach may have to be considered.

My GP is unsympathetic and refuses to prescribe me drugs - what should I do?
Unfortunately this experience is all too common. In this case you should see another GP if possible. You should also ask for a referral to an obstetrician. If you remain untreated and become dehydrated, you can have yourself admitted to A&E for IV fluids and ask to be seen by an obstetrician.

Do alternative remedies work?

Some women are greatly helped by alternative medicine, particularly Homepathy and Acupunture. Some women can claim to have had the illness 'stopped in its tracks' by Acupunture, but success varies between individual patients and it tends to be expensive. These remedies are worth a try if you can afford it but have a back up plan incase it doesn't work.

How long will this last for?
For most women, HG peaks in the first trimester and tails off or disappears completely later in the pregnancy. The usual advice for morning sickness is that it will improve after 12 weeks. The majority of HG sufferers find that it takes longer than this. Unfortunately, some women suffer severely for the entire pregnancy. Others find that it improves, but they suffer from nausea and occasional vomiting until birth. Relapse is quite common especially if you have tried to return to your normal busy life. There is a great temptation to make up for lost time and become very active once you start to feel better, but this very often leads to the nausea returning. You should be very careful about resuming work and normal household activities even if you feel as though you're up to it. Be careful too about stopping your medication, do it very gradually and resume at the first sign of the condition returning. You may have to continue to take it for the entire pregnancy to prevent a relapse.
All I can drink is coke, I'm worried that I'm not eating a healthy diet.

Through pregnancy, we are bombarded with advice about what to eat and what not to eat. Women with HG often find that the list of food and drinks that they can keep down is very small and not at all from the healthy options. For some reason, women with Hyperemesis ofen find sweet and salty foods ie, sweet drinks like coke, and crisps, are more likely to stay down than healthy foods. Their peculiar diet can lead to disapproving comments and the incorrect assumption that this is how they normally eat.
Various women find different drinks acceptable. Coke (often left to go flat) Lucozade, lemonade, milkshakes and IronBru, Dr Pepper, orange squash, apple juice, lime juice, ice cubes made of flat coke or just tapwater, ice lollies and sips of tepid water can help in keeping rehydrated. 

When the illness is at its worst during the early hormonal surges - typically between eight and ten weeks- then it is difficult to retain any liquids and you may need to be hospitalised for rehydration at about this time. 

When solids do become bearable,jelly, tinned fruit, ice lollies, ice cream, crisps, fish fingers, potato cakes, crumpets, soda bread and similar potato based or salty foods have often been found to be acceptable.

The important thing to remember at this time is that it doesn't matter what you eat or drink, the crucial thing is that you eat or drink something. Don't forego something because you are worried that it's bad for you. In a normal diet, too much salt and sugar is bad for you, but when you consume nothing else, this may be your only source of calories, fluid and salt for the day. Instead of berating yourself for your unhealthy diet, congratulate yourself that you have kept something down because your body needs it. If you are able to take vitamin tablets or syrups, then do so but most women find that large multivitamin tablets make the nausea worse. You may be able to get vitamins that dissolve under your tongue which you may be able to tolerate. If and when you begin to feel better, you can start to re-introduce more healthy food.

Will it go away when I give birth?
The good news is that for the vast majority of sufferers the physical symptoms of HG disappear completely as soon as the baby is born. You should be aware though that it is not unknown for the nausea to persist after birth especially if you have been severely ill. If this occurs, speak to your doctor. For women who suffered persistent, long term nausea and vomiting, it may take some time to restore energy levels and nutritional reserves. Moreover, while the physical symptoms may leave, the trauma of HG can leave an emotional legacy for many women, especially when combined with the rigours of caring for a baby. If you have any concerns, speak to your doctor or midwife. Don't feel that you should just be able to pick yourself up and get on with things, if you're having problems you are entitled to seek support.

Will I get it in my next pregnancy and will it be the same?
Unfortunately, having HG in one pregnancy puts you at a high risk of suffering in subsequent pregnancies although it is possible to escape it. Some women find that the HG gets better in subsequent pregnancies, whereas others find it stays the same or gets worse. There is really no way of knowing how your pregnancies will relate to each other.

Can I do anything to prepare for HG incase I get it again in my next pregnancy?
The HER website has a page of advice on preparing for your next pregnancy. forums.helpher.org/viewtopic.php?t=17. If you had medication which worked for you in your previous pregnancy, make sure that you have it ready to take as soon as you feel ill. Studies show that the quicker you get on top of the sickness, the better the medication works. Because HG can start within days of missing your period, see your GP as soon as you know you're pregnant.

Useful sources of information
The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists in the UK have no guidelines on the treatment and management of HG. However, the American College of Obs/Gynae (ACOG) and the Society of Obs/Gynae of Canada (SOGC) have published guidelines which can be found at the following sites

www.sogc.org/guidelines/public/120E-CPG-October2002.pdf 

www.guideline.gov/content.aspx?id=10939

Pregnancy Sickness Support is a UK based organisation run by GPs and midwives with direct experience of HG. They have a helpline which you can call for advice ? if nobody answers you leave a message and a midwife will call you back. They will be able to answer your questions about treatments and they keep a note of doctors around the country who are known to be sympathetic to HG sufferers and are willing to treat it with medication. Their website is at www.pregnancy sicknesssupport.org.uk

The Hyperemesis Education and Research Foundation (HER) is a US based foundation which was formed by HG survivors and has a mission to research the causes of HG and provide information and support for other sufferers. They have links to the latest scientific research and are actively involved in funding research, although you usually have to live in the USA to take part. There are loads of threads on every topic related to HG from women who have been through it, including very useful information about which treatment regimes worked. Their website is at www.hyperemesis.org.
Dealing with well meaning but unhelpful advice

Women with HG are often told by friends and family that it's just morning sickness, a normal part of pregnancy and you just have to put up with it. Many HG sufferers report extreme frustration at being advised to try ginger, dry crackers or eat little and often. Most of them have tried every remedy they can think of to no avail. Because most women are familiar with NVP, there is often an attitude of, well I had morning sickness and I just got on with it. HG sufferers are often left with the feeling that they are whingers and malingerers and that if only they could adopt a positive attitude then they would be fine. This can lead to further depression in what is already a depressive condition. In order to deal with this, it is important that the HG sufferer has some supportive friends or family who can firmly but politely fend off these comments. The sufferer will often have no energy to deal with it herself. If possible explain to the person giving the advice that you are not suffering from morning sickness, you are suffering from a condition called hyperemesis gravidarum.

I have never known anyone with HG. Where can I talk to women who understand how I feel?
There is a support thread on the talk boards here (ask MT to add link) which is run by sufferers and ex-sufferers. There are discussions of practical issues such as tips for coping and medication but the real value of this forum is that you get sympathy and understanding from people who know exactly what you're going through. If you just want to moan or let off steam, you are free to do so and nobody will hold it against you. Comments are also welcome from relatives, partners, friends and carers of HG sufferers. The HER website also has talk boards at forums.helpher.org/. There is also a UK based yahoo group called Bloomingawful at health.groups.yahoo.com/group/bloomingawful/

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
goldie32 · 22/06/2012 18:21

Thanks again Lucinda am ok just very tired, I think you are right. First full week at work yawn! I was not allowed out of hosp with any keytones showing, but not sure what admission levels are. xx

kalidasa · 22/06/2012 18:50

Have had a really grim two days since getting back. Been stuck entirely in bed, don't feel hungry at all, having to force myself to eat and vomiting quite a lot. Feels like a real step back, so depressing! Have had to take some ondansetron so constipated again as well. Great. Hope everyone else is doing better.

Littleplasticpeople · 22/06/2012 19:03

I think ketones over 2+ are when they start to worry. This Tuesday I had 1+ after a bad 24 hours but the GP just told me to retest 8 hours later and only go back to her if ketones had got worse or stayed the same (went to trace as soon as I kept my lunch down so was fine).

stepford fingers crossed things improve soon, I always find weeks 6-12 the absolute worst.

Hope you are ok barmee, tough times.

goldie32 · 22/06/2012 19:34

Oh no Kali that's rubbish! Perhaps it's as you've been travelling again. I am generally fine now but am finding tiredness brings symptoms back. Keep resting and I'm sure you will pick up again soon. Love to all. x

stepfordmum · 22/06/2012 19:37

Thanks Kalidasa and LittlePlasticPeople that's a great help. This morning they were at 3+ and then I brought up loads of liquid, but amazingly I have managed to keep a couple of things down and they are back to Trace again, phew!

For some bizarre reason I have discovered i can keep croissants down so I am eating quite a lot of them, the struggle not to be physically sick the whole time is very wearing though!

My friend who was the same, and had it until 20 weeks, did say that by 15 it did start to improve and wasn't so continuous so that gave me some hope.

MotherofPearl · 22/06/2012 20:38

Kali, so sorry to hear you've had a bad few days. As Goldie says, perhaps the travelling has tired you and that has contributed to the set back. I guess you have to hang onto the fact that while you will probably still have bad days, you're very unlikely to get as bad as you were a few weeks back. 16 weeks though - you've done amazingly well to get to this point, after all you've been through.

Stepford, glad the ketones are down again - 3+ is really quite high, and it makes you feel horrific. I was admitted with 3+ and apart from feeling very sick, I remember feeling so vague and spaced out, almost hallucinatory. Do keep testing yourself regularly and don't hestitate to go to A & E if they go up again. Croissants - yum!

Thinking of Barmee and hope she's doing OK.

Goldie, hope you manage to get some rest over the weekend - sounds like you need it! :)

We've not heard from Meebles for a while, hope all is well with her.

kalidasa · 22/06/2012 21:40

stepfordmum my MIL (who is French!) brought me a fresh croissant during her first stay to help out, at a point where I was barely eating anything and relying on meal-replacement drinks to stay out of ketosis. I only really gave it a go to be polite and was amazed that it stayed down! It was one of the first bits of real food that did. Something about the digestible texture I think!

Still in bed but feeling fractionally better this evening. Better than yesterday anyway when I threw up my supper and then threw up again within an hour on an empty stomach - a nasty reminder of how it used to be! Sympathies for anyone still at the vomiting-with-nothing-there stage.

Re: the ketosis, I managed to get it back under control myself from 2+ a couple of times, but once I hit 3+ I always lost it and ended up in hospital at 4+ for days. Do keep an eye on it. I agree with the MOP that the ketosis itself makes you feel so rough and out of it. At one point when I was being admitted I was so confused that I didn't realise they'd given me a pill to take (I had somehow managed to drop it but didn't realise I had, I was convinced they had inexplicably given me an empty medicine cup!). I just lay there for several hours too out of it to call anyone, and with no medication or drip yet (I was in the EPU waiting for a proper bed). In the end they realised and by then I was in such a state they gave me the max dose of something as a jab in my bottom! I think confusion like that is a sign of ketoacidosis. They should have been keeping a closer eye on me really.

MotherofPearl · 23/06/2012 19:09

Hope everyone is doing OK today? All has gone very quiet, which I hope is a good sign that people are occupied doing enjoyable things. :)

MOH100 · 23/06/2012 20:04

MOP wonder if quietness is an internet gremlin, I wrote a long post about the PSS conference last night and it's disappeared. Hmmm..

kalidasa · 23/06/2012 20:45

I'm here, still in bed, watching back-to-back documentaries on 4OD . . . managed some supper though which is an improvement.

goldie32 · 23/06/2012 20:50

Have had plenty of rest and feel more normal today thanks MOP. Hope as you suggest quietness is a sign of a good day all round. I also had a thing about croissants, perhaps we should add them to the list with flat coke, lollies and crisps! Love to all . xx

MotherofPearl · 23/06/2012 21:57

MOH, how annoying to lose a long post. Hope the conference went well - look forward to hearing more when you can face re-writing your lost post! Hope our thread not suffering from some Natwest-style systems glitch!

Kali, glad to hear you've managed supper and are at least keeping your mind off things watching documentaries.

And Goldie, so pleased you sound more rested. Tiredness sure is the number one trigger for HG relapses. I'm feeling pretty knackered myself (my 4 year old DD has taken to cheerfully waking us all up at 6am, convinced by the light that it's much later than it is and demanding her breakfast), but at least I don't pay for it with sickness anymore.

Hope everyone else hanging in there.

Lifeiswhatyoubakeit · 24/06/2012 09:42

Croissants eh? Think stepford, Kali and goldie might be onto something here! Will try asap!

Kali documentaries back to back sounds light a good idea too - anything to keep your mind off things- distraction I find is really useful. Hope you are having a better few days. Hopefully now ur 16wks you'll be improving soon? One hopes anyways, I know some poor souls have it until the end.

I'm getting down at the moment with HG although I don't feel I deserve to as I haven't vomited since last week now. It seems the 4mg ondansetron x 3 a day actually stops my stomach from emptying but dent stop the waves of nausea which make me feel like I'm genuinely going to throw up 6 or so times a day, which is so mentally wearing. I tried doubling the dose but it doesn't help. I also tried an acupuncture session on Friday with minimal effects but my cousin (who is an acupuncture practitioner in London) said this lady didn't actually do a great job so I'll try someone else before dismissing it completely.

Another thing that's got me down recently is that I was booked by the midwife on Saturday and she put my dates back by one week! So instead of another 8 wks of this bulls!*t to get through I have 9 wks! (16wks was the turning point last time)

And on this delightfully grumpy note (!) I was wondering if anyone had any tips on staying positive? I find it impossible to think about the baby at the moment or really beyond a week or so ahead. The best I can do is focus on small quirks of life that I stumble over day to day that bring me a small amount of pleasure, e.g. My husband bought me a book about plants that has an amazing picture of the Rainbow Eucalyptus bark in it! Someone has to have something better than this!!!.....

Lifeiswhatyoubakeit · 24/06/2012 09:47

Oh and as for Ketones, here on the Isle of Wight where I'm currently staying with my parents, they admitted me to hospital with 3+ ketones and would not discharge me until there were nil ketones.

Where I live though it's different, Luton/Welwyn GC hospitals admit at 3/4+ and discharged at 1+/trace. I guess they need the beds more here. It is bad though.

goldie32 · 24/06/2012 11:04

Life I think being on here does help with the positivity. Although I didn't discover this site until I was post hospital HG. I still find other people who know how I feel/have felt a huge boost. You are very brave to be going through HG for a second time. I have said a definite no more after this ( I didn't suffer at all with DD who is 3 1/2). I watched pointless telly and slept a lot, I didn't have any concentration span for reading or anything else. Like Lucinda says, this too will pass and even though being moved a week back is crap, every day is a step closer! Good luck and happy thoughts, gentle pats, whatever you need. Love to all, hope everyone else is as ok as they can be. xx

MotherofPearl · 24/06/2012 11:40

Life, sorry to hear you're still suffering so much with nausea. It really does sap the will to live doesn't it? My only tip on staying positive is to try not to focus on the expanse of time that seems so lie so dauntingly ahead, but to have lots of little things to look forward to, if you can manage it. I found once I was past the very worst (i.e. the hospitalisation stage), it really helped me to have things to look ahead to, to break up the time - even small stuff like having friends round for an afternoon, or finishing a project at work, or going to DP's parents over the weekend for a bit of a break. And every night before you go to bed, just remind yourself you've done one more day and you're one day closer to the end. :)

BarmeeMarmee · 24/06/2012 14:29

Hi Everyone, thank you all for thinking of me and for being so kind while everything has been going on with Gran. My dad brought me back some of the flowers from her funeral so every time I look at them I think of her. They also played Highland Cathedral while everyone left the crematorium which is the song I was piped down the aisle to on my wedding day so that made me feel linked. Is that silly? Lucinda no dreams but I tend to sleep so deeply these days that's no great surprise.

Life sorry to hear the nausea is still bad. I can sympathise-that was how I felt before actual vomiting kicked back in (not suggesting that's what will happen to you!)

Kali thinking of you-hope the documentaries are interesting ones!

Goldie do take care of yourself please-don't over do it. I think I'm turning into Lucinda and worrying about everyone! Grin

Whoever said about repeat hyperemesis pregnancies (sorry I forget) honestly I feel more selfish than brave doing it again when I knew there was always the likelihood it would happen again. Even more so when I know if I'm honest I would still like more children after this one!!

MOH how was the conference?

Everyone I have missed I'm sorry. How are you all?

In happier news from my end we had the 20 week scan on Friday and I now feel a lot better about things and that it is all more real. Also in a complete surprise it seems we are having a girl- I did shed a tear I don't mind admitting and wondered if maybe Gran had something to do with it, we were so sure it was another boy. Now the hard work of picking a name...

Lifeiswhatyoubakeit · 24/06/2012 16:24

Congrats barmee on finding ou ur having a girl. Wonderful news although I suppose girls names are a bit tricky when u have a boy and think ur having another (same)! It's nice you got some flowers from the funeral to remember her. Do you think you'll press them? Hope ur not feeling too down.

Was thinking of 2 other things I could do to stay positive, 1. Think of the nutritional content of anything kept down and 2. Crossing off days on a big calendar.

MOH100 · 24/06/2012 22:13

Conference was brilliant, really positive and inspiring. It was so great to finally meet in the flesh people that I've been emailing or talking to on here or facebook. We had the whole range of attenders, former sufferers who already volunteer for PSS, recent survivors with their gorgeous babies, some interpid pregnant ladies braving the nausea to come along, some partners who were all up for volunteering their skills which was fantastic and some mums of survivors to lend support. We didn't even make it through the introductions without tears, as you can imagine, even just talking about the whole awful experience is emotional stuff. PSS signed up some new volunteers and the regional breakout sessions and open forum generated lots of ideas. People are really fired up it was a great atmosphere.

The new leaflets were on show, they look glossy and professional with the new branding. They're available for any volunteers who want them to distribute to clinics, hospitals etc. A hot topic was fundraising. PSS now has a virgin money page and you can set up standing orders to make a regular or one off donation. see www.pregnancysicknesssupport.org.uk/get-involved/donate/ Sorry for the blatant plug, but the money will really help with raising awareness and helping to provide one to one support for sufferers.

I presented my data from the survey and it was well received. Roger Gadsby spoke to me afterwards, he says I should publish it. Even when I was preparing the presentation I was thinking that this information really should be out there. The main finding that is NOWHERE else in the academic literature is that the vast majority of HG ladies have symptoms past 35 weeks - sorry ladies, I'm not trying to scare you, these symptoms are far less severe than in the early stages, but you're not abnormal if you're still suffering into the third trimester, and it's not your imagination, despite what idiot midwives and sonographers might imply.

The other main finding that needs a public airing is the rate of crapness of GPs in the UK. You have approximately a 50/50 chance of finding a rubbish GP if you go with HG. And even lower odds of finding one that can satisfactorily treat the condition without instructions from a consultant. It's lamentable.

And another snippet, as I've always suspected, ondansetron is the medication with the highest rate of effectiveness in those who've tried it, followed by steroids and cyclizine. And talking of medication, one of the retired GP trustees of PSS was telling me that phenergan is hopeless. I had thought that phenergan and avomine were the same because they're both promethazine, but seemingly they're different formulations and avomine works much better. Just to let you know incase anyone's on phenergan and found it didn't work, you might give avomine a try. Then ask for ondansetron anyway!

My problem now is time. DD is in the process of growing out of her afternoon nap (sobs quietly), so it's even worse than usual. I can't even stick on cbeebies and sneak a few minutes on the laptop, as soon as she catches sight of it she's over pressing buttons and asking to see photos of herself. But I am going to get on the case and get something published asap.

There was a real kick ass feeling about the conference. We are people on a mission. Useless GPs you have been warned!!!!

meebles · 25/06/2012 08:57

Hi all,

Had an emergency c-section on wednesday evening - weird pains and a worrying CTG/scan. Baby Nathan is doing fine in the neonatal unit. He was just over 2kg, and apart from being a bit jaundiced, he's doing really well. We are working on getting feeding established (both me and him!!).

I hope everyone is doing well today.

Remember, one day at a time worked for me. You will get there eventually.

meebles · 25/06/2012 08:57

p.s. the conference sounded fab!

MotherofPearl · 25/06/2012 09:33

Meebles, many congratulations! Thanks I'm so glad your HG journey is over and of course your baby is safe and sound! Always so exciting to get birth announcements on here. Good luck with it all, and welcome to the Pink Castle!

Barmee, lovely to hear about your scan and baby girl. Knowing the sex and starting to think of names really helps to make it feel more real I think.

MOH, thanks for all the conference info; sounds like it was a great success. It's heartening to hear that action is being taken to raise awareness and offer support.

Hope everyone else is doing OK on this grey and very un-summery Monday morning.

PineapplePol · 25/06/2012 12:07

Hi everyone, Sorry I've been so quiet for a while and thank you for remembering me on the posts. I'm doing ok although very anxious at the moment. I have my 12 wk scan this afternoon and am like a cat on a hot tin roof. I can't settle at anything and although I try and distract myself not much is working!. I've such a warped view of pregnancy having had 5 early miscarriages and having to inject heparin each morning and then the new experience of debilitating sickness this time round. I got myself in a right pickle reading various threads on mumsnet. There are so many sad stories out there and having depressed myself so much I had to stear clear for a while. I've been thinking of you all a lot though. I hope you know how strong all you ladies are and what an inspiration and help you have all been to me. I can only hope the continuing sickness is a good sign and all will be well this afternoon.

The sickness is improving but has become rather unpredictable (big thank you to whoever recommended zip lock food bags!) but for the most part I'm now managing without cyclizine. The nausea is still really bad in the evenings and I'm still waking very early needing sweet tea. However inbetween those times I'm functioning more albeit at a reduced level. Best thing is being able to spend some quality time with DD again. Biggest problem at the moment is travelling in the car. Not too bad bad first thing in morning but after that puking seems inevitable and with very little warning. Thankfully DH will be driving this afternoon. Still can't face cooking. Will DH be on ready meals for the remainder of this pregnancy or does that get better?

Hope everyone managing ok today xxx

LucindaE · 25/06/2012 12:11

Just got back from Liverpool trip and Meebles! Hugs, congratulations, welcome both tothe Pink Castle at the end of the Hyperemesis board, I am so happy to hear of a your wonderful news after such torment and anxiety! How many weeks is baby premature? He sounds a reasonable weight altogether. Thanks so much for coming on with encouragement. Smile Grin Thanks Wine Wine Nice name, too...I hope you both are soon eating like anything.
MOP Thanks so much for being so invaluable. Hugs.
MOH Grin That sounded wonderful, what encouraging news. I can well imagine there would be tears shed. I am Shock about the high percentage of terrible treatment years after I had my own dismal experience, it's shocking.
Kali) Life* MrsD Barmee Goldie Plastic and Anyone I've rudely forgotten, I will be catching up on you all, while clucking.
Barmee Congratulations on girl.
Lucinda
xx

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LucindaE · 25/06/2012 12:16

Cross posted with Pinapple You poor thing, being so anxious, I am sure you will find hhte scan reassuirng, I can't imagine how nervous you must be after five miscarriages, I was bad enough after one missed miscarriage, hugs. The only good thing about Hyperemesis is that you know the hormones are flourishing.
As in post below, hugs and thanks so much to MOP and will catch up on all.
Lucinda
xx

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