Injuries to the belly, pelvis, or vagina, such as a blow to the
belly, can cause vomiting. After a minor injury, your child may have pain,
nausea, or vomiting but usually will start to feel better in a few minutes.
However, vomiting that continues, gets worse, or begins after an injury may
mean that your child has damaged an organ, such as the liver, spleen, or
intestines. Blows to the belly can injure the belly, pelvis, or vagina and also
can cause vomiting.
Blunt injuries can cause severe bruising or serious bleeding inside
the belly. Such injuries are often caused by falls from a significant height or
by car, bicycle, sledding, or skiing accidents in which the child is forcefully
thrown against an object or to the ground.
Vomiting after a head injury may be caused by increased pressure
inside the skull. A blow to the head that causes slight movement of the brain
within the skull may cause nausea and vomiting for a short time. Your child may
vomit once or twice.
Immediate medical attention is needed when:
- Violent vomiting after the head injury continues
for 15 minutes or longer.
- Your child vomits more than 3 or more
times after the head injury.
Vomiting can occur when a baby is shaken, slammed, or thrown against
an object (shaken baby syndrome). Other types of physical or
sexual abuse can also cause vomiting.
You may feel uneasy if your doctor brings up the issue of physical or
sexual abuse. Doctors and nurses have a professional duty and legal obligation
to evaluate possible sexual injury or abuse in a child. It is important to
consider this possibility, especially if there were no witnesses to the injury
that may have caused the child's vomiting. If you think that your child has
been physically or sexually abused, call your doctor or contact one of the
following organizations:
- National Clearinghouse on Family
Violence. Call for a referral to services offered in your area:
1-800-267-1291 or (613) 957-2938.
- Parents
Anonymous. Self-help groups serving parents under stress as well as
abused children are available throughout Canada, Europe, and the United States.
To locate a group in your area, check the listings in your phone book under
Parents Anonymous.
- Kids Help Phone. Call
for services offered in your area: 1-800-668-6868.