Vomiting and Nausea after BMT
My 25 yr old son had a bone marrow transplant back in March, his brother was his donor. Since transplant he has had an ongoing issue with gagging, nausea and vomiting. He has been hospitalized twice for these symptoms. They have done an endoscopy and everything looks good just waiting for biopsy results. Has anyone else had these symptoms 60+ days after transplant? Did you find anything that helped? When did you finally feel better? His counts and everything else is looking great. Just hoping for some insight, answers.
Thanks!
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Bone Marrow Transplant (BMT) & CAR-T Cell Therapy Support Group.
Connect

@ssap1 congratulations on your LTP I am a little over 3years with mine. @wakeup after my TP I tried jello, oatmeal, pudding ,bananas and also the boost.
I sure hope he gets to filling better soon.
Take care
Hi Wendy, Just checking in to see how your son is feeling. I’m not sure if you’ve seen the replies after you left your message but there have been some helpful suggestions for trying to help your son turn that corner with the nausea after his bone marrow transplant.
I posted quite a few ideas for you since nausea was a pretty constant companion for me with my first 2 months.
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/comment/1068667/
And how are you holding up? Being a caregiver, while rewarding to be able to help your son through this, it’s also incredibly taxing…a true labor of love.
Please let me know how he’s doing, ok? (You too!)
Hi Lori,
His doctor has mentioned a feeding tube but my son is adamant he doesn't want one. I understand his hesitation but his body is lacking and he is considered malnourished. However he is an adult and has the final say. He came home from the hospital this past Sunday. He hasn't felt great and tonight he threw up again a lot. It just feels like there is no end in sight. Thanks for all of your suggestions and for listening.
Wendy
Ahhhh, Wendy, what is it with stubborn men! Apparently ‘It’s better to curse the darkness than to light a candle.’ Or in your son’s case, a feeding tube or IV only diet for a bit. I know he’s an adult at 25 and can make his own decisions but he is clinically considered malnourished which can cloud a person’s judgment and cause depression. The feeding tube is a means to reverse the malnourishment and potentially get him back on the road to recovery.
He’s already gone through the worst with his bone marrow transplant and the rest should be just steady upward progress back to good health!
He’s so young at 25 and has his entire life ahead of him. As a mom and his caregiver, you’re in a really difficult spot. I hope you can encourage him to push forward and get the feeding tube. It’s not forever…sometimes as short as a week.
Since his brother was your son’s donor, could he maybe offer some encourament or incentives to get better? I know with a BMT team there are a ton of resources. Would your son consider speaking with a counselor?
Hi Wendy, I’ve been wondering how things are going with your son. Sure hope he’s making some progress with his recovery. Any success with being able to eat?
Hi @wakop. I’ve been hoping to see an update about your son…wondering if he is now past the nausea and is able to eat. Is his health improving?
@loribmt Any chance I could get that recipe for the Lactaid Ice cream~Salted Caramel smoothies? My mom has just come home from her bone marrow transplant for AML. She had a feeding tube in the hospital due to poor nutrition. She is now drinking 3 Ensure Therapeutic Nutrition a day. I mentioned the possibility of Lactaid Ice Cream Salted Carmel smoothies. It was the first time I'd seen her show interest in any food. Thank you!
-
Like -
Helpful -
Hug
1 ReactionHi @laurensk367 Oh your poor mom…I can so relate to her experience! Some of us have a more challenging time than others when it comes to weight loss and nutrition post transplant. I think some of that comes from our months of chemo for AML preceding the transplant.
As you’ve read, I can account for some of my happy weight gain with Lactaid Ice cream! Eaten with reckless abandon. LOL. As for recipe for the smoothies, I know my husband didn’t have one. He just used the Lactaid Salted Caramel Ice Cream as a base and then added bananas or peanut butter or he’d sneak in some protein powder. But ughhh I could tell the second that stuff was in my food. My body and tummy rebelled! I think he also put in cottage cheese or plain Greek yogurt for protein. He just tossed things in the blender and hoped for the best!☺️
There are a ton of recipes online. Just be cautious. No fresh or frozen fruit or honey until your mom’s transplant team gives her the ok. Bananas are ok if you wash the peel first before slicing.
Now that your mom is home, I hope familiar surroundings will help her recover faster. It will be helpful to have little snacks available for her in the fridge. They can be simple containers of leftovers and such. My husband had an array of bits of cheese, crackers, half sandwiches, that type of thing so I could pick and choose when my appetite would periodically resurface.
Just don’t expect her to sit down to full meals. Her appetite will return gradually. Simple meats like seared chicken breast, a simple 96% beef burger, canned chicken, tuna, etc…no greasy, spicy or tomato saucy foods. It’s just too much for her tummy to handle.
She’ll also build more endurance now being home where she can walk around the house or outdoors for shorter spells until she feels stronger.
How many days post transplant is your mom?