Initial Management of Hyperemesis Gravidarum
Begin with immediate IV fluid resuscitation to correct dehydration, thiamine supplementation to prevent Wernicke encephalopathy, electrolyte replacement, and first-line antiemetic therapy with doxylamine-pyridoxine combination. 1, 2
Immediate Stabilization (First 24 Hours)
Fluid and Electrolyte Management
- Administer IV fluid resuscitation immediately to correct dehydration, which often improves associated liver enzyme abnormalities that occur in approximately 50% of patients 1, 2
- Replace electrolytes with particular attention to potassium and magnesium levels, as hypokalemia is a common complication 1, 2
- Target plasma potassium levels ≥3.0 mmol/L in all patients 1
Critical Thiamine Supplementation
- Start thiamine 100 mg daily orally for minimum 7 days, then 50 mg daily maintenance until adequate oral intake is established 1, 2
- If vomiting persists or patient cannot tolerate oral intake, switch immediately to IV thiamine 200-300 mg daily 1, 2
- This prevents Wernicke encephalopathy, a serious and avoidable neurological complication that can develop rapidly—thiamine stores can be completely exhausted after only 20 days of inadequate oral intake 1
- Pregnancy itself increases thiamine requirements, and hyperemesis rapidly depletes stores within 7-8 weeks of persistent vomiting 1
Initial Diagnostic Workup
- Check electrolyte panel, liver function tests (AST/ALT), and urinalysis for ketonuria 1, 2
- Assess severity using the Pregnancy-Unique Quantification of Emesis (PUQE) score to track symptoms over time 1, 2
- Perform abdominal ultrasonography to detect multiple or molar pregnancies and rule out hepatobiliary causes 1, 2
- Perform neurologic examination checking for confusion, ataxia, or eye movement abnormalities suggesting Wernicke's encephalopathy 1
Stepwise Pharmacologic Management
First-Line Therapy
Doxylamine-pyridoxine combination is the preferred initial antiemetic, safe throughout pregnancy and breastfeeding 1, 2
- Dosing: Doxylamine 10-20 mg combined with pyridoxine (vitamin B6) 10-20 mg every 8 hours 1
- Alternative first-line agents include other antihistamines (promethazine, cyclizine) and phenothiazines (prochlorperazine, chlorpromazine), all sharing similar safety profiles 1
- For mild cases, pyridoxine monotherapy alone at 10-25 mg every 8 hours may be sufficient 1
Second-Line Therapy (When First-Line Fails)
Metoclopramide is the preferred second-line agent when first-line antihistamines fail 1, 2
- Dosing: 5-10 mg orally or IV every 6-8 hours 1
- Metoclopramide causes less drowsiness, dizziness, dystonia, and fewer discontinuations compared to promethazine in hospitalized patients 1, 2
- No increased risk of major congenital defects found in meta-analysis of 33,000 first-trimester exposures 1
- Withdraw immediately if extrapyramidal symptoms develop 1
Ondansetron should be reserved as second-line therapy due to concerns about congenital heart defects when used before 10 weeks gestation 1, 2
- Dosing: 8 mg orally every 8 hours, or 16 mg orally as single dose then 8 mg twice daily 2
- IV dosing: 8 mg IV or 0.15 mg/kg IV as single dose 2
- Use on a case-by-case basis before 10 weeks of pregnancy, though recent data suggest the risk is low 1, 2
- Monitor for QT interval prolongation, especially in patients with electrolyte abnormalities 1
Third-Line Therapy (Severe Refractory Cases Only)
Methylprednisolone should be reserved as last resort for severe hyperemesis that fails other therapies 1, 2
- Dosing: 16 mg IV every 8 hours for up to 3 days, then taper over 2 weeks to lowest effective dose, maximum duration 6 weeks 1, 2
- Use with caution in first trimester due to slight increased risk of cleft palate when given before 10 weeks gestation 1
- Reduces rehospitalization rates in severe refractory cases 1
Dietary and Supportive Measures
Non-Pharmacological Interventions
- Small, frequent, bland meals using the BRAT diet (bananas, rice, applesauce, toast) 1
- High-protein, low-fat meals 1
- Avoidance of specific food triggers and strong odors 1
- Ginger supplementation 250 mg capsule four times daily may be considered 1
Critical Monitoring Parameters
Regular Assessments Should Include:
- Hydration status and electrolyte balance 1, 2
- Symptom control using PUQE score serially to track trajectory 1, 2
- Weight monitoring—weight stabilization or gain (not continued loss) is a critical marker of clinical improvement 1
- Resolution of ketonuria as an objective marker of improvement 1
- Fetal growth monitoring, especially if insufficient gestational weight gain, with monthly fetal growth scans from viability in severe cases 1, 2
When to Escalate Care
Indications for Hospitalization
- Frequent vomiting (≥5-7 episodes daily) despite maximal antiemetics 1
- Progressive weight loss ≥5% of pre-pregnancy weight 1
- Inability to maintain oral intake of 1000 kcal/day for several days 1
- Persistent ketonuria despite outpatient management 1
Multidisciplinary Involvement
Severe cases require involvement of obstetricians, gastroenterologists, nutritionists, and mental health professionals, preferably managed at tertiary care centers with multidisciplinary teams experienced in high-risk pregnancies 1, 2
- Mental health support is important as anxiety and depression are common with severe hyperemesis 1
Common Pitfalls to Avoid
- Do not skip the stepwise approach—jumping directly to ondansetron or corticosteroids violates evidence-based guidelines 1
- Do not use PRN or intermittent dosing in refractory cases—switch to around-the-clock scheduled antiemetic administration 1
- Do not delay thiamine supplementation—start immediately, as Wernicke encephalopathy can develop rapidly 1, 2
- Do not continue escalating promethazine doses when side effects emerge—switch to metoclopramide instead 2
Expected Clinical Course
- Symptoms resolve by week 16 in >50% of patients and by week 20 in 80%, though 10% may experience symptoms throughout pregnancy 1, 2
- Recurrence risk in subsequent pregnancies is 40-92% 1, 2
- Early aggressive treatment may prevent progression from mild nausea and vomiting to hyperemesis gravidarum 1
- No significant efficacy difference exists among commonly used antiemetics (metoclopramide, ondansetron, promethazine) based on meta-analysis of 25 studies, so medication selection should be based on safety profile and gestational age 1, 2