When you might feel sick
Sickness can begin at different points of your cancer treatment.
Feeling sick does not happen at the same time for everyone. And you might not feel sick every time you have cancer treatment.
Treatment for feeling or being sick depends on the cause of your sickness and when it starts. Let your doctor or nurse know if you are feeling or being sick. Anti sickness medicines can help.
Sickness straight after treatment
Sickness that starts straight away is called acute onset nausea and vomiting. It may start a few minutes or a few hours after chemotherapy or targeted cancer drug treatment. It usually disappears after 24 hours.
Sickness that starts a day after treatment
Sickness that starts more than 24 hours later is called delayed onset nausea and vomiting. It is most common with the drugs:
-
carboplatin
-
cisplatin
-
cyclophosphamide
-
doxorubicin
It is also more likely with high dose chemotherapy. It might last up to a week after you had your chemotherapy.
You can take anti sickness medicines for a few days after chemotherapy to help delayed onset nausea and vomiting.
Sickness before treatment
Sickness, before you have treatment, is called anticipatory nausea and vomiting. It happens in up to 30 out of 100 people (up to 30%) having cancer drugs. After a few treatments, particularly if their sickness was not controlled well, people start to feel sick and begin vomiting before their next cancer drug treatment.
The reaction is usually caused by something related to the treatment, like the smell of alcohol wipes or the sight of a nurse's uniform. Some people feel sick if they even start to think about their treatment.
Some people are sick as they get to the hospital or when the nurse starts to set up the drip. Your doctor or nurse might give you anti sickness tablets and often another drug such as lorazepam, to take at home before you set off for the hospital for treatment. This medicine may help you relax and feel more able to cope with your treatment.
What can help?
You can try other ways to try and prevent sickness before treatment such as:
- relaxation or guided imagery exercises or recordings
- hypnosis
- behavioural therapies such as cognitive behavioural therapy,
- systematic desensitisation (SD), this is where you imagine your feared or anxiety producing event in gradual steps while you practice relaxation techniques
- distracting yourself with reading, video games, audiobooks, podcasts, music or TV
Treatment for sickness
There are different types of medicines that can help. And there are other ways of controlling sickness due to cancer or its treatment.