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Molly Maloof, MD

Director of Clinical Content
@DoctorBase

vomiting

Everytime I eat hot food and drink cold liquid I throw up
Poster
  • Male | 59 years old
  • Complaint duration: 22 days
  • Medications: None
  • Conditions: No

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Featured Answer

1 UpVoted this answer
Two important problems may be suggested by these common symptoms. Inflammation of the food pipe called the esophagus may disrupt the flow of the food or drink. Erosive Esophagitis is a serious condition that is often overlooked or self-treated with antacids such as TUMS. It can lead to esophagus cancer, narrowing of the esophagus, and blood loss. Esophageal spasm is the second condition that leads to such symptoms. It is not as serious in consequence but can feel awful. It can lead to swallowing complaints or chest pain. Your symptoms should be evaluated by an expert gastroenterologist who can perform an exam, do lab work for signs of inflammation or anemia, and then examine the lining of your gastrointestinal tract with an endoscopy. If the endoscopy findings are not serious then an esophageal manometry may be valuable to check for spasm of the food pipe.
1 UpVoted this answer
The obvious answer would be to stop eating hot food and drink cold liquids. The other option would be to try Constitutional Homeopathic Medicine, a harmless medicine that has been successfully used for centuries. Try a practitioner that does only that. Nature in its wisdom uses as little as possible of anything, homeopathy as well shares that wisdom, and uses Nano-doses with no side effects. A symptom should not be suppressed for it is our only reliable source of information, it should be seen as our body's best effort in its defenses against the "dis-ease." I wish you well!

“Aude sapere”: Dare to know, to taste, and to understand. Open a new chapter to your life.
John Kouame
1 UpVoted this answer
I strongly suggest that you see a licensed physician as soon as possible as there are various issues that can cause this problem. (As well as complications if left untreated).

Pharyngeal and/or esophageal spasms are possibilities. I've also seen similar signs in people with severe Helicobacter Pylori infection of the stomach.Oher causes include gastroenteritis (whether bacterial, viral or parasitic), functional gastroduodenal disorders, gastroparesis (gastric motor dysfunction), gastroesophageal reflux disorder, gastric outlet obstruction (pyloric stenosis), and others. There are also neurological dysfunctions of the brain and nerve pathways (area postrema in the floor of the fourth ventricle which contains a "chemoreceptor trigger zone", an area in the medulla known as the nucleus tractus solitarius which may serve as a central pattern generator for vomiting, hypersensitivity of the vagal afferent nerves, as well as dysfunction of neurons that ascend to the paraventricular nuclei of the hypothalamus and the limbic and cortical regions, where gastric electromechanical events are perceived. In other words...the causes could be anywhere from simple to complex...so you need to see a licensed physician as soon as possible and he or she may opt to refer you to a gastroenterologist if they feel that your problem is beyond their scope of practice.
Jorge A. Sabin
Your body is trying to tell you something. First of all cold drinks are not good to intake for digestion purposes because they slow digestion. You should probably get an evaluation from a Traditional Naturopath to see what if any food allergy or other inbalance is going on with your body systems. Good Luck...
Firstly must be careful not to consume hot or cold food..

Then you should see a specialist in Gastroenterology
M. Hakan Dural
You either have an obstruction or a luver problem.

Might want to get that checked.
Interesting. I would get an up GI done to rule out any esophageal spasms.
You could be eating too fast or drinking too fast. If this is not the case, you need to visit your physician and have them check the valve at the bottom of the esophagus to make sure it is working properly. I think this would be a gastroenterologist, but not sure.
In so doing, you are causing spasm in the diaphragm leading to vomiting ?

So, as they say:" don't do that! "
Don Ha
You can visit you GI (stomach) doctor. The Vagus nerve can be activated when your throat is irritated... This can lead to a 'gag reflex' or vomiting. But make sure to rule out diabetes, reflux disease, etc.