oj and nausea
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oj and nausea
My wife has been trying to drink OJ, but it makes her vomit about 1-2 hours after drinking it.
Yesterday I gave her glass from one orange with no OO and she still got sick. any ideas?
Yesterday I gave her glass from one orange with no OO and she still got sick. any ideas?
yesfictor wrote:-Allergic reaction to oranges? Can she eat whole oranges?
yes- (Allergic) reaction to pesticides? Are the oranges organic?
is this possible?- Too acidic for her stomach?
they are really sweet (in my opinion)
no, but she can go with out eating for 2 hours without nausea,-Low blood sugar induced nausea? Does she eat/drink within the 1-2 hours after the juice?
johndela1 wrote:My wife has been trying to drink OJ, but it makes her vomit about 1-2 hours after drinking it.
fictor wrote:Can she eat whole oranges?
Thats really weird.johndela1 wrote:yes
It cannot be the (higher) sugar content, because the vomit response is too much delayed for that.
Did those oranges used for juicing and eating actually from the same supply?
Just a suggestion to out non native English speakers.
to take a small drink of something is a 'sip'
see:
sip (sp)
v. sipped, sip·ping, sips
v.tr.
1. To drink in small quantities.
2. To drink from in sips.
v.intr.
To drink something in sips.
n.
1. The act of sipping.
2. A small quantity of liquid sipped.
and
zip (zp)
n.
1. A brief sharp hissing sound.
2. Energy; vim.
3. A zipper.
4. Slang Nothing; nil; zero: received zip for money after doing the job for them.
v. zipped, zip·ping, zips
v.intr.
1.
a. To move with a sharp hissing sound.
b. To move or act with a speed that suggests such a sound: The cars zipped by endlessly.
2. To act or proceed swiftly and energetically: zipped through her homework.
3. To become fastened or unfastened by a zipper.
v.tr.
1. To give speed and force to.
2. To impart life or zest to.
3. To fasten or unfasten with a zipper.
to take a small drink of something is a 'sip'
see:
sip (sp)
v. sipped, sip·ping, sips
v.tr.
1. To drink in small quantities.
2. To drink from in sips.
v.intr.
To drink something in sips.
n.
1. The act of sipping.
2. A small quantity of liquid sipped.
and
zip (zp)
n.
1. A brief sharp hissing sound.
2. Energy; vim.
3. A zipper.
4. Slang Nothing; nil; zero: received zip for money after doing the job for them.
v. zipped, zip·ping, zips
v.intr.
1.
a. To move with a sharp hissing sound.
b. To move or act with a speed that suggests such a sound: The cars zipped by endlessly.
2. To act or proceed swiftly and energetically: zipped through her homework.
3. To become fastened or unfastened by a zipper.
v.tr.
1. To give speed and force to.
2. To impart life or zest to.
3. To fasten or unfasten with a zipper.