A daily ritual for the predictable, brutal cycles of CVS — not for the storm itself, but for the calm in between, where mitochondrial repair actually happens.
If you live with cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS), you already know the pattern: weeks or months of feeling fine, then a sudden, violent episode of intractable vomiting that lasts hours or days. Then the well period returns. Then the cycle repeats. The unpredictability is exhausting. The medical bills are worse.
Most CVS content is about surviving an episode. This recipe is for the opposite — the inter-episode well periods, where research suggests the right nutritional support may actually reduce the frequency and severity of future episodes.
| ⏱ Prep: 6 min | 👥 Serves: 1 | 💚 Goal: Mitochondrial support | ⭐⭐ Intermediate |
When Migraine and Vomiting Are the Same Disease
For decades, cyclic vomiting syndrome was misunderstood. Pediatricians thought it was a children’s condition. Adult gastroenterologists thought it was psychosomatic. Patients were sent home with anti-anxiety medications and told to relax. Episodes kept coming.
Then in the 1990s, neurologists and gastroenterologists began comparing notes. They noticed that CVS patients had remarkably high rates of migraine — and migraine patients had remarkably high rates of unexplained vomiting episodes. Family histories overlapped. The same medications that worked for migraine prophylaxis (high-dose riboflavin, CoQ10, magnesium) started working for CVS.
Today, CVS is increasingly understood as part of the migraine spectrum, with shared mitochondrial dysfunction and channelopathy mechanisms. This isn’t fringe theory — it’s in the official diagnostic criteria. And it explains why the supplement protocol below is borrowed almost directly from neurology.
Why This Cocktail Works (According to Science)
CVS is fundamentally a problem of mitochondrial energy production combined with migraine-pathway hypersensitivity. Four ingredients in this elixir target both pathways — but only during well periods. Active episodes need IV care, not a smoothie.
- High-dose riboflavin (B2) — Validated in randomized controlled trials in Neurology for migraine prophylaxis at 400 mg/day. Because CVS shares migraine pathways, the same dose has been adopted in pediatric and adult CVS protocols. The catch? It takes 8 to 12 weeks to show prophylactic effect.
- CoQ10 (ubiquinol) — Documented in Cephalalgia for migraine prophylaxis, with emerging data in CVS. Acts as a mitochondrial cofactor in the electron transport chain — directly addressing the energy production defect at the heart of CVS.
- L-carnitine — Research in the Journal of Inherited Metabolic Disease shows L-carnitine supports mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation. Many CVS patients have subtle carnitine deficiencies, particularly children, and supplementation has reduced episode frequency in clinical case series.
- Magnesium glycinate — Documented in Headache for migraine prophylaxis and smooth muscle calming. Many CVS patients run low on intracellular magnesium between episodes.
| 💡 Did You Know? About 1 in 50 children and 1 in 100 adults experience cyclic vomiting syndrome — yet diagnosis is typically delayed by 5 to 8 years. Most patients are sent through 6 or more specialists before someone connects the dots to migraine pathways. The condition is in the Rome IV diagnostic criteria, but most ER doctors have never read them. |

Recipe: Cycle Calm Restore
| ⏱ Prep: 6 min | 👥 Serves: 1 (10 oz) | 🟡 Intermediate | 💚 Gut & Detox |
Ingredients
- 6 oz cooled ginger tea (steep 1 bag in 8 oz hot water 8 min, cool 5 min)
- 2 oz filtered water
- 1 oz aloe vera inner leaf juice (decolorized — Whole Foods)
- 100 mg liquid CoQ10 ubiquinol (Jarrow QH-Absorb)
- 400 mg riboflavin (B2) — capsule contents (Solgar)
- 1 g L-carnitine tartrate powder (NOW Foods)
- 400 mg magnesium glycinate powder (Doctor’s Best)
- 1 drop stevia (optional)
Instructions
- Brew ginger tea: steep 1 ginger tea bag in 8 oz hot water for 8 minutes. Strain, cool 5 minutes, reserve 6 oz.
- In a 10 oz glass, combine the cooled ginger tea, 2 oz filtered water, and 1 oz decolorized aloe vera juice.
- Add 100 mg liquid CoQ10 ubiquinol, the contents of one 400 mg riboflavin capsule, 1 g L-carnitine tartrate, and 400 mg magnesium glycinate. Whisk vigorously for 30 seconds.
💡 Tip: Riboflavin will turn the drink a noticeable yellow-green — that’s normal and harmless.
- Add 1 drop stevia if desired. The final color should be pale gold-green.
- Sip slowly mid-morning during well periods, daily for 12+ weeks. B2 needs 2 to 3 months for measurable prophylactic effect — patience is part of the protocol.
Variations
| 🌱 Vegan | ❄️ Iced | 💪 Boosted |
| 100% plant-based as written. | Adapts beautifully to chilled — gentler if any nausea sensitivity remains. | Add 200 mg PQQ — supports mitochondrial biogenesis (the regeneration of new mitochondria). |
Try It This Week
Start tomorrow morning. Mark week 12 on your calendar. The B2 isn’t fast — it’s patient, and so is your future self.
📌 Save this recipe on Pinterest for later — track your episode frequency in a journal alongside it.
| ⚠️ Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute medical advice. It is NOT intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent cyclic vomiting syndrome. This recipe is for stable inter-episode well periods only — never during an active vomiting episode, when no oral intake should be attempted. Always consult your gastroenterologist or neurologist before adding supplements, especially if you take prophylactic medications such as amitriptyline, cyproheptadine, or topiramate. |













