This case involves a ten-year-old child who presented to an emergency room with complaints of a three-day history of vomiting and severe headaches. The patient was almost immediately discharged following minimal examination with a presumed case of gastroenteritis diagnosis. The characteristics of the headaches & vomiting were not explored by the treating physician. The patient brought back to an ER by her parents a week later complaining of a 10-day history of vomiting. This represented the second ER visit within 7 days for the same complaints. The patient’s mother told the ER physician that the child was having persistent migraines that precipitated the vomiting episodes. Blood work was ordered which revealed that the patient was severely dehydrated and showed signs of ketonuria. Yet again, the headaches were not explored further and the relationship between the headaches and vomiting was not investigated further. Instead, the patient was again released with a presumed diagnosis of UTI, without any investigation as to the etiology of her recurrent vomiting. The patient presented a third time with complaints of vomiting for 21 days. She was admitted for a gastrointestinal workup. During diagnostic testing, the patient was given IV Morphine as analgesia for the severe headaches. The headaches were not relieved by the Morphine, prompting an order for IV Toradol and head CT scan. The patient’s mother alerted nurses when she noticed that her daughter’s breathing had become “noisy”. The patient was non-responsive and subsequently became apneic. The patient was immediately intubated. The CT scan ordered prior to the respiratory distress revealed transtentorial, cerebellar, and subfalcine herniation related to an obstructing mass within the right lateral ventricle, extending into the foramen of Monro. External ventricular drains were emergently placed. On arrival to the OR, the patient remained unresponsive with fixed and dilated pupils. She never regained consciousness and brain death was confirmed shortly thereafter.