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Abdominal Pain

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Note: there are separate articles on Abdominal Pain in Children and Abdominal Pain in Pregnancy.

Abdominal pain emergencies1

The most urgent problems to identify are:

Pitfalls:

  • The diagnosis can be masked by atypical symptoms – see presentation section.
  • Other acute problems can become life-threatening if neglected, e.g. appendicitis, cholecystitis.

Initial management:

  • Primary survey using ABCD resuscitation principles.
  • Give oxygen.
  • If there is hypovolaemic shock, give fluids until the radial pulse is palpable.
  • Pregnant women need resuscitation in the left lateral position if the uterus is palpable above the umbilicus (to prevent hypotension from IVC obstruction).
  • Refer/transfer immediately: start resuscitation while awaiting transport, but do not delay transfer.
  • Pain relief: see management section.

Aetiology

Causes of abdominal pain - by abdomen regions

Right subcostal

Lung lower lobe, liver, gallbladder, biliary tract, duodenum

Epigastrium

Heart, oesophagus, stomach, pancreas

  • Myocardial infarction
  • Pre-eclampsia
  • Gastritis, oesophagitis, peptic ulcer
  • Pancreatitis, pancreatic tumours
  • Oesophageal or gastric cancer

Left subcostal

Lung lower lobe, spleen, stomach


  • Pneumonia, pleurisy or pulmonary embolus
  • Spenomegaly, splenic rupture
  • Gastritis, peptic ulcer
  • Right flank, left loin

    Right kidney and upper ureter, aorta

    Central abdomen

    Small bowel, lymph nodes, pancreas


    Left flank, left loin

    Left kidney and upper ureter, aorta



    • Aortic aneurysm
    • Pyelonephritis, renal stones, renal or adrenal tumours

    Right iliac fossa

    Appendix, caecum, ureter, ovary, fallopian tube

    Lower abdomen

    Bladder, colon, rectum, uterus

    • Colon/rectum: diverticular disease, ulcerative colitis, tumours
    • Urinary retention, UTI
    • Obstetric: miscarriage, labour, placental abruption, uterine rupture
    • Gynaecological: pelvic infection, endometritis, dysmenorrhoea, ovulation pain
    • Left iliac fossa

      Colon, ureter, ovary, fallopian tube



      • Gynaecological: ectopic pregnancy
        Pelvic infection (usually bilateral)
        Ovarian cysts and tumours, ovulation pain
      • Colon: diverticular disease, ulcerative colitis, tumours
      • Renal stones, UTI
      • Hernia (inguinal/femoral)

      Diffuse pain or variable locations

      Assessment1

      Note: pitfalls in diagnosis

      Some serious pathologies may present with subtle symptoms, or may mimic non-severe problems:

      • Ectopic pregnancy:
        • Can present with syncope, urinary or bowel symptoms; adnexal tenderness may be absent.
        • A bleeding ectopic may present with only subtle changes in vital signs.
        • History of 'missed period' may be absent if vaginal bleeding is mistaken for a normal period.
      • Appendicitis and ectopic pregnancy may cause misleading urinary symptoms and positive dipstick results - this is due to the pelvic irritation involved.
      • Ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm:
        • Can mimic renal colic2 - always consider this in older patients; be aware that haematuria can occur with leaking aneurysms as well as from renal causes.
        • Often presents with back pain.
      • Pre-eclampsia can present with hepatic or epigastric pain.
      • Testicular torsion may present with abdominal rather than scrotal pain.
      • Mesenteric infarction is easily missed - has few signs until shock develops.
      • Acute pancreatitis - when severe, presents with very ill patient and mimics other urgent surgical/medical problems, e.g. ruptured aortic aneurysm, MI.
      • Children, those with learning difficulties and the elderly are harder to assess.
      • Steroids can mask signs of peritonism.
      • Be aware of "medical" problems presenting with abdominal pain.

      History

      • Pain: onset, nature, time course, radiation.
      • Women: is pregnancy possible? LMP date, was this a normal period?
      • Related symptoms: dysphagia, vomiting, anorexia, micturition and bowels, bleeding, systemic symptoms, weight loss.
      • Past medical history, recent injury or surgery, medication, allergies, last meal.

      Examination

      • Note if well or ill, vital signs; chest exam if appropriate.
      • Abdominal examination including hernial orifices.
      • Urinalysis +/- bedside urine pregnancy test.
      • Consider rectal and/or pelvic examination:
        • In the community these may be difficult, and should be omitted unless they are likely to add useful diagnostic information that might prevent hospital referral.
        • Never do vaginal examination if placenta praevia suspected (vaginal bleeding in 2nd half of pregnancy) - it could cause a massive bleed.
      Investigations

      Initial investigations

      • Pregnancy tests:
        • Urine β-HCG tests are sensitive, detecting β-HCG at 25 iu/L (a level normally reached 9 days post-conception).3 Serum testing detects levels down to 5 iu/L. Usually, a urine test is sufficient screening, but if pregnancy or ectopic pregnancy are strongly suspected with a negative urine test, serum testing is definitive.4
        • Serial serum β-HCGs aid diagnosis and management decisions for suspected ectopic pregnancy and miscarriage.3
      • ECG - for cardiac ischaemia or preoperative.
      • Blood tests - cross-match if bleeding; full blood count, renal and liver function, glucose; consider sickle test, calcium, amylase, hepatitis serology, ESR/CRP, bicarbonate. Do serial serum β-HCG for suspected ectopic.
      • Urine - microscopy and culture (plus dipstick and pregnancy test, above).
      • X-ray (if pregnancy excluded) - upright chest X-ray if suspected perforation (to show air under diaphragm); upright abdominal x-ray for obstruction (may show air-fluid levels).

      Further investigations

      • Pelvic ultrasound gives useful information in most gynaecological/obstetric problems. Transvaginal ultrasound may be more helpful in early pregnancy.
      • Abdominal ultrasound useful for masses, organomegaly, ascites, abscess; may show acute appendicitis.
      • CT or MRI: CT is increasingly used in diagnosis of acute abdominal pain.
      • Endoscopy.
      • Diagnostic laparoscopy (followed by laparoscopic surgery if appropriate).
      Management

      In the primary care or A&E setting, use "management of uncertainty" principles. Rather than making a diagnosis, it is more important to decide whether the patient needs surgery, admission or further investigation - and how urgently.1

      • Identify emergencies and resuscitate/transfer (see emergencies box).
      • Pain relief may be needed:
        • Intravenous opiate analgesia can be given, but titrate small doses and monitor BP in unstable patients.1
        • Evidence suggests that pain relief does not adversely affect clinical assessment; it can remove harmful physiological stresses and can improve accuracy of examination.5
      • Have a low threshold for referring/admitting children, the elderly,1,6 and others where diagnosis may be difficult, e.g. those with learning difficulties.
      • The clinical picture can change over time - re-assessment is an important tool.1
      • Consider referral/admission if a patient re-consults with undiagnosed pain.1
      • 'Safety-net' if discharging the patient so they understand when to seek help.

      Document references
      1. Gray J, Wardrope J, Fothergill DJ; Abdominal pain, abdominal pain in women, complications of pregnancy and labour. Emerg Med J. 2004 Sep;21(5):606-13.
      2. Eckford SD, Gillatt DA; Abdominal aortic aneurysms presenting as renal colic. Br J Urol. 1992 Nov;70(5):496-8. [abstract]
      3. The management of early pregnancy loss, Royal College of Obstretricians and Gynaecologists (2006)
      4. Murray H, Baakdah H, Bardell T, et al; Diagnosis and treatment of ectopic pregnancy. CMAJ. 2005 Oct 11;173(8):905-12. [abstract]
      5. Zoltie N, Cust MP; Analgesia in the acute abdomen. Ann R Coll Surg Engl. 1986 Jul;68(4):209-10. [abstract]
      6. Laurell H, Hansson LE, Gunnarsson U; Acute abdominal pain among elderly patients. Gerontology. 2006;52(6):339-44. Epub 2006 Aug 11. [abstract]
      Acknowledgements EMIS is grateful to Dr N Hartree for writing this article. The final copy has passed scrutiny by the independent Mentor GP reviewing team. ©EMIS 2009.
      Document ID: 1735
      Document Version: 22
      Document Reference: bgp1820
      Last Updated: 22 Jul 2008
      Planned Review: 22 Jul 2010

      The authors and editors of this article are employed to create accurate and up to date content reflecting reliable research evidence, guidance and best clinical practice. They are free from any commercial conflicts of interest. Find out more about updating.

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