Abdominal pain
Abdominal pain
Abdominal pain can be characterized by the region it affects. |
ICD-10 |
R10 |
ICD-9 |
789.0 |
Abdominal pain (or stomach ache) can be one of the symptoms associated with transient disorders or serious disease. Making a definitive diagnosis of the cause of abdominal pain can be difficult, because many diseases can result in this symptom. Abdominal pain is a common problem. Most frequently the cause is benign and/or self-limited, but more serious causes may require urgent intervention.
Differential diagnosis
- Gastrointestinal
- GI tract
- Inflammatory: gastroenteritis, appendicitis, gastritis, esophagitis, diverticulitis, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, microscopic colitis
- Obstruction: hernia, intussusception, volvulus, post-surgical adhesions, tumours, superior mesenteric artery syndrome, severe constipation, hemorrhoids
- Vascular: embolism, thrombosis, hemorrhage, sickle cell disease, abdominal angina, blood vessel compression (such as celiac artery compression syndrome), Postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome
- digestive: peptic ulcer, lactose intolerance, coeliac disease, food allergies
- Glands
- Bile system
- Liver
- Pancreatic
- Renal and urological
- Gynaecological or obstetric
- Abdominal wall
- Referred pain
- Metabolic disturbance
- Blood vessels
- Immune system
- Idiopathic
- irritable bowel syndrome (affecting up to 20% of the population, IBS is the most common cause of recurrent, intermittent abdominal pain)
Acute abdominal pain
Acute abdomen can be defined as severe, persistent abdominal pain of sudden onset that is likely to require surgical intervention to treat its cause. The pain may frequently be associated with nausea and vomiting, abdominal distention, fever and signs of shock. One of the most common conditions associated with acute abdominal pain is acute appendicitis.
Selected causes of acute abdomen
By location
Location[1]
- Upper middle abdominal pain
- Upper right abdominal pain
- Liver (caused by hepatomegaly due to fatty liver, hepatitis, or caused by liver cancer, abscess)
- Gallbladder and biliary tract (gallstones, inflammation, roundworms)
- Colon pain (below the area of liver - bowel obstruction, functional disorders, gas accumulation, spasm, inflammation, colon cancer)
- Upper left abdominal pain
- Spleen pain (splenomegaly)
- Pancreas
- Colon pain (below the area of spleen - bowel obstruction, functional disorders, gas accumulation, spasm, inflammation, colon cancer)
- Middle abdominal pain (pain in the area around belly button)
- Appendicitis (starts here)
- Small intestine pain (inflammation, intestinal spasm, functional disorders)
- Lower right abdominal pain
- Lower left abdominal pain
- Sigmoid colon (polyp, sigmoid volvulus, obstruction or gas accumulation)
- Pelvic pain
- Right lumbago and back pain
- liver pain (hepatomegaly)
- right kidney pain (its location below the area of liver pain)
- Left lumbago and back pain
- less in spleen pain
- left kidney pain
- Low back pain
Diagnostic approach
When a physician assesses a patient to determine the etiology and subsequent treatment for abdominal pain the patient's history of the presenting complaint and physical examination should derive a diagnosis in over 90% of cases.
It is important also for a physician to remember that abdominal pain can be caused by problems outside the abdomen, especially heart attacks and pneumonias which can occasionally present as abdominal pain.
Investigations that would aid diagnosis include
If diagnosis remains unclear after history, examination and basic investigations as above then more advanced investigations may reveal a diagnosis. These as such would include
Management
Butylscopolamine (Buscopan) is used to treat cramping abdominal pain with some success.[2]
References
- ^ Richard F.LeBlond (in English). Diagnostics. US: McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc.. ISBN 0-07-140923-8.
- ^ Tytgat GN (2007). "Hyoscine butylbromide: a review of its use in the treatment of abdominal cramping and pain". Drugs 67 (9): 1343–57. PMID 17547475.
Further reading
- Boyle, J. T.; Hamel-Lambert, J. (2001). "Biopsychosocial issues in functional abdominal pain". Pediatr Ann 30 (1): 32–40. PMID 11195732. .
|
|
By region/system |
|
|
Tests |
|
|
Related concepts |
|
|
|
anat(n/s/m/p/4/e/b/d/c/a/f/l/g)/phys/devp
|
noco(m/d/e/h/v/s)/cong/tumr, sysi/epon, injr
|
proc, drug(N1A/2AB/C/3/4/7A/B/C/D)
|
|
|
anat(h/r/t/c/b/l/s/a)/phys(r)/devp/prot/nttr/nttm/ntrp
|
noco/auto/cong/tumr, sysi/epon, injr
|
|
|
|
|