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Approach to Acute Abdominal Pain

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Approach to Acute Abdominal Pain Richard W. Stair, MD Acute Abdominal Pain Approximately 5-10% of ED visits 5 million visits annually Most common diagnosis is ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Approach to Acute Abdominal Pain


1
Approach to Acute Abdominal Pain
  • Richard W. Stair, MD

2
Acute Abdominal Pain
  • Approximately 5-10 of ED visits
  • 5 million visits annually
  • Most common diagnosis is nonspecific abdominal
    pain ( ie, I dunno!)
  • Sex and age shift the likelihood of certain
    diagnoses

3
Abdominal Pain for the AgesCommon Etiologies
  • 0-2 years - colic, gastroenteritis, viral
    illness, constipation
  • 2-12 years - appendicitis, functional disorders,
    gastroenteritis, constipation, viral illness,
    toxins, UTI
  • Teens - as in 2-12 plus dysmenorrhea, PID,
    Mittleshmerz, pregnancy, ovarian cyst

4
Abdominal Pain for the AgesUncommon Etiologies
  • 0-2 years - Hirschsprungs disease, incarcerated
    hernia, intussusception, malabsorption,
    appendicitis, volvulus, milk allergy
  • 2-12 - CF, DM, IBD, Meckels diverticulum,
    ovarian/testicular torsions
  • Teens - colitis, DM, endometriosis, epidydimitis,
    cholecystitis, IBD, torsion

5
BEWARE - Abdominal Pain in the Elderly
  • Many more vague presentations
  • Comorbid diseases
  • Morbidity and mortality rise EXPONENTIALLY after
    age 50
  • Twice as likely to need surgery after age 65
  • Diminished pain sensation

6
Acute Abdominal Pain and Sex
  • Men more frequently seen in the ED, and more
    likely to have a perforated viscus
  • Women are more likely to have cholecystitis,
    diverticulitis, and be D/Cd with nonspecific AP

7
Whats the Problem
  • Imprecise pain generation and transmission to the
    CNS
  • Comorbid diseases, developmental stage of
    patient, medications, social factors
  • The key is understanding types of pain
  • visceral
  • somatic
  • referred

8
Visceral Pain
  • Generated by stretch receptors in the walls of
    hollow viscus and the capsules of solid organs
  • Fibers return to various levels of the
    sympathetic trunk on BOTH sides of the spinal
    cord
  • Poorly described, achy, crampy, diffuse

9
Visceral Pain
  • Levels of visceral innervation
  • C3-5 - liver, spleen, diaphragm, pericardium
  • T5-9 - gallbladder, stomach, pancreas, small
    intestine
  • T10-11 - colon, appendix, pelvic viscera
  • T11-L1 - sigmoid colon, renal capsules, ureters,
    testes
  • S2-4 - urinary bladder

10
Somatic Pain
  • Fibers arise from the parietal peritoneum, the
    rrot of the mesentery, and the anterior abdominal
    wall
  • Innervation corresponds to dermatomes entering
    cord unilaterally
  • Usually sharp, well localized

11
Referred pain
  • Caused by overlap of nerve fibers from different
    locations returning to the spinal cord at the
    same area
  • Pain sensed distal to site of problem
  • Example - L shoulder pain with ruptured spleen,
    remember spleens capsular fibers enter cord at
    C3-5

12
Abdominal Pain - HistoryThink OLD CARS
  • O - onset
  • L - location
  • D - duration
  • C - character
  • A - aggravating/alleviating factors,
    - associated symptoms
  • R - radiation
  • S - severity

13
History - More Info
  • PMH - prior episodes prior medical conditions
    making some diagnoses more common
  • PSH - adhesions 1 cause SBO
  • Medications - NSAIDS, Abx
  • Social - drugs, withdrawal, foreign bodies
  • Gyn/Urol - timing of periods, bleeding,
    testicular pain, bloody urine

14
Physical Exam
  • VITALS
  • General - appears sick or in obvious pain
  • Inspection - bruises, scars, distension
  • Auscultation - hyper, normal, none
  • Palpation - pain vs. tenderness
  • start away from painful area, guarding, etc
  • Extra-abdominal exam

15
Physical Exam Signs
  • Murphys
  • Rovsings
  • Iliopsoas
  • Obturator

16
Ancillary Tests
  • CBC - lacks sensitivity and specificity
  • Labs should be DIRECTED
  • Urine dipsticks
  • Urine hCG

17
Imaging
  • Plain films - obstruction, free air, air-fluid
    levels, foreign bodies
  • CT scanning
  • Ultrasound
  • Nuclear medicine scans (HIDA)
  • Endoscopy

18
DDx - RUQ pain
  • Pneumonia
  • PE
  • hepatitis
  • cholecystitis
  • biliary colic
  • PUD
  • Pancreatitis
  • renal stone
  • pyelonephritis
  • retrocecal appendix
  • heart failure
  • MI

19
DDx - LUQ pain
  • Gastritis
  • gastric ulcer
  • pancreatitis
  • renal stone
  • pyelonephritis
  • Pneumonia
  • PE
  • splenic rupture
  • splenic enlargement
  • diverticulitis

20
DDx - RLQ pain
  • Appendicitis
  • cholecystitis
  • diverticulitis
  • renal stone
  • AAA
  • mesenteric adenitis
  • regional enteritis
  • Meckels diverticulum
  • Testicular torsion
  • epidydimitis
  • salpingitis
  • ectopic pregnancy
  • ovarian cyst
  • Mittleschmertz
  • TOA
  • cystitis
  • prostatitis

21
DDx - LLQ pain
  • AAA
  • renal stone
  • diverticulitis
  • perforation
  • volvulus
  • salpingitis
  • ectopic pregnancy
  • Ovarian cyst
  • Mittleschmertz
  • TOA
  • cystitis
  • prostatitis
  • testicular torsion
  • epidydimitis

22
Management of Acute Abdominal Pain
  • IV access
  • Fluids
  • Emesis Control
  • Analgesia
  • Antibiotics
  • Consultants

23
ACEP Clinical Policy on Acute Abdominal Pain -
Oct 2000
  • Evidence based guidelines and options for many
    Emergency Department presentation

24
Abdominal Pain - Disposition
  • Operating Room
  • Hospital Bed
  • Home with abdominal warnings
  • Remember to beware of the extremes of age
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