Abdominal pain
Abdominal pain, also known as a stomach ache, is a symptom associated with both non-serious and serious medical issues. Since the abdomen contains most of the body's vital organs, it can be an indicator of a wide variety of diseases. Given that, approaching the examination of a person and planning of a differential diagnosis is extremely important.
Common causes of pain in the abdomen include gastroenteritis and irritable bowel syndrome. About 15% of people have a more serious underlying condition such as appendicitis, leaking or ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm, diverticulitis, or ectopic pregnancy. In a third of cases, the exact cause is unclear.
Signs and symptoms
The onset of abdominal pain can be abrupt, quick, or gradual. Sudden onset pain happens in a split second. Rapidly onset pain starts mild and gets worse over the next few minutes. Pain that gradually intensifies only after several hours or even days has passed is referred to as gradual onset pain.One can describe abdominal pain as either continuous or sporadic and as cramping, dull, or aching. The characteristic of cramping abdominal pain is that it comes in brief waves, builds to a peak, and then abruptly stops for a period during which there is no more pain. The pain flares up and off periodically. The most common cause of persistent dull or aching abdominal pain is edema or distention of the wall of a hollow viscus. A dull or aching pain may also be felt due to a stretch in the liver and spleen capsules.
Causes
The most frequent reasons for abdominal pain are gastroenteritis, irritable bowel syndrome, urinary tract problems, inflammation of the stomach and constipation. In about 30% of cases, the cause is not determined. About 10% of cases have a more serious cause including gallbladder or pancreas problems, diverticulitis, appendicitis and cancer. More common in those who are older, ischemic colitis, mesenteric ischemia, and abdominal aortic aneurysms are other serious causes.Acute abdomen
is a condition where there is a sudden onset of severe abdominal pain requiring immediate recognition and management of the underlying cause. The underlying cause may involve infection, inflammation, vascular occlusion or bowel obstruction.The pain may elicit nausea and vomiting, abdominal distention, fever and signs of shock. A common condition associated with acute abdominal pain is appendicitis. Here is a list of acute abdomen causes:
Surgical causes
Source:Inflammatory
- Infections such as appendicitis, cholecystitis, pancreatitis, pyelonephritis, Peritonitis, pelvic inflammatory disease, hepatitis, mesenteric adenitis, or a subdiaphragmatic abscess.
- Perforation of a peptic ulcer, a diverticulum, or the caecum.
- Complications of inflammatory bowel disease, such as Crohn's disease or ulcerative colitis.
Mechanical
- Small bowel obstruction secondary to adhesions caused by previous surgeries, intussusception, hernias, benign or malignant neoplasms.
- Large bowel obstruction caused by colorectal cancer, inflammatory bowel disease, volvulus, fecal impaction, or hernia.
Vascular
- occlusive intestinal ischemia, usually caused by thromboembolism of the superior Mesenteric artery.
[Referred pain]
- Viscero-visceral referral: happens when one organ with afferent nerves close to another organ is sensitized or inflamed
- Viscero-somatic referral: any pain in the viscera that causes pain in the muscle, bone, and skin
- Somatic-visceral referral: pain in the skin, muscles, and bone that causes referred pain in the viscera
Medical causes
Acute pancreatitis.
Sickle cell anemia.
Diabetic ketoacidosis.
Adrenal crisis.
Pyelonephritis.
Lead poisoning.
Familial Mediterranean fever.
Gynecological causes
Source:Pelvic inflammatory disease and abscess.
Ectopic pregnancy.
Hemorrhagic ovarian cyst.
Adnexal or ovarian torsion.
By system
A more extensive list includes the following:- Gastrointestinal
- * GI tract
- ** Inflammatory: gastroenteritis, appendicitis, gastritis, esophagitis, diverticulitis, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, microscopic colitis
- ** Obstruction: hernia, intussusception, volvulus, post-surgical adhesions, tumors, severe constipation, hemorrhoids
- ** Vascular: embolism, thrombosis, hemorrhage, sickle cell disease, abdominal angina, blood vessel compression, superior mesenteric artery syndrome, postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome
- ** Digestive: peptic ulcer, lactose intolerance, celiac disease, food allergies, indigestion
- * Glands
- ** Bile system
- *** Inflammatory: cholecystitis, cholangitis
- *** Obstruction: cholelithiasis
- ** Liver
- *** Inflammatory: hepatitis, liver abscess
- ** Pancreatic
- *** Inflammatory: pancreatitis
- Renal and urological
- * Inflammation: pyelonephritis, bladder infection
- * Obstruction: kidney stones, urolithiasis, urinary retention
- * Vascular: left renal vein entrapment
- Gynaecological or obstetric
- * Inflammatory: pelvic inflammatory disease
- * Mechanical: ovarian torsion
- * Endocrinological: menstruation, Mittelschmerz
- * Tumors: endometriosis, fibroids, ovarian cyst, ovarian cancer
- * Pregnancy: ruptured ectopic pregnancy, threatened abortion
- Abdominal wall
- * muscle strain or trauma
- * muscular infection
- * neurogenic pain: herpes zoster, radiculitis in Lyme disease, abdominal cutaneous nerve entrapment syndrome, tabes dorsalis
- Referred pain
- * from the thorax: pneumonia, pulmonary embolism, ischemic heart disease, pericarditis
- * from the spine: radiculitis
- * from the genitals: testicular torsion
- Metabolic disturbance
- * uremia, diabetic ketoacidosis, porphyria, C1-esterase inhibitor deficiency, adrenal insufficiency, lead poisoning, black widow spider bite, narcotic withdrawal
- Blood vessels
- * aortic dissection, abdominal aortic aneurysm
- Immune system
- * sarcoidosis
- * vasculitis
- * familial Mediterranean fever
- Idiopathic
- * irritable bowel syndrome
By location
- Diffuse
- * Peritonitis
- * Vascular: mesenteric ischemia, ischemic colitis, Henoch-Schonlein purpura, sickle cell disease, systemic lupus erythematosus, polyarteritis nodosa
- * Small bowel obstruction
- * Irritable bowel syndrome
- * Metabolic disorders: ketoacidosis, porphyria, familial Mediterranean fever, adrenal crisis
- Epigastric
- * Heart: myocardial infarction, pericarditis
- * Stomach: gastritis, stomach ulcer, stomach cancer
- * Pancreas: pancreatitis, pancreatic cancer
- * Intestinal: duodenal ulcer, diverticulitis, appendicitis
- Right upper quadrant
- * Liver: hepatomegaly, fatty liver, hepatitis, liver cancer, abscess
- * Gallbladder and biliary tract: inflammation, gallstones, worm infection, cholangitis
- * Colon: bowel obstruction, functional disorders, gas accumulation, spasm, inflammation, colon cancer
- * Other: pneumonia, Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome
- Left upper quadrant
- * Splenomegaly
- * Colon: bowel obstruction, functional disorders, gas accumulation, spasm, inflammation, colon cancer
- Peri-umbilical
- * Appendicitis
- * Pancreatitis
- * Inferior myocardial infarction
- * Peptic ulcer
- * Diabetic ketoacidosis
- * Vascular: aortic dissection, aortic rupture
- * Bowel: mesenteric ischemia, Celiac disease, inflammation, intestinal spasm, functional disorders, small bowel obstruction
- Lower abdominal pain
- * Diarrhea
- * Colitis
- * Crohn's
- * Dysentery
- * Hernia
- Right lower quadrant
- * Colon: intussusception, bowel obstruction, appendicitis
- * Renal: kidney stone, pyelonephritis
- * Pelvic: cystitis, bladder stone, bladder cancer, pelvic inflammatory disease, pelvic pain syndrome
- * Gynecologic: endometriosis, intrauterine pregnancy, ectopic pregnancy, ovarian cyst, ovarian torsion, fibroid, abscess, ovarian cancer, endometrial cancer
- Left lower quadrant
- * Bowel: diverticulitis, sigmoid colon volvulus, bowel obstruction, gas accumulation, Toxic megacolon
- Right low back pain
- * Liver: hepatomegaly
- * Kidney: kidney stone, complicated urinary tract infection
- Left low back pain
- * Spleen
- * Kidney: kidney stone, complicated urinary tract infection
- Low back pain
- * Kidney pain
- * Ureteral stone pain
Mechanism
Each subsection of the gut has an associated visceral afferent nerve that transmits sensory information from the viscera to the spinal cord. The visceral sensory information from the gut traveling to the spinal cord, termed the visceral afferent, is non-specific and overlaps with the somatic afferent nerves, which are very specific. Therefore, visceral afferent information traveling to the spinal cord can present in the distribution of the somatic afferent nerve; this is why appendicitis initially presents with T10 periumbilical pain when it first begins and becomes T12 pain as the abdominal wall peritoneum is involved.
Diagnosis
A thorough patient history and physical examination is used to better understand the underlying cause of abdominal pain.The process of gathering a history may include:
- Identifying more information about the chief complaint by eliciting a history of present illness; i.e. a narrative of the current symptoms such as the onset, location, duration, character, aggravating or relieving factors, and temporal nature of the pain. Identifying other possible factors may aid in the diagnosis of the underlying cause of abdominal pain, such as recent travel, recent contact with other ill individuals, and for females, a thorough gynecologic history.
- Learning about the patient's past medical history, focusing on any prior issues or surgical procedures.
- Clarifying the patient's current medication regimen, including prescriptions, over-the-counter medications, and supplements.
- Confirming the patient's drug and food allergies.
- Discussing with the patient any family history of disease processes, focusing on conditions that might resemble the patient's current presentation.
- Discussing with the patient any health-related behaviors that might make certain diagnoses more likely.
- Reviewing the presence of non-abdominal symptoms that can further clarify the diagnostic picture.
- Using Carnett's sign to differentiate between visceral pain and pain originating in the muscles of the abdominal wall.
Additional investigations that can aid diagnosis include:
- Blood tests including complete blood count, basic metabolic panel, electrolytes, liver function tests, amylase, lipase, troponin I, and for females, a serum pregnancy test.
- Urinalysis
- Imaging including chest and abdominal X-rays
- Electrocardiogram
- Computed tomography of the abdomen/pelvis
- Abdominal or pelvic ultrasound
- Endoscopy or colonoscopy