E N D
1. Abdominal Pain This slide set provides an overview of pediatric gastroesophageal reflux (GER). Information on the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and clinical manifestations of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) are reviewed. Recommendations for the evaluation and management of infants and children with GER are presented, based on the clinical practice guidelines of the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (NASPGHAN) [1].
The NASPGHAN guidelines, which are evidence based, were published in 2001 in the Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition and are also available on www.naspghan.org (click on “Medical Professionals” and then “Position Papers”).
Reference
1. Rudolph C, Mazur LJ, Liptak GS, Baker R, Boyle JT, Colletti RB, Gerson W, Werlin S. Evaluation and treatment of gastroesophageal reflux in infants and children: recommendations of the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 2001;32:S1-31.This slide set provides an overview of pediatric gastroesophageal reflux (GER). Information on the epidemiology, pathophysiology, and clinical manifestations of gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD) are reviewed. Recommendations for the evaluation and management of infants and children with GER are presented, based on the clinical practice guidelines of the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition (NASPGHAN) [1].
The NASPGHAN guidelines, which are evidence based, were published in 2001 in the Journal of Pediatric Gastroenterology and Nutrition and are also available on www.naspghan.org (click on “Medical Professionals” and then “Position Papers”).
Reference
1. Rudolph C, Mazur LJ, Liptak GS, Baker R, Boyle JT, Colletti RB, Gerson W, Werlin S. Evaluation and treatment of gastroesophageal reflux in infants and children: recommendations of the North American Society for Pediatric Gastroenterology, Hepatology and Nutrition. J Pediatr Gastroenterol Nutr 2001;32:S1-31.
2. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 2 Abdominal Pain-A Practical Guide to Differential Diagnosis:Outline Causes (GI & non-GI)
Acute Vs. Chronic
Epigastric pain
RUQ pain
Mid to lower Abd. Pain
RLQ pain
Chronic & recurrent abdominal pain. C&RAP
3. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 3 Abdominal Pain Common GI Associations Functional abdominal pain (non-organic)
Gastroenteritis
Constipation
PUD: Gastritis, ulcer, GERD
Lactose intolerance IBD
Liver biliary diseases
Parasitic infections
Intussusception
Surgical diseases: Appendicitis, Intestinal obstruction, Incarcerated hernia, volvulus (malrotation)
4. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 4 Abdominal Pain Common non-GI Associations Lower respiratory infections
Renal diseases (obstruction, infection)
Urological diseases
Gynecological diseases
Sickle cell anemia
Endocrine diseases
HSP (Henoch Schonlein Purpura)
5. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 5 Abdominal Pain Abdominal pain can be perceived by autonomic sensory pathways from:
The abdominal viscera
Somatic sensory pathways from the parietal peritoneum,
Abdominal wall
Retro peritoneal skeletal muscles
Referred pain: due to local irritation with referral along the pathway of innervations of the organ.
6. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 6 Abdominal Pain: Visceral pain In response to
Stretching (distention)
Inflammation
Ischemia
Dull or aching sensation, poorly localized
7. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 7 Abdominal Pain: Visceral pain
Epigastric: Foregut, liver, biliary tree, pancreas
Periumbilical: Midgut
Suprapubic: Hindgut, urinary tract, genitals Foregut: Distal esophagus till duodenum, Midgut: Jejunum till 2/3 T. colon, Hindgut: distal 1/3 T.colon till rectosigmoidForegut: Distal esophagus till duodenum, Midgut: Jejunum till 2/3 T. colon, Hindgut: distal 1/3 T.colon till rectosigmoid
8. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 8 Abdominal Pain: Somatic pain Somatic pain is well localized and intense (often sharp) in character.
An intra-abdominal process will manifest somatic pain if an inflammatory process affecting a viscus touches a somatic organ (ie, the anterior parietal peritoneum or abdominal wall).
Associated with voluntary guarding, or involuntary rigidity.
9. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 9 Abdominal Pain: Referred pain
The classic example of referred abdominal pain is pneumonia. ( the shared central projections of the parietal pleura of the lung and the abdominal wall)
10. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 10 Abdominal Pain
All three types of pain may be modified by a child’s level of tolerance, development , psychogenic and environmental factors which may augment or inhibit the perception of pain.
11. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 11 Abdominal Pain-A Practical Guide to Differential Diagnosis
Acute pain (recent)
Chronic & Recurrent Abdominal Pain (C&RAP)
12. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 12 Organic: Epigastric Pain GERD
Gastritis
Ulcer disease
H. pylori
Pancreatitis
13. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 13 GERD, Gastritis, Ulcer Pain is epigastric
Regurgitation, retrosternal pain
Pain after meals
Awaken at night
Vomiting
Positive family history
Recent viral infection
Response to antacids, H2 blockers or PPI
14. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 14 Diagnosis of GERD, Gastritis, Ulcer 24 hour pH probe
Upper Endoscopy
H. pylori IgG antibodies
Urea breath test
Trial on H2 blocker or PPI for 2-4 weeks
15. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 15 Pancreatitis Pain is epigastric or mid abdomen
Etiology – idiopathic, viral infection, trauma,, drugs, biliary tract disease, hyperlipidemeia
Family history
Jaundice
Diagnosis: lipase/amylase, liver transaminases, U/S, CT, ERCP, MRCP
16. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 16 Right Upper Quadrant Pain Liver
Biliary tree
17. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 17 Hepatitis Pain is RUQ
Nausea, anorexia, vomiting
May be anicteric
RUQ tenderness, tender hepatomegaly
Diagnosis
Elevated liver transaminases
Specific hepatitis antibodies (Hep A-E, EBV, CMV)
18. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 18 Biliary Tract Disease Pain is RUQ/epigastric
Increases for 10-20 minutes, lasts 1-2 hours
Radiates to back or shoulder
Risk factors - obesity, family history, short gut, TPN, hemolysis, CF, Crohn’s disease
Diagnosis: lipase/amylase, Liver transaminases, U/S, CT, ERCP
19. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 19 Mid to Lower Abdominal Pain Constipation
Parasitic infection
Lactose intolerance
Air swallowing
Urinary tract obstruction
20. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 20 Constipation Pain is lower or moves
History may be poor
You have to ask specifically about bowel movements
Abdominal/rectal exam - variable findings
Therapeutic trial
21. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 21 Parasitic Infection Pain is mid to lower abdomen
Common causes - Giardia, Cryptosporidium.
Anorexia, bloating, diarrhea
Diagnosis: Stool O&P, Giardia antigen
22. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 22 Lactose Intolerance The second most common cause of abdominal pain in childhood.
In affected children lactase activity is genetically programmed to begin to decrease at 4-6 yr of age.
If milk drinking continues at a constant rate, the enzyme activity will not be sufficient to hydrolyze the entire amount of lactose ingested.If milk drinking continues at a constant rate, the enzyme activity will not be sufficient to hydrolyze the entire amount of lactose ingested.
23. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 23 Lactose Intolerance As a result, some lactose spills into the distal small bowel and colon, where it is fermented by bacteria
Gases such as hydrogen and carbon dioxide are produced.
Gas production causes intestinal dilatation & pain.
24. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 24 Lactose Intolerance
Diarrhea results from the osmotic effect of the unabsorbed sugar and its fermentative products.
Early in the development of lactose intolerance, pain may be the sole symptom.
25. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 25 Lactose Intolerance Pain is lower to mid abdomen
Occurs 1-3 hours after ingesting milk or ice cream
Diarrhea less common in older children
26. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 26 Lactose Intolerance: Diagnosis Diagnosis
Elimination diet for 2 weeks
If the abdominal pain disappears, the diagnosis can be suspected.
It should be confirmed by giving the child lactose again and observing for exacerbation of symptoms.
27. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 27 Lactose Intolerance: Diagnosis
This cycle should be completed twice to ensure that lactose intolerance is present.
28. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 28 Lactose Intolerance: Management Lactose intolerance is a dose-related phenomenon, most children can tolerate some lactose-containing foods.
Low-lactose dairy products (e.g., cheese) should be reintroduced as tolerated. Low-lactose dairy products (e.g., cheese) should be reintroduced as tolerated, which would preclude the need for calcium supplementation.
Low-lactose dairy products (e.g., cheese) should be reintroduced as tolerated, which would preclude the need for calcium supplementation.
29. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 29 Urinary Tract Disease Pain is periumbilical, flank, lower abdomen
Signs of infection
Fever
Vomiting
Urgency, bed wetting
UPJ obstruction
Diagnosis: urinalysis, urine culture, U/S
30. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 30 Right Lower Quadrant Pain
Appendicitis
Mesenteric lymphadenitis
Crohn’s disease
Gynecological problems
31. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 31 Mesenteric Adenitis Pain is RLQ
Following viral respiratory illness, Yersinia enterocolitica
Fever, vomiting, diarrhea
Time course 2-4 weeks
Diagnosis by exclusion: CBC, urine, stool studies, U/S, barium contrast studies
32. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 32 Gynecologic Pain Pain is RLQ or LLQ
Diagnosis: GYN evaluation and pelvic U/S Dysmenorrhea
Endometriosis
Benign ovarian cysts do not cause pain
Dysmenorrhea
Endometriosis
Benign ovarian cysts do not cause pain
33. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 33 Crohn’s Disease Pain may be any location, but RLQ common
Oral ulcers, arthritis, growth failure, fever, perianal disease
Family history
Diagnosis: CBC, sed rate, upper GI/small bowel series, Endoscopy
34. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 34 Musculoskeletal Pain Engaged in intensive exercise training programs, history of new exercise, injury
These exercises result in strained muscles and chronic myositis of specific muscle bundles.
The pain usually is described as sharp or knifelike
Triggered by various activities or body positions.
35. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 35 Musculoskeletal Pain It is usually located at the insertion of the rectus or oblique muscles into the costal margin (upper or mid abdomen, lower chest) or iliac crest.
Palpating along these insertions with a fair degree of pressure may reproduces the pain and establishes the diagnosis.
Rectus abdominus stretch may also reveal pain
Rectus abdominus stretch may also reveal pain
36. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 36 Musculoskeletal Pain
If the abdominal muscles are tightened during the physical examination and the pain still is reproduced by palpation, the origin undoubtedly is musculoskeletal.
37. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 37 C&RAP
J. Apley: Definition of RAP
Intermittent abdominal pain in children between the ages of 4 and 16 years that persists more than three months and affects normal activity
(The Child With Abdominal Pains. London, 1975, Blackwell Scientific)
38. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 38 Chronic &Recurrent Abdominal Pain (C&RAP)
10-15% of school children.
Most common age is 5-14yr (school age)
5 - 6 years of age both sexes affected equally
After this age, incidence greater in girls
Organic cause in 10%.
Often disease of child & family.
39. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 39 Chronic &Recurrent Abdominal Pain (C&RAP)
Functional pain is the most common cause of C&RAP
40. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 40 C&RAPClinical manifestations Location: peri-umbilical.
Gradual onset, crampy, daily or several times a week, variable severity.
Interferes with activity.
Normal growth.
Rarely awakened at night.
41. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 41 C&RAPClinical manifestations
Physical Exam
Abdominal tenderness is common, but mild.
No guarding or rebound.
Rectal exam may reveal pellet like stools.
42. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 42 C&RAP Psychological Factors
Primary or adaptive.
Children may be overly sensitive / insecure.
Often positive family history of IBS.
Specific stress factors e.g death, marital discord, divorce, changing school.
43. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 43 C&RAP:Work-Up CBC, ESR
Amylase, lipase
Guaiac stool
O&P, Giardia Ag
U/A, U Cx
Lactose hydrogen breath test.
Imaging
Endoscopy
44. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 44 C&RAP: Red flags Under 4 yrs of age.
Pain away from peri-umbilical area.
Weight loss, growth failure
Bilious emesis (contains biliary fluids, green)
Fever
Awakened at night.
Perianal disease
Anemia
?sedimentation rate
Occult blood in stool
45. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 45 C&RAP Management Primary objective is to return to normal activities.
The Dx of functional pain is a positive Dx.
Reassure the child and family that pain is real and abdominal in origin.
Explain pathophysiology.
Introduce the idea at the first visit.
F\U visits is necessary.
46. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 46 C&RAP Management The child must attend school or seen by their physician.
A visit to the school nurse should be allowed, but not to be send home unless “truly” sick, e.g fever, vomiting.
Medications do not help symptoms.
If the pain is severe acetaminophen may be used
Antimotility agents usually are ineffective.
High fiber diet may be helpful
Psychological help to cope with pain.
47. 25-Jul-12 © M.Miqdady, M.D. 47 C&RAP Prognosis Many adults with IBS report that their symptoms began in childhood
RAP and IBS may be the same syndrome at different developmental stages
It has been observed that RAP and IBS often “run in the family”
(Rasquin-Weber A. Gut 1999;45 Suppl 2:60)
(Hyams JS. J Pediatr 1996;129:220)