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Abdominal Pain. 10% of Emergency Department visits40% diagnosed as
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1. Abdominal Pain: Laboratory Test Pearls and Pitfalls Joe Lex, MD, FAAEM
Temple University Hospital
Philadelphia, PA – USA
Education Chair, American Academy of Emergency Medicine
2. Abdominal Pain 10% of Emergency Department visits
40% diagnosed as “nonspecific”
50% of those admitted discharged with change in diagnosis
3. Differential Includes… Diabetic ketoacidosis
Alcoholic ketoacidosis
Uremia
Sickle cell disease
Porphyria
Systemic lupus Vasculitis
Glaucoma
Hypertension
Scorpion sting
Methanol poisoning
Black widow spider bite
4. Differential Includes… Heavy metal toxicity
Acute coronary syndrome
Pneumonia
Pulmonary embolism
Testicular torsion Herniated thoracic disc
Streptococcal pharyngitis
Rocky Mountain spotted fever
Mononucleosis
Etc.
5. Differential Includes… …and those are just the extraabdominal causes of abdominal pain
I’d be happy with a test that could tell me that the source of pain was really the abdomen.
6. Literature Suggests We Get… White blood cells
Electrolytes
Glucose
Renal functions
Liver functions
Amylase / lipase
Pregnancy test Urinalysis
C-reactive protein
Procalcitonin
Lactate
Phosphorus
Leukocyte elastase
Others??
7. Literature Suggests We Get…
8. First and Foremost… Female + ovaries = pregnancy
When patients said…
“My last period was on time.”
“I don’t think I’m pregnant.”
“I can’t possibly be pregnant.”
…10% were pregnant.
9. Abdominal Pain
10. Right Upper Quadrant
11. Gall Bladder
12. Gall Stones / Colic No pathognomonic study
Lab studies should all be normal
? ALT / AST: think hepatitis
? alkaline phosphatase / bilirubin: think common bile duct obstruction
? amylase / lipase: think pancreatitis
13. Common Duct Stones ? serum bilirubin in 32%
? aminotransferases in 34%
? alkaline phosphatase in 22%
Common duct stones in 17.4%
Best predictive value for duct stone: ? alkaline phosphatase (46%)
14. Common Duct Stones ? bilirubin and alkaline phosphatase associated with common duct stones
Combination of bilirubin level > 3.0 and alkaline phosphatase >250: >75% chance of common duct stone
? serum or urine amylase: little, if any, value
15. Cholecystitis 40 patients: pathologically confirmed acute cholecystitis
Fever at presentation: 10%
Leukocytosis at presentation: 60%
No single / combination of clinical / laboratory findings at time of presentation identified all patients
16. Cholecystitis Acute cholecystitis – nongangrene:
71% lack fever
32% lack leukocytosis
28% lack fever and leukocytosis Acute cholecystitis – gangrene:
59% lack fever
27% lack leukocytosis
6% lack fever and leukocytosis
17. Hepatitis
18. Hepatitis ALT usually >AST
Both 10 – 100 times normal
? prothrombin time first sign of complicated course
WBC / differential not helpful
19. Spot Urine Dipstick 70 – 74% sensitive for serum bilirubin
43 – 53% sensitive for other liver enzyme abnormalities
77 – 87% specific for hepatitis
20. Spot Urine Dipstick 83 – 86% positive predictive values for detecting at least one LFT abnormality
85% negative predictive value for serum bilirubin elevations, but lower for other LFTs
21. Typical AST / ALT Values
22. Abdominal Pain
23. Right Lower Quadrant
24. Appendix
25. White Cells and Appendicitis Typical range: 12,000–18,000 / mm3
Leukocytosis in 75 – 80%
Immature white cells in 75 – 80%
Same as in gastroenteritis, pelvic inflammatory disease, ruptured ovarian cyst, ectopic pregnancy, etc.
26. White Cells and Appendicitis Progressive increase in white cell count over time: unreliable
Elderly (>60!) with appendicitis: normal white cell count 45% of time
27. Proportion of patients with elevated white cell count and perforation equal to proportion perforated with normal white cell count White Cells and Appendicitis
28. White Cells and Appendicitis White cell count does not effect surgeon’s decision to operate
29. White Cells and Appendicitis White cell count and differential normal in 4 – 11% of patients with appendicitis
30. Other Laboratory Studies C-reactive protein and leukocyte elastase: not consistently reliable to rule in or rule out appendicitis
BUT…
31. Triple Test …if white cell count <9000 / mm3 AND
…if neutrophils <75% of total white cells AND
…C-reactive protein <0.6 mg/dL, THEN
Negative predictive value approaches 100%
32. Urine and Appendicitis Proven appendicitis: 20 – 30% have blood, white cells, or bacteria in urine
Retrocecal appendicitis: abnormal urine in 50%
33. Abdominal Pain
34. Epigastrium
35. Pancreas
36. Amylase Elevated in… Pancreatitis
Exctopic pregnancy
Macroamylasemia
Parotitis
Renal failure Bowel obstruction or infarct
Perforated ulcer
Acute peritonitis
Mesenteric ischemia
Other causes
37. Amylase Not Very Sensitive Rises within 6 to 24 hours
Peaks in 48 hours
Normalizes in 5 to 7 days
Sensitivity decreases after first 24 to 48 hours
38. Amylase Not Very Specific Amylase normal in 25 % of patients with acute pancreatitis
Highly specific if elevated 5 times above upper limit of normal
39. Lipase Sensitivity / Specificity Elevated in pancreatitis, bowel obstruction, perforated ulcer
Just as sensitive as amylase
Probably more specific than amylase (80 – 99%)
At five times upper limit of normal: 60% sensitive, 100% specific
40. Biliary Pancreatitis: Labs
41. Other Possible Markers Phospholipase A2
C-reactive protein
Interleukin-6
Interleukin-8
Trypsinogen
Trypsin activation peptide Procarboxy-peptidase B activation peptide
Serum amyloid A
Procalcitonin
Leukocyte elastase
42. Ulcer Disease
43. Helicobacter pylori
44. Abdominal Pain
45. Diffuse
46. Diffuse
47. Small Bowel Obstruction WBC: not sensitive, not specific
Hemoglobin: high if dry, low if bleeding
Amylase, lactate, creatine phosphokinase: elevated late
Electrolytes, renal function: if prolonged volume loss
48. Small Bowel Obstruction History, physical, temperature, x-ray, white blood count, serum amylase: cannot differentiate simple bowel obstruction from strangulated bowel
49. Small Bowel Ischemia Leukocytosis: common, nonspecific
Hemoconcentration, metabolic acidosis with base deficit, hyperamylasemia: nonspecific, present in >50%
Lactate: ~100% sensitive, 42 – 87% specific
50. “Nonspecific” Abdominal Pain Most common in young
Low social class
Psychiatric disorders
BUT…
…If older than 50 years, 10% shown to have intra-abdominal cancer within next year
51. Other Causes Pain Diverticulitis
Ruptured abdominal aortic aneurysm
Perforated viscus
Regional enteritis
Psoas abscess
Endometriosis Mittelschmerz
Splenic rupture / infarct
Cecal volvulus
Gastric volvulus
Sigmoid volvulus
Rectus hematoma
Etc.
52. No Magic Bullet History and physical exam still most important
Lab studies helpful if interpreted properly