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The Acute Abdomen. Andrew Wright MD Department of Surgery. What is an acute abdomen?. What is an acute abdomen?. New onset abdominal pain Usually abdominal pain as main symptom Often seen by primary physician Signifies need for prompt diagnosis
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The Acute Abdomen Andrew Wright MD Department of Surgery
What is an acute abdomen? • New onset abdominal pain • Usually abdominal pain as main symptom • Often seen by primary physician • Signifies need for prompt diagnosis • Does not necessarily imply need for surgical intervention
How do you diagnose an acute abdomen? History and Physical
Exact time and onset • Most slow • Can guide prognosis – i.e. timing of appendicitis • Acute • Colic • Bowel strangulation • Rupture of viscera • Torsion • Fainting • Abdominal apoplexy • Perforated ulcer, ruptured aortic aneurysm, ruptured ectopic • What was patient doing at time of onset? • i.e. “minor” trauma
Location • Initial location • Shifting of pain • Transition from visceral to parietal pain
What is visceral pain? • Intestines are: • Insensitive to touch • Sensitive to stretch, distension, or excessive contraction against resistance • Location: • Small intestine – umbilicus • Large intestine – hypogastrium • Biliary – RUQ, R subscapular • Kidney – Loin, occ radiates to ipsilateral testicle
What is visceral pain? • Character • Paroxysmal • Often excruciating • Patients will writhe, twist, attempt to find a comfortable position • In contrast to peritonitis – where patients will lie still to avoid further irritation
Character • Character • Burning – i.e. ulcer • Agony- i.e. pancreatitis • Sharp, constricting – i.e. biliary colic • Tearing – i.e. dissecting aneurysm • Gripping – i.e. obstruction • Aching – i.e. appendicitis • Dull, fixed – i.e. pyonephrosis
Radiation • Referred pain • Diaphragm – shoulder • Biliary tract – tip of shoulder • Pancreas – mid back • Kidney – mid back • Rectum- coccyx • Uterus – coccyx
Exacerbating factors • Relationship to food • Respiration • Pleuritic pain usually worse on deep inspiration • Micturation • UTI • Bladder obstruction • Nephrolithiasis • Peri-bladder abscess • Reclining • Often retroperitoneal origon
Vomiting • Cause • Obstruction • Severe irritation of nerves of peritoneum • i.e. pain, pancreatitis • Frequency • Relationship with pain • Character • Nausea and/or lack of appetite
Bowel Movements • Regularity • Diarrhea • True diarrhea vs. passage of several small loose stools • Blood • Mucus • i.e. intussusception
Menstruation • Regularity • Exact timing • Pain
History • Prior similar episodes • Prior illnesses that may relate • h/o peritonitis, appendicitis, pneumonia, etc. • Previous attacks of jaundice, melena, hematemesis, hematuria • Travel history • PMH • PSH
General appearance • General gestalt – is he (or she) sick?
Vitals • Pulse • Respiratory rate • Temp • Normal or mildly elevated typical • High fever unusual – suspect kidney or thorax • Hypothermic – suspect shock • Blood Pressure
Inspection • Determine exact location of pain first • Inspection • Distension • Bulge • Hernia • All potential orifices – including femoral • Movement • Rigidity with inspiration
Palpation • Keys to success • Gentleness • Thighs flexed • Thorough exam • Include back • Guarding • Rebound • Iliopsoas rigidity
Percussion • Liver dullness • Free-fluid
Diagnostic Testing • CBC with dif • Electrolytes, BUN, creatinine, and glucose • Aminotransferases, alkaline phosphatase, and bilirubin • Lipase • Urinalysis • Pregnancy test in women of childbearing potential
Imaging • Imaging • Plain XRays • Flat and Upright • Left Lateral Decubitus if not able to stand) • Chest • Ultrasound • CT • Additional Testing • Guide by Differential
Extra-abdominal • Herpes Zoster • MI • Pneumonia
Biliary Disease • Cholelithiasis • Cholecystitis • Cholangitis • Pancreatitis • Biliary Dyskinesia
GI • GERD • Gastritis • Peptic Ulcer Disease • Irritable Bowel • Constipation • Diabetic Gastroparesis
Infectious • Appendicitis • Diverticulitis • Gastroenteritis • Viral • Eosinophilic • Yersinia • Hepatitis • Typhlitis • Tropical infectious diseases (helminthic) • Tuberculosis Typhlitis
Appendicitis Acute Appendicitis Normal
Bowel Obstruction • Hernia • Adhesion • Malignancy • Intussuception
Inflammatory • Crohn’s • Ulcerative Colitis • Malignancy • Epiploic appendagitis Epiploic appendagitis
Gynecologic • PID • Adnexal • Torsion • Cyst • Neoplasm • Endometriosis • Ectopic pregnancy • Endometritis • Leiomyomas
Urologic • UTI • Nephrolithiasis • Bladder distension
Vascular • Aneurysm • Dissection • Mesenteric Ischemia • Acute • Chronic • Sickle Cell Crisis Colonic Ischemia
Other • Psychiatric Disease • Spleen • Abscess • Infarct • Wandering Spleen • Musculoskeletal • Abdominal wall pain • Painful rib syndrome (chostochondritis) • Hernia
Other • Celiac artery compression • Abdominal Migraine • Fitz-Hugh-Curtis syndrome • Familial Mediterranean fever • Hereditary angioedema • Heavy Metal Poisoning • Metabolic • Diabetic Ketoacidosis • Porphyria • Lactose Intolerance
Pediatric • Henoch-Schönlein purpura • Intussuception • Malrotation with midgut volvulus • Recurrent Abdominal Pain – diagnosis of exclusion