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Objectives. To introduce the topic of the emergency management of abdominal pain in the elderlyTo review some diagnostic challenges when dealing with this issue in clinical practiceTo review certain key disease entities that cause abdominal pain in the elderly. Outline. IntroductionThe Challenge
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1. The Emergency Management of Abdominal Pain in the ElderlyGeriatric Grand RoundsApril 3rd, 2001 Dr. Richard Lee MD, CCFP(EM), FRCPC
Assistant Professor, Emergency Medicine
University Of Alberta
2. Objectives To introduce the topic of the emergency management of abdominal pain in the elderly
To review some diagnostic challenges when dealing with this issue in clinical practice
To review certain key disease entities that cause abdominal pain in the elderly
3. Outline Introduction
The Challenge of Diagnosis
4. Outline Specific disease entities
Biliary Tract Disease
Appendicitis
Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm
Ischemic Bowel
Mechanical Obstruction
5. Outline Extra-abdominal sources of pain
Abdominal pain NYD
Summary
Questions
6. Introduction Elderly comprise 13% of society
Fastest growing segment of population
By the year 2030, elderly will comprise 20% of our population
7. Introduction Over-represented in health care utilization
Present more often
Stay longer
Get more investigations
8. Elder vs. Non-Elder ED Utilization
9. Introduction 1 in 10 ED visits for abdominal pain
50-63% (versus 10%) require admission
22-42% (versus 16%) require surgery
10. Introduction Emergency physicians find it more difficult and time consuming to manage abdominal pain in elderly
Mortality higher (up to 70X)
Diagnostic accuracy lower (~50%)
11. Mortality Compared to Agewith Abdominal Pain
12. Diagnostic Accuracy Compared to Age with Abdominal Pain
13. The Challenge of Diagnosis History confounded by
stoicism
alterations in pain perception
memory deficits
communication problems
mental status changes
14. The Challenge of Diagnosis Ensure adequate time to take a history
Assess cognitive functioning of patient
Collaborate history with family, nursing home attendants, etc.
15. The Challenge of Diagnosis Physical exam unreliable
79% will not have rigidity with peritonitis
56% will be afebrile with acute cholecystitis
16. The Challenge of Diagnosis Physical exam must be complete and include all potential hernia sites, the abdominal aorta, the rectum and pelvis if indicated.
Only 5.1% of female elderly patients had a pelvic exam, 72.9% of which were abnormal
17. The Challenge of Diagnosis Ancillary testing unreliable
61% of elderly requiring surgery will have a WBC <10,000
40% with a perforated ulcer will not have free air on X-ray
Ancillary testing may DELAY diagnosis
22. The Challenge of Diagnosis Do not rely on traditional ancillary testing to rule out disease
Other imaging techniques such as CT and ultrasound must be used liberally
23. Biliary Tract Disease 50% of >80 year olds will have gallstones (compared with 9% of 30-40 year olds)
Most common cause of surgery in elderly
24. Biliary Tract Disease Diagnosis of acute cholecystitis usually straightforward BUT
16% will have no epigastric or RUQ pain
5% will have no pain at all
41% will have a normal WBC
13% will be afebrile with all lab tests normal
Ultrasound diagnostic 91%
25. Appendicitis Elderly account for 5-10% of cases but >50% of deaths from appendicitis
1/3 present late (>72 hours)
72% present with perforation or gangrene
Misdiagnosed 50% on admission and 30% at time of surgery
26. Appendicitis Only 20% have classic presentation of anorexia, fever, RLQ pain, high WBC
>25% of plain X-rays consistent with another diagnosis
CT or graded compression ultrasound may be helpful
27. Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm 6% prevalence in >80 year old group
Typical presentation of rupture includes
Hypotension (70-96%)
Abdominal pain (70-80%)
Back pain (>50%)
28. Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Misdiagnosed 31% of time DESPITE classic findings
Key finding is an enlarged, tender aorta
29. Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Late diagnosis increases mortality from 5% to 50-100%
Beware of
renal colic symptoms in elderly
labeling hypotension as vagal
atypical location of abdominal pain
30. Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm Supine flat plate superior to cross table lateral
Ultrasound 98% sensitive for leaking AAA
CT with contrast useful in stable patient
33. Ischemic Bowel Severe, visceral pain out of proportion with physical exam in a patient with risk factors
Pain can be absent 25% of the time
Hard signs = TOO LATE!
Early angiography = 90% survival
Anticipate delays by consultants!
34. Ischemic Bowel CAUSE
SMA embolus
SMA thrombosis
Venous thrombosis
Non-occlusive RISK FACTOR
A Fib, recent MI
CAD, low flow states
Hypercoaguable states
Low CO (CHF, sepsis, digoxin, hypovolemia)
35. Mechanical Obstruction May result from adhesions, hernias, appendicitis, malignancy, volvulus, diverticulitis or AAA
Delayed surgery increases complication rate by 250%
36. Extra-Abdominal Sources of Pain Cardiac ischemia
40% of patients >85 years will have chest pain with an acute MI
37. Symptom Prevalence in Acute Myocardial Infarct Related to Age J Am Geriatr Soc. 1986;34:263-266
38. Extra-Abdominal Sources of Pain Pneumonia, Pulmonary Embolism
Metabolic
HyperCalcemia
Addison’s
Diabetic Ketoacidosis
Glaucoma
et al
Do not limit work up to GI system
39. Abdominal Pain NYD Be very careful of sending an elder patient home without a diagnosis for their abdominal pain
<20% of elderly will have a diagnosis of Abdominal pain NYD (vs >40% in young)
10% of these will be diagnosed with a GI malignancy in one year
40. Summary Abdominal pain in the elderly is a difficult and dangerous disease that must be aggressively investigated and managed
Clinical and ancillary data are less useful and may be misleading
Must maintain a high level of suspicion
41. Questions? Thank You!