Abdominal pain

For pediatric patients see Abdominal pain (peds)

Background

  • Patients with immunosuppression often have delayed or atypical presentations
  • Fever is not a reliable marker for surgical disease

Clinical Features

  • Abdominal pain
  • Associated mostly with nausea, vomiting or diarrhea.
  • Fever may be present in pain from infectious etiology.
  • Abdominal pain may be misleading in elderly or diabetics.

Differential Diagnosis

Diffuse Abdominal pain

Epigastric Pain

RUQ Pain

Left upper quadrant abdominal pain

RLQ Pain

LLQ Pain

Acute Pelvic Pain

Differential diagnosis of acute pelvic pain

Gynecologic/Obstetric

Genitourinary

Gastrointestinal

Musculoskeletal

Vascular

Extra-abdominal Sources of Abdominal pain

Evaluation

Management

  • Treat underlying cause

Patients pain should be addressed as per pain ladder and pain medicine should not be withheld for the fear of masking symptoms.

Disposition

  • Depends on etiology

See Also

References

  1. Norris DL, Young JD. UTI. EM Clin N Am. 2008; 26:413-30.