Title: Abdominal Pain
1Abdominal Pain
2Definition of pain
- A signal of disease
- Unpleasant sensation localized to a part of the
body - Penetrating or tissue destructive process
- stabbing burning twisting
tearing squeezing - Bodily or emotional reaction
- terrifying nauseating
sickening - Accompanied by anxiety
- Urging to escape or terminating the feeling
- Both sensation and emotion
3Clinical characteristics
- Character of pain
- spastic pain
intermittent - inflammatory
persisting - Localization of pain
- usually in the diseased
part - it may be referred
4Clinical characteristics
- Quality and intensity of pain
- peptic ulcer gnawing burning
- Referred pain
- Provocating, aggravating and relieving factors
- ulcer pain relieved by ingestion of food
5Clinical characteristics
- Associated symptoms
- Physical examination neck lymph nodes
-
chest examination - abdominal
examination - Laboratory check up sputum, stool, urine
-
Serum -
X-ray film -
Ultra-sound -
6Clinical characteristics
- The following are important
- severity
- duration
- frequency
- special time of occurrence
-
-
710 Questions on Pain
- Site
- Referral
- Character
- Severity
- Duration
- Onset
- Frequency
- Aggravating factors
- Relieving factors
- Associated symptoms
8Abdominal pain
- Acute abdominal pain
- Chronic abdominal pain
9Etiology and pathogenesis
- Acute abdominal pain
- Parietal peritoneal inflammation
- bacterial contamination chemical irritation
- Acute inflammation of abdominal organs
- gastritis enteritis
- Mechanical obstruction of hollow viscera
- obstruction of the small or large intestine
- obstruction of the biliary tree
10Etiology and pathogenesis
- Acute abdominal pain
- Vascular disturbances
- Embolism, vascular rupture, torsion of the
organs - Referred pain
- pneumonia coronary occlusion
- Abdominal wall
- trauma or infection of
muscles, - distortion or traction of
mesentery(???) - Metabolic and toxic causes
- allergic factors etc.
11Etiology and pathogenesis
- Chronic abdominal pain
- Chronic inflammation of abdominal organs
- reflux esophagitis chronic ulcerative
colitis - Peptic ulcer
- Distention of visceral surfaces hepatic or renal
capsules, hepatitis, hepatic cancer
12Etiology and pathogenesis
- Chronic abdominal pain
- Obstruction or torsion
- Infiltration or metastasis of tumor
- Metabolic and toxic causes uremia
- Neurogenic irritable colon
neurosis
13Mechanisms of abdominal pain
- Visceral pain
- Somatic pain
- Referred pain
14Visceral pain
- Results from stimulation of autonomic nerves
- in the visceral peritoneum which surrounds
- internal organs
- The message may be transferred into the spinal
- cord via sympathic route
15Clinical presentation of visceral pain
- Pain poorly localized
- Intermittent, cramp or colicky pain
- Accompanied by nausea, vomitting and diaphoresis
16Somatic pain
- Stimuli occurs with irritation of parietal
peritoneum - Sensations conducted along peripheral nerves
- which can localize pain better
17Clinical presentation of somatic pain
- Precisely localized pain
- Pain described as intense, constant
- With local guarding or rigidity
- Getting worse after coughing or position changes
- May be caused by infection, chemical irritation,
or - other inflammatory process
18Referred pain
- Pain felt at a distance from its source
- ----The diffuse pain arising from abdominal
visceral structures tends to be projected to a
more superficial region with the same segmental
innervation - The nerves distribution and visceral organs are
- listed in text book (page 37)
19Clinical manifestation
- Localization
- Tenderness over the diseased organ
- Obstruction of small intestine
periumbilical(??) -
supraumbilical(??) - Obstruction of large intestine infraumbilial
area (??) - acute distention of gallbladder right upper
quadrant with - radiation to the right posterior
region of the thorax - or the tip of the
right scapula (??)
20Pain Localization, GI Tract
Stomach, duodenum
Small bowel, proximal half colon
Distal half colon
21Acute epigastric pain referring to the back
- Posteriorly penetrating peptic ulcer
- Biliary pain
- Acute pancreatitis
- Dissecting aneurysm ?????
22Clinical manifestation
- Quality and severity
- Perforation severe dull pain over abdomen
- Obstruction of hollow abdominal viscera
intermittent -
colicky - Intraabdominal vascular disturbances
- sudden and catastrophic in nature
- Acute pancreatitis severe, steady upper,
abdominal pain -
23Pain Severity
Intestinal Colic
Biliary Colic, Pancreatic
Ulcer
24Clinical manifestation
- Provocation and relief
- Acute gastritis and enteritis eating unfresh
or raw foods -
relieved by vomiting or discharge - Peritoneum inflammation accentuated by
pressure - palpation
movement coughing - IBS and constipation relieved temporarily by
bowel movements - Obstruction relieved temporarily
by vomiting - Ulcer eating or taking
antacids
25Clinical manifestation
- Associated manifestations
- Fever inflammation
- Jaundice liver gallbladder pancreatic
disease - Hematuria renal stone
- Diarrhea/rectal bleeding intestinal causes
26Differentiation of three colicky pain
- Type Location Other
manifestation - Intestinal periumbilical
vomiting, nausea - infraumbilical
diarrhea, bowel sounds - Biliary right upper
jaundice fever - quadrant
Murphys sign - Renal ipsilateral flank
changes in urine test - radiate to genitalia??
hematuria - groin???, scrotum??
27Clinical manifestation of chronic abdominal pain
- Past history
- Localization
- Quality
- Pain and position of the body
- Ptosis (??)of stomach or kidney
- pain when standing for long time
- Associated symptoms
- Chronic infection lymphoma malignant
tumor fever - esophagus stomach billary tree
vomiting - Pain referred to the abdomen should be
differentiated
28Diagnostic points
- An accurate menstrual history in a female patient
is essential - Much attention has been paid to the presence or
absence of peristaltic sounds, their quality and
their frequency - PQRST provocative-palliative factors
quality - region severity temporal
characteristics
29WORK-UP OF ABDOMINAL PAIN
- HISTORY
- Onset
- Qualitative description
- Intensity
- Frequency
- Location - Does it go anywhere (referred)?
- Duration
- Aggravating and relieving factors
30Common Acute Pain Syndromes
- Appendicitis
- Acute diverticulitis
- Cholecystitis
- Pancreatitis
- Perforation of an ulcer
- Intestinal obstruction
- Ruptured AAA (abdominal aortic aneurysm)
- Pelvic disorders
31DIAGNOSTIC STUDIES
- Plain X-rays (flat plate)
- Contrast studies - barium (upper and lower
- GI series)
- Ultrasound
- CT scanning
- Endoscopy
- Sigmoidoscopy, colonoscopy