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Abdominal Pain

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Episodes of colicky pain may last for short durations ... Colicky pain is due to smooth muscle spasm in a hallow viscus Eg: Ureteric or intestinal colic ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Abdominal Pain


1
Abdominal Pain
2
  • Abdominal pain may present as a crying episode in
    infants
  • May be difficult to identify, let alone to
    localize.
  • Older children are able to point to the site of
    pain as well as this may facilitate localization.

3
  • Most of the pathological conditions present with
    localized quadrant pain, while functional pain is
    often periumbilical
  • Pain presenting for the first time may, however,
    herald the onset of a recurrent pathology

4
Red Flags
  • Surgical abdomen ( abdominal distension,
    guarding, rigidity, absent peristalsis, lump)
  • Persistent vomiting / bilious vomiting
  • Dehydration / shock

5
  • Why ?
  • Persistent vomiting may lead to dehydration.
  • Bilious vomiting suggests obstruction distal to
    the Ampulla of Vater

6
Red Herrings
  • Torsion testes
  • Basal pneumonia
  • Hip joint pathology

7
Causes Acute Pain Abd.
  • Less common
  • Appendicitis
  • Intestinal obstruction
  • Peritonitis
  • Renal colic
  • Hennoch-Schonlein Purpura
  • Common
  • Intestinal colic
  • Dysentery
  • Hepatitis
  • Gastritis

Rare Pancreatitis, Biliary colic, Meckels
diverticulum, Lead poisoning, Porphyrias, Sickle
cell crisis, Herpes zoster
8
Causes - Chronic
  • Common
  • Constipation
  • Dyspepsia
  • psychogenic
  • Less common
  • Colitis
  • Recurrent appendicitis
  • Rare
  • Inflammatory bowel disease
  • Abdominal migraine
  • Systemic vasculitides

9
Evaluation

10
Ask
  • Onset / Duration / progress / type of pain / site
    of pain / aggravating and relieving factors
  • Vomiting
  • Change in bowel pattern
  • Fever
  • Other symptoms
  • Urinary symptoms, behavior disturbances

11
ONSET
  • Sudden onset of pain (minutes / hours) may
    suggest a colic.
  • Inflammatory pain may progress gradually
    ( hours / days)
  • Sudden screaming episodes in an infant indicate
    intussusception

12
DURATION
  • Episodes of colicky pain may last for short
    durations
  • Inflammatory pain lasts longer

13
PROGRESS
  • Short lasting and self - limiting pain often
    indicates colic and is often recurrent
  • Inflammatory pain lasts longer and usually does
    not recur

14
TYPE OF PAIN
  • Dull ache indicates chronic pathology
  • Colicky pain is due to smooth muscle spasm in a
    hallow viscus Eg Ureteric or intestinal colic

15
Site of pain
  • Site of pain localized to a quadrant helps to
    focus attention to the organs situated in that
    region
  • Generalized pain may be due to intestinal or
    peritoneal pathology

16
Aggravating and Relieving factors
  • Pain in gastritis may be related to eating
    ( Pain - food - relief cycle)
  • Colicky pain may be aggravated by movement

17
Look
  • Sick or well
  • Abdominal distension
  • Tenderness
  • Guarding / rigidity
  • Hernial orifices
  • Jaundice
  • Abdominal lump

18
  • A child suffering from acute surgical abdomen,
    dysentery or pancreatitis looks sick
  • Generalized abdominal distension is a feature of
    intestinal disease while localized distension
    suggests hepatitis or localized pathology

19
  • Localized tenderness denotes local inflammatory
    conditions while peritonitis and intestinal
    obstruction present with generalized tenderness.
  • Absence of tenderness may suggest
    non-inflammatory pathology
  • Guarding and rigidity indicate inflammation of
    the overlying peritoneum

20
  • Jaundice may be a marker of hepatitis. It could
    also indicate biliary obstruction or pancreatitis
  • Abdominal lump may help localize the disease

21
Acute dysentery Acute hepatitis Appendicitis Intus
susception Peritonitis H - S Purpura
Intestinal colic Acute gastritis Renal
colic/Biliary colic Meckels diverticulum Sickle
cell disease Lead poisoning Porphyria
22
Chronic Abdominal Pain
Constipation Dyspepsia Functional
(Psychogenic) Parasitic infection Tumors Appendici
tis Irritable colon / colitis
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