Title: Abdominal Emergencies
1Abdominal Emergencies
- Paramedic Program
- Chemeketa Community College
2Abdominal Emergencies
- Abdominal pain is a frequent complaint.
- Most difficult to dx
- Relies greatly on History
- Physical Exam may be helpful, always necessary
3Abdominal Emergencies, cont.
- Pathophysiology of abdominal pain
- Bacterial/viral Infection
- Chemical Irritation
- Circulatory compromise
- Trauma
- Tumor
- Obstruction
4Types of Pain
- Somatic and Visceral
- Merge in nerve pathway to brainDifficult to
differentiate but - Visceral are more cramping and diffuse
- e.g. Gas pains
- Somatic is more constant and localized
- e.g. Peritonitis
5Anatomy 101
- Abdomen - largest body cavity
- Separated by diaphragm and artificial plane at
pelvis - Bordered by spine and abdominal wall
- Quadrants
6Anatomy
- LUQ
- Spleen
- Pancreas (retroperitoneal)
- Stomach
- Left kidney (retroperitoneal)
- Splenic flexure of colon
7Anatomy
- RUQ
- Liver
- Gall bladder
- Head of pancreas
- Duodenum
- Right kidney (retroperitoneal)
- Hepatic flexure of colon
8Anatomy
- RLQ
- Appendix (supposed to be here)
- Ascending colon,
- Small intestine
- Right ovary, Fallopian tube
- LLQ
- Small intestine
- Descending colon,
- Left ovary, Fallopian tube
9- Flank lateral abdomen
- Peritoneal membrane lining the abdomen
- Most organs within peritoneum
- Retroperitoneal kidneys, part of duodenum, part
of pancreas.
10- Solid organs
- Liver
- Spleen
- Pancreas
- Kidneys
- Adrenals
- Ovaries
11- Hollow organs
- Stomach
- Intestines
- Gall bladder
- Urinary bladder
- Uterus
12GI System
- Mouth
- Esophagus
- Stomach
- Intestines
- Salivary glands
- Teeth
- Liver
- Gall bladder
- Pancreas
- Appendix
13Circulatory system (abdominal cavity)
- Descending aorta
- Superior mesenteric and inferior mesenteric
arteries - Aorta divides
- Iliac arteries
- Inferior vena cava
- Portal system
14Genitourinary System
- Kidneys
- Ureters
- Urinary bladder
- Urethra
15- Male reproductive system
- Testes
- Epididymis
- Prostate
- Vas deferens
- Urethra
- Penis
- Female reproductive system
- Ovaries
- Fallopian tubes
- Uterus
- Vagina
- Vulva
16Pain Referral
- Pain isnt always where it seems!
- Visceral nerve fibers are shared
- Pain shows up away from the source
- e.g. Shoulder pain from diaphragm
17Upper Gastrointestinal Bleeding
- Peptic ulcer disease
- Erosive gastritis
- Esophageal Varices
- Mallory-Weiss Tear
- Esophagitis
- Duodenitis
- Drug Ingestion
18Peptic Ulcer Disease
- Ulcers in lining of esophagus, stomach, or
duodenum Loss of protective effects - 5 x more common after age 50
19Ulcers
- If pain, usually ceases after onset of severe
bleeding - 70-90 caused by Helicobacter pylori
- Antibiotic therapy
- Pain usually located in epigastrium or LUQ.
- May improve after antacids
- Can cause an acute abdomen-rigid, board-like
- Mortality from 3 8
20Gastritis
- Inflammatory response - Gastric erosions
secondary to increased gastric acid secretion - Associated with alcohol ingestion, drugs, stress
- Pt. c/o epigastric pain, belching, indigestion,
N/V
21Gastritis
- Caused by ASA, Steroids, Alcohol, NSAIDS, Burns,
Sepsis, Trauma - Pain improves after eating
- Gastric ulcer may develop
- Most common presentation
- Restless
- Pale, cool, moist skin
- Hypotension
22Varices
- Swollen veins in lower 1/3 of esophagus
- Secondary to portal hypertension
- Most common cause alcoholic cirrhosis
- Accounts for 10 of all hematemesis, melena
- Mortality 40-70
- Guess what drug they use to treat this acutely
Beta Blockers
23Esophagitis
- Common disorder, but uncommon cause of
significant GIB - Esophageal reflux common
- Melena more common presentation
24Mallory-Weiss Tear
- Distal esophagus or proximal stomach
- Laceration
- Most common causes
- Alcoholism and hiatal hernia
- Belching, vomiting, blunt trauma, seizures,
coughing - Multiple bouts of non-bloody emesis followed by
sudden hematemesis - Bleeding usually mild to moderate, stops
spontaneously
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26Duodenitis
- Mean age of presentation
- 49 years
- Melena or hematemesis
- common
- Hemorrhage often self-limited
27Drug ingestion
- Aspirin (even moderate use) increases risk
- Alcohol and Aspirin have a synergistic effect.
- NSAIDs can also cause gastric erosions
28Upper GI Bleeding
- Assessment findings
- Acute/chronic
- Vomiting/hematemesis
- Stool/melena
- Meal history
- Chest pain/gas pain
- Altered mentation
- Skin pale, cool, moist
29Upper GI (cont.)
- Most common presentation
- Acute
- Painless
- N/V/hematemesis
- Melena
- Hypotension, tachycardia, pale, cool, moist skin
30Causes of Acute Upper GI Bleeding
- Peptic ulcer disease (50)
- Varices (10)
- Hemorrhagic gastritis (25)
- Esophagitis
- Mallory-Weiss tear
31Upper GI Bleeding (cont.)
- Management
- Oxygen
- Positioning
- IV, consider fluid challenge
- Consider MAST
- Gastric lavage
- Transfusion
- Psychological support
?
32Lower Gastrointestinal Bleeding
- Diverticulitis
- Angiodysplasia
- Carcinoma
- Rectal Disease
33Diverticulitis
- Presents in 50 of patients gt 60 year old
- Inflammation in or around diverticula -
Retention of food residue and bacteria - Present like appendicitis
- Pt c/o abdominal pain,
- fever, vomiting, anorexia,
- tenderness
34Diverticulitis
- Tx antibiotics, diet changes, possibly surgery
- Bleeding Diverticulitis
- Presents as painless rectal bleeding, commonly
left-sided abdominal pain - Tx prevention of shock
35Angiodysplasia
- Acquired disorder of unknown cause
- Most commonly found in cecum and ascending colon
- AV malformations in 25
- of patients gt 65 years
- Melena
- Difficult to diagnose
- 10-15 Mortality
36Carcinoma
- Uncommon cause of major LGIB
- Presentation diverse
- Painless rectal bleeding
- Weight loss
- Abdominal pain
- Treatment is prevention of shock
37Rectal Disease
- Most common cause of rectal bleed
- Bright red bleeding
- Inflamed veins of anal canal
38Other Abdominal Emergencies
- Gastroenteritis
- Crohns Disease
- Appendicitis
- Perforated abdominal viscus
- Bowel Obstruction
- Pancreatitis
- Cholecystitis
- Hepatitis
- Aortic Aneurysm
- Renal Calculi
- UTI
- Pyleonephritis
- PID
- Renal Failure
- Ovarian cyst
- Ectopic pregnancy
- Mittelschmirz
- Testicular torsion
- Epididymitis
39Gastroenteritis
- Causative organisms
- Many viruses, parasites
- Contracted via fecal-oral transmission,
contaminated food, water - S/S
- N/V, fever, abdominal pain, cramping, anorexia,
lassitude, shock
40Crohns Disease/ Ulcerative Colitis
- Idiopathic, chronic inflammatory disease of
intestines - Crohns - involves rectum small bowel
- Ulcerative Colitis rectum and small bowel spared
41Crohns Disease
- Inflammatory disorder, small and large bowel
- Increased t-cell activity
- Lesions, fistulas
- Risk factors - positive family history, stress
- Pt. presents with irritable bowel, diarrhea,
weight loss
42Appendicitis
- Obstruction appendical lumen
- Ulceration appendiceal mucosa (viral/bacterial)
- Pt c/o RLQ abdominal pain onset acute, originates
at umbilicus, migrates to RLQ - Presentation with N/V, fever, anorexia, rebound
tenderness - Tx fluid replacement,
- prevention of shock, surgery
43Perforated Abdominal Viscus
- Causes include perforated ulcers or diverticulum
- Presentation
- sudden onset abdominal pain
- generalized tenderness
- rebound tenderness
- rigid abdomen
- shock
- Tx IV fluids, antibiotics, surgery
44Bowel Obstruction.
- Causes include tumors,
- ingestion of FB, prior
- abdominal surgery,
- fecal impaction
- Hx
- progressive anorexia,
- fever, chills, skin pale,
- cool, moist, peritonitis
- Acute/chronic, N/V/D/Unable
- Hypotension, tachycardia
- Tx fluid replacement, prevention of shock
45Pancreatitis
- Inflammation of pancreas due to digestion of
gland by its own enzymes - Associated with chronic alcohol abuse, elevated
lipids
46Pancreatitis
- Patient complaints
- Abrupt onset abdominal pain, mid-abdomen
radiating to back and shoulders - N/V
- Hypotension, tachycardia
- Pale, cool, moist skin
- Tx IV fluids, pain meds, NG tube
47Cholecystitis
- Inflammation of the gallbladder
- Obstruction by a gallstone in gallbladder neck,
cystic duct, or common bile duct
Six Fs
Female Fertile Fair Fat Forty Flatulent
48Cholecystitis
- S/S
- Pain in RUQ, worse after meals, esp. high-fat
- Flank pain common may radiate to genitals
- Antacids dont relieve pain
- Skin pale, cool, moist
- Fever
- Tx pain meds, surgery
49Hepatitis
- Caused by viral infections, alcohol, substance
abuse - S/S
- Dull RUQ tenderness
- Decreased appetite, N/V
- Fatigue, H/A, malaise, photophobia, pharyngitis,
cough - Clay-colored stool
- Skin Warm, rash, jaundice
- Tx symptomatically
50Aortic aneurysm
- Usually elder or Marfans, c/o diffuse abdominal
pain and severe back pain tearing sensation
pulsitile mass - Tx oxygen, 2 large-bore IVs, PASG
- Rapid transport
51Renal calculi
- Urinary tract obstruction kidney stones most
common - Age range is 20-50 y/o, most common in spring and
fall 3 x more common in males - Causes UTI, immobilization, increased calcium,
gout, tumors
52Kidney Stones
- Onset acute, intense in back or flank, testicles
- Presentation restless, dysuria, hematuria,
nocturia, frequent urination, N/V - Tx IV fluids, surgery, ultrasound shock waves
- Complications infection, total obstruction
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54Urinary Tract Infection (UTI)
- Cystitis most common (bladder infection)
- More common in females
- Can cause pyelonephritis
- fever, chills, flank pain
- S/S dysuria, hesitancy, discolored urine, lower
abdominal pain, mentation changes - Tx antibiotics, fluids
55Pyelonephritis
- Ascension of bacteria from a lower UTI into renal
parenchyma - Women more prone until 5th decade
- Pt typically febrile, c/o flank or low back pain,
chills, tenderness below 12th rib at vertebra
(CVA tenderness) - Tx IV antibiotics
56Renal failure
- Acute (overall mortality 50)
- Rapid, potentially reversible deterioration of
kidney function-retention of nitrogenous waste
products, electrolytes - Causes reduced renal blood flow shock,
dehydration, vasopressors, renal injury, enlarged
prostate, tumor
57Acute Renal Failure
- S/S
- Onset within hours
- Normal kidney function rapidly deteriorates
- Urine output oliguria, anuria
- Generalized edema
- Acidosis
- Uremia
- High concentrations of uric acid, potassium
- Tx Dialysis
58Acute Renal Failure
- Pt presents
- Severe dyspnea, pulmonary edema,hypotension,
tachycardia, EKG findings, pericarditis rub - Edema, JVD, ascites, rales at bases, wasted
appearance,skin pasty yellow, extremities thin - Urea crystals on skin (late sign)
- Seizures, muscle twitching
59Acute Renal Failure
- Treatment
- Oxygen, fluids, supportive
- Dialysis
60Chronic Renal Failure
- A progressive, irreversible systemic disease
- Secondary to diabetes, hypertension, Rx,
autoimmune disorders - In later stages, requires dialysis or renal
transplant
61Chronic Renal Failure
- GI
- Anorexia, N/V
- Cardiopulmonary
- HTN
- Pericarditis
- Pulmonary edema
- Peripheral, sacral, periorbital edema
62Chronic Renal Failure
- Nervous system
- Anxiety, delirium, progressive obtundation
- Hallucinations, muscle twitching, seizures
- Metabolic
- Glucose intolerence
- Electrolyte disturbances
- Anemia
63Chronic Renal Failure
- Personality changes
- Fatigue
- Mental illness
- Uremic signs
- Pasty, yellow skin discoloration
- Thin extremities from protein wasting
- Uremic frost
64Dialysis Emergencies
- Vascular access
- Bleeding at site of puncture
- Thrombosis
- Infection
- Hemorrhage
- Regular exposure to hemodialysis
- Decrease in platelet function
65Dialysis
- Hypotension
- May result from rapid reduction
- in intravascular volume
- Compensatory mechanisms impaired
- Manage cautiously with fluids
- (200-300ml fluid bolus)
- Chest pain
- PVCs
66Dialysis
- Severe hyperkalemia
- Life-threatening emergency
- S/S weakness
- Tall T-waves, conduction slows (prolonged PR
interval), depressed ST segments, sometimes lost
P-waves - If renal patient in cardiac arrest, consider
calcium and sodium bicarbonate infusions
67Dialysis
- Disequilibrium syndrome
- Results from a disproportionate decrease in
osmolality of ECF - Usually mild HA, restlessness, nausea, fatigue
- May be severe confusion, seizures, coma
68Dialysis
- Air embolism
- Results from negative pressure on the venous side
of the dialysis tubing or malfunction in the
machine - Embolus may be carried to right ventricle
- S/S severe dyspnea, cyanosis, hypotension,
respiratory distress. - Tx with high concentration of oxygen
69Pelvic Inflammatory DiseasePID
fallopian tube
- An infection of the uterus,
- fallopian tubes, ovaries,
- adjacent structures
- Usually sexually transmitted
- Pt presents with fever,
- chills, lower abdominal pain, vaginal bleeding
and/or discharge, pain on walking or intercourse - Tx supportive
ovary
cervix
70Ruptured Ectopic
- Life threatening
- Any time during fertile years
- Mimics other sign and symptoms
- Ask the questions
71Ovarian cyst
- Generally asymptomatic until complicated by
hemorrhage, torsion, rupture, or infection - Fluid-filled sac on ovaries if ruptured, blood
spills into abdominal cavity - Pt presents with abdominal pain,either gradual or
rapid - Onset often with exercise, intercourse, trauma,
or pelvic exam
72Mittelschmerz
- Caused by ovarian bleeding following ovulation
- Pain on ovulation
- severe pain rare
73Testicular Torsion
- Most patients have congenital abnormality of
genitals generally bilateral - Twisting of spermatic cord, cuts off blood supply
- Rotation occurs medially
- Vascular occlusion occurs and infarction after 6
hrs
74Testicular Torsion
- Usually occurs in children and teenagers
- Previous occurrence predisposes pt.
- Pt presents with severe testicular pain, lower
abdominal pain, swollen testicle, tender, higher
in scrotum knot may be palpated above testicle - Usually sudden onset
- Tx pain meds
75Epididymitis
- Cellular inflammation begins in vas deferens and
descends to lower pole of epididymis - Inflammation of epididymis, secondary to
gonorrhea, syphilis, TB, mumps, prostatitis,
urethritis, indwelling catheter.
76Epididymitis
- Pt presents with fever, chills, inguinal pain,
swollen epididymis - 2/3 will have atrophy
- 30 of post pubertal boys with mumps
77Assessment findings
- Scene size-up
- Safety
- PPE
- General Impression
- Trauma
- Medical
78Assessment
- Initial assessment
- Airway
- Breathing
- Circulation
- Disability
- Chief Complaint
79Assessment
- Focused history
- OPQRST
- Previous history of same event
- N/V
- Change in bowel habits/stool
- Constipation
- Diarrhea
- Melena
80Assessment
- Focused history
- Weight loss
- Last meal
- Chest pain
- Focused physical examination
- Appearance
- Posture
- Level of consciousness
- Apparent state of health
81Assessment
- Focused Physical Exam
- Skin color
- Vital signs
- Inspect abdomen
- Auscultate abdomen
- Percuss abdomen (if you dare)
- Palpate abdomen
- Female abdominal exam
- Male abdominal exam
82Management/Treatment Plan
- Airway and ventilatory support
- High flow oxygen
- Resp. status
- Circulatory support
- EKG/pulse
- Monitor B/P
- Pharmacological interventions
- IV
- Pain management, as appropriate (usually call for
medical consult)
83Lets Talk About Pain!
- Old thinking - Dont Mask the Pain so the Doc
can better diagnose! - New we are the patients advocate! Help them to
manage their pain - Current diagnostic tools DONT need pain as a
guide! - So, why dont we help with the pain?
84Management, Treatment (cont.)
- NPO
- Monitor mentation
- Monitor vital signs
- Position of comfort
- Transport considerations
- Persistent pain for gt 6 hours requires transport
- Gentle but rapid transport
- Psychological support
- Calm, caring attitude
85Management
- Transport Considerations
- If it hurt bad enough to call you
- Remember that guy you saw last night and didnt
transport? Do questions like this make you
nervous?
86Abdominal Emergencies
- Abdominal pain is a frequent complaint
- Most difficult to diagnose
- Relies greatly on History
- Physical Exam may be helpful, always necessary
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