Acute Abdominal Pain in Adults: Evaluation and Diagnosis.

Am Fam Physician

Gundersen Medical Foundation Family Medicine Residency, La Crosse, Wisconsin.

Published: June 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Acute abdominal pain is a frequent issue lasting less than seven days, with common causes including gastroenteritis, cholelithiasis, and appendicitis among others.
  • Diagnosis involves assessing pain location, patient history, and physical examination, with recommended tests like blood counts and urinalysis, while imaging is often necessary for conditions that can’t be confirmed clinically.
  • Imaging methods, such as CT scans and ultrasounds, are selected based on pain location and suspected issues, with special considerations for women of childbearing age due to reproductive health concerns.

Article Abstract

Acute abdominal pain, defined as nontraumatic abdominal pain lasting fewer than seven days, is a common presenting concern with a broad differential diagnosis. The most common causes are gastroenteritis and nonspecific abdominal pain, followed by cholelithiasis, urolithiasis, diverticulitis, and appendicitis. Extra-abdominal causes such as respiratory infections and abdominal wall pain should be considered. Pain location, history, and examination findings help guide the workup after ensuring hemodynamic stability. Recommended tests may include a complete blood count, C-reactive protein, hepatobiliary markers, electrolytes, creatinine, glucose, urinalysis, lipase, and pregnancy testing. Several diagnoses, such as cholecystitis, appendicitis, and mesenteric ischemia, cannot be confirmed clinically and typically require imaging. Conditions such as urolithiasis and diverticulitis may be diagnosed clinically in certain cases. Imaging studies are chosen based on the location of pain and index of suspicion for specific etiologies. Computed tomography with intravenous contrast media is often chosen for generalized abdominal pain, left upper quadrant pain, and lower abdominal pain. Ultrasonography is the study of choice for right upper quadrant pain. Point-of-care ultrasonography can aid in the prompt diagnosis of several etiologies of acute abdominal pain, including cholelithiasis, urolithiasis, and appendicitis. In patients who have female reproductive organs, diagnoses such as ectopic pregnancy, pelvic inflammatory disease, and adnexal torsion should be considered. If ultrasonography results are inconclusive in pregnant patients, magnetic resonance imaging is preferred over computed tomography when available.

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