Literature DB >> 21424993

[Acute abdominal pain in the emergency department - a clinical algorithm for adult patients].

H Trentzsch1, J Werner, K-W Jauch.   

Abstract

Acute abdominal pain represents the cardinal symptom behind a vast number of possible under-lying causes including several ones that re-quire surgical treatment. It is the most common sur-gical emergency, the most common cause for a surgical consultation in the emergency department and the most common cause for non-trauma related hospital admissions. The golden mis-sion statement is to rapidly identify whether the underlying cause requires an urgent or even immediate surgical intervention. However, behind the same cardinal symptom one may encounter harmless or non-urgent problems. By employing diagnostic means cost effectively and with the aim to avoid unnecessary exposure of the patient to X-rays in mind, the challenge remains to identify patients with an indication for emergency surgery from those who suffer from a less serious condition and thus can be treated conservatively and without any pressure of time. Dealing with such a highly complex decision-making process calls for a clinical algorithm. Many publications are available that have scrutinised the different aspects of the initial assessment and the emergency management of acute abdominal pain. How-ever, the large body of evidence seems to miss articles that describe a formally correct priority- and problem-based approach. Clinical algorithms apply to complex disease states such as acute abdominal pain and translate them into one clearly laid out, logically coordinated and systematic overall process. Our intention is to devel-op such an algorithm to approach acute abdominal pain from the surgeon's point of view. Based on daily practice and with reference to available literature, it is the aim of this study to define a work flow that simply summarises all steps in-volved and defines the required decision process in order to form the intellectual basis for an evidence-based clinical algorithm. The result is illustrated as a first draft of such an evidence-based algorithm to allow emergency evaluation of adult patients with acute abdominal pain. © Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart ˙ New York.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21424993     DOI: 10.1055/s-0031-1271415

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Zentralbl Chir        ISSN: 0044-409X            Impact factor:   0.942


  6 in total

1.  Acute abdominal pain in the emergency department of a university hospital in Italy.

Authors:  Nicolò Caporale; Antonio Maria Morselli-Labate; Elena Nardi; Rosanna Cogliandro; Mario Cavazza; Vincenzo Stanghellini
Journal:  United European Gastroenterol J       Date:  2015-09-24       Impact factor: 4.623

2.  Surgical decision-making in acute appendicitis.

Authors:  Eva Sandell; Maria Berg; Gabriel Sandblom; Joar Sundman; Ulf Fränneby; Lennart Boström; Åke Andrén-Sandberg
Journal:  BMC Surg       Date:  2015-06-02       Impact factor: 2.102

3.  Acute Abdominal Pain Assessment in the Emergency Department: The Experience of a Greek University Hospital.

Authors:  Dimitrios Velissaris; Menelaos Karanikolas; Nikolaos Pantzaris; George Kipourgos; Vasileios Bampalis; Konstantina Karanikola; Eleftheria Fafliora; Christina Apostolopoulou; Charalampos Gogos
Journal:  J Clin Med Res       Date:  2017-11-06

4.  Acute mesenteric ischaemia: A case of expedited diagnosis and management using point-of-care ultrasound.

Authors:  Jill Crosby; Dagmawi Werku; Tigist Zewdu; Grace Wanjiku; Jessica Schmidt
Journal:  Afr J Emerg Med       Date:  2018-10-02

Review 5.  Approach to Acute Abdominal Pain: Practical Algorithms.

Authors:  Farzad Vaghef-Davari; Hadi Ahmadi-Amoli; Amirsina Sharifi; Farzad Teymouri; Nobar Paprouschi
Journal:  Adv J Emerg Med       Date:  2019-11-08

6.  Massive gastric dilatation caused by eating binges demanding surgical intervention: a case report.

Authors:  Johannes Lemke; Jan Scheele; Stefan Schmidt; Mathias Wittau; Doris Henne-Bruns
Journal:  GMS Interdiscip Plast Reconstr Surg DGPW       Date:  2014-11-03
  6 in total

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