| Literature DB >> 29388612 |
Nadia M Hijaz1, Craig A Friesen1.
Abstract
Acute abdominal pain in pediatric patients has been a challenge for providers because of the nonspecific nature of symptoms and difficulty in the assessment and physical examination in children. Although most children with acute abdominal pain have self-limited benign conditions, pain may be a manifestation of an urgent surgical or medical condition where the biggest challenge is making a timely diagnosis so that appropriate treatment can be initiated without any diagnostic delays that increase morbidity. This is weighed against the need to decrease radiation exposure and avoid unnecessary operations. Across all age groups, there are numerous conditions that present with abdominal pain ranging from a very simple viral illness to a life-threatening surgical condition. It is proposed that the history, physical examination, laboratory tests, and imaging studies should initially be directed at differentiating surgical versus nonsurgical conditions both categorized as urgent versus nonurgent. The features of the history including patient's age, physical examination focused toward serious conditions, and appropriate tests are highlighted in the context of making these differentiations. Initial testing and management is also discussed with an emphasis on making use of surgeon and radiologist consultation and the need for adequate follow-up and reevaluation of the patient.Entities:
Keywords: acute abdominal pain; surgical abdomen; ultrasound
Year: 2017 PMID: 29388612 PMCID: PMC5774593 DOI: 10.2147/PHMT.S120156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Pediatric Health Med Ther ISSN: 1179-9927
Classification of acute abdominal pain based on age and severity
| Surgical condition that requires immediate care | Medical condition that warrants immediate management | Surgical nonemergent condition but requires invasive management | Medical condition that does not warrant immediate management |
|---|---|---|---|
| Incarcerated inguinal hernia | Sepsis/bacteremia | Hypertrophic pyloric stenosis | Gastroesophageal reflux disease |
| Malrotation and volvulus | Gastroenteritis with dehydration | Hirschsprung’s disease | Infantile colic |
| Intestinal obstruction | UTI | Hydroceles | Constipation |
| Intussusception | Milk protein allergy | ||
| Appendicitis | DKA | Meckel’s diverticulum | Food allergies |
| Malrotation and volvulus | Sickle cell crisis | Hirschsprung’s disease | Lactose intolerance |
| Intussusception | Ureteric calculi and acute renal disease | Constipation | |
| Acute pancreatitis | Viral infective gastroenteritis/colitis | ||
| Complicated PUD | |||
| Bacterial infections, including: | |||
| Appendicitis | DKA | Gallstones | Viral gastroenteritis/viral syndrome |
| Complicated acute cholecystitis | Sickle cell crisis | Foreign body | Constipation |
| Testicular torsion | Noncomplicated hepatobiliary disease and noncomplicated acute cholecystitis | Mononucleosis | |
| Ectopic pregnancy, ovarian torsion | Acute complicated pancreatitis | HSP | |
| Small bowel obstructions and adhesions | Complicated PUD | Mesenteric adenitis | |
| Obstructed inguinal hernia | Hemolytic-uremic syndrome | Gastroduodenitis, PUD | |
| Intestinal volvulus | Renal vein thrombosis | Food poisoning | |
| Complicated inflammatory bowel disease | Bacterial infections, including: | Tubo-ovarian disease, ovarian cyst/menstrual pain, pelvic inflammatory disease, sexually transmitted disease |
Note:
Condition considered nonemergent unless it is complicated with perforation, bleeding, or peritonitis.
Abbreviations: DKA, diabetic ketoacidosis; HSP, Henoch–Schönlein purpura; PUD, peptic ulcer disease; UTI, urinary tract infection.
Differentiating surgical from nonsurgical conditions and suggested initial testing
| Evaluation | Surgical | Nonsurgical |
|---|---|---|
| Acute, severe pain, more localized | Midline or generalized pain | |
| Pain increasing in intensity | Stable pain intensity | |
| Pain precedes vomiting | Vomiting absent or precedes pain onset | |
| Bilious vomiting | Long duration of pain | |
| Hematochezia | ||
| Previous abdominal surgery | ||
| Ill appearing | Nondistended normal bowel sounds | |
| Lethargic | Diffuse tenderness | |
| Abdominal distension | No rigidity or rebound tenderness | |
| Absent or high-pitched bowel sounds | ||
| Localized tenderness | ||
| Peritoneal signs (rebound tenderness, rigidity, guarding) | ||
| Labs: complete blood count, electrolytes, liver function tests, amylase, lipase, and urinalysis; pregnancy test in females | Depends on signs and symptoms |
Suggested initial evaluation in patients suspected of having nonurgent condition associated with abdominal pain
| Symptoms | Evaluation |
|---|---|
| Upper or epigastric abdominal pain (particularly with vomiting) | Liver function tests, amylase, and lipase; ultrasound |
| Periumbilical or diffuse pain | CBC, electrolytes, glucose, UA, and consider throat culture |
| Localized RLQ pain | CBC, ESR, CRP, and stool calprotectin; ultrasound, Yersinia culture |
| Lower abdominal pain | UA; ultrasound |
| Genital or scrotal pain/vaginal discharge | Ultrasound |
| Hematemesis | CBC, amylase, lipase, and liver function tests; ultrasound |
| Hematochezia | CBC, ESR, CRP, stool calprotectin, BUN, creatinine; stool culture and |
| Hematuria, flank pain, or suprapubic pain | UA and urine culture; ultrasound and/or CT |
| Polyuria | Electrolytes, glucose, and UA |
| Weight loss or growth deceleration | CBC, ESR, CRP, and stool calprotectin, and celiac serology |
| Diarrhea without fever or hematochezia | Stool ova and parasite |
Abbreviations: AAS, acute abdominal series; BUN, blood urea nitrogen; CBC, complete blood count; CRP, C-reactive protein; CT, computed tomography; ESR, erythrocyte sedimentation rate; RLQ, right lower quadrant; RUQ, right upper quadrant; UA, urinalysis; US, ultrasound of abdomen.