Abdominal Pain Clinical Reasoning Flashcards
what are some causes of RUQ pain?
Biliary disease (cholelithiasis, cholecystitis)
Pancreatitis (also epigastric)
Renal colic (usually flank pain) – from kidney stone, infection
Hepatitis
what are some causes of LUQ pain?
Renal colic (usually flank pain) Splenic infarct or rupture
what are some causes of epigastric pain?
Peptic ulcer
Pancreatitis
Biliary disease (cholelithiasis, cholecystitis)
GERD
what are some causes of diffuse periumbilical pain?
Appendicitis (later RLQ) Bowel obstruction Mesenteric ischemia (acute or chronic) Abdominal aortic aneurysm Gastroenteritis IBD IBS Splenic rupture
what are some causes of RLQ pain?
Appendicitis Diverticulitis Cecal volvulus Ovarian disease (cyst, mass, torsion) Ectopic pregnancy PID
what are some causes of LLQ pain?
Diverticulitis Ovarian disease (cyst, mass, torsion) Ectopic pregnancy Sigmoid volvulus PID
when should you check CVA tenderness?
how do you assess this?
- when you suspect pyelonephritis (renal tenderness)
- make a fist and gently hit the area over the costovertebral angle on both the right and left side
what does rebound tenderness tell you? how do you assess for rebound tenderness?
-Rebound tenderness is a sign of peritoneal irritation
- It is elicited by palpating deeply and slowly.
- The palpating hand is then quickly removed.
- If the pain is greatest when you release the pressure suddenly, the patient has rebound tenderness
what tests can you perform for a patient who you suspect has ascites? describe how to perform them
- shifting dullness: Have the patient lie supine, then determine the borders of dullness and tympany. The area of tympany is present above the area of dullness. The patient is then asked to turn on the side, and the examiner again determines the borders of tympany and dullness. If ascites is present, the “dullness” will shift to the dependent position. The area around the umbilicus that was initially tympanic will become dull.
- fluid wave: Another examiner or the patient’s own hand is placed in the middle of the patient’s abdomen. The examiner then taps one flank while palpating the other side. Detection of the fluid wave suggests ascites
when should you test for Murphy’s sign? how do you do this?
when right upper quadrant pain and tenderness suggest cholecystitis
- Place your fingers under the right costal margin and ask the patient to take a deep breath
- A sharp increase in tenderness with a sudden stop in inspiratory effort constitutes a positive Murphy’s sign of acute cholecystitis.
when should you test for Psoas sign? how do you do this?
when you suspect appendicitis
- The examiner places hand above the patient’s right knee.
- Ask the patient to flex the right hip against resistance.
- Increased abdominal pain indicates a positive psoas sign.
- An alternative is to ask the patient to lie on the left side and passively extend the right hip backwards. Again, increased pain is a positive psoas sign.
when should you test for Obturator sign? how do you do this?
when you suspect appendicitis
- Rotate the leg internally at the hip.
- Increased abdominal pain indicates a positive obturator sign.
when should you perform inguinal palpation?
when you suspect hernias or inguinal lymphadenopathy
when a patient presents with appendicitis, what are next steps for management?
send them to ER!
get a CT scan to rule out appendicitis if diagnosis is uncertain
give IV fluids and antibiotics
surgery likely
classic picture of appendicitis
migration of pain from periumbilical reaction to RLQ to McBurney point (2/3 of way between belly button & iliac crest)
positive psoas/obturator signs on exam
patients often complain of bloating + anorexia
classic picture of biliary disease
episodic, crampy pain that begins an hour or so after eating pain commonly wakes patients from sleep pain may radiate to back/shoulder pain assoc w/ nausea and vomiting Murphy sign is positive
when a patient presents with cholelithiasis/cholecystitis, what are next steps for management?
send them to the ER
send them to get an ultrasound
may need surgery