I. Pertinent Hx:
- Menstrual history of patient is female of childbearing age
- Location of pain may help suggest location of the problem
- Diffuse Pain : ischemia, strangulation
- Midepigatric : stomach, duodenum, liver, biliary
- Periumbilical : appendix, ureters, testes, ovaries
- Lower Abd: lower ureter, colon, bladder, uterus
- Sudden Onset: consider perforated ulcer, ruptured aneurysm, ruptured ectopic pregnancy
- Associated sx to ask about: vomiting, hematemesis, hematuria, diarrhea, obstipation, cough, sputum
II. PMHx: PUD, gallstones, EtOH use, abdominal surgery, AAA, cardiac disease, arrhythmias
III. Diff Dx:
- Intra-abdominal :
- Hollow viscera--esophagitis, gastritis, PUD, cholecystitis, small bowel obstruction/infarction, IBD, appendicitis, colonic obstruction, pseudo-obstruction ("Ogilvie's syndrome"), diverticulitis, enteritis, malabsorption
- Solid organ--hepatitis, pancreatitis, splenic infarct, pyelonephritis, SBP
- Pelvic--PID, ruptured ectopic
- Vascular-Ruptured aneurysm, dissection, Mesenteric Ischemia
- Extra-abdominal :
- DKA
- Acute adrenal insufficiency (Addisonian Crisis)
- Acute porphyria
- Lower lobe pneumonia
- Pulm. embolus
- Pneumothorax
- SS crisis
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Diagnosis of acute appendicitis in children with abdominal pain In a systematic review of studies comparing clinical findings with histologically confirmed appendicitis, the following were significantly associated with that diagnosis:
Not associated with sig. increased likelihood of appendicitis:
(Source: West. J. Med. 176:104, 2001--AFP) |
IV. Px:
- Vitals, lungs, pelvic
- Abdomen
- Insp.--dist., ecchymoses, caput med., surg. scars
- Percuss - tympany, shift. dull., fluid wave, loss of liver dullness
- Palp.--guarding, rebound, CVAT, Murphy's sign, psoas sign, obturator sign
- Auscultate - bowel sounds
- Rectal
V. Workup
- CBC, lytes, glucose, creatinine, LFT's, lipase, amylase
- Consider CXR if Hx/Px suggests lower lobe pneumonia
- As indicated: ultrasound, CT (quite sensitive/specific for appendicitis), Ba enema/sm. bowel series, paracentesis, intravenous pyelography, endoscopy, angio, HIDA, Beta-hCG, ABG, U/A, cervical cultures
- CT had sensitivity of 99% and specificty of 95% for acute appendicitis in a case series of 63 children presenting to an ED with abdominal pain (Am. J. Roentgenol. 184:1802, 2005--JW)
- Ultrasound had sensitivity of 83% and specificity of 95% for acute appendicitis in a case series of 667 adults and children with suspected appendicitis (Am. J. Roentgenol. 184:1809, 2005--JW)
VI. Management:
- To OR STAT if--appendicitis, strangulated hernia, perforation, Meckel's diverticulitis, Boerhaave's, acute cholecystitis/cholangitis, hepatic abscess, ruptured spleen, ruptured ectopic, ruptured ovarian cyst, ruptured aneurysm, ischemic colitis, intra-abdominal abscesses
- If none of the above,
- Surgical consult
- NPO
- NG tube (for vomiting, obstruction suspected)
- Electrolyte/Fluid management
- Opioid analgesia as needed (contrary to popular belief, did not affect diagnostic accuracy in one randomized trial, see J. Am. Coll. Surg. 196:18, 2003--JW)
- In a study in 128 pts with partial small-bowel obstruction felt to be due to adhesions from prior surgery, randomized to conservative care vs. conservative care + (MgO, simethicone, and lactobacillus), incidence of not requiring surgery was sig. higher in the active-tx group (91% vs.76%) (CMAJ 173:1165, 2005--JW)
- Serial exams
- Neostygmine 2mg IV x 1 may help hasten resolution of colonic pseudo-bstruction (NEJM 341:137, 1999--JW)