Synonym: Acute Abdominal Pain
Please also refer to the separate article entitled 'Abdominal Pain'.
The term 'acute abdomen' represents a rapid onset of severe symptoms that may indicate life-threatening intra-abdominal pathology.
Pain is usually a feature but is not always the case. A pain-free acute abdomen is more likely in the elderly, in children and in the third trimester of pregnancy.1
The differential diagnosis is extremely wide and definitive diagnosis is often difficult, particularly in primary care. This is due to the many different organs within the peritoneal cavity and the potential for referred pain.
It is a common problem, ranking in the top three symptoms of patients presenting to accident and emergency departments.2
Management of the acute abdomen in primary care should focus on careful assessment to reach a differential diagnosis list, with close attention paid to symptoms and signs that may indicate a need to investigate the situation further in hospital.
The clinical scenario can change rapidly and conclusions previously reached by yourself or colleagues may need to be revised as events evolve. A failure to be open-minded and revise a previous diagnosis is often at the heart of medicolegal claims relating to patients with an acute abdomen.1
This article will concentrate on diagnosing the important causes of the acute abdomen in primary care/emergency department settings.
Major causes
This list is far from exhaustive but is a useful aide-memoir for those conditions commonly seen in the community:1
Acute cholecystitis
Acute appendicitis or Meckel's diverticulitis
Acute pancreatitis
Ectopic pregnancy
Diverticulitis
Peptic ulcer disease
Pelvic inflammatory disease
Intestinal obstruction, including paralytic ileus (adynamic obstruction)
Gastroenteritis
Acute intestinal ischaemia/infarction or vasculitis
Gastrointestinal haemorrhage
Renal colic or renal tract pain
Acute urinary retention
Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA)
Testicular torsion
Non-surgical disease, e.g. myocardial infarction, pericarditis, pneumonia, sickle cell crisis, hepatitis, inflammatory bowel disease, opiate withdrawal, typhoid, acute intermittent porphyria, HIV-associated lymphadenopathy or enteritis
Classification of causes according to site of pain
Another way to consider the causes of an acute abdomen is by classifying them according to the area of the abdomen most affected by pain (again, the list is not exhaustive):
There are separate articles covering Epigastric Pain, Left Iliac Fossa Pain, Right Iliac Fossa Pain, Left Upper Quadrant Pain, Right Upper Quadrant Pain, Pelvic Pain and Loin Pain.
Assessment
Initial impression/observation
Does the patient look ill, septic or shocked?
Are they lying still (think peritonitis), or rolling around in agony (think intestinal, biliary or renal colic)?
Assess and manage Airway, Breathing and Circulation as a priority.
In an emergency department setting: if there are signs that the patient is shocked or acutely unwell, assess quickly but carefully and arrange any early investigations.
In a community setting: make arrangements for rapid transfer to hospital for further assessment.
History1
This should cover the following points:
Demographic details, occupation, recent travel, history of recent abdominal trauma
Pain:
Onset (including whether new pain or previously experienced)
Site (ask patient to point), localised or diffuse
Nature (constant/intermittent/colicky)
Radiation
Severity
Relieving/aggravating factors (e.g. if worsened by movement/coughing suspect active peritonitis; pancreatitis is relieved by sitting forward)
Associated symptoms:
Vomiting and nature of vomitus (undigested food or bile suggests upper GI pathology or obstruction; feculent vomiting suggests lower GI obstruction)
Haematemesis or melaena
Stool/urine colour
New lumps in abdominal region/groins
Eating and drinking - including when was last meal?
Bowels - including presence of diarrhoea, constipation and ability to pass flatus
Fainting, dizziness or palpitations
Fever/rigors
Rash or itching
Urinary symptoms
Recent weight loss
Past medical and surgical history/medication
Gynaecological and obstetric history:
Contraception (including IUCD use)
LMP
History of STIs/PID
Previous gynaecological or tubal surgery
Previous ectopic pregnancy
Vaginal bleeding
Drug history and allergies - including any complementary medication
Examination1
Please also refer to the separate article on Abdominal Examination.
Pulse, temperature and blood pressure.
Assess respiratory rate and pattern. Patients with peritonitis may take shallow, rapid breaths to reduce pain.
If altered consciousness check GCS or AVPU scale (Alert, Voice response, Pain response, Unconscious).
Inspection:
Look for evidence of anaemia/jaundice.
Look for visible peristalsis or abdominal distension.
Look for signs of bruising around the umbilicus (Cullen's sign - can be present in haemorrhagic pancreatitis and ectopic pregnancy) or flanks (Grey Turner's sign - can be present in retroperitoneal haematoma).
Assess whether patient is dehydrated (skin turgor/dry mucous membranes).
Auscultation:
Auscultate abdomen in all four quadrants.
Absent bowel sounds suggest paralytic ileus, generalised peritonitis or intestinal obstruction. High-pitched and tinkling bowel sounds suggest sub-acute intestinal obstruction.
Intestinal obstruction can also present with normal bowel sounds.
If there is reason to suspect aortic aneurysm, listen carefully for abdominal and iliac bruits.
Percussion:
Percuss the abdomen to assess whether swelling/distension might be due to bowel gas or ascites.
Patients who display tenderness to percussion are likely to have generalised peritonitis and this should act as a red flag for serious pathology.
Assess for shifting dullness and fluid thrill.
Percussion can also be used to determine size of an abdominal mass/extent of organomegaly.
Palpation:
Palpate the abdomen gently, then more deeply, starting away from the pain and moving towards it.
Feel for masses, tenderness, involuntary guarding and organomegaly (including the bladder).
Test for rebound tenderness.
Examine the groins for evidence of herniae.
Always examine the scrotum in men as pain may be referred from unrecognised testicular pathology.
Check supraclavicular and groin lymph nodes.
Further examination:
Perform rectal or pelvic examination as needed with an appropriate chaperone.
Check lower limb pulses if there could be an abdominal aortic aneurysm.
Dipstick urine and send for culture if appropriate.
In a woman of child-bearing age, assume that she is pregnant until proven otherwise - perform a pregnancy test.
Examine any other system that might be relevant, e.g. respiratory, cardiovascular.
Pre-hospital/emergency department care of suspected acute abdomen
Keep patient nil by mouth.
Apply oxygen as appropriate.
IV fluids: set up immediately if shocked and equipment available. Send blood for group and save/crossmatch and other blood tests as appropriate.
Consider passing an NG tube if severe vomiting, signs of intestinal obstruction or extremely unwell and danger of aspiration.
Analgesia: previous practice was to withhold analgesia until surgical review. One recent review showed that opiate administration may alter physical examination findings, but these changes result in no significant increase in management errors.3 Another study showed that morphine safely provides analgesia without impairing diagnostic accuracy.4 A Cochrane review also supported the use of analgesia before assessment by a surgeon.5
Antiemetic: avoid using this as a symptomatic treatment without considering a diagnosis in community setting.
Antibiotics: if suspect systemic sepsis, peritonitis, severe UTI. IV cephalosporin plus metronidazole are commonly used in acutely unwell patients in whom peritonitis is suspected.
Arrange urgent surgical/gynaecological review as appropriate.
Arrange investigations such as ECG if medical cause likely.
Admit: if consider that surgery likely, if unable to tolerate oral fluids, for pain control, if medical cause possible or if IV antibiotics required.
Investigation
This is mainly relevant to patients being assessed in emergency departments or secondary care.
With the exception of a urinary pregnancy test and urine dipstick, there are few tests that are useful in the community assessment of the patient with acute abdominal pain.
On the whole, if you are concerned enough to be ordering blood tests or imaging, the patient should be referred to secondary care.
The following tests are often used but can be non-specific and must be interpreted in the clinical context and with appropriate medical/surgical expertise:
Blood tests: FBC, U&E, LFT, amylase, glucose, clotting, and occasionally Ca2+, ABG (pancreatitis), calcium
Group and Save or crossmatch
Blood cultures
Pregnancy test in women of child bearing age
Urinalysis
Radiology - AXR (supine), CXR (erect looking for gas under the diaphragm), IVP, CT, ultrasound scan as appropriate
Consider ECG and cardiac enzymes
Peritoneal lavage if history of abdominal trauma
Criteria for admission
There are no hard-and-fast rules by which to make this judgement. It will vary with the clinical situation and confidence/experience of the clinician involved.
Any of the red flags below would indicate a need for admission in the vast majority of cases.
Be wary of not admitting patients who have no support at home or live alone if the situation has a chance of deteriorating.
Patients who cannot take oral fluids or who have severe persistent diarrhoea are likely to need admission.
If there is significant co-morbidity such as diabetes or ischaemic heart disease you should have a low threshold for admission.
If you decide to manage patients with early or non-specific abdominal pain in the community, take care to make concrete follow-up arrangements and give advice on what should prompt them to seek further medical attention. Clear documentation is needed.
Red flags that raise suspicion of serious pathology
Hypotension
Confusion/impaired consciousness
Signs of shock
Systemically unwell/septic-looking
Signs of dehydration
Rigid abdomen
Patient lying very still or writhing
Absent or altered bowel sounds
Associated testicular pathology
Marked involuntary guarding/rebound tenderness
Tenderness to percussion
History of haematemesis/melaena or evidence of latter on PR examination
Suspicion of medical cause for abdominal pain
Special situations
Children
Pain aetiology varies with age; history and examination can be difficult. Please refer to the separate articles on Abdominal Pain in Childhood and Recurrent Abdominal Pain in Children.
Pregnancy
Always consider ectopic pregnancy in women of child-bearing age. Causes of acute abdomen in late pregnancy are different and require expert combined obstetric, gynaecological and surgical evaluation. Please refer to the separate article on Abdominal Pain in Pregnancy.
Older patients
Tend to show less specific symptoms and signs.
Tend to present later in the course of their illness.6
Morbidity and mortality in older patients presenting with acute abdominal pain are high.6
You should have a lower threshold for referral to secondary care/for surgical assessment and a higher index of suspicion of serious pathology.1
Aortic aneurysm and bowel ischaemia are more prevalent in the elderly.
Angiodysplasia of the colon is more common and can cause GI haemorrhage.
Medical causes of abdominal pain are encountered more frequently.
The 'Top 5' medical causes of an acute abdomen to consider in older patients are:1
Inferior MI
Lower-lobe pneumonia/PE causing pleurisy
Diabetic ketoacidosis or Hyperosmolar Non-Ketotic Coma (HONK)
Pyelonephritis
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Biliary tract disease, including cholecystitis, is the most common indication for surgery in older patients with abdominal pain. This is thought to be due to age-related changes in the biliary tract.6
Medicolegal pitfalls and tips
Careful documentation of the clinical situation and decision-making process is essential.
Failure to appreciate the severity of illness through not assessing vital signs/taking heed of general condition.
Failing to take note of history from carers/parents in a patient who now seems relatively well, particularly in children.
Failure to examine adequately or to document findings.
Failure to examine for a bladder, herniae or check scrotum.
Failure to carry out rectal or vaginal examination when it is indicated.
Failing to explain the reason for an intimate examination, leading to an accusation of impropriety.
Treating children as little adults and not considering paediatric-specific diagnoses.
Failing to make concrete follow-up arrangements or advising a patient of when they should seek further assessment, when managing patients in the community.
Delayed transfer of acutely unwell patients to hospital. Use 999 service where necessary.
Steroids or other forms of immunocompromise may mask symptoms and signs.
When pain outstrips signs, consider gut infarction or AAA.
Don't rely on a normal test result to discount pathology if the clinical condition suggests otherwise.
Failing to consider pregnancy or conduct a pregnancy test.
Be ready to re-assess your initial diagnosis, or a colleague's diagnosis, where the clinical situation has changed.
Please also refer to the separate article entitled 'Abdominal Pain'.
The term 'acute abdomen' represents a rapid onset of severe symptoms that may indicate life-threatening intra-abdominal pathology.
Pain is usually a feature but is not always the case. A pain-free acute abdomen is more likely in the elderly, in children and in the third trimester of pregnancy.1
The differential diagnosis is extremely wide and definitive diagnosis is often difficult, particularly in primary care. This is due to the many different organs within the peritoneal cavity and the potential for referred pain.
It is a common problem, ranking in the top three symptoms of patients presenting to accident and emergency departments.2
Management of the acute abdomen in primary care should focus on careful assessment to reach a differential diagnosis list, with close attention paid to symptoms and signs that may indicate a need to investigate the situation further in hospital.
The clinical scenario can change rapidly and conclusions previously reached by yourself or colleagues may need to be revised as events evolve. A failure to be open-minded and revise a previous diagnosis is often at the heart of medicolegal claims relating to patients with an acute abdomen.1
This article will concentrate on diagnosing the important causes of the acute abdomen in primary care/emergency department settings.
Major causes
This list is far from exhaustive but is a useful aide-memoir for those conditions commonly seen in the community:1
Acute cholecystitis
Acute appendicitis or Meckel's diverticulitis
Acute pancreatitis
Ectopic pregnancy
Diverticulitis
Peptic ulcer disease
Pelvic inflammatory disease
Intestinal obstruction, including paralytic ileus (adynamic obstruction)
Gastroenteritis
Acute intestinal ischaemia/infarction or vasculitis
Gastrointestinal haemorrhage
Renal colic or renal tract pain
Acute urinary retention
Abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA)
Testicular torsion
Non-surgical disease, e.g. myocardial infarction, pericarditis, pneumonia, sickle cell crisis, hepatitis, inflammatory bowel disease, opiate withdrawal, typhoid, acute intermittent porphyria, HIV-associated lymphadenopathy or enteritis
Classification of causes according to site of pain
Another way to consider the causes of an acute abdomen is by classifying them according to the area of the abdomen most affected by pain (again, the list is not exhaustive):
There are separate articles covering Epigastric Pain, Left Iliac Fossa Pain, Right Iliac Fossa Pain, Left Upper Quadrant Pain, Right Upper Quadrant Pain, Pelvic Pain and Loin Pain.
Assessment
Initial impression/observation
Does the patient look ill, septic or shocked?
Are they lying still (think peritonitis), or rolling around in agony (think intestinal, biliary or renal colic)?
Assess and manage Airway, Breathing and Circulation as a priority.
In an emergency department setting: if there are signs that the patient is shocked or acutely unwell, assess quickly but carefully and arrange any early investigations.
In a community setting: make arrangements for rapid transfer to hospital for further assessment.
History1
This should cover the following points:
Demographic details, occupation, recent travel, history of recent abdominal trauma
Pain:
Onset (including whether new pain or previously experienced)
Site (ask patient to point), localised or diffuse
Nature (constant/intermittent/colicky)
Radiation
Severity
Relieving/aggravating factors (e.g. if worsened by movement/coughing suspect active peritonitis; pancreatitis is relieved by sitting forward)
Associated symptoms:
Vomiting and nature of vomitus (undigested food or bile suggests upper GI pathology or obstruction; feculent vomiting suggests lower GI obstruction)
Haematemesis or melaena
Stool/urine colour
New lumps in abdominal region/groins
Eating and drinking - including when was last meal?
Bowels - including presence of diarrhoea, constipation and ability to pass flatus
Fainting, dizziness or palpitations
Fever/rigors
Rash or itching
Urinary symptoms
Recent weight loss
Past medical and surgical history/medication
Gynaecological and obstetric history:
Contraception (including IUCD use)
LMP
History of STIs/PID
Previous gynaecological or tubal surgery
Previous ectopic pregnancy
Vaginal bleeding
Drug history and allergies - including any complementary medication
Examination1
Please also refer to the separate article on Abdominal Examination.
Pulse, temperature and blood pressure.
Assess respiratory rate and pattern. Patients with peritonitis may take shallow, rapid breaths to reduce pain.
If altered consciousness check GCS or AVPU scale (Alert, Voice response, Pain response, Unconscious).
Inspection:
Look for evidence of anaemia/jaundice.
Look for visible peristalsis or abdominal distension.
Look for signs of bruising around the umbilicus (Cullen's sign - can be present in haemorrhagic pancreatitis and ectopic pregnancy) or flanks (Grey Turner's sign - can be present in retroperitoneal haematoma).
Assess whether patient is dehydrated (skin turgor/dry mucous membranes).
Auscultation:
Auscultate abdomen in all four quadrants.
Absent bowel sounds suggest paralytic ileus, generalised peritonitis or intestinal obstruction. High-pitched and tinkling bowel sounds suggest sub-acute intestinal obstruction.
Intestinal obstruction can also present with normal bowel sounds.
If there is reason to suspect aortic aneurysm, listen carefully for abdominal and iliac bruits.
Percussion:
Percuss the abdomen to assess whether swelling/distension might be due to bowel gas or ascites.
Patients who display tenderness to percussion are likely to have generalised peritonitis and this should act as a red flag for serious pathology.
Assess for shifting dullness and fluid thrill.
Percussion can also be used to determine size of an abdominal mass/extent of organomegaly.
Palpation:
Palpate the abdomen gently, then more deeply, starting away from the pain and moving towards it.
Feel for masses, tenderness, involuntary guarding and organomegaly (including the bladder).
Test for rebound tenderness.
Examine the groins for evidence of herniae.
Always examine the scrotum in men as pain may be referred from unrecognised testicular pathology.
Check supraclavicular and groin lymph nodes.
Further examination:
Perform rectal or pelvic examination as needed with an appropriate chaperone.
Check lower limb pulses if there could be an abdominal aortic aneurysm.
Dipstick urine and send for culture if appropriate.
In a woman of child-bearing age, assume that she is pregnant until proven otherwise - perform a pregnancy test.
Examine any other system that might be relevant, e.g. respiratory, cardiovascular.
Pre-hospital/emergency department care of suspected acute abdomen
Keep patient nil by mouth.
Apply oxygen as appropriate.
IV fluids: set up immediately if shocked and equipment available. Send blood for group and save/crossmatch and other blood tests as appropriate.
Consider passing an NG tube if severe vomiting, signs of intestinal obstruction or extremely unwell and danger of aspiration.
Analgesia: previous practice was to withhold analgesia until surgical review. One recent review showed that opiate administration may alter physical examination findings, but these changes result in no significant increase in management errors.3 Another study showed that morphine safely provides analgesia without impairing diagnostic accuracy.4 A Cochrane review also supported the use of analgesia before assessment by a surgeon.5
Antiemetic: avoid using this as a symptomatic treatment without considering a diagnosis in community setting.
Antibiotics: if suspect systemic sepsis, peritonitis, severe UTI. IV cephalosporin plus metronidazole are commonly used in acutely unwell patients in whom peritonitis is suspected.
Arrange urgent surgical/gynaecological review as appropriate.
Arrange investigations such as ECG if medical cause likely.
Admit: if consider that surgery likely, if unable to tolerate oral fluids, for pain control, if medical cause possible or if IV antibiotics required.
Investigation
This is mainly relevant to patients being assessed in emergency departments or secondary care.
With the exception of a urinary pregnancy test and urine dipstick, there are few tests that are useful in the community assessment of the patient with acute abdominal pain.
On the whole, if you are concerned enough to be ordering blood tests or imaging, the patient should be referred to secondary care.
The following tests are often used but can be non-specific and must be interpreted in the clinical context and with appropriate medical/surgical expertise:
Blood tests: FBC, U&E, LFT, amylase, glucose, clotting, and occasionally Ca2+, ABG (pancreatitis), calcium
Group and Save or crossmatch
Blood cultures
Pregnancy test in women of child bearing age
Urinalysis
Radiology - AXR (supine), CXR (erect looking for gas under the diaphragm), IVP, CT, ultrasound scan as appropriate
Consider ECG and cardiac enzymes
Peritoneal lavage if history of abdominal trauma
Criteria for admission
There are no hard-and-fast rules by which to make this judgement. It will vary with the clinical situation and confidence/experience of the clinician involved.
Any of the red flags below would indicate a need for admission in the vast majority of cases.
Be wary of not admitting patients who have no support at home or live alone if the situation has a chance of deteriorating.
Patients who cannot take oral fluids or who have severe persistent diarrhoea are likely to need admission.
If there is significant co-morbidity such as diabetes or ischaemic heart disease you should have a low threshold for admission.
If you decide to manage patients with early or non-specific abdominal pain in the community, take care to make concrete follow-up arrangements and give advice on what should prompt them to seek further medical attention. Clear documentation is needed.
Red flags that raise suspicion of serious pathology
Hypotension
Confusion/impaired consciousness
Signs of shock
Systemically unwell/septic-looking
Signs of dehydration
Rigid abdomen
Patient lying very still or writhing
Absent or altered bowel sounds
Associated testicular pathology
Marked involuntary guarding/rebound tenderness
Tenderness to percussion
History of haematemesis/melaena or evidence of latter on PR examination
Suspicion of medical cause for abdominal pain
Special situations
Children
Pain aetiology varies with age; history and examination can be difficult. Please refer to the separate articles on Abdominal Pain in Childhood and Recurrent Abdominal Pain in Children.
Pregnancy
Always consider ectopic pregnancy in women of child-bearing age. Causes of acute abdomen in late pregnancy are different and require expert combined obstetric, gynaecological and surgical evaluation. Please refer to the separate article on Abdominal Pain in Pregnancy.
Older patients
Tend to show less specific symptoms and signs.
Tend to present later in the course of their illness.6
Morbidity and mortality in older patients presenting with acute abdominal pain are high.6
You should have a lower threshold for referral to secondary care/for surgical assessment and a higher index of suspicion of serious pathology.1
Aortic aneurysm and bowel ischaemia are more prevalent in the elderly.
Angiodysplasia of the colon is more common and can cause GI haemorrhage.
Medical causes of abdominal pain are encountered more frequently.
The 'Top 5' medical causes of an acute abdomen to consider in older patients are:1
Inferior MI
Lower-lobe pneumonia/PE causing pleurisy
Diabetic ketoacidosis or Hyperosmolar Non-Ketotic Coma (HONK)
Pyelonephritis
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
Biliary tract disease, including cholecystitis, is the most common indication for surgery in older patients with abdominal pain. This is thought to be due to age-related changes in the biliary tract.6
Medicolegal pitfalls and tips
Careful documentation of the clinical situation and decision-making process is essential.
Failure to appreciate the severity of illness through not assessing vital signs/taking heed of general condition.
Failing to take note of history from carers/parents in a patient who now seems relatively well, particularly in children.
Failure to examine adequately or to document findings.
Failure to examine for a bladder, herniae or check scrotum.
Failure to carry out rectal or vaginal examination when it is indicated.
Failing to explain the reason for an intimate examination, leading to an accusation of impropriety.
Treating children as little adults and not considering paediatric-specific diagnoses.
Failing to make concrete follow-up arrangements or advising a patient of when they should seek further assessment, when managing patients in the community.
Delayed transfer of acutely unwell patients to hospital. Use 999 service where necessary.
Steroids or other forms of immunocompromise may mask symptoms and signs.
When pain outstrips signs, consider gut infarction or AAA.
Don't rely on a normal test result to discount pathology if the clinical condition suggests otherwise.
Failing to consider pregnancy or conduct a pregnancy test.
Be ready to re-assess your initial diagnosis, or a colleague's diagnosis, where the clinical situation has changed.
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