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Abdominal Pain II – Lower abdominal and pelvic pain

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Presentation on theme: "Abdominal Pain II – Lower abdominal and pelvic pain"— Presentation transcript:

1 Abdominal Pain II – Lower abdominal and pelvic pain
EMC SDMH 2015

2 Objectives Briefly revise patterns of pain radiation
Differentials of lower abdominal pain Review assessment of appendicitis Review assessment of diverticulitis Review assessment of types of bowel obstruction Discuss mesenteric ischaemia Briefly review ovarian cyst accidents

3 Pain modalities in the abdomen
Visceral ‘aching, cramping, dull’ Poorly localised – typically midline  ‘Colicky’ Parietal Somatic, sharp, well localised  ‘Peritonitic’ Referred Ureteric  teste/vulva Cardiac  epigastrium, arm, back Diaphragmatic  shoulder tip

4 Differentials for lower abdominal pain

5 Appendicitis Commonest surgical emergency Typically younger adult
Peak in children 6-9 yrs old 10 % pts > 60yrs age 1:1500 pregnancies Initial diagnostic accuracy of ~ 85% Often delayed diagnosis in children, elderly, pregnancy

6 Clinical features HISTORY sens (spec) EXAM RLQ tenderness 96%
Nausea % (30%) Anorexia % (35%) RLQ pain % (50%) Migration % (80%) Fever % (50%) Pain generally precedes nausea Elderly, paediatric more prone to atypical presentations RLQ tenderness % Guarding % Fever % Rectal exam not helpful Rovsings, Posas and Obturator signs may be specific, but insensitive

7 Assessment WCC & CRP?

8 Decision rules Alvarado Score
Stratifies to high, intermediate and low risk appendicitis When compared to CT evidence Score % Score % Score % Prospective use of Alavarado <4 to exclude appendicitis ; 28% appendicitis! (Andrew et al 2013) ~ Gestalt assessment 80-85%

9 Imaging Ultrasound CT Scan Operator dependent Sensitivity 75-90%
Specificity % PPV and NPV 90-95% Performs better in children Generally accessible Sensitivity & specificity 98% Needs contrast Radiation dose 8-10mSV

10 Management Early surgical referral
May not require imaging to take to OT IV Analgesia IV Fluids IV antibiotics – reduces peri-operative complication rate

11 Diverticulitis Increasing prevalence 20% chance of diverticulitis
5% of <40 yrs 30% age 60 70% age 85 20% chance of diverticulitis 10-15% diverticular bleeding 70% asymptomatic lifelong diverticulosis 5% right sided diverticulosis

12 Clinical features History EXAM/LABS Left lower abdo pain (90%)
GI disturbance diarrhoea 30%, constipation 50% Anorexia (~40%) Nausea (~40%) Dysuria/Frequency (10%) Fever (30%) Abdominal tenderness (90%) Fever (30%) Leucocytosis (60%) Clinical triad of LLQ pain, fever and leucocytosis ~25%

13 Imaging CT scan unequivocal test of choice
Diagnosis and severity grading Diverticulosis Uncomplicated Diverticulitis

14 Management Uncomplicated (75%) Complicated (25%)
Inflammation simply confined to diverticulum/lumen wall Depending upon institutional guidelines - Immunocompetent Well appearing Pain controlled Self caring Clear fluid diet Oral antibiotics(Augmentin Duo) 5-7 days(?) Analgesia Outpatient colonoscopy 4-6 weeks Complicated (25%) Inflammation and free fluid, abcess, collection, obstruction ,perforation NBM IV Fluids +/- resuscitation fluid IV antibiotics – triple therapy Targeted surgical treatment depending upon complication

15 Bowel obstructions Small bowel Large bowel Volvulus

16 Bowel obstruction History Exam / LABs
Abdominal pain – cramping/colicky Distension/bloating ‘Constipation’/nil flatus Vomiting – only if proximal Abdominal distension Variable degree & nature of abdominal tenderness Bowel sounds variably present/absent Nil specific lab results – consistent with dehydration Acid base deficit/lactate elevation may suggest ischemia/sepsis – generally normal

17 Imaging Small bowel obstruction
Centrally located dilated loops of bowel apparent Air-fluid interface Dilatation >3 cm in 3 loops Valvulae conniventes visible String of beads sign in otherwise gasless abdomen AXR Sensitivity 50-66%

18 Imaging Large Bowel obstruction
Colonic distension >6 cm (9 cm for cecum) Collapsed distal colon Peripherally distributed Haustra visible

19 Imaging Volvulus – Sigmoid/Caecal Subtype large bowel obstruction.
Characteristic ‘coffee bean’ appearance to dilated bowel for sigmoid Caecal volvulus less distinctive, but looped away from RIF

20 Management Small bowel (80%) Large bowel (20%) Analgesia NBM.
NGT optional IV fluids to replace losses CT scan to establish cause and exclude closed loop obstruction Adhesions/Herniae (internal/external)commonest causes Surgical consultation and admission Analgesia NBM. NGT not required IV fluids to replace losses CT scan to establish cause Carcinoma/Diverticular stricture commonest reasons Sigmoid volvulus and caecal volvulus require urgent decompression to prevent bowel ischemia

21 Acute mesenteric ischaemia
Mesenteric arterial embolus Mesenteric arterial thrombosis Mesenteric vein thrombosis Ischaemic colitis Typically sudden onset colicky, severe pain; older patient with cardiovascular disease Little to find on exam – pain out of proportion to findings Associated forceful offensive diarrhoea; maroon/bloody stool.

22 Management No reliable pathology Imaging Treatment –
Supportive – Metabolic acidosis +/- lactate (LATE!) WCC >15 Amylasaemia CK Imaging AXR – often normal CT – SBO; pneumatosis coli; portal vein gas CT mesenteric angiography gold standard Treatment – Laparotomy if appropriate to treat cause Broad spectrum IV a/b Mortality 75-90% if infarction fully established Survival 50% 5 yrs if aggressively managed early

23 Ovarian cyst accidents
Ovarian cyst torsion Typically premenopausal woman Commoner with PCOS, OHSS Cyst >4 cm, R>L incidence Severe colicky abdominal pain, becoming constant Pain out of proportion to signs 50% nausea and vomiting Adnexal mass on USS raises suspicion. Normal flow doesn’t exclude diagnosis Management = laparoscopic detorsion (90% success rate hrs)

24 Ovarian cyst accidents
Ovarian cyst rupture Corpus luteal cysts responsible, D20-26 of menses Mittelschmerz = physiological rupture Sudden onset of pain, maximal at onset Secondarily generalised pelvic pain, aching in nature Variable amount of pain - mild to very severe Not constitutionally unwell, mild peritonism only. USS – mild free fluid 40%. Treatment conservative with analgesia HAEMORRHAGE – 3% of ruptures – bleeding from corpus luteal cyst; worsening pain with free fluid. Require laparoscopic OT for haemostasis

25 Pelvic Inflammatory Disease
Spectrum of illness from acute bilateral pelvic pain  Tubo-ovarian abscess and sepsis Bilateral crampy dull pain <7 days duration. Exacerbated by coitus 75% associated with new PV discharge Adnexal, uterine or cervical tenderness (95% sensitive). Cervicitis should be present No pathology reliably rules in or out – inflammatory markers expected to be elevated however. Swabs for chlamydia, gonococcus USS demonstrates tubo-ovarian pathology in more unwell individuals (febrile), but often normal Management Mild infection – Ceftriaxone 500mg + Azithromycin stat dose, metronidazole 14/7 Repeat dose azithromycin 7/7 Major infection – Ceftriaxone 2 g daily +azithromycin +metronidazole

26 Questions?

27 Summary History remains best predictor in appendicitis.
CRP, WCC may be more useful as rule-out tests Outpatient treatment feasible for diverticulitis Be mindful of possibility of closed loop obstruction in SBO and need for surgical intervention early Acute mesenteric ischaemia – suspect early with pain out of proportion to signs Ovarian cyst torsion – good prognosis with early OT Ovarian cyst haemorrhage can complicate of cyst rupture, but requires OT Don’t forget PID – although can be difficult to diagnose


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