Epigastric abdominal pain: Difference between revisions

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==Background==
==Background==
*This page outlines the general approach to adult epigastric pain
*This page outlines the general approach to adult epigastric pain
*The epigastric region contains: stomach, duodenum, pancreas, hepatic flexure, transverse colon, and the abdominal aorta
*Key EM considerations: [[acute coronary syndrome]] can present as epigastric pain (always consider in patients >40 or with cardiac risk factors), [[pancreatitis]], [[peptic ulcer disease]], [[AAA]]
*Epigastric pain is one of the most common presentations for atypical MI, especially in women, elderly, and diabetic patients
{{Abdominal pain location}}


==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==
===History===
*Onset, character, radiation (back = pancreatitis, AAA; chest = ACS, GERD; right shoulder = biliary)
*Relationship to meals: postprandial (biliary, peptic ulcer), relief with eating (duodenal ulcer), worse with eating (gastric ulcer)
*Alcohol use, gallstone history (pancreatitis)
*NSAID/aspirin use (peptic ulcer disease)
*Cardiac risk factors (ACS presenting as epigastric pain)
*Melena or hematemesis (GI bleeding from ulcer or varices)
*Prior episodes
===Physical Exam===
*Epigastric tenderness, guarding
*Murphy sign (biliary — though usually more RUQ)
*Cullen sign (periumbilical ecchymosis) or Grey Turner sign (flank ecchymosis) — late signs of hemorrhagic pancreatitis
*Pulsatile abdominal mass (AAA)
*Absent/decreased bowel sounds
===Red Flags===
*Epigastric pain with diaphoresis, dyspnea, or radiation to jaw/arm (ACS)
*Hematemesis or melena (GI bleeding)
*Rigid abdomen with free air (perforated ulcer)
*Pulsatile mass (ruptured AAA)
*Severe pain radiating to back with hemodynamic instability (pancreatitis with hemorrhage or ruptured AAA)


==Differential Diagnosis==
==Differential Diagnosis==
{{Template:Abdominal Pain DDX Epigastric}}
{{Template:Abdominal Pain DDX Epigastric}}


==Workup==
===Must Not Miss===
*CBC
*[[Acute coronary syndrome]]: atypical MI presentation — get ECG early
*Chem
*Perforated [[peptic ulcer disease|peptic ulcer]]: free air, peritonitis
*LFTs
*[[Ruptured AAA]]: hypotension, pulsatile mass, elderly
*Lipase
*Severe [[pancreatitis]]: especially necrotizing
*Coags
*[[Boerhaave syndrome]]: esophageal perforation after forceful vomiting
 
==Evaluation==
===Immediate===
*[[ECG]]: obtain early in all patients with epigastric pain, especially age >40 or any cardiac risk factors — inferior MI commonly presents as epigastric pain
*Bedside glucose
 
===Laboratory===
*[[CBC]], [[BMP]]
*[[LFTs]], lipase (>3x upper limit of normal diagnostic for pancreatitis)
*[[Troponin]] (ACS screening)
*[[Urinalysis]]
*[[Urinalysis]]
*Urine pregnancy (females)
*Urine pregnancy test (females of reproductive age)
*?ECG (if >50 or at risk for cardiac disease)
*Coagulation studies if bleeding
*?[[RUQ US]]
*[[Lactate]] if concern for ischemia or sepsis
*?CXR
*Type and screen if active GI bleeding
**Consider if at risk for perforated ulcer
 
===Imaging===
*[[CXR]]: free air under diaphragm (perforation), mediastinal air (Boerhaave)
*[[RUQ US]]: gallstones, biliary pathology
*[[CT abdomen pelvis]] with IV contrast: pancreatitis complications, perforation, AAA, mass
*[[POCUS]]: free fluid, gallbladder, aorta (AAA screening)
*CT angiography if AAA or aortic pathology suspected


==Management==
==Management==
*Treat underlying disease process
*ECG first in older patients or those with risk factors — if ACS, activate cardiac protocol
*Consider GI cocktail (Maalox Plus/Lidocaine Viscous 2%/Donnatol)
*IV fluids, analgesia
*GI cocktail (antacid + viscous lidocaine +/- anticholinergic): may provide symptomatic relief for GERD/gastritis, but does NOT rule out cardiac cause even if effective
*PPI ([[pantoprazole]]) for suspected peptic ulcer or GERD
*[[Pancreatitis]]: aggressive IV fluid resuscitation, pain control, NPO initially, monitor for complications
*GI bleeding: resuscitation, PPI infusion, GI consultation for endoscopy
*Perforated ulcer: emergent surgical consultation, broad-spectrum IV antibiotics
*Ruptured AAA: emergent vascular surgery, permissive hypotension


==Disposition==
==Disposition==
*Disposition per underlying disease process
*Admit: pancreatitis requiring IV management, ACS, GI bleeding, perforation, biliary obstruction
*Discharge: mild gastritis/GERD with resolved symptoms, negative cardiac workup, ability to tolerate oral intake
*Follow-up: PCP in 1-2 weeks for new PPI starts; GI referral for suspected ulcer (H. pylori testing, EGD)
*Return precautions: worsening pain, vomiting blood, black stools, chest pain, lightheadedness


==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Abdominal Pain]]
*[[Abdominal Pain]]
*[[Abdominal Pain (Peds)]]
*[[Pancreatitis]]
*[[Peptic ulcer disease]]
*[[GERD]]


==External Links==
==External Links==

Latest revision as of 09:29, 22 March 2026

Background

  • This page outlines the general approach to adult epigastric pain
  • The epigastric region contains: stomach, duodenum, pancreas, hepatic flexure, transverse colon, and the abdominal aorta
  • Key EM considerations: acute coronary syndrome can present as epigastric pain (always consider in patients >40 or with cardiac risk factors), pancreatitis, peptic ulcer disease, AAA
  • Epigastric pain is one of the most common presentations for atypical MI, especially in women, elderly, and diabetic patients


Classification by Abdominal pain location

Side-by-side comparison of quadrants and regions.
Chart of commonly reported referred pain sites.
RUQ pain Epigastric pain LUQ pain
Flank pain Diffuse abdominal pain Flank pain
RLQ pain Pelvic pain LLQ pain

Clinical Features

History

  • Onset, character, radiation (back = pancreatitis, AAA; chest = ACS, GERD; right shoulder = biliary)
  • Relationship to meals: postprandial (biliary, peptic ulcer), relief with eating (duodenal ulcer), worse with eating (gastric ulcer)
  • Alcohol use, gallstone history (pancreatitis)
  • NSAID/aspirin use (peptic ulcer disease)
  • Cardiac risk factors (ACS presenting as epigastric pain)
  • Melena or hematemesis (GI bleeding from ulcer or varices)
  • Prior episodes

Physical Exam

  • Epigastric tenderness, guarding
  • Murphy sign (biliary — though usually more RUQ)
  • Cullen sign (periumbilical ecchymosis) or Grey Turner sign (flank ecchymosis) — late signs of hemorrhagic pancreatitis
  • Pulsatile abdominal mass (AAA)
  • Absent/decreased bowel sounds

Red Flags

  • Epigastric pain with diaphoresis, dyspnea, or radiation to jaw/arm (ACS)
  • Hematemesis or melena (GI bleeding)
  • Rigid abdomen with free air (perforated ulcer)
  • Pulsatile mass (ruptured AAA)
  • Severe pain radiating to back with hemodynamic instability (pancreatitis with hemorrhage or ruptured AAA)

Differential Diagnosis

Epigastric Pain

Must Not Miss

Evaluation

Immediate

  • ECG: obtain early in all patients with epigastric pain, especially age >40 or any cardiac risk factors — inferior MI commonly presents as epigastric pain
  • Bedside glucose

Laboratory

  • CBC, BMP
  • LFTs, lipase (>3x upper limit of normal diagnostic for pancreatitis)
  • Troponin (ACS screening)
  • Urinalysis
  • Urine pregnancy test (females of reproductive age)
  • Coagulation studies if bleeding
  • Lactate if concern for ischemia or sepsis
  • Type and screen if active GI bleeding

Imaging

  • CXR: free air under diaphragm (perforation), mediastinal air (Boerhaave)
  • RUQ US: gallstones, biliary pathology
  • CT abdomen pelvis with IV contrast: pancreatitis complications, perforation, AAA, mass
  • POCUS: free fluid, gallbladder, aorta (AAA screening)
  • CT angiography if AAA or aortic pathology suspected

Management

  • ECG first in older patients or those with risk factors — if ACS, activate cardiac protocol
  • IV fluids, analgesia
  • GI cocktail (antacid + viscous lidocaine +/- anticholinergic): may provide symptomatic relief for GERD/gastritis, but does NOT rule out cardiac cause even if effective
  • PPI (pantoprazole) for suspected peptic ulcer or GERD
  • Pancreatitis: aggressive IV fluid resuscitation, pain control, NPO initially, monitor for complications
  • GI bleeding: resuscitation, PPI infusion, GI consultation for endoscopy
  • Perforated ulcer: emergent surgical consultation, broad-spectrum IV antibiotics
  • Ruptured AAA: emergent vascular surgery, permissive hypotension

Disposition

  • Admit: pancreatitis requiring IV management, ACS, GI bleeding, perforation, biliary obstruction
  • Discharge: mild gastritis/GERD with resolved symptoms, negative cardiac workup, ability to tolerate oral intake
  • Follow-up: PCP in 1-2 weeks for new PPI starts; GI referral for suspected ulcer (H. pylori testing, EGD)
  • Return precautions: worsening pain, vomiting blood, black stools, chest pain, lightheadedness

See Also

External Links

References