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}} | {{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}} | ||
===Must Not Miss=== | |||
*[[Acute coronary syndrome]]: atypical MI presentation — get ECG early | |||
*Perforated [[peptic ulcer disease|peptic ulcer]]: free air, peritonitis | |||
*[[Ruptured AAA]]: hypotension, pulsatile mass, elderly | |||
*Severe [[pancreatitis]]: especially necrotizing | |||
*[[Boerhaave syndrome]]: esophageal perforation after forceful vomiting | |||
==Evaluation== | ==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== | ==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== | ==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== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[Abdominal Pain]] | |||
*[[ | *[[Pancreatitis]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Peptic ulcer disease]] | ||
*[[GERD]] | |||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[Category:GI]] | [[Category:GI]] | ||
[[Category:Symptoms]] | [[Category:Symptoms]] | ||
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
| 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
- Gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD)
- Peptic ulcer disease with or without perforation
- Gastritis
- Pancreatitis
- Gallbladder disease
- Myocardial Ischemia
- Splenic Infarctionenlargement/rupture/aneurysm
- Pericarditis/Myocarditis
- Aortic dissection
- Hepatitis
- Pyelonephritis
- Pneumonia
- Pyogenic liver abscess
- Fitz-Hugh-Curtis Syndrome
- Hepatomegaly due to CHF
- Bowel obstruction
- SMA syndrome
- Pulmonary embolism
- Bezoar
- Ingested foreign body
Must Not Miss
- Acute coronary syndrome: atypical MI presentation — get ECG early
- Perforated peptic ulcer: free air, peritonitis
- Ruptured AAA: hypotension, pulsatile mass, elderly
- Severe pancreatitis: especially necrotizing
- 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
- 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
