Abdominal pain (peds)

Background

bilious emesis in a kid is a surgical emergency until proven otherwise

Visceral pain is dull & non-specific

Somatic pain is sharp & localized d/t peritoneal or diaphragm irritation

Guarding & TTP/rebound are most c/w surgical DZ in kids

Infants eat, sleep & poop, probs w/ these can be a bad sign


Epidemiology

Ten most common Dx in order:

  1. AGE (26%)
  2. Nonspecific AP (26%)
  3. Viral Illness (6%)
  4. Constipation (5%)
  5. UTI (5%)
  6. Pharyngitis (5%)
  7. Appy (4%)
  8. Asthma (2%)
  9. OM (2%)
  10. PNA (2%)

Also look for extra-abdominal (collagen dz, HSP, DKA, poison, IBD, CF, nephrotic syndrome)

DDx 1

  • Infancy
    • gastroenteritis, intussusception, volvulus, incarcerated hernia, Hirschrung's dz, NEC, perforation, colic, pneumonia, pyloric stenosis
  • Childhood
    • AGE, appy, pancreatitis, HSP, HUS, Incarcerated Hernia, constipation, UTI, pyelo, PNA, GAS phryngitis, ulcers, meckels, IBD
  • Adolescence
    • same as before but add ectopic, PID, torsion (testicular, ovarian), IBD, biliary disease, nephrolithiasis

DDX 2

Infant

green vomit: bad sign

obstruction: volvulus, malrotation

abd pain also caused by trauma, intuss.(air enema is dx and tx), intestinal anomalies, incarcerated hernia, sickling syndromes, (acute intermittent porphyria), appy, milk allergy, wilms tumor, toxins (heavy metals), disaccharide deficiency.

2-5 years

viral, gastroenteritis, pnemonia, asthma, constipation, trauma, appy, sickling syndrome, UTI, meckel's diverticulum, HSP, nephrotic syndrome, intuss, IBD, HUS, DM, pancreatitis

order: amylase, LFT's

5-12 years

appy (CT c rectal contrast-very sens. + spec.), testicular torsion (or appendix testis torsion), functional abd pain, gastroenteritis, constipation, URI, CF, DM, torsion, renal calculi, Rheumatic fever

Adolescent

ectopic: get ßhCG, type + cross (rhogam), pelvic US--be sure well-hydrated for US for optimal imaging, PID, IBP, Rheumatic fever, abd abscess

Workup

  1. UA, Upreg
  2. Dehydration: electrolytes, renal fxn tests
  3. Vomiting without diarrhea: LFTs, lipase, toxin screen
  4. Fever: CBC, CRP
  5. Diagnostic imaging
  6. Role of abdominal xrays: only good if positive (ann emerg med-1992 rothrock et al)
  7. 50% of of patients with major disease had normal radiographs

See Also

Peds: Necrotizing Enterocolitis (NEC)

Peds: Volvulus

Peds: Pyloric Stenosis

Peds: Intussusception

Peds: Meckel's Diverticulum

Peds: Appendicitis (Peds)

Peds: Inguinal Hernia (Peds)

Source

Gausche 11/03- By Lampe

7/2/09 PANI