Abdominal pain causes: Difference between revisions
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The causes of abdominal pain vary with the distribution of the pain. The distribution can be determined by various methods, such as abdominal quadrants. Other methods exist that divide the abdomen into nine sections. | The causes of abdominal pain vary with the distribution of the pain. The distribution can be determined by various methods, such as abdominal quadrants. Other methods exist that divide the abdomen into nine sections. | ||
==Causes Based | ==Causes Based upon Location== | ||
[[Causes of diffuse abdominal pain|Diffuse Abdominal Pain]] | [[Causes of diffuse abdominal pain|Diffuse Abdominal Pain]] | ||
| [[ Intraperitoneal causes of acute abdominal pain |Intraperitoneal]] | | [[ Intraperitoneal causes of acute abdominal pain |Intraperitoneal]] |
Revision as of 13:33, 17 June 2013
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Editor-In-Chief: C. Michael Gibson, M.S., M.D. [1]
Overview
The causes of abdominal pain vary with the distribution of the pain. The distribution can be determined by various methods, such as abdominal quadrants. Other methods exist that divide the abdomen into nine sections.
Causes Based upon Location
Diffuse Abdominal Pain | Intraperitoneal | Extraperitoneal | Epigastric and Upper Quadrant | Right Upper Quadrant | Right Lower Quadrant | Left Upper Quadrant | Left Lower Quadrant | Pelvic/Hypogastric Region | Causes by Organ System | General Causes
Selected Causes
- Abdominal wall injury/disruption: mesenteric traction, muscle trauma, muscular infection, abdominal cutaneous nerve entrapment syndrome (ACNES), also known as intercostal neuralgia; diverticulosis (rare)
- Autoimmune: sarcoidosis, vasculitis
- Diarrhea
- Digestive: lactose intolerance, celiac sprue
- Distention of visceral surfaces such as the hepatic or renal capsule
- Endometriosis
- Functional pain: irritable bowel syndrome (affecting up to 20% of the population, IBS is the most common cause of recurrent, intermittent abdominal pain)
- Inflammation of bowel wall: Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, microscopic colitis, diverticulitis, gastroenteritis
- Mechanical obstruction of hollow viscera such as the small intestine, the appendix associated with appendicitis, the large intestine (e.g. by intussusception), the biliary tree (e.g. by gallstones), or the ureter (e.g. by urinary calculi)
- Meningitis
- Metabolic disturbance: lead poisoning, Black widow spider bite, uremia, diabetic ketoacidosis, porphyria, C1-esterase inhibitor deficiency, adrenal insufficiency
- Neurogenic pain: tabes dorsalis, herpes zoster, Lyme disease (Lyme radiculitis or Bannwarth syndrome)
- Parietal peritoneal inflammation
- Due to infection: inflamed or suppurative appendix in appendicitis, pelvic inflammatory disease
- Due to chemical irritation: perforated gastric or peptic ulcer; pancreatitis, Mittelschmerz, ruptured ectopic pregnancy
- Miscellaneous (Familial Mediterranean fever)
- Pelvic inflammatory disease
- Post-surgical adhesions
- Referred pain from the thorax (pneumonia, coronary occlusion), the spine (radiculitis secondary to arthritis), genitals (testicular torsion)
- Reproductive organs (in women): mittelschmerz, torsion of the ovary, ectopic pregnancy
- Vascular disturbances (leading to ischemia): embolism, thrombosis, vascular rupture, torsional occlusion (volvulus), sickle cell anemia, left renal vein entrapment, superior mesenteric artery syndrome (nutcracker syndrome)
Causes of Abdominal Pain by Organ System
Causes of Abdominal pain in Alphabetical Order