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Query: UMLS:C0000737 (abdominal pain)
31,184 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Pain is the most common presenting complaint heard in Emergency Medicine, yet it is poorly controlled. Evaluation of this pain should be with use of objective pain scales completed by the patient, not relying on physician impression. Treatment modalities available in the Emergency Department, a review of medications and their dosing as well as specifics to pediatric pain management are presented. The final section reviews situation or diagnosis specific pain control: headaches, renal colic, polytrauma victims, abdominal pain, soft tissue injury and acute arthritis. These recommendations are based on a Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians (CAEP) consensus conference held in April 1993. The literature was reviewed extensively and used as the basis for the consensus workshops and discussion. At the writing of the consensus paper, however, no specific ideas were borrowed from any one article. The appended bibliography is suggested reading, selected from the larger literature review. There are to date few controlled multi centre trials in overall pain management that would allow guidelines to be produced.
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PMID:Emergency pain management: a Canadian Association of Emergency Physicians (CAEP) consensus document. 788 8

If renal colic is suspected in the patient presenting with acute flank or lower abdominal pain it must be established whether or not the affected kidney is obstructed and whether there is functional impairment that may require urological intervention. The radionuclide renal study developed in this hospital and used routinely for over 10 years can reveal obstruction when the results of commonly used tests are negative. It also provides information on renal function, morphology and blood flow. It is a cost-effective, safe and reliable procedure for the initial investigation of patients presenting with suspected renal colic.
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PMID:The role of the radionuclide renal study in the management of renal colic. 851 58

Several studies have shown that plain film radiography (PFR) is unnecessary for most patients with abdominal pain. To evaluate the current-day utilization of PFR, we retrospectively reviewed 224 patients presenting to an emergency department with acute abdominal pain. Plain film radiography was performed in 55.8% (125/224) of patients, but only 10.4% (13/125) of these were diagnostic. Most patients with non-specific abdominal pain had radiographs (62%, 31/50), suggesting that PFR was being used as a routine investigation. Plain film radiography has little in the diagnosis of most causes of abdominal pain and should therefore not be used routinely. Confining radiography to patients with suspected gastrointestinal obstruction, perforation or ischaemia, unexplained peritonism, or renal colic would have included all our diagnostic films and reduced the utilization of PFR to 20.5%. The reasons for inappropriate requests and issues concerning the use of emergency radiography are discussed. Staff education, departmental protocols and increased out-of-hours ultrasonography facilities are recommended to reduce the inappropriate use of PFR.
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PMID:Are abdominal radiographs still overutilized in the assessment of acute abdominal pain? A district general hospital audit. 1645 5

Rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm often presents with an abdominal pain, hypotension and a pulsatile abdominal mass. In the last years same clinical reports describe patients with less apparent clinical signs who were found later in their evaluation to have a contained rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm. The diagnosis may be delayed by consideration of other disease causing similar symptoms (herniated disc, renal colic). In these patients with confusing abdominal symptoms CT scan provides a rapid and noninvasive diagnosis. We report three cases of contained rupture of an abdominal aortic aneurysm evaluated by computed tomography with different clinical presentation: back pain for erosion into the lumbar vertebral bodies, lower extremity neuropathy and obstructive jaundice. All patients were operated on within 24 hours on admission; there was no operative mortality and survival was 100% at one year.
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PMID:[Chronic rupture of abdominal aortic aneurysms. (Report of 3 cases)]. 1092 Apr 98

The differential diagnosis of left lower quadrant abdominal pain in an adult man includes, among others, sigmoid diverticulitis; leaking abdominal aortic aneurysm; renal colic; epididymitis; incarcerated hernia; bowel obstruction; regional enteritis; psoas abscess; and in this rare instance, situs inversus with acute appendicitis. We report a case of situs inversus totalis with left-sided appendicitis and a brief review of the literature. There were several subtle indicators of total situs inversus present that were missed by the physicians and surgeons who initially evaluated the patient prior to surgery. Computed tomography scan with contrast, however, revealed the diagnosis immediately, and treatment was successfully initiated.
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PMID:Left lower quadrant pain of unusual cause. 1126 11

The evaluation of metabolic risk factor in children with renal stone disease is the basis of medical treatment aimed at preventing recurrent stone events and the growth of preexisting calculi. In this retrospective study, we evaluated the metabolic risk factors and clinical and family histories of 90 children with kidney stone disease who had been referred to our institution and subjected to clinical tests using a standardized protocol. The mean age of our pediatric patients was 10.7 years, and the male:female ratio was 1.14:1.0. Biochemical abnormalities were found in 84.4% of all cases. A single urine metabolic risk factor was present in 52.2% (n = 47) of the patients, and multiple risk factors were present in the remaining 31.1% (n = 28). Idiopathic hypercalciuria (alone or in combination) and hypocitraturia (alone or in combination) were the most frequent risk factors identified in 40 and 37.8% of these patients, respectively. Renal colic or unspecified abdominal pain were the most frequent forms of presentation (76.9%), with 97.5% of stones located in the upper urinary tract. In most patients, stone disease was confirmed by renal ultrasonography (77%). A positive family history in first-degree and second-degree relatives was found in 46.2 and 32.5% of the cases, respectively. We conclude that specific urine metabolic risk factors are found in most children with kidney stones and that hypocitraturia is as frequent as hypercalciuria. Very often there is a positive family history of renal stone disease in first- and second-degree relatives.
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PMID:Metabolic risk factors in children with kidney stone disease. 1935 Feb 77

Acute abdominal pain constitutes a diagnostic challenge for the physician. The list of diseases that can cause abdominal pain is very extensive. Some of these conditions may be serious and life-threatening. The medical history is fundamental for the judicious choice of the most suitable diagnostic tests. Plain abdominal x-ray has little diagnostic efficiency although it comprises the initial diagnostic test when perforation of a hollow viscus, intestinal obstruction or ingestion of a foreign body is suspected. Abdominal ultrasound is the test of choice in suspected biliary tract pathology, complicated renal colic and gynaecological disease. Abdominal computed axial tomography (CT) may be the most sensitive and specific imaging test for diagnosing most causes of abdominal pain but should be reserved for selected cases.
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PMID:[Imaging tests in acute abdominal pain]. 1910 Jan 35

Renal stones (nephrolithiasis) are a relatively common problem and a frequent Emergency Department (ED) diagnosis in patients who present with acute flank/abdominal pain. The goal of this topic review is to provide physicians with an evidence-based diagnostic approach for the evaluation and management of patients with nephrolithiasis. Unenhanced helical CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis should be performed on all patients with their first episode of acute flank pain and suspected renal colic. It is considered the optimal diagnostic test to confirm a urinary stone in a patient with flank pain. Pain management can be achieved by using NSAIDs, opioids or a combination of both. Several factors will help you determine if emergent urology evaluation is warranted; size and location of renal calculi, persistence of colic pain, impaired renal function and signs of infection.
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PMID:Evaluation and management of renal colic in the emergency department. 2012 Sep 83

Acute renal infarction due to emboli represents a very rare but significant threat for kidney loss, and the clinical presentation is challenging. The differential diagnosis of massive renal thrombi includes all other causes of abdominal pain, and they can be easily misdiagnosed as renal colic due to nephrolithiasis. Although there are a few case reports regarding the possibility that cardiac emboli may cause acute kidney infarction, intracardiac thrombi within the ventricular cavity diagnosed by echocardiography as a cause of such renal artery occlusion have never been reported in patients with cardiomyopathy. Herein, we describe a 39-year-old male with a history of ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy. He was admitted to our hospital with left upper abdominal pain and vomiting. After serial examinations and tests, the diagnosis of acute renal infarction due to intracardiac thrombus embolization as a result of severely reduced cardiac function was made.
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PMID:Acute kidney infarction secondary to intracardiac thrombus embolization in a patient with ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy. 2119 30

Acute renal artery thromboembolic occlusion is seldomly encountered with respect to other central and peripheral ones. Patients may present with non-specific abdominal pain and renal colic. Organ functions can be preserved by means of endovascular treatment when early diagnosis is possible. Acute occlusion of renal arteries must be considered in the differential diagnosis of acute flank pain. This paper presents successful endovascular treatment of thromboembolic renal artery occlusion in two cases.
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PMID:Diagnosis and endovascular treatment of acute thromboembolic renal artery occlusion presenting with abdominal pain. 2252 29


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