Contents

Search


acute abdomen

abdominal pain & tenderness of < 24 hours duration (see abdominal pain) Etiology: 1) cholecystitis 2) diverticulitis - including Meckel's diverticulitis 3) gastroenteritis 4) ectopic pregnancy 5) acute salpingitis 6) tubo-ovarian abscess 7) mittelschmerz 8) ovarian torsion 9) ruptured ovarian cyst 10) ureteral calculus 11) pyelonephritis 12) perinephric abscess 13) Crohn's disease 14) Yersinia enterocolitis 15) mesenteric adenitis 16) psoas abscess 17) torsion of an undescended testicle 18) perforated duodenal ulcer 19) omental torsion 20) mucocele 21) strangulated inguinal hernia 22) Mycobacterium avium intracellulare in patients with AIDS 23) intussusception 24) volvulus Radiology: - contrast-enhanced CT of abdomen [3]

General

abdominal pain

References

  1. Medical Knowledge Self Assessment Program (MKSAP) 16, American College of Physicians, Philadelphia 2012
  2. Ross A, LeLeiko NS. Acute abdominal pain. Pediatr Rev. 2010 Apr;31(4):135-44 PMID: 20360407
  3. Shaish H et al. Diagnostic accuracy of unenhanced computed tomography for evaluation of acute abdominal pain in the emergency department. JAMA Surg 2023 May 3; [e-pub] PMID: 37133836 https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamasurgery/fullarticle/2804484