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14. Chronic Abdomen / W.G. Thompson
Recurrent abdominal pain; recurrent
abdominal pain in children.
Ten percent of children suffer recurrent
abdominal pain and approximately 20% of adults have abdominal pain at least six times per
year unrelated to menstruation. The pain is chronic when it has been present for six
months or more. It may be related to gastrointestinal functions such as eating and
defecation. It is often a feature of dyspepsia or the irritable bowel syndrome. Occasionally,
the pain has no relationship to bodily functions, and no gastrointestinal, hepatobiliary,
genital or renal cause for
the pain can be found.
| 14.3 Causes and Mechanism |
page 28 |
The mechanisms of abdominal pain are
discussed above, in Section 13 ("Acute Abdomen"). Of course, chronic abdominal
pain may be caused by many organic diseases. Peptic ulcer generally produces pain after
meals or on an empty stomach and is relieved by food or antacid. Abdominal pain awakening
the patient at night is a particularly discriminating feature.
Biliary colic may be due to cystic or
common bile duct obstruction by a stone. Characteristically this pain is significant
enough to awaken the patient at night or require a visit to the emergency room for
analgesia. It lasts from 1 hour to 12 hours; beyond that time consider acute cholecystitis
or pancreatitis. Attacks are sporadic and at intervals, not continuous. Biliary pain is
located in the epigastrium, the right upper quadrant and/or the right scapula. It leaves
the patient shaken but well. Should the gallbladder become inflamed, cholecystitis
results. Obstruction of the common bile duct with a stone results in pain, jaundice and
sometimes fever (cholangitis).
Pancreatitis is a devastating illness, with
steady epigastric pain radiating to the back and sometimes accompanied by shock. It almost
always requires admission to hospital.
Ischemic bowel disease, subacute bowel
obstruction caused by Crohns disease, neoplasm or volvulus may present with
recurrent bouts of abdominal pain, often related to eating. These conditions are usually
progressive and accompanied by physical signs.
In a patient with diverticular disease, a
peridiverticular abscess may develop, causing recurrent bouts of severe left lower
quadrant abdominal pain and fever. Usually, diverticula are asymptomatic and symptoms that
do occur are those of coincident irritable bowel syndrome.
Renal colic due to a stone in the ureter is
rarely chronic but may be recurrent. It consists of severe flank pain radiating to the
groin and testicle, and may be accompanied by hematuria. Typically, a patient smitten with
renal colic is unable to lie still.
Gynecologic conditions ranging from
mittelschmerz (ruptured ovarian cyst) to pelvic inflammatory disease may account for
recurrent abdominal pain. Menstruation-related pain in a young woman suggests
endometriosis. Chronic pelvic pain often relates to the irritable bowel syndrome.
Chronic appendicitis probably does not
exist.
The chronic abdomen is seldom explained by
the above mechanisms. Functional abdominal pain may originate in any part of the
gastrointestinal tract or biliary tree. It is unrelated to bodily function and may be
continuous. It is uncertain whether the pain is due to a normal perception of abnormal gut
motility or an abnormal perception of normal motility, or indeed if it is due to the gut
at all; there are frequently accompanying psychosocial difficulties.
| 14.4 Important Historical Points
and Physical Examination Features |
page 29 |
Pain, when related to a bodily function _
defecation, eating, micturition or menstruation _ focuses the investigation upon the
involved system. Certain physical findings (such as an abdominal mass, or blood or mass
upon rectal examination) point to specific organic diseases. Fever, weight loss, rectal
bleeding and/or anemia indicate further tests. These features are absent in chronic
functional abdominal pain.
| 14.5 Differential Diagnosis,
Diagnosis and Management |
page 30 |
Management of the organic causes of the
chronic abdomen can be directed at the underlying disease process. In many instances,
however, there is no organic basis. Here, the physicians responsibility is to
reassure the patient that no serious disease exists, and help the patient coexist with the
symptoms in the light of the patients social background. One might improve digestion
through regular and better eating habits, and treat bowel dysfunction, particularly
constipation, with increased dietary bulk.
| 14.6 Pain and Emotion |
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There are patients who have severe
recurrent abdominal pain unrelated to bodily function or organic disease. Such patients
see many doctors without satisfaction; the genesis of the symptom is thought to be
psychogenic. This pain is often given such descriptors as "illness behavior" and
"pain proneness." Some have hypochondriasis and do not improve when organic
disease has been disproved. An extreme example is the Münchausen syndrome, where the
patient deliberately relates a tall tale of medical duress in order to precipitate
treatment, perhaps even surgery.
Functional pain is frequent in those who
have recent conflicts, have experienced a death in the family, or have become overly
concerned with fatal illness. Depression and anxiety are frequent. Here, it is important
not to carry out extensive investigation in a fruitless search for an elusive cause. This
only reinforces the patients belief that something is wrong and undermines the
patients confidence in the benign diagnosis.
Such pain may be an emotional expression,
in which case regular visits are necessary to allow the patient to vent his or her
problems. Drugs, especially narcotics, should be used with restraint, and the physician
should strive to develop a strong doctor-patient relationship while dealing with the
patients depression, anxiety, frustration and often hostility. These patients test
our skill in the art rather than the science of medicine. |