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Abdominal Pain
Abdominal pain is one of the most common reasons for referral to medical and surgical teams in the NHS.
Some causes are benign, while others are time-critical and life-threatening.
This guide focuses on how doctors should think clinically when assessing abdominal pain on the ward and on-call.
What does this topic cover?
This is not a list to memorise.
It is a framework for thinking safely and logically when reviewing a patient with abdominal pain.
The key question is always:
Is this patient sick?
And could this be surgical?
How does abdominal pain present?
Patients may describe:
- Localised pain (e.g. RUQ, epigastric, RIF)
- Generalised abdominal pain
- Colicky pain
- Constant severe pain
- Pain radiating to back or shoulder
- Pain associated with vomiting or diarrhoea
Associated symptoms matter:
- Fever
- Vomiting
- Constipation or diarrhoea
- Jaundice
- GI bleeding
- Weight loss
- Urinary symptoms
The story often gives you the diagnosis before the bloods do.
First priority = assess stability
Before thinking about diagnoses, always assess:
- NEWS score
- BP and heart rate
- Oxygen saturations
- Temperature
- Mental state
- Urine output
Red flags:
- Hypotension
- Tachycardia
- Confusion
- Guarding / rigidity
- Severe uncontrolled pain
- Rising lactate
These patients need urgent senior review.
Think anatomically (simple and practical)
This makes abdominal pain much easier to approach.
Epigastric pain:
- Acute pancreatitis
- Gastritis / peptic ulcer disease
- Upper GI bleed
- Biliary colic
- Myocardial infarction (always consider)
Right upper quadrant (RUQ):
- Gallstones / biliary colic
- Cholecystitis
- Cholangitis
- Hepatitis
- Liver congestion
Right lower quadrant (RIF):
- Appendicitis
- Crohn’s flare
- Constipation
- Ovarian pathology (in women)
Left lower quadrant (LIF):
- Diverticulitis
- Constipation
- Colitis
Generalised abdominal pain:
- Gastroenteritis
- Peritonitis
- Bowel obstruction
- Ischaemic bowel
- DKA
- Sepsis
On the ward, always ask
Could this be surgical?
Because missing a surgical abdomen is one of the biggest on-call risks.
Always consider surgical causes if there is:
- Severe pain
- Guarding or rigidity
- Rebound tenderness
- Persistent vomiting
- No bowel movements + distension
- Haemodynamic instability
If unsure → discuss early with seniors or surgical team.
Immediate assessment on the ward (what juniors should actually do)
When reviewing a patient with abdominal pain:
Do early:
- Full A–E assessment
- Examine the abdomen properly
- Check bowel movements
- Check urine output
- Bloods: FBC, U&E, LFTs, CRP, amylase
- VBG/ABG + lactate if unwell
- Urinalysis
- Pregnancy test in women of childbearing age
Practical steps:
- Analgesia (do not withhold while assessing)
- Antiemetics if needed
- IV fluids if dehydrated
- Keep NBM if surgical cause possible
Imaging (real-world approach)
- Ultrasound → gallstones, biliary pathology, ascites
- CT abdomen → obstruction, perforation, severe inflammation
- AXR → limited value but may help in obstruction
Don’t order scans blindly — use clinical suspicion.
When to escalate
Escalate urgently if:
- Severe pain not controlled
- Guarding or peritonism
- Hypotension
- Tachycardia
- Rising lactate
- AKI
- NEWS ≥5
- Concerned nursing staff
These patients often need:
- Senior review
- Surgical input
- Urgent imaging
- HDU/ICU if unstable
Common mistakes juniors make
- Focusing only on blood results
- Ignoring a concerning abdominal exam
- Delaying escalation while waiting for scans
- Underestimating persistent pain
- Forgetting pregnancy test
- Forgetting that MI can present as epigastric pain
Take-home concept
Abdominal pain is not about memorising differentials.
It is about assessing severity, thinking anatomically, recognising red flags, and escalating early when concerned.