Acute Abdominal Pain in Children
- 1 September 1980
- journal article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine
- Vol. 73 (9) , 641-645
- https://doi.org/10.1177/014107688007300909
Abstract
During a twelve-month period, 416 children with acute abdominal pain required emergency admission to Southampton General Hospital; 46% had operations. Appendicitis was the commonest organic cause of acute abdominal pain identified (31%). Constipation (9%) can present as acute abdominal pain simulating appendicitis. All children should have a urine sample examined microscopically and the finding of significant pyuria is suggestive, but not diagnostic, of a urinary tract infection (7%). Mesenteric adenitis, which can only be diagnosed with certainty at laparotomy, was less common (4%). Despite careful clinical assessment and follow up, 45% of children in this series remained undiagnosed. Sedation but not analgesia may assist in the diagnosis of the acute abdomen in children.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Viruses and acute abdominal pain in childhood.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1979
- Is appendicitis familial?BMJ, 1979
- Incidence and outcome of symptomatic urinary tract infection in children.BMJ, 1979
- Appendicitis in infancyJournal of Pediatric Surgery, 1978
- Active observation in management of acute abdominal pain in childhood.BMJ, 1976
- Significance of faecoliths in the diagnosis of acute appendicitisBritish Journal of Surgery, 1975
- Acute Abdominal Pain in Childhood, with Special Reference to Cases not due to Acute AppendicitisBMJ, 1969
- Acute abdominal pain in childhood: analysis of a year's admissions.BMJ, 1967
- Parents, Family Doctors, and Acute Appendicitis in ChildhoodBMJ, 1963
- Epidemiology of Acute IntussusceptionBMJ, 1961