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Basics

Basics

Definition

An emergency condition characterized by historical and physical examination findings of a tense, painful abdomen. May represent a life-threatening condition.

Pathophysiology

  • A patient with an acute abdomen has pain associated with either distention of an organ, inflammation, traction on the mesentery or peritoneum, or ischemia.
  • The abdominal viscera are sparsely innervated, and diffuse involvement is often necessary to elicit pain; nerve endings also exist in the submucosa-muscularis of the bowel wall.
  • Any process that causes fluid or gaseous distension (i.e., intestinal obstruction, gastric dilatation-volvulus, ileus) may produce pain.
  • Inflammation produces abdominal pain by releasing vasoactive substances that directly stimulate nerve endings.
  • Many nerves in the peritoneum are sensitive to a diffuse inflammatory response.

Systems Affected

  • Behavioral-trembling, inappetence, vocalizing, lethargy, and abnormal postural changes such as the praying position to achieve comfort.
  • Cardiovascular-severe inflammation, ischemia, and sepsis may lead to acute circulatory collapse (shock). May be associated with SIRS and septic shock.
  • Gastrointestinal-vomiting, diarrhea, inappetence, generalized functional ileus; pancreatic inflammation, necrosis, and abscesses may lead to cranial abdominal pain, vomiting, and ileus.
  • Hepatobiliary-jaundice associated with extrahepatic cholestasis from biliary obstruction (including pancreatitis) and bile peritonitis. Hyperbilirubinemia may occur secondary to sepsis.
  • Renal/Urologic-azotemia can be due to prerenal causes (dehydration, hypovolemia, and shock), renal causes (acute pyelonephritis and acute renal failure), and post-renal causes (ureteral obstruction, urethral obstruction and uroperitoneum from bladder rupture).
  • Respiratory-increased respiratory rate due to pain or metabolic/acid-base disturbances.

Signalment

  • Dogs and cats.
  • Dogs more commonly.
  • Younger animals tend to have a higher incidence of trauma-related problems, intussusceptions, and acquired diet- and infection-related diseases; older animals have a greater frequency of malignancies.
  • Male cats and dogs are at higher risk for urethral obstruction.
  • Male Dalmatians in particular have a higher risk of urethral obstruction because of the high incidence of urate urinary calculi.
  • German shepherds with pancreatic atrophy have a higher risk of mesenteric volvulus.
  • Patients treated with corticosteroids and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs are at higher risk for gastrointestinal ulceration and perforation.

Signs

General Comments

Clinical signs vary greatly depending on the type and severity of the disease leading to an acute abdomen.

Historical Findings

  • Trembling, reluctance to move, inappetence, vomiting, diarrhea, vocalizing, and abnormal postures (tucked up or praying position)-signs that the owner may notice.
  • Question owner carefully to ascertain what system is affected; for example, melena with a history of NSAID treatment may suggest GI mucosal disruption (ulceration).

Physical Examination Findings

  • Abnormalities include abdominal pain, splinting of the abdominal musculature, gas- or fluid-filled abdominal organs, abdominal mass, ascites, pyrexia or hypothermia, tachycardia, and tachypnea.
  • Once abdominal pain is confirmed, attempt to localize the pain to cranial, middle, or caudal abdomen.
  • Perform a rectal examination to evaluate the colon, pelvic bones, urethra, and prostate, as well as for the presence of melena.
  • Rule out extra-abdominal causes of pain by careful palpation of the kidneys and thoracolumbar vertebrae.
  • Pain associated with intervertebral disc disease often causes referred abdominal guarding and is often mistaken for true abdominal pain. Renal pain can be associated with pyelonephritis.

Causes

Gastrointestinal

  • Stomach-gastritis, ulcers, perforation, foreign bodies, gastric dilatation-volvulus.
  • Intestine-obstruction (foreign bodies, intussusception, hernias), enteritis, ulcers, perforations.
  • Rupture after obstruction, ulceration, or blunt or penetrating trauma, or due to tumor growth.
  • Vascular compromise from infarction, mesenteric volvulus, or torsion.

Pancreas

  • Pain associated with inflammation, abscess, ischemia.
  • Pancreatic masses or inflammation obstructing the biliary duct/papilla may cause jaundice.

Hepatic and Biliary System

  • Rapid distention of the liver and its capsule can cause pain.
  • Biliary obstruction, rupture, or necrosis may lead to bile leakage and peritonitis. Gallbladder mucocele may be identified on ultrasound examination.
  • Hepatic abscess.

Spleen

  • Splenic torsion, splenic masses, splenic thrombus, splenic abscess.

Urinary Tract

  • Distention is the main cause of pain in the urinary tract.
  • Lower urinary tract obstruction can be due to tumors of the trigone area of the bladder or urethra, urinary calculi, or granulomatous urethritis.
  • Traumatic rupture of the ureters or bladder are associated with blunt trauma and increased intra-abdominal pressure.
  • Urethral tears can be associated with pelvic fractures from acute trauma.
  • Free urine in the peritoneal cavity leads to a chemical peritonitis.
  • Acute pyelonephritis, acute renal failure, nephroliths, and ureteroliths are uncommon causes of acute abdomen.

Genital Tract

  • Prostatitis and prostatic abscess, pyometra; a ruptured pyometra or prostatic abscess can cause endotoxemia, sepsis, and cardiovascular collapse.
  • Infrequent causes include ruptures of the gravid uterus after blunt abdominal trauma, uterine torsion, ovarian tumor or torsion, and intra-abdominal testicular torsion (cryptorchid).

Abdominal Wall/Diaphragm

  • Umbilical, inguinal, scrotal, abdominal, or peritoneal hernias with strangulated viscera.
  • Trauma or congenital defects leading to organ displacement or entrapment in the hernia will lead to abdominal pain if the vascular supply of the organs involved becomes impaired or ischemic.

Risk Factors

  • Exposure to NSAIDs or corticosteroid treatment (increased risk when used concurrently)-gastric, duodenal, or colonic ulcers.
  • Garbage or inappropriate food ingestion-pancreatitis.
  • Foreign body ingestion-intestinal obstructions.
  • Abdominal trauma-hollow viscus rupture.
  • Hernias-intestinal obstruction/strangulation.

Diagnosis

Diagnosis

Differential Diagnosis

  • Renal-associated pain, retroperitoneal pain, spinal or paraspinal pain, and disorders causing diffuse muscle pain may mimic abdominal pain; careful history and physical examination are essential in pursuing the appropriate problem.
  • Parvoviral enteritis can present similarly to intestinal obstructive disease; fecal parvoviral antigen assay and CBC (leukopenia) are helpful differentiating diagnostic tests.

CBC/Biochemistry/Urinalysis

  • Inflammation or infection may be associated with leukocytosis or leukopenia.
  • Anemia may be seen with blood loss associated with GI ulceration.
  • Azotemia is associated with prerenal, renal, and post-renal causes.
  • Electrolyte abnormalities can help to evaluate GI disease (i.e., hypochloremic metabolic alkalosis with gastric outflow obstruction) and renal disease (i.e., hyperkalemia with acute renal failure or post-renal obstruction).
  • Hyperbilirubinemia and elevated hepatic enzymes help localize a problem to the liver or biliary system.
  • Urine specific gravity (before fluid therapy) is needed to help differentiate prerenal, renal, and post-renal problems.
  • Urine sediment may be helpful in acute renal failure, ethylene glycol intoxication, and pyelonephritis.

Other Laboratory Tests

  • Venous blood gas analysis including lactate concentration may indicate acid-base abnormalities, and increased lactate may be associated with hypoperfusion.
  • Canine and feline pancreatic lipase immunoreactivity can be useful in evaluating pancreatitis.

Imaging

Abdominal Radiography

  • May see abdominal masses or changes in shape or shifting of abdominal organs.
  • Loss of abdominal detail with abdominal fluid accumulation is an indication for abdominocentesis.
  • Free abdominal gas is consistent with a ruptured GI viscus or infection with gas-producing bacteria and is an indication for emergency surgery.
  • Use caution when interpreting radiographs following abdominocentesis with an open needle. Free gas may be introduced with this technique.
  • Use caution when evaluating postoperative radiographs; free gas is a normal postoperative finding.
  • Ileus is a consistent finding with peritonitis.
  • Characterize ileus as functional (due to metabolic or inflammatory causes) or mechanical (due to obstruction).
  • Foreign bodies may be radiopaque.
  • Upper GI barium contrast radiographs are useful in evaluating the GI tract, particularly for determination of GI obstruction.
  • Loss of contrast or radiographic detail in the area of the pancreas can be observed with pancreatic inflammation.

Abdominal Ultrasound

  • A sensitive diagnostic tool for the detection of abdominal masses, abdominal fluid, abscesses, cysts, lymphadenopathy, and biliary or urinary calculi.
  • FAST ultrasound is a published technique meaning Focused Assessment with Sonography in Trauma.

Abdominal CT

  • Very sensitive diagnostic tool that may be used especially when surgeon requires additional information.

Diagnostic Procedures

Abdominocentesis/Abdominal Fluid Analysis

  • Perform abdominocentesis on all patients presenting with acute abdomen. Four-quadrant approach may improve yield. Fluid can often be obtained for diagnostic evaluation even when only a small amount of free abdominal fluid exists, well before detectable radiographic sensitivity. Ultrasound is much more sensitive than radiography for the detection of fluid and can be used to direct abdominocentesis. Blind abdominocentesis can be performed safely without ultrasound guidance. Abdominal fluid analysis with elevated WBC count, degenerate neutrophils, and intracellular bacteria is consistent with septic peritonitis and is an indication for immediate surgery.
  • Diagnostic peritoneal lavage can be performed by introducing sterile saline (10–20 ml/kg) and performing abdominocentesis with or without ultrasound guidance.
  • Measurement of glucose concentration in abdominal effusion in comparison with peripheral blood may aid in the diagnosis of septic abdomen. A blood-to-abdominal fluid glucose difference of >20 mg/dL is consistent with septic effusion.
  • Pancreatitis patients may have an abdominal effusion characterized as a non-septic (sterile) peritonitis.
  • Creatinine concentration higher in abdominal fluid than in serum indicates urinary tract leakage.
  • Similarly, higher bilirubin concentration in abdominal fluid than in serum indicates bile peritonitis.

Sedation and Abdominal Palpation

• Because of abdominal splinting associated with pain, thorough abdominal palpation is often not possible without sedation; this is particularly useful for detecting intestinal foreign bodies that do not appear on survey radiographs.

Exploratory Laparotomy

• Surgery may be useful diagnostically (as well as therapeutically) when ultrasonography (or other advanced imaging) is not available or when no definitive cause of the acute abdomen has been established with appropriate diagnostics.

Treatment

Treatment

Appropriate Health Care

  • Inpatient management with supportive care until decision about whether the problem is to be treated medically or surgically. Early intervention with surgery is important when indicated.
  • Aggressive therapy and prompt identification of the underlying cause is very important.
  • Many causes of acute abdominal pain require emergency surgical intervention.
  • Keep patient NPO if vomiting, until a definitive cause is determined and addressed.
  • Intravenous fluid therapy is usually required because of the large fluid loss associated with an acute abdomen; the goal is to restore the normal circulating blood volume.
  • If severe circulatory compromise (shock) exists, supplement initially with isotonic crystalloid fluids (90 mL/kg, dogs; 70 mL/kg, cats) over 1–2 hours; hypertonic fluids or colloids may also be beneficial if refractory to isotonic crystalloids or hypoproteinemic.
  • Evaluate hydration and electrolytes (with appropriate treatment adjustments) frequently after commencement of treatment.

Diet

Early nutritional support important, especially in order to maintain GI mucosal barrier. Nutritional support can be enteral (oral, nasoesophageal, esophageal tube, gastrostomy tube, enterostomy tube) or parenteral.

Surgical Considerations

  • Many different causes of an acute abdomen (with both medical and surgical treatments) exist; make a definitive diagnosis whenever possible prior to surgical intervention.
  • This can prevent both potentially unnecessary and expensive surgical procedures and associated morbidity and mortality.
  • It will also allow the surgeon to prepare for the task and to educate the owner on the prognosis and financial investment.

Medications

Medications

Drug(s)

Analgesics

  • Pain medication may be indicated for control of abdominal discomfort.
  • Opioids, such as hydromorphone or fentanyl, are often good choices.

Histamine H2 Antagonists

  • Reduce gastric acid production.
  • Famotidine 0.5–1.0 mg/kg IV, SC or IM q12h.
  • Ranitidine 2 mg/kg IV q12h

Proton Pump Inhibitor

Pantoprazole 1–1.5 mg/kg IV as a CRI over 24 hours.

Protectants

Sucralfate 0.25–1 g PO q8h.

Antiemetics

  • Metoclopramide 0.2–0.4 mg/kg IV q6–8h (or 24-hour continuous rate infusion (1–2 mg/kg/24h).
  • Maropitant: dogs, 1–2 mg/kg SC; cats, 1 mg/kg SC
  • Ondansetron 0.5–1 mg/kg IV slowly q6–12h.
  • Dolasetron 1 mg/kg IV q24h.

Antibiotics

  • Antibiotics may be indicated if signs of infection (fever, elevated white blood cell count, positive culture) are seen or hemorrhagic diarrhea is present.
  • Broad spectrum for Gram-positive, Gram-negative, and anaerobic bacteria.
  • Gram stain and cultures prior to treatment if possible, but do not delay intervention pending results.

Contraindications

Do not use metoclopramide if GI obstruction is suspected. Do not use barium if gastrointestinal perforation is suspected. Use iodinated contrast agent instead.

Precautions

Gentamicin and most NSAIDs can be nephrotoxic and should be used with caution in hypovolemic patients and those with renal impairment. Opiates are preferred to NSAIDs for pain management as NSAIDs may cause GI complications.

Follow-Up

Follow-Up

Patient Monitoring

Patients usually require intensive medical care and frequent evaluation of vital signs and laboratory parameters.

Miscellaneous

Miscellaneous

Synonym

Colic

Abbreviations

  • GI = gastrointestinal
  • NSAID = nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug

Suggested Reading

Beal MW. Approach to the acute abdomen. Vet Clin North Am Small Anim Pract 2005, 35:375396.

Heeren V, Edwards L, Mazzaferro EM. Acute abdomen: Diagnosis. Compend Contin Educ Pract Vet 2004, 26:350363.

Heeren V, Edwards L, Mazzaferro EM. Acute abdomen: Treatment. Compend Contin Educ Pract Vet 2004, 26:35663673.

Mazzaferro EM. Triage and approach to the acute abdomen. Clin Tech Small Anim Pract 2003, 18:16.

Author Steven L. Marks

Consulting Editor Stanley L. Marks