Acute Abdomen for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
Included In This Lesson
Study Tools For Acute Abdomen for Certified Emergency Nursing (CEN)
Outline
Acute Abdomen
Definition/Etiology:
5-10% of ER visits are for abdominal pain.
Compared with younger patients, the elderly have a 6-8x increase in mortality with an acute abdomen.
Causes include:
- Ectopic pregnancy / placental abruption
- Pelvic inflammatory disease
- Ovarian torsion
- Endometriosis
- Testicular torsion
- Nephrolithiasis
- AAA
- MI
- Splenic rupture
- Sickle cell crisis
- Black widow bite (or other spider)
- Appendicitis / Peritonitis
- Mesenteric ischemia
- Bowel perforation (covered separately)
- Volvulus / bowel obstruction
- Gallbladder / pancreatitis
- Cancer
- Diverticular disease
- Food-borne illness
- Adhesions
- Irritable bowel syndrome
- Opiate withdrawal
- Toxic ingestion
- Pyelonephritis
- Incarcerated hernia
- Intra-abdominal abscess
Pathophysiology:
Abdominal pain can have many causes. In general:
- Ischemic tissue (incarcerated hernia, mesenteric ischemia)
- Blood or bowel contents in the peritoneum
- Rupture (AAA, ectopic, etc)
- Obstruction (crampy, spasming, trying to move)
Clinical Presentation:
High-risk features:
- Sudden, severe onset
- Constant, unremitting
- Recent surgery
- Age >65
- Immunocompromised
- Major comorbidities (CAD, DM, cancer)
- Tense, rigid abdomen
- Involuntary guarding
- Shocky
- Pregnant
- Alcoholic
Take a good history. Have a system:
- Onset
- Location
- Duration
- Character
- Aggravating
- Relieving
- Treatments
- Severity
Collaborative Management:
Labs:
- CBC, CMP, amylase, lipase
- Blood cultures, lactate
- Type and cross
- Urinalysis, HCG
Imaging:
- FAST exam
- Formal abdominal ultrasound
- CT abdomen/pelvis
Other:
- NPO
- Nasogastric tube / stomach decompression / LIWS
- Pain management
Evaluation | Patient Monitoring | Education:
- Frequent vitals
- Monitor NG output
- Make sure it’s on LIWS
- Pain management
- Watch for shock
- Two large bore peripherals
Linchpins: (Key Points)
- Assume it’s bad.
- Practice your physical assessment.
- Take a good history.
- Try to figure it out before looking at the CT report.
Transcript
For more great CEN prep, got to the link below to purchase the “Emergency Nursing Examination Review” book by Dr. Laura Gasparis Vonfrolio RN, PHD
https://greatnurses.com/
References:
- Kendall, J. L. (2022, September 12). Evaluation of the adult with abdominal pain in the emergency department. UpToDate. https://www.uptodate.com/contents/evaluation-of-the-adult-with-abdominal-pain-in-the-emergency-department