Acute abdominal pain may relate to specific organ systems and needs an interdisciplinary approach with close collaboration between internal and surgical disciplines. Main objective is to shorten the diagnostic work-up between the beginning of the symptoms and their therapy. After clarifying of the five w-questions: when, how, how long, why, and where, abdominal ultrasound, ECG, laboratory diagnostics and early application of computed tomography should be performed.For the most part, chronic abdominal pain is caused by disorders of the gut-brain-axis such as the irritable bowel syndrome. Because of the synaptic plasticity, the processing of pain is dynamic and cannot be related to a single organ system. This problem is obvious in patients with irritable bowel syndrome and colonic diverticula, which may be interpreted as symptomatic uncomplicated diverticular disease (SUDD, type 3a). However, a reliable clinical differentiation between both groups is not possible. The establishment of SUDD (type 3a) considerable widened the application area of mesalazine.
Keyphrases
- abdominal pain
- irritable bowel syndrome
- computed tomography
- magnetic resonance imaging
- chronic pain
- drug induced
- liver failure
- white matter
- blood pressure
- heart rate variability
- magnetic resonance
- resting state
- stem cells
- heart rate
- sleep quality
- aortic dissection
- functional connectivity
- mesenchymal stem cells
- spinal cord
- extracorporeal membrane oxygenation
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- smoking cessation