Mark's Abdominal Pain

February 06, 2018 Print Friendly Version of this page Print Get a PDF version of this webpage PDF
By Chris Warner (4th year Medical Student)
Name
Mark Fletcher
DOB
06/01/1995 (23 years)
Occupation
Dental Student
History
Woke this morning with generalised abdominal pain 6/10 in severity. Pain progressively became more severe (8/10) and now located in RIF. Was in bed when the pain came on. Pain is made worse by movement, and better slightly by lying completely still with knees up towards chest. Has been vomiting from about an hour after the pain started (approximately 5 times), no blood or bile in the vomit. Two episodes of diarrhoea, no blood in stool. No contact with anyone who has been ill. No recent travel.
Past Medical History
Asthma
Drug History
NKDA. Salbutamol inhaler (uses less than once a week)
Family History
Father has ulcerative colitis
Social History
Non-smoker. Does not drink alcohol.
Introduction & consent

Name, age, occupation

Asks open question

Establishes site of pain

Establishes onset & duration of pain e.g. sudden, gradual

Establishes time course of pain e.g. intermittent, progressive or continuous

Establishes character of pain
e.g. colicky (renal stones), burning (peptic ulcer or reflux disease), sharp (rupture of viscus) or dull

Asks if pain radiates
e.g. loin to groin (renal stones), shoulder tip (gallbladder), back (abdominal aortic aneurysm or ruptured duodenal ulcer) groin or testicles (hernia)

Asks how severe pain is

Alleviating factors (diet, opening bowels)

Exacerbating factors (swallowing, fatty food (gallstones), spicy food/hot drinks (peptic ulcer))

Checks for associated symptoms: nausea/vomiting, bowel habits, dysphagia, dyspepsia, bloating/swelling, flatulence, fever

Screens for IBD symptoms: red eye, joint pain, skin lesions, oral ulcers, bloody diarrhoea

Identifies any red flags: rectal bleeding (fresh/melaena), vaginal bleeding, haemetemsis, haematuria, weight loss, loss of appetite

Asks for any recent illness or any family members/contacts with similar symptoms

Past medical and surgical history (specifically abdominal pain, bowel disorders)

Family history (specifically asking for colon cancer, inflammatory bowel disease)

Drug history and allergies

Smoking, alcohol and illicit drug use

Checks impact of symptoms on occupation

Ideas
"Was there anything you thought it might be?"

Concerns
"What about it is worrying you in particular?"

Expectations
"Is there anything in particular you were hoping we would to today?"

Communication skills (empathy and avoids jargon)

Summarises back to patient

Gives reasonable differential diagnosis (Appendicitis, Gastroenteritis, Testicular torsion)