Take Home Points
- Go in thinking sick vs not sick – this can take time to develop and that’s ok, this skill will come as you see more patients
- If you’re thinking about getting a scan or u/s – just get it! You don’t want to go home thinking you should have gotten a scan and didn’t
- Pain is subjective (what they tell you) and while tenderness is objective (what you see) – scan every patient that has true tenderness
- Perform belly exams with distraction – ask a question while pressing on the belly and look for the involuntary flexing of the abdominal wall which is tenderness, grabbing your wrist which is guarding, or a firm abdominal wall which is rigidity
- Just like real estate – think location location location – this will help guide your differentials and narrow down whats going on
- As a general rule – above the level of the ASIS is abdominal, and below the ASIS is pelvic
- Don’t anchor on a differential – there can more than one thing going on, keep searching if you don’t find an answer in your initial workup
REBEL Core Cast – Basics of EM – Introduction to Abdominal Pain
Click here for Direct Download of the Podcast
Co-Host
James F. Martin, MD
Associate Clinical Professor – Rutgers RWJ
Monmouth Medical Center– RWJBarnabas
Long Branch, NJ
Post Peer Reviewed By: Anand Swaminathan, MD (Twitter: @EMSwami)
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