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Abdominal Pain, Nausea, and Vomiting

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Surgery

Abstract

A 38-year-old woman presents to the emergency department with colicky abdominal pain, nausea, and vomiting for the past day. She has had at least 10 episodes of green, bilious emesis without blood. She has had no passage of stool or flatus per rectum since yesterday morning and has not eaten in 24 hours due to the vomiting and abdominal pain. She denies a history of similar symptoms and has no other medical problems. Past surgical history is significant for a C-section 2 years ago. On physical examination, her temperature is 99.3 °F, heart rate is 122/min, blood pressure is 124/78 mmHg, and respiratory rate is 14/min. Her mucous membranes are dry and her abdomen is distended, with a well-healed low transverse abdominal incision. Auscultation reveals high-pitched tinkling bowel sounds. She has mild tenderness throughout the abdomen, but there is no rebound, guarding, or rigidity. No masses or hernias are identified. Rectal examination reveals normal tone, no gross blood, no masses, and no stool in the rectal vault. Laboratory examination is significant for a white blood cell count of 8.2 × 103/μL (normal 4.1–10.9 × 103/μL), hemoglobin 17 g/dL (12.3–15.7 g/dL), hematocrit 51 % (37–46 %), sodium 141 mEq/L (135–145 mEq/L), potassium 2.9 mEq/L (3.5–5.0 mEq/L), chloride 93 mmol/L (98–106 mEq/L), bicarbonate 31 mEq/L (24–30 mEq/L), BUN 30 mg/dL (7–22 mg/dL), and creatinine 1.2 mg/dL (0.56–1.0 mg/dL). Abdominal x-ray is provided in Fig. 2.1.

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Correspondence to Jill Q. Klausner .

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Klausner, J.Q., Chen, D.C. (2015). Abdominal Pain, Nausea, and Vomiting. In: de Virgilio, C., Frank, P., Grigorian, A. (eds) Surgery. Springer, New York, NY. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-1726-6_2

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-1726-6_2

  • Publisher Name: Springer, New York, NY

  • Print ISBN: 978-1-4939-1725-9

  • Online ISBN: 978-1-4939-1726-6

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