Acute abdomen refers to sudden, severe abdominal pain requiring urgent medical attention and often surgical intervention. Pharmacological management focuses on resuscitation, pain control, infection treatment, and preparation for potential surgery while maintaining diagnostic clarity.
🎯 Systematic Approach to Acute Abdomen
Comprehensive management strategy focusing on stabilization and diagnosis:
Initial Resuscitation
- ABC assessment: Airway, Breathing, Circulation
- IV access: Large-bore intravenous lines
- Fluid resuscitation: Crystalloids for hypotension
- Monitoring: Vital signs, urine output
- Laboratory: CBC, electrolytes, amylase, lipase, LFTs
- Key Point: Stabilize before definitive diagnosis
Symptomatic Management
- Pain control: Opioids with caution
- Nausea/vomiting: Antiemetics as needed
- NG tube: For bowel obstruction, ileus
- NPO: Nothing by mouth initially
- Key Point: Do not mask surgical signs
Surgical Preparation
- Consultation: Early surgical evaluation
- Imaging: CT scan, ultrasound, X-rays
- Consent: Prepare for possible operation
- Optimization: Correct coagulopathy, electrolytes
- Key Point: Timely intervention saves lives
💊 Analgesia & Symptom Control
Balancing pain relief with preservation of diagnostic signs:
Opioid Analgesics
- Morphine: 2-5 mg IV every 5-15 minutes
- Fentanyl: 25-50 mcg IV every 5-10 minutes
- Hydromorphone: 0.2-0.6 mg IV every 5-15 minutes
- Mechanism: Mu-opioid receptor agonism
- Monitoring: Respiratory rate, sedation score
- Key Point: Do not delay diagnosis
Antiemetics
- Ondansetron: 4-8 mg IV every 8 hours
- Metoclopramide: 10 mg IV every 6-8 hours
- Prochlorperazine: 5-10 mg IV every 6-8 hours
- Mechanism: 5-HT3 antagonism, dopamine blockade
- Indications: Nausea, vomiting, bowel stimulation
- Key Point: Essential for patient comfort
NSAIDs & Other Analgesics
- Ketorolac: 15-30 mg IV every 6 hours
- Acetaminophen: 1 g IV every 6 hours
- Contraindications: Renal impairment, bleeding risk
- Benefits: Opioid-sparing effect
- Limitations: Avoid in suspected perforation
- Key Point: Adjunctive therapy only
Antispasmodics
- Hyoscine: 10-20 mg IV/IM
- Dicyclomine: 10-20 mg IV/IM
- Indications: Biliary/renal colic, intestinal spasm
- Mechanism: Anticholinergic smooth muscle relaxation
- Side Effects: Dry mouth, blurred vision, urinary retention
- Key Point: Specific for colicky pain
🦠 Antimicrobial Therapy
Targeted antibiotic regimens based on suspected source:
General Principles
Timing: Administer within 1 hour of diagnosis for sepsis
Spectrum: Cover Gram-negative rods and anaerobes
Source control: Surgical intervention often required
De-escalation: Narrow spectrum based on culture results
Duration: Typically 4-7 days after source control
Common Regimens
Community-acquired: Piperacillin-tazobactam or Carbapenems
Healthcare-associated: Broader spectrum with MRSA coverage
Appendicitis: Cefoxitin or Cefotetan monotherapy
Diverticulitis: Metronidazole + third-generation cephalosporin
Cholangitis: Piperacillin-tazobactam or Carbapenems
- Avoid analgesia before surgical evaluation in some cases
- Do not give oral medications if surgery anticipated
- Monitor for opioid-induced ileus in bowel obstruction
- Consider patient age, comorbidities, allergy history
- Early surgical consultation is essential
- Reassess frequently for changing clinical status
📊 Antibiotic Selection by Diagnosis
| Condition | Common Pathogens | First-line Therapy | Alternative Options | Special Considerations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Appendicitis | E. coli, Bacteroides, Pseudomonas | Cefoxitin 2g IV or Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375g IV | Ertapenem, Moxifloxacin + Metronidazole | Single pre-op dose often sufficient if early surgery |
| Diverticulitis | Bacteroides, E. coli, Klebsiella | Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375g IV q6h | Meropenem, Ceftriaxone + Metronidazole | Uncomplicated cases may be managed outpatient with oral antibiotics |
| Cholecystitis/Cholangitis | E. coli, Klebsiella, Enterococcus | Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375g IV q6h | Meropenem, Ceftriaxone + Metronidazole | ERCP may be needed for cholangitis, urgent cholecystectomy for cholecystitis |
| Perforated Peptic Ulcer | Oral flora, E. coli, Bacteroides | Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375g IV q6h | Meropenem, Cefepime + Metronidazole | Urgent surgical consultation, H. pylori treatment post-op |
| Pancreatitis (Severe) | Gut flora if infected necrosis | Meropenem 1g IV q8h or Imipenem | Piperacillin-tazobactam, Fluoroquinolone + Metronidazole | Antibiotics only for proven infection, not prophylactically |
| Peritonitis | Polymicrobial - Gram-negative, anaerobes | Piperacillin-tazobactam 3.375g IV q6h | Carbapenem, Cefepime + Metronidazole | Source control essential, consider antifungal if immunocompromised |
🏥 Resuscitation & Supportive Care
Critical interventions for hemodynamic stabilization:
Fluid Resuscitation
Crystalloids: Normal saline or Lactated Ringer's
Initial bolus: 20-30 mL/kg for hypotension/shock
Monitoring: Urine output, lactate clearance, vital signs
Goals: MAP >65 mmHg, urine output >0.5 mL/kg/hr
Caution: Avoid fluid overload in cardiac/renal impairment
Vasoactive Support
Norepinephrine: First-line for septic shock (2-20 mcg/min)
Vasopressin: Add-on therapy (0.01-0.03 units/min)
Dopamine: Limited use, consider for bradycardia
Monitoring: Arterial line for accurate BP measurement
Goals: Tissue perfusion, not just blood pressure numbers
Electrolyte Management
Potassium: Correct hypokalemia for cardiac stability
Magnesium: Essential for cardiac function
Calcium: Ionized calcium maintenance
Glucose: Tight control (140-180 mg/dL)
Monitoring: Frequent electrolyte panels
⚠️ Specific Conditions & Management
Targeted approaches for common acute abdomen etiologies:
Bowel Obstruction
NG tube: Decompression essential
Fluids: Correct third-space losses
Electrolytes: Monitor and replace losses
Surgery: If complete obstruction, strangulation, or failure to resolve
Antibiotics: If ischemia or perforation suspected
Mesenteric Ischemia
Anticoagulation: Heparin for arterial thrombosis
Vasodilators: Papaverine for non-occlusive mesenteric ischemia
Antibiotics: Broad-spectrum for bowel translocation
Surgery: Urgent revascularization or resection
Monitoring: High mortality, require ICU care
Ruptured Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm
Blood products: Massive transfusion protocol
Permissive hypotension: SBP 80-100 mmHg until control
Avoid: Aggressive fluid resuscitation
Surgery: Emergency open repair or EVAR
Mortality: Extremely high without immediate intervention
- Ruptured AAA: Hypotension, pulsatile mass, back pain
- Bowel perforation: Rigid abdomen, free air on X-ray
- Mesenteric ischemia: Pain out of proportion to exam
- Ectopic pregnancy rupture: Hypotension, positive pregnancy test
- Strangulated hernia: Tender, irreducible hernia
- Action: Immediate surgical consultation, OR preparation
🎯 Clinical Pearls
Essential considerations for acute abdomen management:
- Early surgical consultation is crucial - do not delay
- Analgesia does not mask physical findings when used appropriately
- Consider non-surgical causes (DKA, porphyria, sickle cell crisis)
- Elderly and immunocompromised may have atypical presentations
- Repeat abdominal exams are essential for monitoring progression
- CT scan is the imaging modality of choice for most cases
- Time-to-antibiotics critical for suspected intra-abdominal infection
- History: Onset, location, migration, character, severity, associated symptoms
- Physical: Comprehensive abdominal exam, including rectal/pelvic
- Laboratory: CBC, chemistry, LFTs, amylase, lipase, lactate, urinalysis
- Imaging: X-ray (obstruction, perforation), US (gallbladder, appendix), CT (most cases)
- Special tests: ECG (MI), β-hCG (pregnancy), blood cultures (sepsis)
- Monitoring: Serial exams, vital signs, laboratory trends
🧠 Key Takeaways
- ✅ ABCs first - stabilize before definitive diagnosis
- ✅ Early surgical consult - do not delay potential operation
- ✅ Analgesia appropriate - does not mask diagnosis when used properly
- ✅ Antibiotics timely - within 1 hour for septic shock
- ✅ Fluid resuscitation - guided by clinical endpoints
- ✅ Serial examinations - essential for monitoring progression
- ✅ Know surgical emergencies - require immediate intervention