Symptom Finder - Right Upper Quadrant Pain
Right Upper Quadrant Pain
The patient is complaining of RUQ pain and you cannot just give him or her a bag of pills and send him or her home.
The patient’s condition may be serious. However, you are in a hurry to get out of the office because you have another important appointment. What do you do? The key is to visualize the anatomy. Imagine the liver, gallbladder, bile ducts, hepatic flexure of the colon, duodenum, and head of the pancreas. Surrounding these are the skin, fascia, ribs, and thoracic and lumbar spine, with the intercostal nerves and arteries and abdominal muscle.
Pain is usually from inflammation, trauma, or infarction. The patient gives no history of trauma, but he or she could have a contusion of the muscle from coughing hard. That is not likely, however, unless the patient has other symptoms of the respiratory tract.
The possible sources of inflammation should be narrowed down first. The liver can be inflamed from hepatitis (most likely viral), the gallbladder from cholecystitis (most likely induced by stones and bacteria), or the bile ducts from cholangitis. The colon may be involved with diverticulitis, a segment of granulomatous colitis, or perhaps there is a retrocecal appendix. The duodenum, of course, would most likely have a peptic ulcer which could cause an obstruction or a perforation if the patient is vomiting, or pallor and shock if the patient is bleeding. The pancreas could be inflamed with pancreatitis, especially if the patient drinks alcohol.
These are the most important intra-abdominal considerations, but if the mnemonic VINDICATE were applied one might not forget the Budd–Chiari syndrome (thrombosis of the hepatic veins), portal vein thrombosis, or pylephlebitis; these are rare. In addition, toxic hepatitis from isoniazid, thorazine, and erythromycin estolate (Ilosone), for example, can be painful. Collagen diseases affecting the liver are another possibility.
Now let us round out the differential diagnosis with extra-abdominal disorders. The skin may be involved with herpes zoster or cellulitis. A fascial rent may cause a hernia, particularly if there was previous upper abdominal surgery. Compression of the nerve roots by a herniated disc, thoracic spondylosis, or a spinal cord tumor is possible, but unlikely. Systemic conditions, such as lead colic and porphyria, and involvement of another organ, such as the kidney, must be considered (pyelonephritis or renal colic).
Approach to the Diagnosis
As in the case of generalized abdominal pain, an immediate CBC, urinalysis, chemistry profile, serum amylase and lipase levels, and flat plate and upright films of the abdomen are ordered. If cholecystitis is suspected, ultrasonography or nuclear scanning of the gallbladder (hepatoiminodiacetic acid [HIDA] scan) is ordered. If there is jaundice, a
common duct stone can be ruled out by an MRCP or endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP).
Other Useful Tests
1. Surgery consult
2. CT scan of the abdomen
3. Quantitative urine amylase
4. Urine porphobilinogen (porphyria)
5. Gallium scan (subphrenic abscess)
6. IVP (renal stone)
7. Liver function studies (common duct stone)
8. Blood lead level
9. Pregnancy test (ruptured ectopic pregnancy)
10. X-ray of thoracolumbar spine (radiculopathy)
11. Laparoscopy (ruptured viscus)
12. Aortogram (dissecting aneurysm)
13. Lymphangiogram (Hodgkin lymphoma)
14. Exploratory laparotomy
15. MRI
16. Endoscopic ultrasonography
The patient is complaining of RUQ pain and you cannot just give him or her a bag of pills and send him or her home.
The patient’s condition may be serious. However, you are in a hurry to get out of the office because you have another important appointment. What do you do? The key is to visualize the anatomy. Imagine the liver, gallbladder, bile ducts, hepatic flexure of the colon, duodenum, and head of the pancreas. Surrounding these are the skin, fascia, ribs, and thoracic and lumbar spine, with the intercostal nerves and arteries and abdominal muscle.
Pain is usually from inflammation, trauma, or infarction. The patient gives no history of trauma, but he or she could have a contusion of the muscle from coughing hard. That is not likely, however, unless the patient has other symptoms of the respiratory tract.
The possible sources of inflammation should be narrowed down first. The liver can be inflamed from hepatitis (most likely viral), the gallbladder from cholecystitis (most likely induced by stones and bacteria), or the bile ducts from cholangitis. The colon may be involved with diverticulitis, a segment of granulomatous colitis, or perhaps there is a retrocecal appendix. The duodenum, of course, would most likely have a peptic ulcer which could cause an obstruction or a perforation if the patient is vomiting, or pallor and shock if the patient is bleeding. The pancreas could be inflamed with pancreatitis, especially if the patient drinks alcohol.
These are the most important intra-abdominal considerations, but if the mnemonic VINDICATE were applied one might not forget the Budd–Chiari syndrome (thrombosis of the hepatic veins), portal vein thrombosis, or pylephlebitis; these are rare. In addition, toxic hepatitis from isoniazid, thorazine, and erythromycin estolate (Ilosone), for example, can be painful. Collagen diseases affecting the liver are another possibility.
Now let us round out the differential diagnosis with extra-abdominal disorders. The skin may be involved with herpes zoster or cellulitis. A fascial rent may cause a hernia, particularly if there was previous upper abdominal surgery. Compression of the nerve roots by a herniated disc, thoracic spondylosis, or a spinal cord tumor is possible, but unlikely. Systemic conditions, such as lead colic and porphyria, and involvement of another organ, such as the kidney, must be considered (pyelonephritis or renal colic).
Approach to the Diagnosis
As in the case of generalized abdominal pain, an immediate CBC, urinalysis, chemistry profile, serum amylase and lipase levels, and flat plate and upright films of the abdomen are ordered. If cholecystitis is suspected, ultrasonography or nuclear scanning of the gallbladder (hepatoiminodiacetic acid [HIDA] scan) is ordered. If there is jaundice, a
common duct stone can be ruled out by an MRCP or endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP).
Other Useful Tests
1. Surgery consult
2. CT scan of the abdomen
3. Quantitative urine amylase
4. Urine porphobilinogen (porphyria)
5. Gallium scan (subphrenic abscess)
6. IVP (renal stone)
7. Liver function studies (common duct stone)
8. Blood lead level
9. Pregnancy test (ruptured ectopic pregnancy)
10. X-ray of thoracolumbar spine (radiculopathy)
11. Laparoscopy (ruptured viscus)
12. Aortogram (dissecting aneurysm)
13. Lymphangiogram (Hodgkin lymphoma)
14. Exploratory laparotomy
15. MRI
16. Endoscopic ultrasonography