- Ask the patient what the complaint is.
- Determine that onset, constancy, relieving factors, and exacerbathing factors.
- Age is important in predicting the pathology.
- Pain is a most important symptom. Determine its onset , character, site, severity, movement. Ask if anything relieves or exacerbates the pain, eg- movement or coughing in peritonitis, food in peptic ulcer disease.
- Vomiting. Note onset and time, type, presistence, content. Did pain precede vomiting? If so the cause of vomiting is usually surgical.
- Diarrhoeal/constipation.These may be relevant in cases of intermittent or complete intestinal obstruction.
- Temperature. Is the patient pyrexial? Are there rigors? These suggest bacterial infection.
- Past medical history. Ask about previous operations, disease, family history, recent injury, menstrual periods.
- Drugs. Ask about current or recent medication. Specifically ask about hypoglycaemics, steriods, sedatives, hypotensives, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, anticoagulants, antibiotics, and cardiac drugs.
- In patients who have sustained truma, get details of what happened from the patient or other witnesses. Start resuscitation if required at the same time.
Relevant Points in the history...
Relevant Points in the history of patients with acute abdominal pain.
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