Left lower quadrant abdominal pain: Difference between revisions
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
*This page | *This page outlines the general approach to adult left lower quadrant (LLQ) pain | ||
*LLQ contains: sigmoid colon, descending colon, left ureter, left ovary/fallopian tube (females), left spermatic cord (males) | |||
*Key EM considerations: [[diverticulitis]] (most common surgical cause in adults >40), [[ovarian torsion]], [[ectopic pregnancy]], renal colic | |||
*Always consider pregnancy-related emergencies in women of reproductive age | |||
{{Abdominal pain location}} | |||
==Clinical Features== | ==Clinical Features== | ||
* | ===History=== | ||
*Onset, character, location, radiation, aggravating/alleviating factors | |||
*Prior episodes of similar pain (recurrent diverticulitis) | |||
*Change in bowel habits, blood in stool (colitis, diverticulitis, malignancy) | |||
*Urinary symptoms (UTI, nephrolithiasis) | |||
*Menstrual/gynecologic history: LMP, vaginal bleeding/discharge, sexual activity | |||
*Fever (infectious/inflammatory cause) | |||
*Diet: low fiber (diverticular disease) | |||
*Age: diverticulitis more common >40 years | |||
===Physical Exam=== | |||
*LLQ tenderness, guarding, rebound (peritonitis) | |||
*Palpable mass (abscess, tumor) | |||
*CVA tenderness (pyelonephritis, nephrolithiasis) | |||
*Pelvic exam: cervical motion tenderness, adnexal mass/tenderness (ectopic, torsion, PID) | |||
*Rectal exam: stool guaiac, rectal mass | |||
*Testicular exam in males (referred pain from hernia or testicular pathology) | |||
===Red Flags=== | |||
*Hemodynamic instability with LLQ pain + positive pregnancy test ([[ectopic pregnancy]]) | |||
*Acute onset severe pain with no prior history (torsion, mesenteric ischemia, perforation) | |||
*Fever + peritoneal signs (perforation, abscess) | |||
*Free air on imaging (perforated diverticulitis or other hollow viscus) | |||
==Differential Diagnosis== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
{{ | {{DDX LLQ}} | ||
===Must Not Miss=== | |||
*[[Ectopic pregnancy]] in reproductive-age women | |||
*[[Ovarian torsion]] | |||
*Perforated [[diverticulitis]] | |||
*[[Mesenteric ischemia]] (especially elderly with atrial fibrillation) | |||
*Large bowel obstruction / [[volvulus]] (sigmoid volvulus) | |||
==Evaluation== | ==Evaluation== | ||
=== | ===Laboratory=== | ||
*CBC | *[[CBC]], [[BMP]] | ||
* | *[[Urinalysis]] | ||
* | *Urine pregnancy test (mandatory in reproductive-age women) | ||
* | *[[LFTs]], lipase | ||
* | *[[Lactate]] if concern for ischemia or sepsis | ||
*[[CRP]]/[[ESR]] may support diverticulitis diagnosis | |||
*GC/CT NAAT if PID suspected | |||
=== | ===Imaging=== | ||
* | *[[CT abdomen pelvis]] with IV contrast: gold standard for diverticulitis, abscess, volvulus, mesenteric ischemia | ||
* | *Pelvic ultrasound (transvaginal): first-line for suspected ovarian torsion, ectopic pregnancy | ||
*[[POCUS]]: free fluid, hydronephrosis, IUP identification | |||
*Abdominal X-ray: useful for obstruction or volvulus (coffee bean sign in sigmoid volvulus) | |||
* | |||
==Management== | ==Management== | ||
*Treat underlying disease process | *Treat underlying disease process | ||
*IV fluids, analgesia | |||
*[[Diverticulitis]]: uncomplicated — outpatient antibiotics or observation without antibiotics per recent guidelines; complicated (abscess, perforation, obstruction) — IV antibiotics, surgical consultation | |||
*[[Ectopic pregnancy]]: emergent OB/GYN consultation | |||
*[[Ovarian torsion]]: emergent GYN consultation for surgical detorsion | |||
*Sigmoid [[volvulus]]: GI consultation for endoscopic decompression; surgery if peritonitis | |||
*[[Nephrolithiasis]]: analgesia (NSAIDs first-line), hydration | |||
==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
* | *Admit: complicated diverticulitis, ectopic pregnancy requiring intervention, ovarian torsion, bowel obstruction/volvulus, mesenteric ischemia | ||
*Discharge: uncomplicated diverticulitis, stable renal colic, benign ovarian cyst, with appropriate follow-up and return precautions | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[Abdominal Pain]] | *[[Abdominal Pain]] | ||
*[[ | *[[Diverticulitis]] | ||
*[[Ectopic pregnancy]] | |||
*[[Ovarian torsion]] | |||
==External Links== | ==External Links== | ||
| Line 40: | Line 82: | ||
[[Category:GI]] | [[Category:GI]] | ||
[[Category:Symptoms]] | |||
Latest revision as of 09:30, 22 March 2026
Background
- This page outlines the general approach to adult left lower quadrant (LLQ) pain
- LLQ contains: sigmoid colon, descending colon, left ureter, left ovary/fallopian tube (females), left spermatic cord (males)
- Key EM considerations: diverticulitis (most common surgical cause in adults >40), ovarian torsion, ectopic pregnancy, renal colic
- Always consider pregnancy-related emergencies in women of reproductive age
Classification by Abdominal pain location
| RUQ pain | Epigastric pain | LUQ pain |
| Flank pain | Diffuse abdominal pain | Flank pain |
| RLQ pain | Pelvic pain | LLQ pain |
Clinical Features
History
- Onset, character, location, radiation, aggravating/alleviating factors
- Prior episodes of similar pain (recurrent diverticulitis)
- Change in bowel habits, blood in stool (colitis, diverticulitis, malignancy)
- Urinary symptoms (UTI, nephrolithiasis)
- Menstrual/gynecologic history: LMP, vaginal bleeding/discharge, sexual activity
- Fever (infectious/inflammatory cause)
- Diet: low fiber (diverticular disease)
- Age: diverticulitis more common >40 years
Physical Exam
- LLQ tenderness, guarding, rebound (peritonitis)
- Palpable mass (abscess, tumor)
- CVA tenderness (pyelonephritis, nephrolithiasis)
- Pelvic exam: cervical motion tenderness, adnexal mass/tenderness (ectopic, torsion, PID)
- Rectal exam: stool guaiac, rectal mass
- Testicular exam in males (referred pain from hernia or testicular pathology)
Red Flags
- Hemodynamic instability with LLQ pain + positive pregnancy test (ectopic pregnancy)
- Acute onset severe pain with no prior history (torsion, mesenteric ischemia, perforation)
- Fever + peritoneal signs (perforation, abscess)
- Free air on imaging (perforated diverticulitis or other hollow viscus)
Differential Diagnosis
Must Not Miss
- Ectopic pregnancy in reproductive-age women
- Ovarian torsion
- Perforated diverticulitis
- Mesenteric ischemia (especially elderly with atrial fibrillation)
- Large bowel obstruction / volvulus (sigmoid volvulus)
Evaluation
Laboratory
- CBC, BMP
- Urinalysis
- Urine pregnancy test (mandatory in reproductive-age women)
- LFTs, lipase
- Lactate if concern for ischemia or sepsis
- CRP/ESR may support diverticulitis diagnosis
- GC/CT NAAT if PID suspected
Imaging
- CT abdomen pelvis with IV contrast: gold standard for diverticulitis, abscess, volvulus, mesenteric ischemia
- Pelvic ultrasound (transvaginal): first-line for suspected ovarian torsion, ectopic pregnancy
- POCUS: free fluid, hydronephrosis, IUP identification
- Abdominal X-ray: useful for obstruction or volvulus (coffee bean sign in sigmoid volvulus)
Management
- Treat underlying disease process
- IV fluids, analgesia
- Diverticulitis: uncomplicated — outpatient antibiotics or observation without antibiotics per recent guidelines; complicated (abscess, perforation, obstruction) — IV antibiotics, surgical consultation
- Ectopic pregnancy: emergent OB/GYN consultation
- Ovarian torsion: emergent GYN consultation for surgical detorsion
- Sigmoid volvulus: GI consultation for endoscopic decompression; surgery if peritonitis
- Nephrolithiasis: analgesia (NSAIDs first-line), hydration
Disposition
- Admit: complicated diverticulitis, ectopic pregnancy requiring intervention, ovarian torsion, bowel obstruction/volvulus, mesenteric ischemia
- Discharge: uncomplicated diverticulitis, stable renal colic, benign ovarian cyst, with appropriate follow-up and return precautions
