Left upper quadrant abdominal pain: Difference between revisions
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
*This page outlines the general approach to adult LUQ pain | *This page outlines the general approach to adult left upper quadrant (LUQ) pain | ||
*LUQ contains: spleen, stomach, left kidney, splenic flexure of colon, tail of pancreas, and left adrenal gland | |||
*Key EM considerations: splenic pathology (rupture, infarct, abscess), gastric/peptic ulcer disease, pancreatitis, renal pathology | |||
*Remember referred pain sources: left lower lobe pneumonia, MI, pericarditis | |||
{{Abdominal pain location}} | |||
==Clinical Features== | ==Clinical Features== | ||
===History=== | |||
*Onset, character, radiation, timing, severity | |||
*Associated symptoms: nausea/vomiting, fever, hematochezia/melena, pleuritic chest pain | |||
*Recent trauma (splenic injury) | |||
*History of blood dyscrasias, anticoagulation, mononucleosis (splenic enlargement) | |||
*Alcohol use, gallstones (pancreatitis) | |||
*NSAID use, H. pylori history (peptic ulcer disease) | |||
*History of atrial fibrillation or hypercoagulable state (splenic infarct) | |||
===Physical Exam=== | |||
*LUQ tenderness, guarding, peritoneal signs | |||
*Kehr sign: left shoulder pain from diaphragmatic irritation (splenic injury, ruptured spleen) | |||
*Splenomegaly | |||
*Epigastric tenderness radiating to back (pancreatitis) | |||
*CVA tenderness (pyelonephritis, nephrolithiasis) | |||
===Red Flags=== | |||
*Hemodynamic instability with LUQ pain (splenic rupture, ruptured AAA) | |||
*Kehr sign (hemoperitoneum) | |||
*Recent trauma + LUQ pain (delayed splenic rupture can occur weeks after injury) | |||
*LUQ pain + atrial fibrillation (splenic artery embolism/infarct) | |||
==Differential Diagnosis== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
{{DDX LUQ}} | {{DDX LUQ}} | ||
== | ===Must Not Miss=== | ||
* | *'''[[Splenic rupture]]''' (traumatic or spontaneous) | ||
* | *'''Splenic infarct''' (embolic, sickle cell crisis) | ||
* | *'''[[Myocardial infarction]]''' (referred pain — always consider in older patients) | ||
* | *'''Left lower lobe [[pneumonia]]''' (referred to LUQ) | ||
* | |||
==Evaluation== | |||
===Laboratory=== | |||
*[[CBC]], [[BMP]] | |||
*[[LFTs]], lipase | |||
*[[Urinalysis]] | *[[Urinalysis]] | ||
*Urine pregnancy (females) | *Urine pregnancy test (females of reproductive age) | ||
* | *[[Lactate]] if concern for mesenteric ischemia or sepsis | ||
* | *[[Troponin]], [[ECG]] if cardiac cause considered (age >40 or risk factors) | ||
* | *Coagulation studies if anticoagulated or concern for splenic hemorrhage | ||
* | |||
===Imaging=== | |||
*[[CT abdomen pelvis]] with IV contrast: most useful for LUQ pathology (splenic infarct, abscess, mass, pancreatitis, renal pathology) | |||
*[[POCUS]]/[[FAST exam]]: evaluate for free fluid (splenic rupture) | |||
*[[CXR]]: if concern for pneumonia or free air (perforated ulcer) | |||
*[[RUQ US]]: if concern for biliary/hepatic pathology | |||
==Management== | ==Management== | ||
*Treat underlying disease process | *Treat underlying disease process | ||
*Consider GI cocktail | *IV fluids and analgesia | ||
*Consider GI cocktail if gastritis/peptic ulcer suspected | |||
*Emergent surgical consultation for splenic rupture | |||
*Hematology consultation for splenic infarction | |||
==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
* | *Based on underlying diagnosis | ||
*Admit: splenic pathology, pancreatitis requiring IV management, mesenteric ischemia, MI | |||
*Discharge: mild gastritis, stable renal colic, musculoskeletal pain with clear follow-up | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
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[[Category:GI]] | [[Category:GI]] | ||
[[Category:Symptoms]] | |||
Latest revision as of 23:42, 20 March 2026
Background
- This page outlines the general approach to adult left upper quadrant (LUQ) pain
- LUQ contains: spleen, stomach, left kidney, splenic flexure of colon, tail of pancreas, and left adrenal gland
- Key EM considerations: splenic pathology (rupture, infarct, abscess), gastric/peptic ulcer disease, pancreatitis, renal pathology
- Remember referred pain sources: left lower lobe pneumonia, MI, pericarditis
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, radiation, timing, severity
- Associated symptoms: nausea/vomiting, fever, hematochezia/melena, pleuritic chest pain
- Recent trauma (splenic injury)
- History of blood dyscrasias, anticoagulation, mononucleosis (splenic enlargement)
- Alcohol use, gallstones (pancreatitis)
- NSAID use, H. pylori history (peptic ulcer disease)
- History of atrial fibrillation or hypercoagulable state (splenic infarct)
Physical Exam
- LUQ tenderness, guarding, peritoneal signs
- Kehr sign: left shoulder pain from diaphragmatic irritation (splenic injury, ruptured spleen)
- Splenomegaly
- Epigastric tenderness radiating to back (pancreatitis)
- CVA tenderness (pyelonephritis, nephrolithiasis)
Red Flags
- Hemodynamic instability with LUQ pain (splenic rupture, ruptured AAA)
- Kehr sign (hemoperitoneum)
- Recent trauma + LUQ pain (delayed splenic rupture can occur weeks after injury)
- LUQ pain + atrial fibrillation (splenic artery embolism/infarct)
Differential Diagnosis
Left upper quadrant abdominal pain
- GERD
- Peptic ulcer disease with or without perforation
- Pancreatitis
- Splenic infarction/Splenic artery aneurysm rupture
- Pyelonephritis
- Bowel obstruction
- Myocardial Ischemia
- Pneumonia
- Pulmonary embolism
- Herpes zoster
- Pericarditis/Myocarditis
- Aortic Dissection
Must Not Miss
- Splenic rupture (traumatic or spontaneous)
- Splenic infarct (embolic, sickle cell crisis)
- Myocardial infarction (referred pain — always consider in older patients)
- Left lower lobe pneumonia (referred to LUQ)
Evaluation
Laboratory
- CBC, BMP
- LFTs, lipase
- Urinalysis
- Urine pregnancy test (females of reproductive age)
- Lactate if concern for mesenteric ischemia or sepsis
- Troponin, ECG if cardiac cause considered (age >40 or risk factors)
- Coagulation studies if anticoagulated or concern for splenic hemorrhage
Imaging
- CT abdomen pelvis with IV contrast: most useful for LUQ pathology (splenic infarct, abscess, mass, pancreatitis, renal pathology)
- POCUS/FAST exam: evaluate for free fluid (splenic rupture)
- CXR: if concern for pneumonia or free air (perforated ulcer)
- RUQ US: if concern for biliary/hepatic pathology
Management
- Treat underlying disease process
- IV fluids and analgesia
- Consider GI cocktail if gastritis/peptic ulcer suspected
- Emergent surgical consultation for splenic rupture
- Hematology consultation for splenic infarction
Disposition
- Based on underlying diagnosis
- Admit: splenic pathology, pancreatitis requiring IV management, mesenteric ischemia, MI
- Discharge: mild gastritis, stable renal colic, musculoskeletal pain with clear follow-up
