Prepubertal pelvic pain: Difference between revisions
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{{PediatricPage|Pelvic pain}} | |||
==Background== | |||
[[File:Blausen 0732 PID-Sites.png|thumb|Pelvic anatomy.]] | |||
*Pelvic pain in prepubertal children has a different differential than in post-pubertal/adult patients | |||
*Pregnancy-related causes are not applicable (but always consider the possibility of sexual abuse) | |||
*Most common causes: [[UTI]], [[constipation]], [[appendicitis]] | |||
*Key EM concerns: [[ovarian torsion]] (can occur at any age), [[appendicitis]], sexual abuse, incarcerated hernia | |||
==Clinical Features== | |||
===History=== | |||
*Onset, location, duration, character | |||
*Urinary symptoms (UTI) | |||
*Bowel habits (constipation is a very common cause) | |||
*Vaginal discharge or bleeding (foreign body, vulvovaginitis, abuse) | |||
*Fever (UTI, appendicitis, abscess) | |||
*Vomiting (appendicitis, ovarian torsion) | |||
*Any concern for abuse — screen carefully | |||
===Physical Exam=== | |||
*Abdominal exam: tenderness, guarding, peritoneal signs | |||
*External genital exam: discharge, bleeding, irritation, foreign body, signs of trauma | |||
*Internal/speculum exam is generally NOT indicated in prepubertal children | |||
*Rectal exam if necessary (appendicitis) | |||
===Red Flags=== | |||
*Severe acute unilateral pain (ovarian torsion) | |||
*Peritoneal signs (appendicitis, perforated viscus) | |||
*Vaginal bleeding in prepubertal child (foreign body, abuse, precocious puberty, tumor) | |||
*Signs of sexual abuse (genital trauma, STI symptoms, behavioral changes) | |||
==Differential Diagnosis== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
{{Prepubertal pelvic pain DDX}} | |||
=== | ===GI=== | ||
*[[Constipation]] (most common benign cause) | |||
*[[Appendicitis]] | *[[Appendicitis]] | ||
*[[ | *Mesenteric lymphadenitis | ||
*[[ | *[[Intussusception]] | ||
*[[ | *Meckel diverticulum | ||
* | |||
=== | ===GU=== | ||
* | *[[UTI]] | ||
* | *[[Ovarian torsion]] (can occur even without ovarian mass) | ||
*Ovarian cyst (functional — rare prepubertally but can occur) | |||
*Labial adhesions (can cause urinary retention) | |||
*Inguinal hernia | |||
* | ===Gynecologic=== | ||
==== | *Vaginal foreign body | ||
*[[ | *Vulvovaginitis (nonspecific irritation, poor hygiene) | ||
* | |||
* | ===Other=== | ||
* | *Inguinal hernia (incarcerated) | ||
*Musculoskeletal (hip pathology, muscle strain) | |||
*Abuse — always consider | |||
==Evaluation== | |||
*[[Urinalysis]] + culture | |||
*Abdominal X-ray if constipation suspected (to confirm or rule out fecal loading) | |||
*Pelvic/abdominal ultrasound if ovarian torsion, mass, or appendicitis suspected | |||
*CT abdomen/pelvis if appendicitis high on differential and US nondiagnostic | |||
*STI testing if concern for abuse | |||
==Management== | |||
*Constipation: enema/disimpaction, stool softeners, dietary counseling | |||
*UTI: age-appropriate antibiotics (see [[UTI (peds)]]) | |||
*Appendicitis: surgical consultation | |||
*Ovarian torsion: emergent surgical consultation for detorsion | |||
*Vaginal foreign body: removal (may require sedation) | |||
*Suspected abuse: child protective services notification, forensic exam per local protocol | |||
== | ==Disposition== | ||
* | *Admit: appendicitis, ovarian torsion, incarcerated hernia, severe infection | ||
* | *Discharge: constipation, UTI with ability to take oral antibiotics, resolved pain | ||
* | *Return precautions: worsening pain, fever, vomiting, vaginal bleeding | ||
== See Also == | ==See Also== | ||
*[[Pelvic Pain]] | *[[Pelvic Pain]] | ||
*[[Abdominal pain (peds)]] | |||
*[[Ovarian torsion]] | |||
*[[UTI (peds)]] | |||
*[[Non-accidental trauma]] | |||
== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | |||
[[Category: | [[Category:Pediatrics]] | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:OBGYN]] | ||
[[Category:Symptoms]] | |||
Latest revision as of 09:32, 22 March 2026
This page is for pediatric patients. For adult patients, see: Pelvic pain
Background
- Pelvic pain in prepubertal children has a different differential than in post-pubertal/adult patients
- Pregnancy-related causes are not applicable (but always consider the possibility of sexual abuse)
- Most common causes: UTI, constipation, appendicitis
- Key EM concerns: ovarian torsion (can occur at any age), appendicitis, sexual abuse, incarcerated hernia
Clinical Features
History
- Onset, location, duration, character
- Urinary symptoms (UTI)
- Bowel habits (constipation is a very common cause)
- Vaginal discharge or bleeding (foreign body, vulvovaginitis, abuse)
- Fever (UTI, appendicitis, abscess)
- Vomiting (appendicitis, ovarian torsion)
- Any concern for abuse — screen carefully
Physical Exam
- Abdominal exam: tenderness, guarding, peritoneal signs
- External genital exam: discharge, bleeding, irritation, foreign body, signs of trauma
- Internal/speculum exam is generally NOT indicated in prepubertal children
- Rectal exam if necessary (appendicitis)
Red Flags
- Severe acute unilateral pain (ovarian torsion)
- Peritoneal signs (appendicitis, perforated viscus)
- Vaginal bleeding in prepubertal child (foreign body, abuse, precocious puberty, tumor)
- Signs of sexual abuse (genital trauma, STI symptoms, behavioral changes)
Differential Diagnosis
Prepubertal pelvic pain
Gynecologic
- Trauma
- Laceration
- Hematoma
- Sexual abuse
- Vaginal foreign body
- Vaginal infection
- Contact Vulvovaginitis
- Outflow-tract obstruction
- Imperforate hymen
- Labial adhesions
- Congenital abnormalities
Gastrointestinal
Musculoskeletal
- Muscle tendon injury
- Growth-plate injury
- Ligamentous injury
- Avulsion fracture
- Inguinal hernia
- Intervertebral disc herniation
Urologic
Other
- Diabetic ketoacidosis
- Sickle cell crisis
- Neoplasms
GI
- Constipation (most common benign cause)
- Appendicitis
- Mesenteric lymphadenitis
- Intussusception
- Meckel diverticulum
GU
- UTI
- Ovarian torsion (can occur even without ovarian mass)
- Ovarian cyst (functional — rare prepubertally but can occur)
- Labial adhesions (can cause urinary retention)
Gynecologic
- Vaginal foreign body
- Vulvovaginitis (nonspecific irritation, poor hygiene)
Other
- Inguinal hernia (incarcerated)
- Musculoskeletal (hip pathology, muscle strain)
- Abuse — always consider
Evaluation
- Urinalysis + culture
- Abdominal X-ray if constipation suspected (to confirm or rule out fecal loading)
- Pelvic/abdominal ultrasound if ovarian torsion, mass, or appendicitis suspected
- CT abdomen/pelvis if appendicitis high on differential and US nondiagnostic
- STI testing if concern for abuse
Management
- Constipation: enema/disimpaction, stool softeners, dietary counseling
- UTI: age-appropriate antibiotics (see UTI (peds))
- Appendicitis: surgical consultation
- Ovarian torsion: emergent surgical consultation for detorsion
- Vaginal foreign body: removal (may require sedation)
- Suspected abuse: child protective services notification, forensic exam per local protocol
Disposition
- Admit: appendicitis, ovarian torsion, incarcerated hernia, severe infection
- Discharge: constipation, UTI with ability to take oral antibiotics, resolved pain
- Return precautions: worsening pain, fever, vomiting, vaginal bleeding
