Diferencia entre revisiones de «Flank pain»
(Text replacement - "==Sources==" to "==References==") |
(Comprehensive expansion: EM-focused approach to flank pain with evaluation strategy, pain management, and disposition criteria) |
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==Background== | ==Background== | ||
*This page outlines the general approach to flank pain in the ED | |||
*The most common cause is [[nephrolithiasis]], but vascular emergencies (AAA, renal infarction) must be considered | |||
*Flank pain may also be referred from intra-abdominal or retroperitoneal pathology | |||
{{Abdominal pain location}} | |||
==Clinical Features== | ==Clinical Features== | ||
*Location: Pain between the costal margin and iliac crest, typically lateral to the paraspinal muscles | |||
*Classic renal colic: sudden onset, severe colicky pain radiating from flank to groin/testicle/labia | |||
*Associated symptoms may help differentiate cause: | |||
**Dysuria, frequency, hematuria → urologic cause | |||
**Fever, chills → [[pyelonephritis]], [[perinephric abscess]] | |||
**Pulsatile abdominal mass, hemodynamic instability → [[AAA]] | |||
**Sudden onset with atrial fibrillation or recent MI → [[renal infarction]] | |||
**Nausea, vomiting common with both renal and GI causes | |||
*Physical exam: | |||
**CVA tenderness | |||
**Abdominal exam for peritoneal signs, masses, or pulsatile mass | |||
**Testicular exam in males | |||
**Pelvic exam in females of childbearing age if gynecologic cause suspected | |||
==Differential Diagnosis== | ==Differential Diagnosis== | ||
{{Flank pain DDX}} | {{Flank pain DDX}} | ||
== | ==Evaluation== | ||
*Urinalysis — hematuria supports urologic cause but absence does not exclude it (up to 15% of kidney stones have no hematuria)<ref>Bove P, Kaplan D, Dalrymple N, et al. Reexamining the value of hematuria testing in patients with acute flank pain. J Urol. 1999;162(3):685-687.</ref> | |||
*Pregnancy test in females of childbearing age | |||
*BMP/Cr — evaluate renal function, especially if obstruction suspected | |||
*CBC — if infection or hemorrhage suspected | |||
*Lactate — if concern for ischemia or sepsis | |||
*'''CT abdomen/pelvis without contrast''' — gold standard for [[nephrolithiasis]] and can identify most alternative diagnoses | |||
*'''CT with IV contrast''' or [[CT angiography]] — if vascular emergency suspected (AAA, renal infarction, aortic dissection) | |||
*[[Point-of-care ultrasound|Bedside ultrasound]] — can identify hydronephrosis, AAA; first-line in pregnancy | |||
*[[Renal ultrasound]] — alternative to CT, especially in young patients or pregnancy | |||
==Management== | ==Management== | ||
*'''Pain control''' is the priority for renal colic: | |||
**[[Ketorolac]] 15-30 mg IV or IM — first line (NSAIDs are superior to opioids for renal colic)<ref>Holdgate A, Pollock T. Systematic review of the relative efficacy of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and opioids in the treatment of acute renal colic. BMJ. 2004;328(7453):1401.</ref> | |||
**[[IV lidocaine]] 1.5 mg/kg IV over 10 min — emerging evidence as adjunct<ref>Soleimanpour H, et al. Effectiveness of intravenous lidocaine versus intravenous morphine for patients with renal colic. BMC Urol. 2012;12:13.</ref> | |||
**Opioids (e.g., morphine, hydromorphone) for refractory pain | |||
*IV fluids — for hydration; aggressive IV fluids do NOT speed stone passage | |||
*Alpha-blockers ([[tamsulosin]] 0.4 mg PO daily) for medical expulsive therapy of stones 5-10 mm<ref>Hollingsworth JM, et al. Alpha blockers for treatment of ureteric stones: systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ. 2016;355:i6112.</ref> | |||
*[[Pyelonephritis]]: Antibiotics per guidelines (see [[Pyelonephritis]]) | |||
*Emergent urology consult for: obstructed infected kidney (pyonephrosis), bilateral obstruction, solitary kidney with obstruction, or urosepsis | |||
*If AAA suspected: emergent surgical consultation | |||
==Disposition== | ==Disposition== | ||
*'''Admit:''' | |||
**Infected obstructed kidney / urosepsis | |||
**Intractable pain or vomiting | |||
**[[Acute kidney injury]] | |||
**Vascular emergency (AAA, renal infarction) | |||
*'''Discharge with follow-up:''' | |||
**Uncomplicated renal colic with adequate pain control | |||
**Stone <10 mm without complicating factors | |||
**Strain urine, urology follow-up within 1-2 weeks | |||
**Return precautions: fever, intractable pain/vomiting, inability to urinate | |||
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
*[[Nephrolithiasis]] | |||
*[[Pyelonephritis]] | |||
*[[Abdominal aortic aneurysm]] | |||
*[[Renal infarction]] | |||
*[[Abdominal pain]] | *[[Abdominal pain]] | ||
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<references/> | <references/> | ||
[[Category: | [[Category:Renal]] | ||
[[Category:Urology]] | |||
[[Category:Symptoms]] | |||
Revisión actual - 22:56 20 mar 2026
Background
- This page outlines the general approach to flank pain in the ED
- The most common cause is nephrolithiasis, but vascular emergencies (AAA, renal infarction) must be considered
- Flank pain may also be referred from intra-abdominal or retroperitoneal pathology
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
- Location: Pain between the costal margin and iliac crest, typically lateral to the paraspinal muscles
- Classic renal colic: sudden onset, severe colicky pain radiating from flank to groin/testicle/labia
- Associated symptoms may help differentiate cause:
- Dysuria, frequency, hematuria → urologic cause
- Fever, chills → pyelonephritis, perinephric abscess
- Pulsatile abdominal mass, hemodynamic instability → AAA
- Sudden onset with atrial fibrillation or recent MI → renal infarction
- Nausea, vomiting common with both renal and GI causes
- Physical exam:
- CVA tenderness
- Abdominal exam for peritoneal signs, masses, or pulsatile mass
- Testicular exam in males
- Pelvic exam in females of childbearing age if gynecologic cause suspected
Differential Diagnosis
Flank Pain
- Vascular
- Abdominal aortic aneurysm
- Renal artery embolism
- Renal vein thrombosis
- Aortic dissection
- Mesenteric ischemia
- Renal
- Pyelonephritis
- Perinephric abscess
- Perinephric hematoma
- Papillary necrosis
- Renal cell carcinoma
- Obstructive uropathy
- May or may not be due to nephrolithiasis
- Renal infarction
- Renal hemorrhage
- Ureter
- Nephrolithiasis
- Blood clot
- Stricture
- Tumor (primary or metastatic)
- Bladder
- Tumor
- Varicose vein
- Cystitis
- GI
- Biliary colic
- Pancreatitis
- Perforated peptic ulcer
- Appendicitis (appendix may be pushed to RUQ in pregnancy)
- Inguinal Hernia
- Diverticulitis
- Cancer
- Bowel obstruction
- Gynecologic
- Ectopic Pregnancy
- PID/TOA
- Ovarian cyst
- Ovarian torsion
- Endometriosis
- Mittelschmerz or benign ovulatory pain
- GU
- Other
- Shingles
- Lower lobe pneumonia
- Retroperitoneal hematoma, abscess, or tumor
- Epidural abscess
- Epidural hematoma
- Rib contusion/fracture
Evaluation
- Urinalysis — hematuria supports urologic cause but absence does not exclude it (up to 15% of kidney stones have no hematuria)[1]
- Pregnancy test in females of childbearing age
- BMP/Cr — evaluate renal function, especially if obstruction suspected
- CBC — if infection or hemorrhage suspected
- Lactate — if concern for ischemia or sepsis
- CT abdomen/pelvis without contrast — gold standard for nephrolithiasis and can identify most alternative diagnoses
- CT with IV contrast or CT angiography — if vascular emergency suspected (AAA, renal infarction, aortic dissection)
- Bedside ultrasound — can identify hydronephrosis, AAA; first-line in pregnancy
- Renal ultrasound — alternative to CT, especially in young patients or pregnancy
Management
- Pain control is the priority for renal colic:
- Ketorolac 15-30 mg IV or IM — first line (NSAIDs are superior to opioids for renal colic)[2]
- IV lidocaine 1.5 mg/kg IV over 10 min — emerging evidence as adjunct[3]
- Opioids (e.g., morphine, hydromorphone) for refractory pain
- IV fluids — for hydration; aggressive IV fluids do NOT speed stone passage
- Alpha-blockers (tamsulosin 0.4 mg PO daily) for medical expulsive therapy of stones 5-10 mm[4]
- Pyelonephritis: Antibiotics per guidelines (see Pyelonephritis)
- Emergent urology consult for: obstructed infected kidney (pyonephrosis), bilateral obstruction, solitary kidney with obstruction, or urosepsis
- If AAA suspected: emergent surgical consultation
Disposition
- Admit:
- Infected obstructed kidney / urosepsis
- Intractable pain or vomiting
- Acute kidney injury
- Vascular emergency (AAA, renal infarction)
- Discharge with follow-up:
- Uncomplicated renal colic with adequate pain control
- Stone <10 mm without complicating factors
- Strain urine, urology follow-up within 1-2 weeks
- Return precautions: fever, intractable pain/vomiting, inability to urinate
See Also
External Links
References
- ↑ Bove P, Kaplan D, Dalrymple N, et al. Reexamining the value of hematuria testing in patients with acute flank pain. J Urol. 1999;162(3):685-687.
- ↑ Holdgate A, Pollock T. Systematic review of the relative efficacy of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs and opioids in the treatment of acute renal colic. BMJ. 2004;328(7453):1401.
- ↑ Soleimanpour H, et al. Effectiveness of intravenous lidocaine versus intravenous morphine for patients with renal colic. BMC Urol. 2012;12:13.
- ↑ Hollingsworth JM, et al. Alpha blockers for treatment of ureteric stones: systematic review and meta-analysis. BMJ. 2016;355:i6112.
