Right upper quadrant abdominal pain
Background
- This page outlines the general approach to right upper quadrant (RUQ) pain
- RUQ contains: liver, gallbladder, hepatic flexure of colon, right kidney, duodenum, head of pancreas
- Biliary disease (cholelithiasis, cholecystitis, choledocholithiasis, cholangitis) is the most common cause of RUQ pain
- Key EM considerations: RUQ pain can also be from hepatic pathology, pneumonia (right lower lobe), or cardiac disease (right heart failure, pericarditis)
- HELLP syndrome and preeclampsia must be considered in pregnant patients with RUQ pain
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, duration, radiation (right shoulder/scapula suggests biliary)
- Relationship to meals: postprandial, especially fatty foods (biliary colic)
- Fever, chills (cholecystitis, cholangitis, hepatic abscess)
- Jaundice, dark urine, pale stools (biliary obstruction)
- Nausea/vomiting
- Prior episodes (recurrent biliary colic)
- Prior cholecystectomy (consider choledocholithiasis, bile duct stricture)
- Pregnancy status
- Alcohol use, hepatotoxic medications (hepatitis)
- Travel history, immunosuppression (hepatic abscess, hepatitis)
Physical Exam
- Murphy sign: inspiratory arrest during RUQ palpation — highly suggestive of cholecystitis
- Hepatomegaly, liver tenderness
- Jaundice, scleral icterus
- Charcot triad (fever + RUQ pain + jaundice) = cholangitis
- Reynolds pentad (Charcot triad + hypotension + AMS) = severe/suppurative cholangitis
- CVA tenderness (pyelonephritis)
- Decreased breath sounds at right base (pneumonia, pleural effusion)
Red Flags
- Charcot triad or Reynolds pentad (biliary sepsis)
- Hemodynamic instability
- RUQ pain in pregnancy (HELLP, preeclampsia)
- Rapidly progressive jaundice
- Peritoneal signs (gallbladder perforation)
- Hepatomegaly with ascites and encephalopathy (acute liver failure)
Differential Diagnosis
RUQ Pain
- Gallbladder disease
- Pancreatitis
- Acute hepatitis
- Pancreatitis
- GERD
- Appendicitis (retrocecal)
- Pyogenic liver abscess
- Bowel obstruction
- Cirrhosis
- Budd-Chiari syndrome
- GU
- Other
- Hepatomegaly due to CHF
- Peptic ulcer disease with or without perforation
- Pneumonia
- Herpes zoster
- Myocardial ischemia
- Pulmonary embolism
- Abdominal aortic aneurysm
Must Not Miss
- Cholangitis: biliary sepsis, can rapidly decompensate
- HELLP syndrome: pregnant patient with RUQ pain, elevated LFTs, thrombocytopenia
- Hepatic abscess: fever, RUQ pain, sepsis
- Right lower lobe pneumonia: referred RUQ pain
- Ruptured hepatic adenoma/hepatocellular carcinoma: hemorrhage
- Budd-Chiari syndrome: acute hepatic vein thrombosis
Evaluation
Laboratory
- CBC with differential
- BMP
- LFTs: AST, ALT, alkaline phosphatase, bilirubin (direct and total)
- Lipase (pancreatitis)
- Coagulation studies (PT/INR — marker of liver synthetic function)
- Urinalysis
- Urine pregnancy test (females of reproductive age)
- Blood cultures if febrile or concern for cholangitis
- Lactate if sepsis suspected
Imaging
- RUQ US (first-line for RUQ pain): gallstones, gallbladder wall thickening, pericholecystic fluid, CBD dilation, Murphy sign on ultrasound
- POCUS: can identify gallstones and free fluid at bedside
- CT abdomen pelvis with IV contrast: when diagnosis unclear, or to evaluate complications (abscess, perforation, mass)
- CXR: right lower lobe pneumonia, pleural effusion, free air
- MRCP or ERCP: for suspected choledocholithiasis or cholangitis (ERCP is both diagnostic and therapeutic)
- HIDA scan: if cholecystitis suspected but ultrasound equivocal
Management
- IV fluids, analgesia (NSAIDs effective for biliary colic), antiemetics
- Biliary colic: pain management, outpatient surgical referral for cholecystectomy
- Cholecystitis: IV antibiotics, surgical consultation for cholecystectomy (usually within 24-72 hours)
- Choledocholithiasis: GI consultation for ERCP
- Cholangitis: emergent ERCP for biliary drainage, IV antibiotics, ICU monitoring if hemodynamically unstable
- Hepatitis: supportive care, identify etiology
- Hepatic abscess: IV antibiotics, IR-guided drainage, ID consultation
- HELLP/Preeclampsia: OB consultation, delivery planning, magnesium sulfate
Disposition
- Admit: cholecystitis, cholangitis, hepatic abscess, pancreatitis, HELLP, acute liver failure, GI bleeding
- Observation: equivocal cholecystitis, pending HIDA scan results
- Discharge: biliary colic with resolved pain and reliable outpatient surgical follow-up; hepatitis with stable labs and close PCP follow-up
- Return precautions: fever, worsening pain, jaundice, vomiting, inability to tolerate oral intake
