Abdominal and Pelvic Pain
Note to readers from
the Brookside Associates:
Although this page faithfully
reproduces the original Operational Medicine 2001, there is a
better (updated protocols and pictures) version of it in
Military Obstetrics & Gynecology. |
Uncertainty of Diagnosis
When treating a female patient with abdominal pain, I sometimes don't
have a clue as to what the problem is. I say this as a board-certified OB-GYN, with more
than 20 years in clinical practice, practicing in a 600-bed teaching hospital, with
ultrasound, MRI scans, and full lab support. Sometimes all I can say is: "This
patient is sick with something."
Sometimes these patients get well before I can figure out the diagnosis.
Sometimes these patients get worse and I end up performing surgery and find PID, or
endometriosis, or an ovarian cyst or almost any other gynecologic, surgical or medical
problem. Sometimes I do laparoscopy and find nothing abnormal, but the pain goes away.
The First Point is: In clinical gynecology, the diagnosis is often
unclear. Just because you're unsure of the diagnosis doesn't mean you can't take good
care of the patient. Often you must treat the patient before knowing the diagnosis.
The Second Point is: More important than knowing the correct
diagnosis is doing the right thing for the patient.
Pain and Bedrest
If the patient has pelvic/abdominal pain or tenderness, placing her on
bedrest for a few days will usually help and is never the wrong thing to do. For many of
your patients, the pain will simply resolve (although you won't know why).
Pain and Fever
If the patient has a fever (in addition to her pain), I would recommend
you give her antibiotics to cover PID. With mild pain and fever, oral antibiotics should
work well, so long as they are effective against chlamydia (Doxycycline,
tetracycline, erythromycin, Azithromycin
, etc.).
If the fever is high or the pain is moderate to severe, I would
recommend IV antibiotics (such as clindamycin/gentamicin or cefoxitin
or cefotetan or Flagyl/gentamicin)
to cover the possibility of pelvic abscess.
CDC Protocols for PID
Chronic Pain
If there is no fever, but your patient complains of chronic pelvic pain,
a course of oral Doxycycline is wise. Some of
these women will be suffering from chlamydia and you may cure them through the use
of an antibiotic effective against chlamydia. Others will not improve and will need
further evaluation by experienced providers in well-equipped settings.
Pregnancy Test
Any patient complaining of pelvic pain should have a pregnancy test. I
am surprised at how often it is positive despite the patient saying "that's
impossible."
Read more about
Pregnancy Tests
BCPs and Pain
Most patients complaining of intermittent, chronic pelvic pain will
benefit from oral contraceptive pills. BCPs reduce or eliminate most dysmenorrhea and have
a favorable influence on other gynecologic problems such as endometriosis, ovarian cysts,
and adenomyosis, a benign condition in which the uterine lining grows into the underlying
muscle wall, causing pain and heavy periods.
When using BCPs to treat chronic pelvic pain, multiphasic BCPs such as Ortho Novum 7/7/7, Triphasil or Tri-Norinyl
have not been as effective as the stronger, monophasic BCPs such as LoOvral, Ortho
Novum 1+35 or Demulen 1/35 (in my
experience). I believe the reason is that the multiphasic pills, by virtue of their lower
dose and changing dosage, do not suppress ovulation as consistently as the higher-dose
pills.
If the BCPs do not help or if the patient continues to have pain during
her menstrual flow, change the BCP schedule so the patient takes a monophasic (LoOvral, Ortho
Novum 1+35, etc.) BCP every day. She will:
-
not stop at the end of a pack.
-
not wait one week before restarting.
-
not have a menstrual flow.
If she doesn't have a menstrual flow, she can't get dysmenorrhea. Taken
continuously, BCPs are effective and safe. The only important drawback is that she will
not have a monthly menstrual flow to reassure her that she is not pregnant.
Because the birth control pills are so very effective in treating
dysmenorrhea, the emergence of cyclic pelvic pain while taking BCPs is a worrisome
symptom. Endometriosis can cause these symptoms. Happily, birth control pills,
particularly if taken continuously, are a very effective treatment for endometriosis. Upon
return to a garrison setting, women with pain while taking should be evaluated by an
experienced gynecologic clinician.
After a number of months, women on continuous BCPs will usually
experience spotting or breakthrough bleeding. It is not dangerous. If this becomes a
nuisance, stop the BCPs for one week (she'll have a withdrawal bleed), and then restart
the BCPs continuously.
Read more about Birth Control Pills
Pregnancy and Bleeding
Any pregnant patient who experiences bleeding should lie still (bedrest)
until the bleeding stops for a few days. Then she may be moved to a definitive care
setting (hospital). If she is destined to miscarry, having her lie still will not prevent
the miscarriage, but it will probably postpone the miscarriage until she can be moved to a
safe place where D&C capability is present.
Read more
about miscarriage
Threatened Abortion
Patients who are less than 20 weeks pregnant and have cramping uterine
pain are usually threatening to miscarry. Bedrest is a good idea for all these patients,
not because it will prevent the miscarriage, but because it may postpone the miscarriage
until the patient is in a location that can deal effectively with any complications. If
medical evacuation is not an option, then bedrest will still help the woman tolerate the
discomfort of the miscarriage.
Of all women with a threatened abortion, about half will ultimately
miscarry and about half will not. In the group who do not miscarry, the remainder of the
pregnancy is usually uneventful and the baby will be expected to arrive at full term,
alive and without disability.
Read
more about Threatened Abortion
Ectopic Pregnancy
This is a pregnancy occurring outside the normal location (within the
uterus). While these pregnancies will grow briefly, they are not viable and lead to
pregnancy loss.
The pregnancy loss can be nearly unnoticed (a "tubal
abortion," with the pregnancy expelled out the end of the fallopian tube), but are
more often very dramatic, with severe pain and bleeding. If the tube ruptures, extensive
and sometimes fatal hemorrhage into the abdominal cavity occurs.
Women with an ectopic pregnancy will almost always have a positive
pregnancy test, often have vaginal bleeding, and may or may not have abdominal pain or
tenderness. Right shoulder pain is an ominous sign, usually indicating extensive
hemorrhage into the abdomen, with irritation of the phrenic nerve which courses along the
undersurface of the right hemidiaphragm.
In a hospital setting, a variety of treatments can be considered,
including surgery, chemotherapy (methotrexate), and occasionally observation.
In an isolated military setting, bedrest until a prompt medical
evacuation to a surgical facility is most appropriate.
Should medical evacuation to a surgical facility not be an available
option, treatment is supportive, with IV fluids, bedrest, a MAST suit, and blood
transfusions as needed. Most women managed with this supportive treatment will survive
treatment, although some will not. Survivors should expect a lengthy, uncomfortable
recovery. Oral iron therapy will help restore lost hemoglobin.
Read more about Ectopic Pregnancy
Read
more about Blood Transfusions
Placental Abruption
Patients who are more than 20 weeks pregnant who have constant pain in
the uterus are probably experiencing a placental abruption (premature separation of the
placenta), particularly if the uterus is tender. They may or may not have vaginal
bleeding.
When hospital care is available, these women are best evaluated by an
obstetrician with the technologic resources of electronic fetal monitoring, ultrasound and
a sophisticated laboratory testing. In isolated settings, bedrest with the patient lying
on her left side and IV hydration are really the only options you have. If the pain
improves with bedrest, keep the patient at rest. Consider transport later, after the pain
resolves. If the pain shows no evidence of improving with rest, then you will need to
transport her sooner since severe placental abruption may be fatal to the patient and/or
her baby. Definitive treatment consists of cesarean section and treatment of the
coagulopathy (bleeding disorder) that usually accompanies this problem.
If neither definitive therapy (cesarean section) nor medical evacuation
are available, the following generalizations can be made:
-
With very mild cases, the contractions will usually go away with bedrest
and the pregnancy will continue for a while (days to weeks) although early delivery is
usually the rule. The ultimate outcome for mother and baby is generally good if the mild
abruption is the only significant problem.
-
For moderate degrees of placental abruption, the woman usually goes into
premature labor and delivers. She generally does well, but the baby may be stillborn or
severely incapacitated.
-
For severe degrees of placental abruption, if the woman does not deliver
very promptly, the abruption will likely prove fatal to her because of the marked
coagulopathy that develops. If the baby is not delivered within 10 to 20 or 30 minutes of
the severe abruption, it will likely be stillborn.
Under these circumstances, supportive treatment (bedrest, IV fluids,
blood transfusions) may be lifesaving.
Read
more about Placental Abruption
Read
more about Blood Transfusions
Placenta Previa
Any pregnant patient beyond the 20th week of pregnancy who is bleeding
should lie still and YOU SHOULD NOT DO A PELVIC EXAMINATION UNLESS INSTRUCTED TO DO SO
BY A CONSULTING OBSTETRICIAN. In most cases, the bleeding comes from a small placental
abruption and will temporarily resolve with bedrest. Occasionally, the bleeding will be
from a "placenta previa," a condition in which the placenta is located
immediately behind the cervix. If you perform a pelvic exam on a patient with placenta
previa, you may cause massive bleeding which you won't be able to stop without a cesarean
section.
Most bleeding in pregnant patients will stop temporarily with bedrest.
If a definitive treatment center is close (a brief, smooth ambulance ride), then immediate
transport of the patient is best. If a definitive treatment center is distant, it is
probably better to stop the bleeding first with bedrest. Move her after a few days when
the long and perhaps bumpy transport is less likely to re-start the bleeding. If the
bleeding shows no sign of slowing despite bedrest, you may need to begin transport anyway.
Should transport not be an available option:
-
Continue the bedrest as long as there is any bleeding. Marginal placenta
previas may resolve with time and successful vaginal delivery, while dangerous, can be
successful. In this case, pressure from the fetal head on the placenta tends to compress
or tamponade the loss of blood from the placenta long enough to achieve a successful
delivery.
-
In cases of a complete placenta previa, where the placenta totally covers
the internal cervical os, maternal death during labor, due to intractable hemorrhage is
the rule.
Read
more about Placenta Previa
Read
more about Blood Transfusions
IUD Problems
Any woman with an IUD who has any symptoms of pelvic/abdominal pain or
abnormal bleeding should first have the IUD removed. Depending on the circumstances,
another IUD may be safely inserted at a later time, but the current IUD should be removed.
If the pelvic pain is caused by a low-grade infection in the uterus, leaving the IUD in
place may lead to a more serious infection and subsequent infertility.
Ovarian Cyst
An ovarian cyst is a fluid-filled sac arising from the ovary.
These cysts are common and generally cause no trouble. Each time a woman
ovulates, she forms a small ovarian cyst (3.0 cm in diameter or less). Depending on where
she is in her menstrual cycle, you may find such a small ovarian follicular cyst. Large
cysts (>7.0 cm) are less common and should be followed clinically or with ultrasound.
Occasionally, ovarian cysts may cause a problem by:
-
Delaying menstruation
-
Rupturing
-
Twisting
-
Causing pain
95% of ovarian cysts disappear spontaneously, usually after the next
menstrual flow. Those that remain and those causing problems are often removed surgically.
Ruptured Ovarian Cyst
This is an ovarian cyst that has ruptured and spilled its' contents into
the abdominal cavity.
If the cyst is small, its' rupture usually occurs unnoticed. If large,
or if there is associated bleeding from the torn edges of the cyst, then cyst rupture can
be accompanied by pain. The pain is initially one-sided and then spreads to the entire
pelvis. If there is a large enough spill of fluid or blood, the patient will complain of
right shoulder pain.
Symptoms should resolve with rest alone. Rarely, surgery is necessary to
stop continuing bleeding.
Unruptured Ovarian Cyst
While most of these have no symptoms, they can cause pain, particularly
with strenuous exercise or intercourse. Treatment is symptomatic with rest for those with
significant pain. The cyst usually ruptures within a month.
Once ruptured, symptoms will gradually subside and no further treatment
is necessary. If it doesn't rupture spontaneously, surgery is sometimes performed to
remove it. This will relieve the symptoms and prevent torsion.
Torsioned Ovarian Cyst
A torsioned ovarian cyst occurs when the cyst twists on its' vascular
stalk, disrupting its' blood supply. The cyst and ovary (and often a portion of the
fallopian tube) die and necrose.
Patients with this problem complain of severe unilateral pain with signs
of peritonitis (rebound tenderness, rigidity). This problem is often indistinguishable
clinically from a pelvic abscess or appendicitis, although an ultrasound scan can be
helpful.
Treatment is surgery to remove the necrotic adnexa. If surgery is
unavailable, then bedrest, IV fluids and pain medication may result in a satisfactory,
though prolonged, recovery. In this suboptimal, non-surgical setting, metabolic acidosis
resulting from the tissue necrosis may be the most serious threat. Mortality rates from
this condition (without surgery) are in the range of 20%.
Other surgical conditions which may resemble a twisted ovarian cyst
(such as appendicitis or ectopic pregnancy) may not have a good outcome if surgery is
delayed. For this reason, patients thought to have a torsioned ovarian cyst should be
moved to a definitive care setting where surgery is available.
Dysmenorrhea
Painful menstrual cramps. These midline, lower abdominal, suprapubic
cramps or aches usually begin shortly before the beginning of menses and can persist for a
few days into the menstrual flow. Then complete relief occurs and the patient remains
pain-free until the next month.
This is not a dangerous condition but can be a powerful nuisance to the
patient. The single most effective medication to treat this is oral contraceptive pills
(fixed-dose or monophasic BCPs like LoOvral, 1/35s,
etc.) Standard doses of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory agents such as naproxen or ibuprofen
can be helpful. Exercise, through the release of beta endorphins, is helpful to some.
Patients with endometriosis may also complain of monthly pain. If the
symptoms are severe and do not respond to BCPs (cyclic or continuous), or NSAIDs, then
endometriosis is usually looked for with diagnostic laparoscopy at an opportune time.
Mittelschmerz
Pain associated with ovulation (from German: "middle pain")
which typically occurs at mid-cycle...half way between the menstrual flows.
The pain is either right or left-sided, depending on which ovary
released the egg that month. Women do not usually alternate sides, but rather randomly
ovulate: sometimes one side, sometimes the other.
The pain, when it occurs, is mild to moderate. There may be some mild
peritoneal signs. By the time the patient is examined, the pain is often improving. If the
symptoms are severe or last more than a day or two, consider other diagnoses such as
ovarian cyst, ectopic pregnancy or endometriosis.
Treatment is supportive. Usually a day or two of rest will see the
complete resolution of symptoms. Rarely the symptoms last longer. Any mild analgesic will
make them feel better. Birth control pills usually provide complete relief through their
inhibition of ovulation.
Functional Bowel Syndrome
Intermittent cramping abdominal pain, associated with episodes of
constipation or diarrhea, with or without mucous stools.
Patients with this problem give a history of periodically recurring
symptoms, often provoked by stress. X-ray evaluation of the abdomen will show no
abnormality and all lab studies will be normal. The pain will move from place to place in
the abdomen.
Treatment is generally supportive with reduction of stress when that is
possible. Avoiding (or treating) constipation or diarrhea is helpful. Non-narcotic
analgesics can be given if the pain is quite significant. Antispasmodics are sometimes
helpful. Psychoactive drugs are inadvisable unless a specific psychological disorder is
present which would be expected to respond to the psychoactive drug.
Gastroenteritis
Acute inflammation of the stomach and intestines, resulting in cramping
abdominal pain, distention, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, fever, and chills. This may be due
to bacterial infection, viral infection, or ingestion of a toxic substance (food
poisoning).
Patients usually complain of diffuse, cramping abdominal pain with
marked GI symptoms. The pain migrates from place to place. Treatment is mostly supportive
(rest and observation in mild cases, IV fluids in severe cases) with specific antibiotic
therapy when the causative organism is known and sensitive to this approach.
Diverticular Disease
Diverticular disease represents a spectrum of abnormalities ranging from
asymptomatic "diverticula" (small outpouchings of the colon) to
"diverticulitis" with peritonitis, abscess formation and sometimes perforation
of the colon.
Diverticular disease is usually focused in the sigmoid colon in the left
lower quadrant, although diverticula can be found in small numbers anywhere along the
course of the large and small intestines.
Cramping lower abdominal pain with diarrhea alternating with
constipation are symptoms common to those with diverticular disease (and also functional
bowel syndrome). If accompanied by fever and elevated white blood count with a mass in the
left lower abdomen, "diverticulitis" is likely to be present.
Mild symptoms require only supportive treatment. Diverticulitis often
requires IV fluids and antibiotics.
PID
Pelvic Inflammatory Disease (PID) is a bacterial inflammation of the
fallopian tubes, ovaries, uterus and cervix.
Initial infections are caused by single-agent STDs, such as gonorrhea or
chlamydia. Subsequent infections are often caused by multiple non-STD organisms (E. Coli,
Bacteroides, etc.).
From a clinical management point of view, there are two forms of PID:
-
Mild, and
-
Moderate to Severe
PID: Mild
Gradual onset of mild bilateral pelvic pain with purulent vaginal
discharge is the typical complaint. Fever <100.4 and deep dyspareunia are common.
Moderate pain on motion of the cervix and uterus with purulent or
mucopurulent cervical discharge is found on examination. Gram-negative diplococci or
positive chlamydia culture may or may not be present.
WBC may be minimally elevated or
normal.
Treatment consists of Doxycycline
100 mg PO BID x 10-14 days, plus one of these:
Alternative treatment includes:
For further information, read the CDC Treatment Guidelines for PID
PID: Moderate to Severe
With moderate to severe PID, there is a gradual onset of moderate to
severe bilateral pelvic pain with purulent vaginal discharge, fever >100.4 (38.0),
lassitude, and headache. Symptoms more often occur shortly after the onset or completion
of menses.
Excruciating pain on movement of the cervix and uterus is characteristic
of this condition. Hypoactive bowel sounds, purulent cervical discharge, and abdominal
dissension are often present. Pelvic and abdominal tenderness is always bilateral except
in the presence of an IUD.
Gram-negative diplococci in cervical discharge or positive
chlamydia
culture may or may not be present. WBC and
ESR are elevated.
Treatment consists of bedrest, IV fluids, IV antibiotics, and NG suction
if ileus is present. Since surgery may be required, transfer to a definitive surgical
facility should be considered.
ANTIBIOTIC REGIMEN: (Center for Disease Control, 1998)
Doxycycline 100 mg PO or IV
every 12 hours, PLUS either:
This is continued for at least 48 hours after clinical improvement. The Doxycycline is continued orally for 10-14 days.
ALTERNATIVE ANTIBIOTIC REGIMEN: (Center for Disease Control, 1998)
-
Clindamycin 900 mg IV every 8
hours, PLUS
-
Gentamicin, 2.0 mg/kg IV or IM,
followed by 1.5 mg/kg IV or IM, every 8 hours
This is continued for at least 48 hours after clinical improvement.
After IV therapy is completed, Doxycycline 100 mg
PO BID is given orally for 10-14 days.Clindamycin
450 mg PO daily may also be used for this purpose.
ANOTHER ALTERNATIVE ANTIBIOTIC REGIMEN: (Center for Disease Control,
1998)
ANOTHER ALTERNATIVE ANTIBIOTIC REGIMEN: (Center for Disease Control,
1998)
ANOTHER ALTERNATIVE ANTIBIOTIC REGIMEN: (Center for Disease Control,
1998)
For further information, read the CDC Treatment Guidelines for PID
Endometriosis
A condition in which fragments of the lining of the uterus are found
outside the uterus but within the abdomen. Each month, with menses, these fragments bleed
into the abdomen causing pelvic/abdominal pain, scarring, and sometimes infertility.
The classical patient with endometriosis complains of about 6 months of
steadily worsening dysmenorrhea, deep dyspareunia, and sometimes painful bowel movements.
The physical exam will reveal the adnexal areas and cul-du-sac to be vaguely tender,
without masses. When a rectal exam is done and the cervix stretched upward, tender nodules
can be felt along the utero-sacral ligaments.
Many medical/surgical treatments are effective. A simple but expedient
therapy is taking a low-dose, monophasic BCP each day, without stopping for a menstrual
flow. This approach is safe and will postpone menses for months. For cases of mild to
moderate endometriosis, this approach is probably as effective as some of the more exotic
medications or conservative surgery. In more severe cases, such medications as Lupron or
Danazol, with or without surgery, can provide additional relief.
Make sure PID has been ruled out since it can mimic endometriosis.
Appendicitis
This condition is characterized by progressive right lower quadrant
pain. Nausea and anorexia occur early. Vague pain begins in the periumbilical area and
migrates over several hours to McBurney's Point in the right lower quadrant. The patient
lies supine with the right hip flexed.
On examination, marked tenderness at McBurney's Point, voluntary
guarding, rigidity and rebound tenderness are found. Fever is not common unless appendix
is ruptured. Bowel sounds are quiet and no bowel movement will have occurred since the
onset of the pain. Motion of the uterus or right adnexa causes marked pain.
X-ray of the abdomen may show an oval, calcified fecalith up to 1-2 cm
in diameter in the right lower quadrant of the abdomen. A sentinel loop of gas-filled
small bowel next to the appendix may be seen.
The treatment is essentially surgical. Antibiotics may be helpful but
are not a substitute for surgery in other than extreme circumstances. If antibiotics alone
are used, many patients will live but others will not. Begin treatment with intravenous
antibiotics while arranging for transfer to a surgical facility for appendectomy:
-
Unasyn 3.0 grams IV
every 6 hours PLUS
-
Flagyl 500mg IV every 6 hours,
OR
-
Mefoxin 2 gm IV every 6 hours,
PLUS
-
Gentamicin 80 mg IV every 8
hours, OR
-
Gentamicin 80 mg IV every 8
hours, PLUS
-
Flagyl (Metronidazole)
Loading dose: 15 mg /kg infused IV over 1 hour (1 gm or 1,000 mg for a
70 kg adult)
Maintenance dose: 7.5 mg/kg infused IV over 1 hour, every 6 hours (500 mg for a 70 kg
adult)
Bowel Obstruction
A condition in which a portion of the large or small intestine becomes
obstructed.
Patients with bowel obstruction complain of pain, which may be cramping
or constant. Abdominal dissension is prominent and patients are constipated. Nausea and
vomiting usually accompany this problem. Plain x-rays of the abdomen show a distended,
gas-filled loop of intestine proximal to the obstruction. If the problem is not resolved,
gangrene and peritonitis develop.
Initial treatment consists of decompression from above with NG suction
and support with IV fluids. Partial obstructions are usually relieved with these simple
measures. Complete bowel obstruction requires surgery and bowel resection. Without
surgery, a complete bowel obstruction would be expected to be fatal. If surgical therapy
is unavailable, IV antibiotics should be started while arranging for prompt Medical
Evacuation.
Degenerating Fibroid
When a fibroid tumor of the uterus (leiomyoma) has metabolic needs which
exceed its' blood supply, degeneration occurs.
These benign uterine muscle tumors are common (40% of all women by age
40), and generally without symptoms. Occasionally, they cause trouble through excessive
bleeding or pain. With degeneration, they become very tender to palpation, but the adnexal
structures (tubes and ovaries) are not tender (as they would be with PID).
Treatment is supportive. (bedrest, oral analgesia) Symptoms gradually
resolve over 3 weeks. Definitive therapy consists of surgical removal although this is
usually unnecessary.
Infected/Rejected IUD
Sooner or later, as many as 5% of all intrauterine devices will become
infected. Patients with this problem usually notice mild lower abdominal pain, perhaps a
fever and deep dyspareunia. The uterus is tender to touch and one or both adnexa may also
be tender.
Treatment consists of removal of the IUD and broad-spectrum antibiotics.
If the symptoms are mild and the fever low-grade, oral antibiotics (ampicillin, cephalosporins, tetracycline, etc.) are very suitable. If the
patient's fever is high, the symptoms significant or she appears quite ill, IV antibiotics
are a better choice (cefoxitin, or metronidazole plus gentamicin, or clindamycin
plus gentamicin). If an IUD is present and the
patient is complaining of any type of pelvic symptom, it is wisest to remove the IUD, give
antibiotics, and then worry about other possible causes for the patient's symptoms.
IUDs can also be rejected without infection. Such patients complain of
pelvic pain and possibly bleeding. On pelvic exam, the IUD is seen protruding from the
cervix. It should be grasped with an instrument and gently removed. It cannot be saved and
should not be pushed back inside.
Cystitis
These bladder infections are quite common. The patient complains of the
classical symptoms of urinary frequency, urgency, burning on urination, and pain on
completion of urination. Blood, if present, denotes "hemorrhagic cystitis." A
tender bladder is virtually diagnostic, although endometriosis can also cause such
tenderness.
Treatment consists of:
-
Pushing fluids, particularly acid-containing liquids such as cranberry
juice or any citric juice (orange, lemon, grapefruit). Acidity inhibits bacterial growth. Vitamin C (Ascorbic acid) can also be used to
acidify the urine.
-
Any oral broad-spectrum antibiotic, such as:
-
Pyridium for a day will provide
immediate relief by anesthetizing the bladder mucosa.
Pyelonephritis
A kidney infection.
These infections are characterized by CVA pain (flank pain) or
tenderness, chills, fever, lassitude, and sometimes nausea and vomiting. They may be
preceded by cystitis or may come without warning.
Treatment is vigorous antibiotic therapy (frequently IV antibiotics
because of the seriousness of the illness) and brisk fluid intake (IV or PO). Severe cases
may result in septic shock, DIC and death, even with antibiotic therapy.
Because of the seriousness of this condition, medical evacuation from
isolated military settings is usually undertaken. If medical evacuation is not an
available option, the prognosis is still reasonably good as the serious complications of
pyelonephritis are not common.
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