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Abdominal Injuries

Disease Abdominal girthAbdominal mass

Abdominal injuries
The lower ribs are near the liver, spleen and kidneys. Rib fractures can cause internal damage to these organs. Symptoms are pain in the abdomen or back (rarely, pain may travel to the shoulder).

 


Abdominal Injuries ... tender abdomen, abdominal pain, abdominal pain, pain
Abdominal muscle strain ... muscle pain
Abdominal Neoplasms ... abdominal pain
Abnormalities, Radiation-Induced ... swallowing pain
Abruptio Placentae ... abdominal pain ...

Abdominal injuries.
Treatment options
Treatment depends on the type and severity of the injury. Always see your doctor if pain persists after a couple of days. What you may think is a straightforward sprain may actually be a fractured bone.

Patients with other significant abdominal injuries, such as injuries to the bowel, spleen or liver, who require open operation and repair may also, at the same time undergo surgical exploration and repair of the injured kidney.

Salmonella, Headache, Chronic, Hematopoietic Cell Growth Factors, Industry, Food, Methyltransferase, Protein-beta-Aspartate, Minority Groups, Myosin Adenosine Triphosphatase, N-Cadherins, Nephropathies, Idiopathic Membranous, Abdominal Injuries, ...

Your child may be at increased risk for both spinal cord and intra-abdominal injuries because the shoulder belt can cut him or her across the neck and the lap belt, rather than sitting in the lap.

Blunt trauma can present without any external physical signs, and life-threatening intraabdominal injuries may be overlooked during initial assessment and treatment.

Using a shoulder belt without a lap belt can leave one at greater risk for some injuries than wearing no seat belt at all. Chest and abdominal injuries are more than twice as common among those who wear shoulder but not lap belts than among those ...

Individuals with flexion-distraction fractures also may have associated intra-abdominal injuries in up to 50% of cases (Goodrich, "Chance Fracture").

children outgrow their infant seats, some parents mistakenly place them in booster seats or adult seat belts. Because young children are not adequately restrained by booster seats or adult seat belts, they are at risk for head and abdominal injuries ...

To prevent abdominal pain caused by swallowing air (aerophagia), do not chew gum or drink carbonated beverages.
Prevent abdominal injuries by wearing your seat belt safely and correctly every time you drive or are a passenger in a car.

neck injuries are common in people with severe head trauma. Spine x-rays are usually ordered before the head is moved if there is any neck pain or other symptoms of a neck injury. In a car accident, there may also be chest or abdominal injuries.

abdominal injuries, such as crush injuries from a car accident or a fall
a foreign body in the colon or rectum
alcohol abuse
dysentery or other intestinal disorders, such as Meckel's diverticulum or intussusception ...

Abdominal surgery, particularly that involving the digestive or biliary tract, is another significant risk factor: The peritoneum may be contaminated during or after surgery from such events as anastomotic leaks. Traumatic abdominal injuries— ...

See also: Injuries, Symptom, Injury, Cancer, Stomach

Disease Abdominal girthAbdominal mass

 
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