Abdominal Examination
Abdominal examination and questions for medical student exams, finals, OSCEs and MRCP PACES
Intro (WIIPPPPE)
- Wash your hands
- Introduce yourself
- Identity of patient –confirm
- Permission (consent and explain examination)
- Pain?
- Position
- Initially at 45⁰ but must be lying flat to palpate abdomen. A pillow under the head or raising knees slightly might help this.
- Privacy
- Expose fully (nipples to knees). Important to see hernial orifices.
General Inspection
- Surroundings
- Monitoring:
- Catheter +/- urometer (inspect for quantity and colour)
- Pulse oximeter
- Surgical drains
- Treatments
- Oxygen specs/mask (method of delivery, rate, SATs)
- NG tube, IV fluids/ antibiotics
- TPN lines
- Central lines
- PCA pump
- Ensure drinks
- Bottles of Creon
- Paraphernalia:
- Food and drink
- Nil by mouth (NBM) signs
- Vomit bowels
- Monitoring:
- Patient
- Well/ unwell
- Alert/ drowsy
- Orientated/ confused
- Comfortable at rest/ writhing around in pain/ peritonitic
- Cachexia (look for temporalis wasting or skin fold thickness)/ obesity
- Tachypnoea
- Skin colour
- Jaundice (seen when bilirubin >40)
- Anaemic
- Bronze diabetes (hereditary haemochromatosis)
- Obvious scars
Hands
- Inspect
- Clubbing ( 4 C’s)
- Cirrhosis, Crohn’s disease, Coeliac disease, ulcerative Colitis
- Koilonychia (iron deficiency)
- Leuconychia
- Hypoalbuminaemia secondary to liver disease, nephrotic syndrome, malnutrition or protein-losing enteropathy
- Palmar erythema
- Chronic liver disease, thyrotoxicosis, pregnancy
- Dupuytren’s contracture (idiopathic, alcoholic liver disease)
- Clubbing ( 4 C’s)
- Palpate
- Capillary refill
- Pulse
- Check for asterixis
- Sign of hepatic encephalopathy, or any other type of encephalopathy. Usually bilateral unless due to a neurological lesion.
Arms
- Bruises – coagulopathy (liver disease)
- Excoriations – pruritus (↑bilirubin / uraemia/ anaemia)
- Tattoos
- Needle track marks
- Cannulae
- PIC lines
- AV fistula scars
- In use? Look for needle marks.
- Patent? Feel for a thrill, auscultate for bruit.
- Kidney transplant? Pay attention when palpating abdomen!
Eyes
- Scleral icterus
- Conjunctival pallor (anaemia)
- Kayser-Fleischer rings
- Sign of Wilson’s disease – these can only be seen with a slit lamp.
Mouth
- Angular stomatitis (B12 or iron deficiency)
- Macroglossia (B12 or folate deficiency)
- Dry mucous membranes
- Oral candidiasis (immunosuppression)
- Gingival hypertrophy (immunosuppression)
- Aphthous mouth ulcers (IBD , coeliac)
- Patient’s breath
- Alcohol
- Pear drops in DKA
- Fetor hepaticus in liver failure
Neck
- JVP
- Raised in RHF leading to liver failure
- Cervical lymphadenopathy
- The GI tract begins in the mouth!
- Virchow’s node
- Left supraclavicular fossa – if palpable this is Troisier’s sign.
Chest
- Central lines
- Scars
- Gynaecomastia (chronic liver disease)
- Spider naevi in SVC distribution
- >5 is pathological and suggests chronic liver disease
Abdomen
- Position
- Ensure the patient is lying flat at this point
- Screening
- Ask patient to take a deep breath in (peritonism)
- Ask the patient to lift their head off the bed looking for divarication of rectus abdominis
- Ask the patient to turn their head and cough whilst palpating hernial orifices
- Inspection
- Distension (6Fs):
- Fat
- Foetus
- Fluid
- Flatus
- Faeces
- Fulminant tumour
- Scars
- Take some time over this, particularly when looking for small paracentesis or biopsy scars.
- Striae
- Pregnancy, rapid growth during puberty, medications e.g. steroids
- Stoma + stoma bag
- Position
- Flush/ spouted
- Contents of bag
- Caput medusae
- = Umbilical recanalisation due to portal HTN. Flow is away from umbilicus.
- Grey-Turner’s sign
- = Bruising of the flanks. Signs of retroperitoneal haemorrhage e.g. due to severe pancreatitis.
- Cullen’s sign
- = Periumbilical bruising. Also a sign of retroperitoneal haemorrhage.
- Distension (6Fs):
- Palpation
- Same level as patient
- 9 areas to palpate
- Least painful → most painful area
- Watching the patient’s face
- Lightly then more deeply
- Lightly – guarding, rigidity?
- Deeply for organomegaly
- Liver – start in RIF, towards RUQ
- Spleen – start in RIF, towards LUQ
- Ballot kidneys (upper hands still, bottom hand moves)
- AAA – gently (above umbilicus!)
- Same level as patient
- Percussion
- Liver (from RIF to RUQ and from clavicle down)
- Spleen
- Bladder
- Shifting dullness if distended and suspect ascites (offer if not distended)
- Auscultate
- Bowel sounds:
- Tinkling = mechanical bowel obstruction
- Absent = ileus or peritonism
- Bruits: AAA, renal
- Bowel sounds:
Legs
- Peripheral oedema (right heart failure, pregnancy, hypoalbuminaemia secondary to liver disease or nephrotic syndrome)
- Bruising
- Erythema nodosum (IBD)
Closure
- Thank patient
- Patient comfortable?
- Help getting dressed?
- Wash hands
- Turn to examiner, hands behind back, holding stethoscope (try not to fidget!) before saying: “To complete my examination, I would like to…”
- Fully examine
- Hernial orifices
- Inguinal lymph nodes
- External genitalia
- Perform a DRE (important, don’t forget this one!)
- Bedside Invx:
- Look at obs chart and repeat set of obs
- Urine dip
- Pregnancy test
- If ascites is found, do a full cardiac exam –need to examine volume status.
- Fully examine
Click here for medical student OSCE and PACES questions about Abdominal Examination
Common Abdominal Examination exam questions for medical students, finals, OSCEs and MRCP PACES
Click here to download free teaching notes on Abdominal Examination: Abdominal Examination
Perfect revision for medical students, finals, OSCEs and MRCP PACES