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Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection logoLink to Oxford University Press - PMC COVID-19 Collection
. 2021 May 4;108(Suppl 2):znab134.031. doi: 10.1093/bjs/znab134.031

26 COVID-19 Diagnosis in Patients with Acute Abdominal Pain Without Respiratory Symptoms: A UK Emergency General Surgical Unit Experience

S Zuberi 1, Y Mushtaq 1, K Patel 1, S Vickramarajah 2, A Askari 1, F Rashid 1, R Gurprashad 1
PMCID: PMC8135705

Abstract

Introduction

Evidence has emerged reporting atypical symptoms of the coronavirus (COVID-19). There is a sparsity of existing studies examining COVID-19 related abdominal pain and the role of investigative imaging for the virus in these patients. Study aims were to determine COVID-19 incidence in those with acute abdominal pain in the absence of respiratory symptoms and to assess the performance of Computer Tomography (CT) thoracic imaging.

Method

Retrospective analysis of all patients admitted to our emergency general surgical unit between 1st March 2020 and 31st May 2020 was performed. All patients underwent nasal and oro-pharyngeal COVID-19 RT-PCR swabs as well as CT on admission.

Results

From 112 patients admitted with acute abdominal pain in the absence of respiratory symptoms, 16 (14.3%) tested positive for COVID-19 on RT-PCR swab testing. 50% (8/16) of these patients had no intra-abdominal pathology on CT. The sensitivity and specificity of CT thoracic imaging for COVID-19 was 43.8% and 91.7%.

Conclusions

One in seven patients with abdominal pain without any respiratory symptoms tested positive. Half these patients represented COVID-19 manifesting primarily as acute abdominal pain. Combined swab testing and CT imaging should be performed in all abdominal pain presentations due to the varying diagnostic performance of thoracic CT in diagnosing COVID-19.


Articles from The British Journal of Surgery are provided here courtesy of Oxford University Press

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