What is abdominal pain?
Abdominal pain is when your child complains that his stomach
(abdomen) hurts.
What causes abdominal pain?
Usually stomachaches are caused by something simple like:
- overeating
- gas pains from drinking too much soda
- other types of indigestion.
Sometimes a stomachache is caused by constipation. A stomachache
may also be the first sign of stomach flu (viral gastroenteritis)
and vomiting or diarrhea will soon follow. Other common causes
are food poisoning or a urinary tract infection. A common serious
cause is appendicitis.
Stomachaches that keep coming back (recurrent) can have many
causes. The most common causes of frequent stomachaches are
stress and worries. Over 10% of children have recurrent
stomachaches from stress. The pain occurs in the pit of the
stomach or near the belly button. The pain is mild but real. If
your child keeps getting stomachaches, talk to your doctor.
How long does it last?
With harmless causes, the pain is usually better or gone in
2 hours. With stomach flu, the stomach may hurt before each
bout of vomiting or diarrhea. With serious causes, the pain
worsens or becomes constant.
How can I take care of my child?
Indigestion or illness: If your child has a stomachache from
eating or illness, use the following guidelines for
treatment:
- Rest: Your child should lie down and rest until he feels
better. A warm washcloth or heating pad on the stomach
for 20 minutes may speed recovery.
- Diet: Avoid giving your child solid foods. Only allow
sips of clear fluids. Keep a vomiting pan handy.
Younger children are especially likely to refer to nausea
as "a stomachache."
- Sitting on the toilet: Encourage your child to sit on the
toilet and try to pass a BM. This may relieve pain if it
is due to constipation or diarrhea.
- No medicine: Do not give any medicines for stomach cramps
unless you have talked with your healthcare provider.
Especially avoid laxatives, enemas, and painkillers.
Stress or worry: If your child has already seen a doctor and
you know that the stomachaches are from stress or worry, these
suggestions might ease the pain:
- Help your child worry less. Children who often have
stomachaches tend to be sensitive, serious,
conscientious, even model children. This can make them
more vulnerable to the normal stresses of life, such as
changing schools or moving. Help your child talk about
events that trigger his pains and how he's going to cope
with them.
- Make sure that your child doesn't miss any school because
of stomachaches. Stressed children have a tendency to want
to stay home when the going gets rough.
- Teach your child to use relaxation exercises for pain. Have
him lie down in a quiet place; take deep, slow breaths; and
think about something pleasant. Listening to audiotapes that
teach relaxation might help.
- Caution: Your child should have a complete medical
checkup before you conclude that recurrent stomachaches
are due to worrying too much.
When should I call my child's healthcare provider?
Call IMMEDIATELY if:
- The pain is severe AND lasts more than 1 hour.
- The pain is constant AND has lasted more than 2 hours.
- The pain comes and goes (cramps) AND lasts more than
24 hours.
- The pain is in the scrotum or testicle.
- Your child starts acting very sick.
Call during office hours if:
- This is a recurrent problem for your child.
- You have other questions or concerns.
Written by B.D. Schmitt, M.D., author of "Your Child's Health," Bantam Books.
This content is reviewed periodically and is subject to
change as new health information becomes available. The
information is intended to inform and educate and is not a
replacement for medical evaluation, advice, diagnosis or
treatment by a healthcare professional.
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