Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
4280974 | The American Journal of Surgery | 2009 | 6 Pages |
BackgroundChronic abdominal wall pain (CAWP) occurs in about 30% of all patients presenting with chronic abdominal pain.MethodsThe authors review the literature identified in a PubMed search regarding the abdominal wall as the origin of chronic abdominal pain.ResultsCAWP is frequently misinterpreted as visceral or functional abdominal pain. Misdiagnosis often leads to a variety of investigational procedures and even abdominal operations with negative results. With a simple clinical test (Carnett's test), >90% of patients with CAWP can be recognized, without risk for missing intra-abdominal pathology.ConclusionThe condition can be confirmed when the injection of local anesthetics in the trigger point(s) relieves the pain. A fasciotomy in the anterior abdominal rectus muscle sheath through the nerve foramina of the affected branch of one of the anterior intercostal nerves heals the pain.