Psychiatric symptoms among patients with acute abdominal pain: Patients with organic dyspepsia report more psychiatric symptoms and rate poorer general health compared to patients with other specific abdominal diagnoses and non-specific abdominal pain at an emergency ward

Erik Lexne, Lars Brudin, Ina Marteinsdottir, James J. Strain, Per Olof Nylander

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

2 Scopus citations

Abstract

Background: Abdominal pain is a common cause of visits to emergency facilities. It is related to psychiatric disorders in primary care, but it is unclear if this also holds in emergency departments. Objective: Is to explore potential differences between diagnostic groups in patients with acute abdominal pain in an emergency ward regarding concurrent somatic-and psychiatric symptoms, ‘Length of stay’ (LOS) and perceived health. Method: The patients (N = 137) were divided into three groups; organic dyspepsia, specific abdominal diagnoses, and non-specific abdominal pain. The Prime-MD results for extra gastrointestinal symptoms (outside the gastrointestinal tract), psychiatric symptoms, frequency of symptoms, self-reported health, and LOS within the month before admittance were compared between the diagnostic groups. Results: There was a significant positive correlation between the number of physical extra gastrointestinal and psychiatric symptoms (p <.001), especially regarding anxiety (p <.001) and depression (p =.002). Patients with organic dyspepsia reported significantly more total (p =.016), extragastrointestinal (p =.026) (chest pain; p =.017, dizziness; p =.004, palpitations; p =.005, insomnia; p =.005 and worries; p =.001), and summarized anxiety and depression symptoms (p =.001–0.002) besides poorer general health (p <.001) compared to other abdominal conditions. Also, organic dyspepsia patients needed longer hospital stay than the non-specific abdominal group (p =.002) but similar to the specific abdominal disorders group. Conclusion: Organic dyspepsia is accompanied by more co-occurring physical, anxiety and depression symptoms as well as poorer perceived health than other abdominal pain conditions and comparably increased LOS. This suggests that psychiatric consultations might be beneficial for diagnosing and treating psychiatric comorbidity in emergency care.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)769-776
Number of pages8
JournalScandinavian Journal of Gastroenterology
Volume55
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 2 Jul 2020

Keywords

  • Anxiety
  • depression
  • emergency ward
  • health
  • organic dyspepsia
  • prime-MD

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Psychiatric symptoms among patients with acute abdominal pain: Patients with organic dyspepsia report more psychiatric symptoms and rate poorer general health compared to patients with other specific abdominal diagnoses and non-specific abdominal pain at an emergency ward'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this