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This website is intended to assist with patient education and should not be used as a diagnostic, treatment or prescription service, forum or platform. Always consult your own healthcare practitioner for a more personalised and detailed opinion
We have selected the following expert medical opinion based on its clarity, reliability and accuracy. Credits: Sourced from the website Patient UK, authored by Dr Mary Lowth (see below). Please refer to your own medical practitioner for a final perspective, assessment or evaluation.
Most doctors use the term 'recurrent abdominal pain' to mean that your child has experienced tummy pain on and off, for 3 months or more.
If your child is otherwise healthy and there are no alarm symptoms then the most likely cause of the pain is one of those listed under probable causes, below. Most of the conditions listed underneath them as possible causes are extremely unlikely.
These include:
These include:
Occasionally a physical problem outside the tummy can cause RAP. This explains why your doctor will need to examine, for instance, the testicles and groin of a boy with RAP.
Recurrent pain in the tummy may be referred from:
Bacterial gastroenteritis can occasionally seem to trigger IBS. This may just mean that the bowel is sore and taking its time to settle down. Researchers do not know why gastroenteritis leads to IBS in some people and not in others. It is not clear whether IBS caused in this way is just as likely to persist as IBS which starts by itself.
In RAP that is not caused by a physical condition, the pain is usually around the belly button. There is often a headache. Feeling sick (nausea) and even being sick (vomiting) are fairly common. However, your child is well between attacks and is otherwise healthy - growing well and, generally eating and drinking normally. There are no 'alarm symptoms' (see below).
The patterns of RAP that doctors describe, and which are NOT associated with a physical condition are:
Pain is created in the brain out of a mixture of nerve and chemical signals. These include signals from injured tissues - but these do not provide the only 'input' to the pain centres of the brain. These areas also receive input from the thinking and emotional parts of the brain, and we know that these can modify and even create pain.
IBS is remarkably common in adults, affecting up to 1 in 5 people at some point. While it is most commonly diagnosed in young adults, it can start at any age. In fact, one US study suggested that 1 in 16 children aged 11-13, and almost 1 in 7 teenagers, experience IBS-type symptoms.
The causes of IBS in children are thought to be similar to those in adults. Although there is no problem with any one part of the gut, it's thought that the different bits don't work smoothly together. In addition, the gut may be hyper-sensitive to pain signals and the nerves or muscle of the gut may be overactive.
IBS may be the cause if your child has abdominal pain which can be made better by going to the toilet (for a poo), or pain which is associated with needing to poo more often or with the poo being different. IBS is diagnosed if your child has abdominal pain or discomfort and a change in bowel habit.
Other symptoms of IBS in children may include diarrhoea (often several times a day, often with a 'rush' to go), constipation (hard, dry stools; infrequent bowel movements or straining to have a bowel movement, passing mucus, and feeling bloated). Symptoms may occur after eating.
The tummy pain is typically around the belly button. Your doctor finds no signs or symptoms that point to a physical condition causing your child's pain. They are well between episodes and are not losing weight. They may be quite anxious about the pain and about the effect that it is having. Most children experiencing RAP will have functional abdominal pain.
This occurs when your child has functional abdominal pain but also has symptoms affecting other parts of their body at the same time, such as headache, pain in the arms or legs, or difficulty sleeping.
This occurs when the pain is high in the tummy - above the belly button - and not made better by going to the toilet (for a poo). There may be symptoms of indigestion, such as belching and pain after eating.
Your child has recurrent sudden episodes of pain around the belly button which last for over an hour, and which interfere with normal activities. During attacks your child is off their food, may have nausea or vomiting, and may also have headache, turn pale and be intolerant of light. Between episodes your child is perfectly well.
Tummy pain due to physical causes can occur anywhere in the abdomen, including around the belly button. However, it is most often in the lower abdomen, either just above the pubic bone or in the bottom right or left corners, or in the upper right corner just under the ribs. Most physical causes do not run in families (exceptions to this are inflammatory bowel disorders such as Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis, and coeliac disease).
These include:
If one or more of these symptoms are present, this does not mean that your child is seriously ill, or that you should be alarmed. They are sometimes called 'alarm' symptoms because they set off an alarm in the mind of a doctor, reminding them to consider other physical causes for the pain.
Experiencing pain when there is no underlying physical problem is surprisingly common. It can be difficult for children, who may feel as though their friends and family will think they are inventing the pain or that they are suspected of imagining it. It is important to explain that you know that their pain is real and that it needs to be managed and treated just as much as if it came from a broken bone.
Although injury, pressure and stretching of our bodily tissues cause pain, the sensation of pain can also be made, increased or altered by the brain. There are pain 'centres' in the brain, which receive signals from body tissues but also from the thinking and emotional areas of the brain. The final pain sensation is created by the brain from all three.
Many of us will have experienced the brain's effect on pain: we get headaches when worried, feel sick when given bad news and develop loose stools when anxious. In the same way, stress can affect physical pain - for instance, by making even normal activity of the bowel painful.
We are more likely to feel pain - or feel the pain more intensely - when we are expecting pain, where we believe we have a worrying illness, or where we are anxious or depressed. Focusing on the location of a pain will sensitise the nerves and make it worse. People sometimes use a technique of focusing on another part of their body to manage pain - for example, clenching fists or focusing on toes when having an injection.
The body may create the sensation of pain as a substitute for the sensation of other distress such as bullying, unhappiness at school, worry about exams, worries about friendships or worries about weight and body image. Distress may be experienced as real tummy (abdominal) pain, headaches or both.
In IBS, doctors additionally believe that the intestines are abnormally sensitive and overactive, which is a major source of pain.
We know that painkillers are not always particularly helpful in this form of 'brain-induced' pain and that painkillers come with side-effects. In many cases, the side-effects may include making the bowel more sensitive, or upsetting the normal working of the bowel by causing constipation or indigestion. However, understanding how the pain is made shows us that working on the emotional and anxious areas of the brain through reassurance is just as likely to be effective.
We also know that the body contains natural pain-reducing substances, including adrenaline (epinephrine), cortisol and endorphins. This is why, in a sudden accident, even a severe injury is often not initially painful. It also means that increasing levels of these positive chemicals can be helpful. Endorphins, for example, are increased in exercise, and adrenaline (epinephrine) by both exercise and excitement. It follows from this that if your child is able to increase their exercise levels and to find enjoyable and fun things to do, this is more than a distraction, it will also have a direct and real effect on the pain and it may allow them to feel more in control of their situation.
The doctor will often make the diagnosis of recurrent abdominal pain (RAP) based on the questions they ask you and your child, and on the examination they make of your child. They will want to know:
Questions about the pain
Questions about your child
Your doctor will check your child's height and weight and will examine your child's tummy, to see how tender it is and where it is sore.
In most cases of recurrent abdominal pain (RAP) the diagnosis is made by your GP after taking a clear history and examination and checking carefully for 'alarm' signs and for anything that suggests a physical cause, such as constipation or lactose intolerance. Your GP may do some tests to exclude coeliac disease. If lactose intolerance is suspected they may also suggest a food diary and some trials to see if excluding milk is helpful.
Your doctor is likely to want to review your child, after an interval has passed, to see whether things are settling down and to make sure that things aren't changing and that your child - even if they still have some symptoms of RAP - is feeling better.
Most children with recurrent abdominal pain (RAP) do not need investigations, because their symptoms and examination findings point so strongly to one of the common patterns of RAP.
However, because coeliac disease and giardia infection are both common possibilities which are easily ruled out (and which mimic IBS), these basic tests are commonly offered:
If your child is upset at the thought of a blood test then ask the doctor how necessary this is. If the doctor feels that coeliac disease is very unlikely in your child's case, and everything else suggests to the doctor that there is no physical cause for the pain, then a blood test is very unlikely to be helpful.
However, if your doctor feels that your child's signs or symptoms suggest a physical cause for the pain, further investigations will be needed.
These may include:
Your doctor will investigate your child to rule out all causes that seem possible, based on the symptoms and examination.
If everything tests as normal, and your child is not getting worse and is well between attacks, it is extremely likely that your child has no physical illness causing their pain. Further testing for rare conditions that don't 'fit' the picture is thought to be a bad thing, as this is likely to make your child more anxious, which is likely to make the pain worse.
Serious conditions generally show themselves quickly because they get worse and because they show alarm signs. However, if your child is diagnosed with RAP and then new symptoms develop, you should return to your doctor and ask for another review.
If your child has an underlying physical cause for their recurrent abdominal pain (RAP), such as constipation or coeliac disease, treatments will be directed at that cause, and are not described here.
Most children with RAP without physical cause get better with reassurance that there is nothing physically wrong and with an explanation of the source of the pain.
Various other things may be helpful, including:
If children are stressed by RAP, and if they continue to miss school and other activities, a type of counselling called cognitive behavioural therapy (CBT) may be helpful. CBT helps people to change the way that they think about stressful things.
Family therapy, in which other members of the child's family are involved in the therapy, can be useful, particularly if other members of the family are experiencing anxiety. Other forms of talking therapy such as hypnotherapy are also sometimes used. Hypnotherapy probably affects the way the brain deals with pain.
Medicines are not usually recommended for children with RAP, unless they have severe symptoms which have not responded to simple management. Medicines are often not very effective for pain originating in the brain, and the side-effects of many medicines can make tummy pain worse.
It has been suggested that children are less likely to experience RAP if they have a good proportion of fruit in their diet. It is not, however, clear that modifying the diet once you have RAP is helpful.
There is no evidence that fibre supplements or lactose-free diets are helpful for most children. Some children with IBS (see below) may benefit from fibre - but this must be of the soluble type. Insoluble fibre makes things worse.
It is always the case that a balanced, healthy diet containing sufficient fibre, fruit and vegetables is generally better for your child's health.
Children who have proven food intolerances, such as lactose intolerance, will benefit from excluding those items from their diet. In the case of lactose intolerance, this condition is not an allergy but an inability to process lactose in the bowel. It therefore does not usually need to be absolutely excluded from the diet, just reduced.
True food intolerance can only be diagnosed by stopping and then trialling the relevant food. Allergy tests offered by alternative practitioners, such as hair tests or tests involving placing food on the skin, are not supported by evidence. This means that they do not produce medically accepted results.
If following such advice and applying exclusion diets as a result, be very aware of your child's need for a balanced diet with sufficient calories and nutrients to support growth and development, energy, learning and exercise. Restrictive diets are potentially harmful, so please consider talking to a health professional before making this choice for or with your child.
The power of the hot water bottle to make children feel better should not be underestimated. A hot water bottle, or a microwave-warmed grain bag, can be very helpful. This isn't just a 'placebo' - adding warmth to the sensations on the tummy can 'override' the pain nerves and reduce the sensation of pain.
As explained under the section which explains the pain, boosting the levels of the body's natural painkillers such as adrenaline (epinephrine), cortisol and endorphins will reduce the sensation of pain. The best ways to increase levels of these natural body chemicals include exercise and fun or exciting activities. This may not always be easy (or even possible) for your child whilst they have pain. However, there is evidence that increasing these activities when your child does not have pain will then benefit them when they do.
Distraction can also be helpful during episodes of pain. Focusing the mind away from the pain will reduce its impact. Most parents are very experienced in distracting their child from pain - reading, films and TV, music and conversation are all likely to help your child feel better during attacks. Helping them keep up with school work if absent from school may also help them feel better, as they may be less worried.
The symptoms of IBS can often be treated with a combination of the following:
Certain foods and drinks are thought to cause IBS symptoms in some children, such as milk products, caffeine drinks, artificial sweeteners and gas-producers such as cabbage and onions. It is not a good idea to exclude everything at once: keeping a food diary can help work out whether any foods are triggers.
Dietary fibre can lessen constipation in children with IBS but it may not help with lowering pain.
Medications are sometimes used in childhood IBS.
They include:
Recurrent abdominal pain (RAP) usually settles down over time. However, it can persist for a while. It is more likely to persist if it has been going on for a long time - more than six months - before seeking medical advice. It also seems as though it is more likely to continue if parents are very stressed, or families experience lots of stressful life events.
Many children who experience RAP will go on to experience IBS in adulthood. This is particularly the case where others in the family are affected by IBS.
Dr Mary Lowth
MA (Cantab), MB BChir, DFFP, DRCOG, PG Cert Med Ed, FRCGP
Qualified in 1988 (Cambridge), spent 20 years as a GP in Suffolk. Also a GP trainer, GP appraiser and Training Programme Director.
Medicolegal GP with Freedom from Torture.
Clinical writer, novelist and journalist. I write on medicine, on medical ethics and on human rights.
MRCGP Examiner and Clinical Casewriter 2007-17.
International Development Advisor for MRCGP(Int) Brunei 2011-15.
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