Abstract

BackgroundAbdominal pain is a common complaint among emergency department patients, making it essential to identify those with life-threatening etiologies. We report on the rare finding of atraumatic transvaginal bowel evisceration in a patient presenting to the emergency department with the primary complaint of abdominal pain.Case DescriptionA 63-year-old female presented ambulatory to the emergency department with abdominal pain and foreign body sensation in her vagina after coughing. Physical exam demonstrated evisceration of her small bowel through her vagina. During her clinical course, she rapidly deteriorated from appearing well without abdominal tenderness to hypotensive with frank peritonitis.ConclusionThis case demonstrates the need to perform a thorough physical exam on all patients with abdominal pain and details the management of vaginal evisceration. This case also highlights the difficulty of appropriate triage for patients with complaints not easily assessed in triage. In an era of emergency department crowding, emergency physicians should reevaluate nursing education on triaging abdominal pain to prevent delays in caring for well-appearing patients who have underlying life-threatening illnesses.

Highlights

  • Abdominal pain is a common complaint among emergency department patients, making it essential to identify those with life-threatening etiologies

  • This case demonstrates the need to perform a thorough physical exam on all patients with abdominal pain and details the management of vaginal evisceration. This case highlights the difficulty of appropriate triage for patients with complaints not assessed in triage

  • We report this rare finding in a patient presenting to the emergency department with the common chief complaint of abdominal pain

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Summary

Conclusion

This case demonstrates the need to perform a thorough physical exam on all patients with abdominal pain and details the management of vaginal evisceration. This case highlights the difficulty of appropriate triage for patients with complaints not assessed in triage. Author details 1Department of Emergency Medicine, Brody School of Medicine, East Carolina University, 600 Moye Boulevard, Greenville, NC 27834 USA 2Johnston Memorial Hospital, 351 Court Street North East, Abingdon, VA 24210 USA. Authors’ contributions KC treated the patient in the ED and was involved in drafting the manuscript. LL cared for the patient in the ED and was involved in drafting the manuscript, major revisions, and editing of the manuscript. Competing interests The authors declare that they have no competing interests

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