When to seek medical advice
About Stomachaches and Abdominal Pain
Common causes of abdominal pain
Home treatment
When to seek medical advice
See the doctor immediately or call 911 if:
- Your child is constantly crying and you cannot figure out why.
- Your child is under 2 years old and is having obvious abdominal pain.
- Your child is doubled over with pain or is lying completely still.
- Your child is extremely sleepy, listless, irritable or confused.
- Your child has had a severe stomachache that has lasted for more than 2
hours or is getting worse.
- Your child is having severe abdominal pain and there is blood in his
stool.
- Your child has abdominal pain and is vomiting, especially if the pain does
not improve after the vomiting.
- Your child is having abdominal pain due to poisoning.
- Your child is having abdominal pain after a trauma.
- Your child has a severe pain on the lower right side of the abdomen. This
may be a sign of appendicitis. For more information, watch the video: Appendicitis:
Where is the pain located?.
- Your child's abdomen feels swollen or tight and is tender to the touch.
- Your son's pains are located in the scrotum or testicles.
Make an appointment with your doctor if:
- Your child is having periodic stomachaches that last for more than 24
hours.
- Your child is having abdominal pain, and he finds it difficult to urinate.
- Your child has a stomachache and diarrhea.
- Your child has a stomachache, difficulty swallowing and fever. This may be
a sign of strep throat.
- Your child has a recurring stomachache.
- Your child gets a stomachache after drinking milk. This may be a sign that
your child is lactose intolerant.
- Your child has a recurring stomachache and a loss of appetite, weight loss
or is not gaining weight faster enough. This may be a sign of a chronic
intestinal disease.
Colic
When to seek medical advice
When an otherwise healthy baby is crying excessively, we say that the child has
colic. All babies cry but babies with colic cry far more than normal. Colic is
not a disease and there is no known reason why it happens. Your child's doctor
can help you sort out whether your infant's crying is normal, due to colic, or
caused by an underlying medical problem.
Make an appointment with your doctor if:
- Your child will not stop crying, and you cannot figure out why. Your
doctor will take a complete medical history and give him a thorough physical
exam to determine why your baby is crying. While the cause of colic is
unknown, it is important for your doctor to rule any possible medical
problem.
- Your child is not eating well or is not acting well. Even with colic,
babies will usually eat and act well in between episodes of crying.
Constipation
When to seek medical advice
Constipation is defined by hard or painful bowel movements or infrequent bowel
movements that are accompanied by stomachaches. However, constipation is hard to
diagnose because the frequency of bowel movements can vary widely in children.
Some children have a bowel movement once or more each day while others only have
one every few days.
Make an appointment with your doctor if:
- Your child is having hard or painful bowel movements, or his stomachaches
are accompanied by infrequent bowel movements.
- Your child bleeds when passing bowel movements
About Stomachaches and Abdominal Pain
Stomachache or abdominal pain is a common problem for children. It is often
caused by harmless conditions such as overeating or not eating enough food,
having intestinal gas or a mild viral infection. Children may also experience
abdominal pain if they have another illness such as an ear, throat or lung
infection. However, there are some serious conditions that may require surgery.
Children who have recurring stomachaches should always be examined by a doctor.
Repeated stomachaches may be due to illnesses such as constipation
or urinary
tract infection. If there are additional symptoms such as vomiting, diarrhea
and/or blood in the child's stools, the child may have a chronic intestinal
disease like Crohn's
disease, ulcerative
colitis, or celiac
disease.
Most cases of recurring stomachaches, especially in school-aged children, are
related to psychological stress or anxiety. Children who are unable to verbalize
their feelings of discomfort or stress often will express their discomfort by
having stomachaches, or headaches.
As a parent, you can help your child by recording information about his
stomachaches. This information will help you understand why your child has
recurring stomach pain and will also help your child's doctor to make the right
diagnosis.
Try to chart the following information:
- When did the pain start?
- Did it come on suddenly or gradually?
- Where is it located?
- Is the pain constant, or does it come and go?
- Is it in the same each time or does the pain's location change?
- Is there anything that seems to trigger the pain?
- How long does the pain last?
- Is there anything that makes the pain better or worse (such as food,
hunger, or body position)?
- Are there other symptoms, such as fever, nausea, vomiting or diarrhea,
present?
- Overall, how is your child's condition? Is she less active than usual?
- Has your child lost any weight?
Common causes of abdominal pain
Some of the most common causes of abdominal pain in children are colic,
constipation,
gastroenteritis
and urinary
tract infection, as well as illnesses that need surgery to correct like appendicitis
and intussusception.
For more information about these surgical conditions, watch these videos:
Home treatment
In this section, we will focus how you can treat general abdominal pain at
home, and then we will look at the treatment for two most common causes of
stomach pain: colic and constipation.
General Abdominal Pain
- Let your child lie down and rest until he feels better.
- If your child feels nauseous or is vomiting, give him small sips of clear
fluid and avoid solid foods.
- If your child is having a stomachache because of constipation, encourage
him to go to the toilet. This will often ease the pain. Natural laxatives
such as prune juice and fruits (pears, apricots and peaches)may help to
relieve the constipation. A warm bath can also help your child relax so that
he can use the toilet.
- Do not give your child pain relief medicines or laxatives if you don't
know what the cause of the stomachache is. Some medicines such as ibuprofen
can cause stomach pain.
- Children with recurring abdominal pain may be troubled psychologically. If
you suspect that this is the case with your child, take him to the doctor
for a thorough exam.
- If a recurring stomachache is due to psychological troubles, talk to your
child about what may be bothering him.
Colic
Infants with colic can present a major challenge to parents, but you can take
comfort knowing that colic generally improves over time. Do not be afraid to ask
for help and support from family and friends.
There is no one single colic treatment that works for all babies, but there are
several general things you can try:
- Make sure that your baby is getting enough to eat. Hungry babies cry! If
necessary, weigh your baby periodically to make sure that he is eating
enough to gain weight. Also, babies often want to suck even when they are
NOT hungry, so a pacifier may help in these cases.
- Burp your baby frequently, because swollowed air can make colic worse. To
prevent your baby from swollowing air, make sure that he is in the correct
position for breast feeding. You can try different positions as well to see
which one works best for your child. For babies that are bottle-fed, try
different types of bottles to see which ones can minimize swallowed air.
- You can give your baby a massage. However do not overstimulate your child
because this may make him even more unsettled. Also try carrying and rocking
your baby. If that doesn't help, you can try swaddling your baby with a
blanket and let him lie quietly in the dark.
- Give your baby a hot bath or try giving him a pacifier. Some babies sleep
better after a hot bath. Some babies are calmer after they have had a
pacifier.
- Avoid smoking. Nursing mothers who smoke increase the risk of having a
colicky baby.
- Some infants may have a sensitivity to dairy proteins. So if you are
nursing, avoid eating any dairy products such as milk, cheese and butter for
a week. For formula-fed babies, trying giving your child a soy-based
formula. If your baby's condition improves, you can reintroduce diary
products after 14 days and observe whether the colic returns. After a while,
your baby should be able to tolerate the dairy products that you eat.
Mothers who are not drinking milk, you should take calcium supplements. Also
avoid caffeine found in coffee, tea, soft drinks and chocolate.
- Some colicky infants will respond to singing, music or monotonous sounds
(like the sounds of a washing machine or a vacuum cleaner). Other infants
may calm down from repetitive movements like those from a car ride or on a
swing.
- No medicine has been shown to improve colic.
- There is NO magic cure for colic! However, research has clearly shown that
babies who have colic do outgrow it and grow up to be normal, healthy
children.
Constipation
- Give your child plenty of fluids (like water or juices) to drink. This
should help ease her constipation.
- Avoid overfeeding your child on milk or other dairy products because they
can cause constipation. Children over 12 months old should not drink more
than 16-24 ounces of milk in 24 hours. Also, some children may have a
sensitivity to milk, so their condition should improve after taking milk
completely out of their diet. However, in this case, give your child
calcium-fortified soy milk to make sure that she gets enough calcium in her
diet.
- Babies on formula may become constipated. Try adding 2-3 teaspoonfuls of
prune juice or corn syrup for each 4 oz of formula.
- A healthy diet is the key to preventing constipation. Have your child eat
plenty of fresh fruit and vegetables in order to get enough fiber. Also have
her drink plenty of water and other fluids, especially in warm weather.
Also, eating too much meat and sugar can cause constipation.
- Teach your child good toilet habits. Start toilet training as soon as your
child shows the motivation for this. Use the time after meals for a trip to
the toilet. Set up an area in the bathroom just for your child so that she
will be happy sitting on the toilet. Use rewards like stickers as an
incentive for the child, even if it is just for sitting on the toilet.