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  • Unexplained abdominal pain

    Posted by Altbema on July 11, 2014 at 1:22 pm

    I am a 70 year old women who takes Crestar for high cholesterol and metropolol for high blood pressure and palpitations, and synthroid for thyroid condition. For the last year, I have experienced on and off pain in left pelvic and abdomen areas, that often went to my back. At first, went to my gastro doctor who gave me a colonoscopy with negative results. The pain subsided a little bit and I assumed it was just muscular in nature. But in the last three months, the pain and burning has came back and I can only get relief by taking either a hot bath or lying down.

    After reading your NYTimes article, I was convinced that it was a hernia and therefore went to my family doctor who ordered a sonogram of the entire pelvic, abdomen, uterus areas. Again, this test did not show anything. I have even stopped taking Crestar thinking that it might have effected my muscular system (no change in the pain yet). I have also stopped exercising or walking since I find it brings on more pain.

    I am trying to rest but feel this is no way to live and therefore am most frustrated.

    Thank you for your advice and counsel.

    Marilyn

    drtowfigh replied 10 years, 11 months ago 2 Members · 1 Reply
  • 1 Reply
  • drtowfigh

    Moderator
    July 11, 2014 at 5:28 pm

    Unexplained abdominal pain

    Hernias can cause groin pain, radiating around to the back. Lying flat makes it better. So many of your symptoms may be suggestive of a hernia.

    When ordering an ultrasound, it must be a specifici hernia ultrasound. The technician or radiologist should have you stand up, bend forward and back, push your belly in and out, and basically have you do maneuvers to exacerbate a small hernia and make it more likely to visualize a hernia. If that is not diagnostic, then I recommend MRI pelvis with Valsalva. Based on our research, a CT is likely to be nondiagnostic with small hernias.

    If all are negative and you still have symptoms highly suggestive of a hernia, then you should have the ultrasound/MRI re-read. I read my own images and there are a lot of “negative” interpretations because radiologists are not in time with what constitutes a small hernia. Especially in women.

    These are my suggestions.

    Hip problems can also manifest as groin pain. Just another thing to think about.

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