Has anyone been diagnosed with Abdominal Wall Pain
Starting on May 1, 2017, I began having abdominal pain that wraps around to my left back. The first time it happened, I went to the emergency room because I thought I might have an apendicitis. The hospital did a CT scan of my abdomen, everything looked okay. I went to the emergency room several times over the summer with excruciating abdominal and back pain. I had a hida scan done, a colonoscopy and an endoscopy and CT and ultrasound scans of my abdomen. Everything looked normal. In September of this year, a doctor at Mayo felt the area on my abdomen and did a Carnett's test. He suggested it could be abdominal wall pain. I have had two steroid injections and I am still having pain in the same area. Has anyone out there had this type of diagnosis and still having pain?
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rt061069 Experiencing constant pain greatly impacts every area of your life. It appears that you went through all the proper channels regarding your medical care. It is frustrating not getting the answers and relief you need.
Are you planning to have your doctor send the referral? People from all over the country come to the Pain Rehabilitation Clinic (PRC). I think you would be interested in learning more from other members like @dawn_giacabazi @jefferie @franknstein and @elsa who have been through the program, as well as @rwinney who will be going to PRC soon. See more about their experiences in these Connect discussions about pain rehab.
– https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/pain-rehabilitation-21da8b/.
– https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/pain-rehab-program-decision/
What I'm hearing is that Mayo Clinic's (likely) recommendation is to explore pain management.
Rob, If the Pain Rehab Clinic at Mayo Clinic admits you, what would be your reservations in participating?
@erikas I am ready to come to Mayo for the whole process, I am at close to an 8 or higher every day in pain level. I will review all of your recommendations on Connect. Anything you can do to help would be greatly appreciated!
Are you going to PRC? It's so I've done it.
Look into Mast Cell Activation Syndrome. It was a life saver for my grandson after 2.5 years of abdominal pain.
@erikas I have read up on all of the posts here and the only thing I can add is its really getting worse each day. If you push in from the side of each flank (middle sides of my stomach) its very tender but pushes the pain into the middle area. The pain then goes up and down the middle. Getting up this morning around 5am I hadn't urinated in say four hours, it didn't really burn but right after the pain below my navel to lower waistband amped up even more. Same happens after a BM and noticed today that even standing and blowing my nose hard sent pain through the middle of my abdomen. Yes I have pain that pushes up and out at my xiphoid but I have pain all the way down to the lower pelvic area. Maybe have two issues with it started above my navel then went below a year later.
I read up on MALS and some matches but more doesn't, same with Nutcracker renal vein issues. I just have terrible aching 24/7 that no pill helps at all for pain. So late yesterday I got a call from Mayo asking me to confirm my ID, asked if I was taking any narcotics and that my GI doctor sent a refer to the 800 fax number. Now I guess GI is going to look at my records and get back to me, very confusing how this is working. Yes there could be more specifics tests or exams that need to be done by someone who specializes in abdominal pain but I don't know who that is. Going to Mayo Pain Medicine sounds the route, my main hospital pain mgt team can't figure it out though, they don't discuss entrapped nerves or say ab wall syndromes. I have never had an injection anywhere down the middle except for lower pelvis. I also can't find any doctor that speaks in much detail to abdominal diastasis and the change it could be part of the problem. I am desperate and running out of ideas and doctors to see.
@rt061069 it sounds like things are moving closer to your getting to pain rehab. That's great. If you have specific questions about the process, please contact Mayo Clinic directly.
As @donfeld mentioned above, he's been to PRC and can tell you more about his experience.
@bubbleshdr I have had abdominal pain that has been getting worse for 3 years, I had had full work ups, tests, pills and some injections. Where exactly did you have them inject or places.
We live close to Madison. I had my work up done there. Every 8 weeks I get trigger point injections into the lap sites that are painful to deep palpation. It’s usually the middle upper abdomen and right lower abdomen that is injected. My GI PA uses triamcinolone with lidocaine. I don’t think there is an easy fix to my chronic abdominal pain but I do think I’m lucky to have access to providers who I like and trust.
@bubbleshdr , did you have pain non stop before they figured out the injections. How many total injection areas do they hit, from reading once the needle is in they can drop 3-4 times, do you get 4-8 spots hit? My pain mgt doctor has focused only on the illoinguinal and illohypogstic nerve areas. Also had an mri lumbar spine and thoracic epi injection. I haven't had anything in my upper rectus abdominis or around umbilical region. I have a lot pain and pressure from navel up that pushes pain all they way to the xiphoid and rib cage area and down to lower pelvis. You push in and around xiphoid or from outside stomach wall pushing toward middle and pain shoots down to pelvis area. I now have level 8 pain 24/7, its unbearable. Any thoughts you have would be appreciated, I just can't find pain mgt doctor who has some focus on ab pain and trigger points. This is trial and error for relief we are looking for, thats hard to find in a doctor.
I have chronic intermittent severe RLQ pain. The pain was never relieved until I started PT for abdominal scar mobilization and then it was still severe when I had a flare. My GI doctor was doing an endoscopy when she told me she had read a case study on abdominal cutaneous nerve entrapment. She asked if she could give me a lidocaine injection into my abdomen. The injection relieved the pain I had at that moment. I have had triamcinolone/lidocaine injections every 2 months since 2015. I have had 25+ PT sessions for scar mobilization.
My GI doctor would do 2-3 injections with a spinal needle. She told me she knew when she felt a “pop” she was in the right spot. I felt like she moved the needle in and out in a spiral pattern. I know it sounds crazy but I got used to the sensation and I didn’t mind having the injections. Unfortunately she retired and I was assigned to a new PA. I really like my PA but she does injections differently. I don’t think she is doing the injections wrong but it is a different procedure. My PA doesn’t go in as deep and she doesn’t do more than a single puncture in one area and she goes directly down into the scar with no spiral injection. She also uses topical numbing which was a pleasant surprise.
If my bowel gets full, I get RLQ pain. The abdominal pain isn’t my focus most days as I also have chronic pelvic pain that has been more difficult to treat. Did you have surgery that lead to your abdominal pain or another source? PT has helped me the most but I’m a PT junkie as I have significant arthritis. I didn’t find narcotics to be really helpful as it just made me more constipated. I’m really sorry you are dealing with this horrible pain. I have a really good pain doctor but I think I’m staying with my GI PA until GI no longer offers this service.