Role of diagnostic laparoscopy in chronic and recurrent pain abdomen

In: International Surgery Journal · 2020 · vol. 7(2) , pp. 365 · doi:10.18203/2349-2902.isj20200022 · W3000338529
article OA: diamond CC0
AI-generated summary by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-13

Diagnostic laparoscopy established a diagnosis in 88% of patients with chronic and recurrent abdominal pain, with appendicitis and adhesions being the most common findings.

One-sentence paraphrase of the abstract; not a substitute for reading it. No clinical advice. How this works

AI-generated deep summary by claude@2026-06, 2026-06-13 · read from full text

This prospective descriptive study evaluated the diagnostic and therapeutic role of diagnostic laparoscopy in 50 surgical patients with chronic or recurrent abdominal pain lasting more than 3 months and with inconclusive clinical or radiological diagnoses. Laparoscopy established a diagnosis in 44 patients (88%), with appendicitis (28%) and adhesions (24%) as the most common findings, followed by tuberculosis (16%), pelvic inflammatory disease (8%), and less frequent findings including endometriosis (3%) and partial torsion of an ovarian cyst (4%); the remaining 6 patients had normal studies (12%). When indicated, therapeutic procedures were performed during the same laparoscopic session, and histopathology follow-up was reported, with appendicectomy and adhesiolysis being the most frequent interventions. The main limitation acknowledged by the study design is that it is a small, descriptive, single-cohort investigation without a comparative diagnostic strategy. Relevance to endometriosis: endometriosis was found in 3% of patients during diagnostic laparoscopy, though the paper’s main focus is the overall role of laparoscopy in chronic and recurrent abdominal pain.

Read from the paper's body, not the abstract. Not a substitute for reading the paper. No clinical advice. How this works

Abstract

Background: Chronic and recurrent abdominal pain of unknown origin represents a significant problem in surgical patients and poses a diagnostic dilemma. With advances in optics, laparoscopy allows visualisation of entire peritoneal cavity and further makes histological diagnosis possible. The rapidly increasing popularity of laparoscopy may be attributed to several factors including its applicability in both emergency and elective settings, high diagnostic yield, therapeutic management in the same setting, low patient morbidity, reduced hospital stays and expenditure. The objective of the study was to evaluate the role of diagnostic laparoscopy in chronic and recurrent pain abdomen.Methods: We conducted a prospective descriptive study on 50 patients who suffered from chronic and recurrent pain in abdomen for more than 3 months with inconclusive clinical or radiological diagnosis. All patients were subjected to diagnostic laparoscopy and findings were noted down. Therapeutic procedures were conducted at the same setting wherever indicated. Histopathological evaluation reports were followed up.Results: Out of 50 patients, laparoscopy established diagnosis in 44 patients, proving diagnostic efficacy at 88%. The most common finding at diagnostic laparoscopy was appendicitis (28%), followed by adhesions (24%). Other findings were tuberculosis (16%), pelvic inflammatory disease (8%), endometriosis (3%), partial torsion of ovarian cyst (4%), cholecystitis (2%). However, diagnostic laparoscopy showed normal study in 6 patients (12%). Appendicectomy followed by adhesiolysis were the most common procedures performed.Conclusions: Recurrent appendicitis is the most common cause of chronic and recurrent pain abdomen. Diagnostic laparoscopy is a safe and effective modality for both diagnostic and therapeutic management of such patients.
Full text 4,775 characters · extracted from oa-doi-fallback · 5 sections · click to expand

Background

Chronic and recurrent abdominal pain of unknown origin represents a significant problem in surgical patients and poses a diagnostic dilemma. With advances in optics, laparoscopy allows visualisation of entire peritoneal cavity and further makes histological diagnosis possible. The rapidly increasing popularity of laparoscopy may be attributed to several factors including its applicability in both emergency and elective settings, high diagnostic yield, therapeutic management in the same setting, low patient morbidity, reduced hospital stays and expenditure. The objective of the study was to evaluate the role of diagnostic laparoscopy in chronic and recurrent pain abdomen.

Methods

We conducted a prospective descriptive study on 50 patients who suffered from chronic and recurrent pain in abdomen for more than 3 months with inconclusive clinical or radiological diagnosis. All patients were subjected to diagnostic laparoscopy and findings were noted down. Therapeutic procedures were conducted at the same setting wherever indicated. Histopathological evaluation reports were followed up.

Results

Out of 50 patients, laparoscopy established diagnosis in 44 patients, proving diagnostic efficacy at 88%. The most common finding at diagnostic laparoscopy was appendicitis (28%), followed by adhesions (24%). Other findings were tuberculosis (16%), pelvic inflammatory disease (8%), endometriosis (3%), partial torsion of ovarian cyst (4%), cholecystitis (2%). However, diagnostic laparoscopy showed normal study in 6 patients (12%). Appendicectomy followed by adhesiolysis were the most common procedures performed.

Conclusions

Recurrent appendicitis is the most common cause of chronic and recurrent pain abdomen. Diagnostic laparoscopy is a safe and effective modality for both diagnostic and therapeutic management of such patients. Metrics

References

Camilleri M. Management of patients with chronic abdominal pain in clinical practice. Neurogastroenterol Motil. 2006;18:499-506. Paajanen, Hannu, Julkunen, Kristiina, Waris, Heidi, Laparoscopy in Chronic Abdominal Pain: A Prospective Nonrandomized Long-term Follow-up Study. J Clin Gastroenterol. 2005;39(2):110-4. Townsend CO, Sletten CD, Bruce BK, Rome JD, Luedtke CA, Hodgson JE. Physical and emotional functioning of adult patients with chronic abdominal pain: Comparison with patients with chronic back pain. J Pain. 2005;6:5-83. El-labban GM, Hokkam EN. The efficacy of laparoscopy in the diagnosis and management of chronic abdominal pain. J Minimal Access Surg. 2010;6(4):95. Sayed ZK, Verma RA, Madhukar KP, Vaishampayan AR, Kowli MS, Vaja C. Role of diagnostic laparoscopy in chronic abdominal pain. Int J Sci Stud. 2015;3(4):31-5. Kumar A, Sarwar MY, Pandey NK. Role of diagnostic laparoscopy in nonspecific chronic abdominal pain: experience of 100 cases. J Evol Med Dent Sci. 2013;48(2):9361-6. Adhikari DR, Vankipuram S, Tiwari AR, Chaphekar AP, Satardey RS. Small intestinal obstruction secondary to jejunal trichobezoar removed per anum without an enterotomy: a case report. J Clin Diagnos Res. 2015;9(3):3. Bhatia P, Gupta P, Mor D. Role of diagnostic laproscopy in chronic pelvic pain. Int J Reprod Contracept Obstet Gynecol. 2016;5(4):1152-7. Karvande R, Kamble R, Kharade M. A study of role of diagnostic and therapeutic laparoscopy in chronic and recurrent abdominal pain. Int Surg J. 2016;3(3):1336-40. Sinha RM. Efficacy of Diagnostic and Therapeutic Laparoscopy in Chronic Abdominal Pain - A Hospital Based Prospective Study. Int Arch BioMed Clin Res. 2016;2(3):46-8. Thanapongsathron W, Kanjanabut B, Vaniyapong T, Thaworncharoen S. Chronic right lower quadrant abdominal pain: laparoscopic approach. JMed Assoc Thai. 2005;88(1):42-7. Rao TU. Role of diagnostic laparoscopy in chronic abdominal conditions with uncertain diagnosis. Int Surg J. 2016;4(1):15-8. Baria KAK. Role of laparoscopy in diagnosis and management Of chronic Abdominal pain. Indian J Sci Res. 2013;4(1):65-8. Wolfe JHN, Behn AR, Jackson BT. Tuberculous peritonitis and role of diagnostic laparoscopy, The Lancet. 1979;313(8121):852-3. Shayani V, Siegert C, Favia P. The Role of Laparoscopic Adhesiolysis in the Treatment of Patients with Chronic Abdominal Pain or Recurrent Bowel Obstruction. JSLS. 2002;6(2):111-4. Dunker MS, Bemelman WA, Vijn A, Jansen FW, Peters AA, Janss RA, et al. Long-term outcomes and quality of life after laparoscopic adhesiolysis for chronic abdominal pain. J Am Assoc Gynecol Laparosc. 2004;11:36-41.

Text is read by the "Ask this paper" AI Q&A widget below. Extraction quality varies by source — PMC NXML preserves structure cleanly, OA-HTML may include some navigation residue, and OA-PDF can have broken hyphenation. The publisher copy (via DOI) is the canonical version.

My notes (saved in your browser only)

Ask this paper AI returns verbatim quotes from the full text · source: oa-doi-fallback

Answers must be backed by verbatim quotes from this paper's full text. Hallucinated quotes are dropped automatically; if no verbatim passage answers the question, we say so. How this works

Condition tags

endometriosis

Citation neighborhood (sparse)

Too few in-corpus citations on either side for a chart; here are the lists.

Cites (1)

References (15)

Source provenance

openalex
last seen: 2026-06-04T00:00:01.174412+00:00
License: CC0 · commercial use OK