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Why does abdominal pain happen?

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Abdominal pain is a kind of pain that occurs between the chest and pelvic regions

. The nature of abdominal pain can be cramp, achy, dull, intermittent, or sharp. Localized pain is limited to one area of the abdomen. This is a type of pain that is often caused by problems in a particular organ. The most common cause of localized pain is stomach ulcers which are open sores on the stomach’s inner lining.

Why does abdominal pain happen? Cramp-like pain may be associated with diarrhoea, constipation, bloating, or flatulence. In people assigned female at birth, it can be associated with menstruation, miscarriage, or reproductive complications. This pain comes and goes, and may go away on its own without treatment. Viral, bacterial, or parasitic infections that affect the stomach and intestines may also cause significant abdominal pain.

Why does abdominal pain happen? Are all kinds of abdominal pain the same? There could be different kinds of abdominal pain, not all is the same. For example, if you’re experiencing acute abdominal pain, you’ve most likely only been dealing with the discomfort for about a week, maybe less. Chronic abdominal pain, on the other hand, is pain that’s constant or recurring. It lasts for three months or longer.

Since several gastrointestinal and systemic disorders lead to abdominal pain, doctors and healthcare professionals sometimes have a hard time understanding the root cause of the pain. Progressive abdominal pain is pain that gets worse over time. Typically other symptoms occur as the abdominal pain progresses. Progressive abdominal pain is often a sign of something more serious.

Abdominal pain may be felt anywhere between the chest and groin region of your body. The pain may be generalized, localized, or it may feel like cramps in your belly. If you have cramping or discomfort in your stomach, it may be due to gas, bloating, or constipation. Or it might be a sign of a more serious medical condition. Colicky pain in the abdomen region comes and goes. There is a sharp, sudden pain in your abdomen. Kidney stones and gallstones are often the cause of this type of pain.

What causes abdominal pain? Why does abdominal pain happen? The reason behind abdominal pain could be infection, abnormal growths, inflammation, obstruction or blockage, intestinal disorders, inflammation diseases that affect the organs in the abdomen. Infections in the throat, intestines, and blood can cause bacteria to enter your digestive tract, resulting in abdominal pain. These infections may also cause changes in digestion, like diarrhoea or constipation. Cramps associated with menstruation are also a potential source of lower abdominal pain, but these are more commonly known to cause pelvic pain.

Other common causes of abdominal pain include constipation, diarrhoea, gastroenteritis or stomach flu, acid reflux which is a condition when stomach contents leak backwards into the oesophagus, causing heartburn and other symptoms, vomiting, stress. Diseases that affect the digestive system can also cause chronic abdominal pain. The most common are gastro-esophageal reflux disease or GERD, irritable bowel syndrome or spastic colon, Crohn’s disease which is an inflammatory bowel disease, lactose intolerance which is the inability to digest lactose, the sugar found in milk and milk products.

Causes of severe abdominal pain include organ rupture or near-rupture like a burst appendix, appendicitis, gallbladder stones, kidney stones, kidney infection. The location of the pain within the abdomen may be a clue as to its cause. Pain that’s generalized throughout the abdomen not in one specific area may indicate appendicitis, Crohn’s disease, traumatic injury, irritable bowel syndrome, urinary tract infection, the flu.

Mild abdominal pain may go away without treatment. If you’re experiencing abdominal pain because of gas or bloating, it may simply need to run its course. But in some cases, abdominal pain may warrant a trip to the doctor. You should seek immediate medical care if the pain is so severe that you can’t sit still or need to curl into a ball to get comfortable.

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