INSPECTION ABDOMINAL EXAMINATION
The patient must be in supine position. The doctor stands on patient’s right side and the patient should be made comfortable. Inspection must be done in good light from xiphisternum to the level of the symphysis pubis.
SHAPE:
Normal shape of the abdomen is scaphoid or boat shaped. Distention – May be Generalized or Localized.
- Generalized distension may be due to fat, fluid, flatus, faeces or pregnancy.
- Localized may be seen in small bowel obstruction, gross enlargement of the spleen, liver or ovaries.
- Groin should be examined, especially for inguinal and femoral hernia. If no swelling is seen, patient is asked to look on side and cough. The hernia may now be visible. To understand how to differentiate between inguinal and femoral hernia, please refer Palpation.
SKIN:
- Any form of pigmentation of the abdominal wall should look for. For example, linea nigra is a sign of pregnancy, below the umbilicus. Erythema ab igne a brownish pigmentation produce by constant application of heat. It suggests long standing pain, such as in chronic pancreatitis.
- Distention due to any reason may cause a smooth and glossy skin, whereas a relieved previous distention may cause wrinkled skin.
- Abdominal striae, commonly known as stretch marks represent rupture of subepidermal connective tissue, as a result of abdominal distention, present or past. They especially see after pregnancy.
- Dilated veins may see in venous obstruction of any form. On the abdominal wall, they usually see due to IVC or portal vein obstruction.
- Spider nevi see in alcoholics, cirrhosis, pregnancy, RA, Thyrotoxicosis and sometimes in normal individuals. It has a central arteriole and radiating small vessels. They are pulsatile and blanch on pressure.
- Also look for scars, old or recent. They may suggest some injury or past operations.
UMBILICUS:
- The umbilicus normally is slightly invert and retracted.
- In ascites, it acquires a smiling face (transverse stretch) or flattened or everted. In obesity, the umbilical cleft is deeper than normal.
- Normally, it is equidistant from the xiphisternum and symphysis pubis.
- In ascites, its distance from xiphisternum is greater, whereas, in ovarian tumor or full urinary bladder, its distance is greater from symphysis pubis.
- Cullen sign – Bluish discoloration of periumbilical region in acute hemorrhagic pancreatitis or ruptured ectopic pregnancy.
- Cherry red swelling suggests inflamed Meckel’s diverticulum.
MOVEMENTS OF THE ABDOMINAL WALL:
- Normally there is a gentle rise in the abdominal wall during inspiration and a fall during expiration. The movements are symmetrical.
- The abdomen bulges in diaphragmatic paralysis during expiration.
- In generalized peritonitis this movement absent or markedly diminish (the ‘still, silent abdomen’).
PULSATIONS:
- Normally, the pulsations are not visible over abdomen, but pulsation of the abdominal aorta may visible in thin and nervous patients, in the epigastrium.
- In aneurysm of abdominal aorta, this is more visible and a widened aorta felt on palpation.
PERISTALSIS:
- Peristalsis on inspection can experience only with great patience. It mark in pyloric stenosis in the epigastric region. In the same region, peristaltic wave of transverse colon can see, moving from right to left.