Background
Emergency laparoscopic exploration can be used to identify the causative pathology of acute abdominal pain. Laparoscopic surgery
also allows treatment of many intraabdominal disorders. This report was prepared to describe the effectiveness of laparoscopic
surgery compared to laparotomy or nonoperative treatment.
Methods
A panel of European experts in abdominal and gynecological surgery was assembled and participated in a consensus conference
using Delphi methods. The aim was to develop evidence-based recommendations for the most common diseases that may cause acute
abdominal pain.
Recommendations
Laparoscopic surgery was found to be clearly superior for patients with a presumable diagnosis of perforated peptic ulcer,
acute cholecystitis, appendicitis, or pelvic inflammatory disease. In the emergency setting, laparoscopy is of unclear or
limited value if adhesive bowel obstruction, acute diverticulitis, nonbiliary pancreatitis, hernia incarceration, or mesenteric
ischemia are suspected. In stable patients with acute abdominal pain, noninvasive diagnostics should be fully exhausted before
considering explorative surgery. However, diagnostic laparoscopy may be useful if no diagnosis can be found by conventional
diagnostics. More clinical data are needed on the use of laparoscopy after blunt or penetrating trauma of the abdomen.
Conclusions
Due to diagnostic and therapeutic advantages, laparoscopic surgery is useful for the majority of conditions underlying acute
abdominal pain, but noninvasive diagnostic aids should be exhausted first. Depending on symptom severity, laparoscopy should
be advocated if routine diagnostic procedures have failed to yield results.
Paper presented at the 13th International Congress of the European Association for Endoscopic Surgery (EAES), Venice, Italy,
June 2005
S. Sauerland and E. A. M. Neugebauer are the Conference organizers on behalf of the Scientific Committee of the European Association
for Endoscopic Surgery (EAES), c/o EAES Office, P.O. Box 335, 5500 AH Veldhoven, The Netherlands