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Chronic abdominal pain

Last updated: June 3, 2026

Summarytoggle arrow icon

Chronic abdominal pain is constant or recurring abdominal pain lasting ≥ 3 months. The most common causes are disorders of gut-brain interaction, such as irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) and functional dyspepsia, followed by organic diseases of the viscera and disorders of the abdominal wall. A targeted clinical evaluation is required to identify red flags in chronic abdominal pain (e.g., unexplained weight loss, symptom onset over 50 years of age) and to help narrow the differential diagnoses. Initial laboratory studies are based on clinical suspicion; imaging and endoscopy may be necessary. Management is based on the underlying cause. Management of persistent pain in disorders of gut-brain interaction is multimodal and can include nonpharmacological management and central neuromodulators.

For acute pain, see "Acute abdomen."

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Definitionstoggle arrow icon

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Etiologytoggle arrow icon

Disorders of gut-brain interaction are the most common cause of chronic abdominal pain. [3]

Disorders of gut-brain interaction (nociplastic pain) [1][4]

Intra-abdominal (visceral pain) [1][4]

Gastrointestinal

Non-gastrointestinal

Abdominal wall [1][4]

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Clinical evaluationtoggle arrow icon

Focused history [1][4]

Chronic pancreatitis, malignancy, abscess, and psychiatric conditions can cause constant chronic abdominal pain. Other causes of chronic abdominal pain typically manifest with intermittent pain. [1]

Focused examination [1][4]

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Red flags for chronic abdominal pain toggle arrow icon

The following features raise suspicion for structural disease and may warrant an expedited or specialized evaluation. [1][4]

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Diagnosistoggle arrow icon

Approach [1][4]

Red flags in chronic abdominal pain may warrant an expedited and/or specialized evaluation. [1][4]

Disorders of gut-brain interaction can only be diagnosed after excluding structural disease.

Laboratory studies [1][4]

Imaging [1][4]

Imaging in chronic abdominal pain is obtained selectively for patients with red flags in chronic abdominal pain, abnormal examination, and/or laboratory findings.

Repeat imaging is discouraged if clinical features have not changed. [1][4]

Additional studies [1][4]

Further testing under the direction of specialists is tailored to the clinical presentation, e.g.:

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Common causestoggle arrow icon

Common causes of chronic abdominal pain [1][4]
Condition Characteristic clinical features Diagnostic findings Management
Irritable bowel syndrome [5]
Functional dyspepsia [6]
  • Chronic or recurrent epigastric pain or burning sensation
  • Postprandial fullness or early satiety
Gastroesophageal reflux disease [7]
Peptic ulcer disease [8]
Inflammatory bowel disease [9][10]
Chronic pancreatitis [11]
Chronic abdominal wall pain [4]
  • Sharp pain, often localized in an area < 2 cm
  • Unrelated to eating or bowel function
  • Clearly related to movement
  • Management of the underlying cause (e.g., nerve entrapment, hernia)
  • Therapeutic nerve blocks
Endometriosis [12][13]
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Managementtoggle arrow icon

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Persistent pain in disorders of gut-brain interaction toggle arrow icon

General principles [3]

  • Use a culturally sensitive and patient-centered approach.
    • Validate the patient's pain experience and align on shared goals (e.g., function, quality of life).
    • Set realistic expectations focused on symptom improvement and functional gains.
  • Avoid escalation of testing or medications in the absence of a clear benefit.
  • Introduce nonpharmacological treatment (e.g., brain-gut psychotherapy) early in care.
  • Optimize symptomatic management based on the underlying disease.
  • Consider central neuromodulators.

Avoid opioid therapy for treatment of chronic abdominal pain. [3]

Brain-gut psychotherapy [3]

Central neuromodulators [3]

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