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Abdominal Pain Common in Childhood, Adolescence

(HealthDay News)
by -- Jane Parry
Updated: Oct 16th 2009

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FRIDAY, Oct. 16 (HealthDay News) -- Both children and adolescents frequently experience abdominal pain, and it is a common cause of a visit to the doctor, according to a study in the October issue of Clinical Gastroenterology and Hepatology.

Ilja Juliane Dorothee Schwille, of the University Hospital Tuebingen in Germany, and colleagues analyzed data from the German Health Interview and Examination Survey for Children and Adolescents to ascertain the prevalence of abdominal pain. The survey was given to 7,697 adolescents aged 11 to 17 years and the parents of 7,544 children aged 3 to 10 years.

The three-month prevalence rates of abdominal pain decreased with age, from 69.3 percent in children to 59.6 percent in adolescents, and abdominal pain affected girls more than boys in both age groups, and migrants more than locals, the investigators found. Abdominal pain led to a doctor's visit for 51.6 percent of the children and 38.5 percent of the adolescents, and medication was prescribed to 22.6 and 39.2 percent of the respondents, respectively.

"We conclude that high abdominal pain prevalence, strong health care use, and considerable restrictions in daily life as a result of abdominal pain necessitate further studies to develop, among others, concepts for prevention of chronification," the authors write. "The complex biopsychosocial influences on abdominal pain such as migration background and socioeconomic status should be kept in mind."

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