A duodenal ulcer typically presents with rhythmic, gnawing or burning epigastric pain that appears 2–3 h after meals or during the night and is promptly relieved by food, milk or antacids. Many patients also note early satiety, bloating, nausea and occasional retching; weight loss may occur because pain discourages eating. Pain can radiate to the back, and if an ulcer penetrates posteriorly it may cause continuous, non-relenting backache. Complications include sudden, severe, diffuse abdominal pain with board-like rigidity (perforation) or passage of black, tarry stools (bleeding). Alarm features—persistent vomiting, unexplained weight loss, anaemia, or recent onset of progressive symptoms—require urgent evaluation to exclude malignancy.
| Symptom group | Typical features | Key clues |
|---|---|---|
| Epigastric pain | Burning/gnawing, 2–3 h post-prandial or nocturnal, relieved by food/antacid | Rhythmic pattern |
| Dyspepsia | Early satiety, bloating, nausea | Meal-related |
| Weight loss | Reduced intake due to anticipated pain | Pain-food cycle |
| Back pain | Deep, continuous if posterior penetration | Non-relenting |
| Alarm signs | Vomiting, melena, anaemia, progressive symptoms | Complication/malignancy risk |