Tag Archives: Intestinal Obstruction

Main Symptoms of Adhesive Intestinal Obstruction

Adhesive intestinal obstruction happens when internal scar tissue tangles or kinks the bowel. Most scars come from past surgery, and symptoms can flare days to years later. Crampy belly pain is the first clue. Spasms come in waves every few minutes and feel like bad gas that won’t move. Swelling follows. The abdomen puffs up and feels tight, like an overfilled balloon. Vomiting starts early. First food, then bile-green fluid, and finally the vomit can smell like stool. No gas or stool passes. You can’t burp, pass wind, or move your bowels, even when you feel the urge. Bowel sounds... Learn more

What Are the Symptoms of Intestinal Obstruction?

The classic picture of intestinal obstruction is “pain, distension, vomiting, and absence of stool/gas.” Abdominal pain: forceful peristalsis in the proximal bowel causes colicky pain every 5–15 min; persistent severe pain suggests ischemia or perforation. Distension: gas and fluid accumulate proximal to the blockage, inflating the abdomen; low obstructions produce greater swelling and visible peristaltic waves. Vomiting: high obstructions provoke early, frequent emesis—first gastric, then bilious or feculent; low obstructions delay vomiting. Obstipation: complete obstruction abolishes flatus and stool; residual distal content may be passed early. Auscultation reveals hyperactive, high-pitched, metallic bowel sounds; peritoneal signs or systemic toxicity warn of... Learn more