- Prepare equipment: examining light, tape measure, water-soluble skin-marking pencil, stethoscope
- Empty bladder
- Short fingernails
- Warm and comfortable environment
- Hand washing
- Greet and identify the client
- Explain the procedure
- Provide client privacy
- Inquire client’s history of bowel habits
- Position the client: supine, with arms comfortable at the side, knees slightly flexed (dorsal recumbent)
- Place small pillows beneath the knees and the head to reduce abdominal tension. Only expose the area from the chest line to the pubic area.
- Assessment: Inspection
- Contour, symmetry. If distention or protrusion (protuberant) is present, measure abdominal girth. Contour may be flat or rounded (normal). Asymmetry is abnormal.
- Abdominal movements (respiration, peristalsis, aortic pulsation): diminished abdominal respirations may be abnormal. Vigorous, exaggerated pulsations are abnormal. Peristaltic waves should not be visible.
- Scars, striae, rashes, and lesions.
- Color: normally lighter than general skin tone; abnormal if purple, yellow, pale, red, or bruised.
- Vascularity: scattered fine veins; abnormal if dilated.
- Striae: silvery-white/brown; abnormal if red.
- Cullen’s sign (acute pancreatitis, ruptured ectopic pregnancy), Grey Turner’s sign (trauma, acute pancreatitis)
- Characteristics: pale, smooth, minimally raised scars, free of lesions or rashes, flat moles and surgical scars may be present. Record the length in cm and location. Good skin turgor.
- Umbilicus color, location, contour: similar to surrounding skin tones, settled midline, inverted, and round. Abnormal if everted, enlarged, or discolored.
- Patient Behavior: relaxed, quiet, relaxed facial expressions, normal respirations.
- Assessment: Auscultation
- Should be done before percussing and palpating (these alter bowel sounds). Listen for bowel sounds in all quadrants for at least one minute. One sound should be heard every 5 to 10 seconds.
- Begin from the RLQ, moving clockwise. Sounds are normally soft, intermittent, and from 5 to 30 sounds per minute.
- RLQ: ileocecal valve bowel sounds are normally present here.
- Borborygmus: stomach growling (prolonged gurgling)
- Bruit: (using the bell) over the abdominal aorta and the renal, iliac, and femoral arteries.
- Assessment: Percussion
- Note areas of tympany or dullness. Use a systematic pattern (LLQ, LRQ, URQ, and ULQ; counterclockwise). Indirect percussion is used to determine the size and location of abdominal organs, air, fluid, and muscles.
- Sounds: flat (bone, muscle), dull (heart, liver, spleen, fluid, feces), resonance (air-filled), hyperresonance (emphysematous lungs; hyperinflated), tympany (drum-like; gas in stomach or intestine)
- Percuss liver size starting from the umbilical level of the left MCL moving forward and backward to determine the liver borders.
- Normal height of the liver: 6 to 12 cm (MCL) and 4 to 8 cm (MSL). Enlargement indicates hepatomegaly.
- Spleen: 7 cm wide near the left 10th rib, slightly posterior to the LMAL.
- Kidney: blunt percussion (direct or indirect) should result in no tenderness. Inflammation and infection may be indicated if pain is produced.
- Stricken at the costovertebral angles, noting tenderness or pain.
- Assessment: Palpation
- Light palpation in all quadrants, followed by deep palpation (usually not done by nurses)
- Assess location and abdominal muscle tone
- Note for unusual masses, pulsation, tenderness, or pain.
- Abdomen: should be non-tender and soft. Abnormal findings include guarding and rigid.
- Masses: no palpable masses.
- Aorta: Palpate the aorta at or slightly above the umbilicus for contour and pulsations. Normally 2.5 to 3 cm wide with a moderately strong and regular pulse.
- Liver: bimanually palpate; under the patient’s right flank (11th to 12th rib) and press upward. Place the right hand at the level of the dullness, and have the patient take a deep breath. Normally not palpable. Mild tenderness is normal.
- Spleen: seldom palpable.
- Kidney: bimanually palpate below the umbilicus. Note the size, shape, and tenderness. Normally not palpable.
- Inguinal and Femoral Lymph Nodes palpated bilaterally. Note for enlargement.
- Contraindicated for clients with tumors of the liver and kidney
- Position the client comfortably, and inform them of findings as necessary.
- Wash hands and document the procedure.