Archive/Constipation in the Pediatric Emergency Department: Clinical Presentations, Diagnostic Context and Testing Patterns
Constipation in the Pediatric Emergency Department: Clinical Presentations, Diagnostic Context and Testing Patterns
Julia Leszkowicz, Kinga Miaśkiewicz, Marcin Wieczorek et al.
July 2, 2026
en

Abstract

Background: Constipation in children often presents with non-specific symptoms, which can complicate its recognition in the pediatric emergency department (PED). Aim: This study aimed to characterize the clinical presentations, diagnostic context and testing patterns of children discharged with constipation from a tertiary pediatric emergency center. Methods: A retrospective analysis of medical records of patients under 18 years of age was conducted for patients who presented to the PED of a tertiary hospital in northern Poland from 2021–2024 and were ultimately discharged as K59.0 ICD-10 code (constipation). Demographic data, symptoms reported upon admission, and laboratory and imaging tests performed were collected and reviewed. Results: PED visits discharged with ICD-10 code K59.0 accounted for 2.97% of all 34,278 PED visits during study period. Among 1017 patients discharged with ICD-10 code K59.0, only 26.5% reported constipation as their main complaint. The most common complaints were abdominal pain (61.6%), vomiting (14.4%), and urinary symptoms (4.9%). Commonly suspected initial diagnoses were urinary tract infections or acute appendicitis. More complete documentation of constipation-related symptoms showed an exploratory association with less intensive diagnostic testing. Conclusions: Constipation should be routinely considered in children presenting to the PED with abdominal pain, vomiting, urinary symptoms, or rectal bleeding, even when bowel problems are not the main complaint. Structured history taking supported by simple diagnostic tools could help standardize assessment and support patient selection for further testing, although prospective studies are needed to determine clinical outcomes.

IPC Classification

G06A61

Keywords

constipationpediatricemergencydepartmentclinicalpresentationsdiagnosticcontexttestingpatternsdiseasesbackgroundchildrenoftenpresentsnon-specificsymptomswhichcomplicaterecognitionaimedcharacterizedischargedtertiary
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