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Symptom guide

Abdominal Bloating: Imaging-Related Causes Doctors May Consider

Abdominal Bloating is a common symptom search that can overlap with several organs or body systems. Imaging is usually ordered when clinicians need structural clues that fit the rest of the history and exam. On its own, a symptom usually does not point to one single imaging answer, so doctors look at timing, severity, exam findings, and whether follow-up testing is needed. If imaging is performed, pages like Adrenal Adenoma help explain the report terms that may follow.

Educational overview only. Imaging findings, clinician review, and the full clinical picture matter more than a symptom page alone.

What doctors may do next

When the symptom is persistent, severe, or worsening

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What this symptom page is best for

Use this page to understand why certain imaging findings may come up during a workup for abdominal bloating: imaging-related causes doctors may consider. If you already have a report, the linked finding and phrase pages below usually give a more precise plain-English explanation, especially wording like "Cholelithiasis without evidence of acute cholecystitis.."

Possible causes doctors may consider

  • Gallstones

    Gallstones is one of the imaging findings that can become relevant when abdominal bloating is being worked up.

  • Liver Lesion

    Liver Lesion is one of the imaging findings that can become relevant when abdominal bloating is being worked up.

  • Diverticulitis

    Diverticulitis is one of the imaging findings that can become relevant when abdominal bloating is being worked up.

When imaging may be ordered

  • When the symptom is persistent, severe, or worsening
  • When exam findings or labs raise concern for a structural cause
  • When clinicians need imaging to separate overlapping causes in the same region

How concerning it can be

Concern depends on how severe or persistent the symptom is, what else is happening clinically, and whether imaging shows a matching explanation. Symptom pages are educational and should not be used to judge urgency without clinician input.

Related radiology findings

Related report phrase explanations

Related symptom guides

Keep exploring related pages

Clear medical disclaimer

Educational information only. Symptoms should be evaluated by a clinician, especially if severe, new, or rapidly worsening.

Important Notice

Educational use only. RadDx does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, treatment, or clinician supervision.

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