Many things can cause abdominal pain, including kidney stones, constipation, appendicitis, colon cancer, etc. If there is visible blood in your urine, it's a kidney stone, and that will probably pass by itself, especially if you drink lots of water. You can try a laxative to rule out constipation. Those are the easy ones. For more difficult medical problems you will need the help of a doctor. If it is appendicitis, that is life-threatening and you would need medical attention immediately.
Usually a sharp pain in the lower right part of the abdomen.
Typically appendicitis pain is on the right side slightly above the pelvis. It can be higher in some individuals. Raise up on the ball of the right foot and let the heel drop down. It will typically cause a sharp pain in that area. Consult a doctor!
appendicitis
lower abdomen
The average uterus is approximately the size of a fist and is located in the center in the lowest part of your abdomen near the bladder.
In the appendix, which is located in the lower right-hand part of the abdomen.
Please understand that you can't be diagnosed online, sight unseen or by some one other than an NP, PA, DO or MD. You haven't been specific about the location of your pain. I realize you said "stomach pain" but your stomach is in the upper, left quadrant of your abdomen. There's no real way for a patient to identify an exact part of the stomach that has pain. Is the pain to the right or left of the naval, above or below the naval? The lower abdomen is divided into a left and right. You didn't state which side of your abdomen the pain is in. You haven't said how long you've had the pain, how intense it is, if it's constant, comes & goes or described the quality of the pain (achy, sharp, dull, throbbing, burning). I can't know if your abdomen is distended, tender or if you have normal bowel sounds. A lack of useful information makes your question difficult to answer. If pain and nausea are your only symptoms (fatigue can be due to pain), consider gas and try a simethicone product. If after 3 days, you still have pain or if your symptoms have worsened I suggest you see your doctor.
Pain in the lower left quadrant of the abdomen could be diverticular disease, constipation, or colon polyps or tumors. For females it could signal cysts on left ovary, mid-cycle pain or ectopic pregnancy. It could also be an inguinal hernia.
'Diffuse' means "spread out," so diffuse abdominal pain is pain that encompasses the entire abdomen and is not limited to one certain part of the abdomen.
'Diffuse' means "spread out," so diffuse abdominal pain is pain that encompasses the entire abdomen and is not limited to one certain part of the abdomen.
Gallstones are stones that accumulate in the gallbladder or bile ducts. Appendicitis refers to the very painful inflammation of the appendix. Both pains are on the right side, but gallbladder pain is up under the ribs, while appendix pain is on the lower right side.
See a doctor. Do not rely on public opinion for your health.