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us Health & medical scares worsening lower right abdominal pain • right lower quadrant pain getting worse • lower right belly pain steadily worsening • constant rlq pain • sharp pain lower right abdomen • pain near navel moving to right • suspected appendicitis symptoms • possible appendix inflammation • right side abdominal pain and nausea • right lower abdominal pain and fever • pain worse when walking or coughing • abdominal tenderness right lower side • vomiting with right lower pain • could be pregnant right sided pain • pelvic pain right side uncertainty • severe belly pain unsure cause • worsening stomach pain not improving • emergency evaluation for abdominal pain

What to do if…
you develop steadily worsening pain in the lower right side of your abdomen

Short answer

Steadily worsening lower-right abdominal pain needs urgent evaluation today—often in an Emergency Department. If the pain is severe or rapidly worsening, or you’re faint/very unwell, go to the ER now or call 911.

Do not do these things

  • Do not “sleep it off” if the pain is worsening over hours.
  • Do not eat a large meal while you’re arranging urgent evaluation.
  • Do not take laxatives, use enemas, or try to “push through constipation.”
  • Do not use heat in a way that could mask how quickly the pain is worsening (and do not let it delay you going in).
  • Do not drive yourself if you feel faint, weak, confused, very unwell, or the pain is severe.
  • Do not start leftover antibiotics or new medications to “test it.” If you take pain relief, keep it minimal and record what you took and when.

What to do now

  1. Choose the safest level of care (now).
    • Call 911 or go to the ER immediately if: pain is severe, becomes suddenly worse, you have fainting/near-fainting, confusion, trouble breathing, repeated vomiting, or you look/feel seriously ill.
    • If it’s steadily worsening but you’re stable, the ER is often the right choice because appendicitis and other urgent conditions commonly need an exam plus labs/imaging that many urgent cares can’t do on-site.
  2. If pregnancy is possible (even uncertain): treat this as ER-level today. Go now—especially if abdominal/pelvic pain comes with vaginal bleeding, shoulder-tip pain, weakness, dizziness, or fainting. If you’re faint/unsafe to travel, call 911.
  3. Avoid large meals; take small sips of water if you need to. Avoid alcohol. If you have diabetes or need medications with food, keep yourself safe and tell the ER what you’ve taken.
  4. Make a quick symptom timeline (take it with you). Start time, location, whether it moved, how it’s changed, nausea/vomiting, bowel changes, fever/chills, urinary symptoms, vaginal bleeding/discharge, last period/pregnancy possibility, and any surgeries/conditions.
  5. Bring essentials and reduce delays. Photo ID/insurance card (if you have them), medication/allergy list, phone charger. If you can, ask someone to drive you and stay reachable.
  6. If you must wait briefly for transport: rest in a position of comfort and re-check yourself for escalation (faintness, spreading/severe pain, worsening vomiting, confusion). If any appear, call 911.

What can wait

  • You do not need to diagnose yourself (appendicitis vs. ovarian vs. kidney stone vs. bowel issues).
  • You do not need to finish work, errands, or “see if it passes after dinner.”
  • You do not need to decide on CT/ultrasound, surgery, or treatment choices until you’ve been evaluated and the risks are explained.

Important reassurance

It’s reasonable to feel alarmed by pain in this area—seeking care promptly is a protective move, not an overreaction. Many causes are treatable, and early evaluation helps prevent complications.

Scope note

This is first-step guidance for the next few hours. The right tests and treatment depend on an in-person exam and, often, labs/imaging.

Important note

This guide is general information and not medical advice or a diagnosis. If symptoms are severe or worsening, seek emergency care immediately.

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