9 - GI Emergencies Flashcards
What is the key feature of peritonitis?
- Diffuse abdominal pain that will be sudden if perforated viscus
- Patient will often lie very still and any movement is very painful. Shallow breathing and flexed knees
- Control the infectious source, eliminate bacteria and support organs
What is the difference between primary and secondary peritonitis?
Primary: spontaneous infection of ascitic fluid. vomiting, abdominal pain and fever
Secondary: results from inflammatory process leading to perforation or gangrene of abdominal viscera, e.g appendicitis, peptic ulcer disease, ovarian cyst, tubal pregnancy
How does a cirrhotic liver lead to ascites?
- Portal hypertension increases hydrostatic pressure in the veins draining the gut
- Decreased liver function so less albumin production so lower oncotic pressure holding in fluid
What are the common causes of bowel obstruction?
Adults: post op adhesions, incarcerated hernias
Children: intussusception, intestinal atreisa, meconium ileus
What is intussusception, how does it cause bowel obstruction and how do you treat it?
- One segment of the bowel telescopes into the other, usually due to a mass like an enlarged lymph node or Meckel’s diverticulum
- Lymphatic and venous drainage can be impaired and you get oedema and infarction
- Abdominal pain, vomiting, haematochezia
- Air enema or surgery
What is the common presentation of small bowel obstruction?
- Start sudddenly with peri-umbilical pain, nausea and vomiting
- Abdomen tender and distended
- High pitched bowel sounds
- Late absolute constipation
- Usually due to abdominal adhesions
How can we diagnose a small bowel obstruction?
- History of abdominal pain
- Physical examination: high pitched bowel sounds, presence of hernia, abdominal distension
- Image with x-ray to see distended loops
What is the common causes of large bowel obstruction?
- Colorectal cancer
- Volvulus
- Strictures from diverticulitis
Most occur distal to splenic flexure
What are some common symptoms of large bowel obstruction?
- Periumbilical or suprapubic pain
- Abdominal distension and pain
- Nausea/vomiting
- Constipation then diarrhoea
Where are the most common areas for a volvulus to occur?
- Caecum
- Sigmoid
Overloaded sigmoid from constipation can twist on its axis
What are the differences between small and large bowel obstruction?
- Small bowel tends to be younger age group than large
Who is more at risk of acute mesenteric ischaemia and what can it be caused by?
- More common in females, elderly and peripheral vascular disease
Caused by:
- Emboli in SMA
- Arterial or venous thrombosis
- Vasculitis
- Vasoconstriction
How does acute mesenteric ischaemia present?
- Difficult to detect
- Abdominal pain disproportionate to clinical findings
- Fever, diarrhoea, nausea and haematochezia
- Pain often left sided as splenic flexure is fragile
How would you investigate and treat a suspected acute mesenteric ischaemia?
- Blood test for metabolic acidosis/increased lactate levels
- Erect CXR for perforation
- CT angiography
- Surgery to resect ischaemic bowel
- Surgical embolectomy
- Thrombolytic agents
What are the common causes for upper GI bleeding?
- Peptic ulcers (gastric antrum/lesser curve > duodenal)
- Varices
Most upper GI bleeds stop spontaneously