Bowel Obstruction ☺️ Flashcards
What are the most common causes of bowel obstructions
Small bowel – adhesions, herniae
- Crohns
- hot <= active inflammation causes strictures
- cold <= repeated inflammation causes strictures
- Gallstones - repeated cholecystitis => fistula from GB to SB
Large bowel – malignancy, diverticular disease, and volvulus
Presentation
Peristalsis against blackage =>
- Diffuse, central colicky abdo pain
- N+V (ask patient to describe the contents - billous/green)
Inability to pass anything
- constipation (reduced mv)/complete constipation (no stool or flatus)
- abdominal distension - particularly with LBO
Tinkling bowel sounds - more common in early BO
Tympanic on percussion
Tender
Investigations
- bloods
- scans
IF BO SUSPECTED - URGENT BLOODS
- FBC
- CRP
- U&E - monitor for electrolyte losses, metabolic derangement
- LFT
- G&S
- VBG - high lactate => hypoperfusion and ischemia
CT scan with IV contrast - abdo, pelvis SBO -dilated bowel 3cm+ -central -visible valvulae conniventes LBO -dilated bowel 6cm+, 9cm+ at cecum -peripheral -haustra (halfway across)
AXR
-free air under diaphragm
Management
-
Initial
-NBM, IV fluids
Conservative
- NG drainage + urinary catheter - drip and suck
- If not - gastrograffin to see if contrast reaches LB in 6hrs
Surgery => laparotomy
-when no past abdo surgery - unlikely to resolve
-suspicion of intestinal ischaemia/closed loop bowel obstruction
-strangulated hernia, obstructing tumour
-no improvement in 48hrs+ with conservative
If resection needed, re-joining of obstructed bowel is often not possible => stoma
- IV ABx - esp if perforation suspected
- urinary catheter - reduce urinary distention for surgery
Complications
Bowel ischaemia
Bowel perforation => faecal peritonitis
Dehydration and renal impairment