Bowel Perforation Flashcards
Where can bowel perforation occur?
Any location from the oesophagus to the rectum
What is the most common causes of bowel perforation?
Peptic ulcers (gastric / duodenal) & Sigmoid diverticulum
What are inflammatory causes of perforation?
Chemical
- Peptic ulcer disease
- Foreign body (e.g. battery or caustic soda)
Infection
- Diverticulitis
- Cholecystitis
- Meckel’s Diverticulum
Colitis
- Toxic megacolon (e.g. C. diff, Ulcerative Colitis)
What are ischaemic causes of bowel perforation?
- Mesenteric Ischaemia
- Ischaemia and necrosis due to obstruction
Give examples of traumatic causes of bowel perforation.
Iatrogenic
- Recent surgery (including anastomotic leak)
- Endoscopy / overzealous NG tube insertion
Penetrating or blunt trauma
- Shear forces from acceleration-deceleration
- High forces over small surface area (e.g. a handle bar)
Direct rupture
- Excessive vomiting leading to oesophageal perforation (Boerhaave Syndrome)
What are symptoms of bowel perforation?
- Pain
- Rapid onset
- Sharp in nature
- Symptoms of systemic illness
- Malaise
- Vomiting
- Lethargy
What are the signs of bowel perforation, found on examination?
- Patients will look unwell
- Features of sepsis
- Tachycardia, Tachypnoea, High temp, Low BP
- Features of peritonism (Localised / Generalised)
- Rigid abdomen
- Staying very still
What is implied if a patient is peritionitic throughout their abdomen & what action needs to be taken?
This implies generalised contamination & they will almost always need urgent surgery.
What is the presentation of thoracic perforation, such as in oesophageal rupture?
Symptoms
-
Pain
- From chest or neck
- May radiate to the back
- Worse on inspiration
- Associated vomiting and respiratory symptoms.
Signs
- Signs of pleural effusion on auscultation and percussion
- Palpable crepitus potentially
What are important differentials to consider with a presentation of bowel perforation?
- Acute pancreatitis
- Myocardial infarction
- Tubo-ovarian pathology
- Ruptured aortic aneurysm
What lab tests would you order when investigating a suspected case of bowel perforation?
- Baseline blood tests, including G&S.
- Raised WCC and CRP are common features
- Dependent on timing and degree of contamination
- Amylase often mildly elevated in perforation (although non-specific)
- Urinalysis
* To exclude both renal & tubo-ovarian pathology.
What imaging may you order when investigating a suspected case of bowel perforation?
- Erect chest radiograph (eCXR)
- Can show free air under the diaphragm
- Pneumomediastinum / widened mediastinum may also be present if the perforation is thoracic in origin.
- CT (Gold standard for diagnosis of any perforation)
- To confirm any free air presence
- To suggest a location of the perforation & a possible underlying cause
What is Rigler’s sign?
Also known as the double-wall sign:
It’s a sign of pneumoperitoneum seen on AXR when both sides of the bowel wall can be seen, due to free intra-abdominal air acting as an additional contrast.
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What is Psoas sign?
Loss of the sharp delineation of the psoas muscle border, secondary to fluid in the retroperitoneum.
What is the initial management of a patient with bowel perforation?
Warrants early assessment, rapid diagnosis and early definitive treatment:
- Start broad spectrum antibiotics early
- NBM
- Consider NG tube
- IV fluids and analgesia
- Move onto highly individualised management, taking into account the site of perforation and patient factors