chapter 35: small bowel. Flashcards

1
Q

intestine: nutrient and water absorption

A

small intestine

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
2
Q

intestine: water absorption

A

large intestine

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
3
Q

portions of the duodenum

A
  • bulb (1st portion) - 90% of ulcers here
  • descending (2nd) - contains ampulla of Vater (duct of wirsung) and duct of santorini
  • transverse (3rd)
  • ascending (4th)
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
4
Q

portions of the duodenum that are retroperitoneal

A

descending and transverse portions

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
5
Q

transition point of the 3rd and 4th portions of the duodenum

A

acute angle between the aorta (posterior) and SMA (anterior)

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
6
Q

vascular supply duodenum

A

superior (off gastroduodenal artery) and inferior (off SMA) pancreaticoduodenal arteries

  • both have anterior and posterior branches
  • many communications between these arteries
How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
7
Q

100 cm long; long vasa recta, circular muscle folds

  • absorbs 95% NaCl and 90% water
  • vascular supply: SMA
A

Jejunum

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
8
Q

maximum site of all absorption except for b12 (terminal ileum), bile acids (ileum - non conjugated; terminal ileum - conjugated), iron (duodenum) and folate (terminal ileum)

A

jejunum

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
9
Q

150 cm long, short vasa recta, flat

- vascular supply: sma

A

ileum

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
10
Q

what is absorbed at the intestinal brush border?

A

maltase, sucrase, limit dextrinase, lactase

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
11
Q

normal sizes: small bowel / transverse colon / cecum

A

3 / 6 / 9 cm

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
12
Q

SMA eventually branches into the…

A

ileocolic artery

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
13
Q

cell types of the small intestine

A

absorptive cells, goblet cells (mucin secretion), paneth cells (secretory granules, enzymes), enterochromaffin cells, runner’s glands, peyer’s patches, m cells

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
14
Q

What do goblet cells secrete?

A

mucin secretion

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
15
Q

What do paneth cells secrete?

A

secretory granules, enzymes

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
16
Q

What do enterochromaffin cells secrete?

A

APUD, 5-hydroxytryptamine release, carcinoid precursor

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
17
Q

What do brunner’s cells secrete?

A

alkaline solution

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
18
Q

What do M cells secrete?

A

antigen-presenting cells in intestinal wall

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
19
Q

released into the gut; also in mother’s milk

A

IgA

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
20
Q

small bowel has both heme and Fe transporters

A

Fe

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
21
Q

where is iron absorbed?

A

duodenum

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
22
Q

where is folate absorbed?

A

terminal ileum

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
23
Q

where is b12 absorbed?

A

terminal ileum

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
24
Q

where are bile acids absorbed?

A
  • ileum: non conjugated

- terminal ileum: conjugated

How well did you know this?
1
Not at all
2
3
4
5
Perfectly
25
what are the phases of migrating motor complex (gut motility)?
phase 1: rest 2: acceleration and gallbladder contraction 3: peristalsis 4: deceleration
26
Most important hormone in migrating motor complex (Acts on phase 3)
motilin
27
percent of bile salts reabsorbed
95%
28
how are bile salts reabsorbed?
- 50% passive absorption (non-conjguated bile salts) - 45% ileum, 5% - 50% active resorption (conjugated bile salts) in terminal ileum (Na/K ATPase); conjugated bile salts are absorbed only in the terminal ileum
29
When do gallstones form?
gallstones form after terminal ileum resection from malabsorption of bile salts
30
how is diagnosis of short-gut syndrome made?
symptoms; not length of bowel
31
diarrhea, steatorrhea, weight loss, nutritional deficiency | - lose fat, B12, electrolytes, water
short-gut syndrome
32
stains: checks for fecal fat
sudan red stain
33
test: checks for b12 absorption (radiolabeled b12 in urine)
schilling test
34
how much bowel do you need to survive off TPN?
75 cm to survive off TPN; 50 cm with competent ileocecal valve
35
Tx: short gut syndrome
restrict fat, ppi to reduce acid, lomotil (diphenoxylate and atropine)
36
causes of steatorrhea
- gastric hyper secretion of acid | - interruption of bile salt resorption
37
how does gastric hyper secretion of acid cause steatorrhea?
decreased pH-> increased intestinal motility; interferes with fat absorption
38
how does interruption of bile salt resorption cause steatorrhea?
(eg terminal ileum resection) interferes with micelle formation and fat absorption
39
Tx: steatorrhea
control diarrhea (lomotil); decrease oral intake, especially fats, pancreas, ppi
40
causes of non healing fistulas
FRIENDS: fistulas, radiation, inflammatory bowel disease, epithelialization, neoplasm, distal obstruction, sepsis/infection
41
characteristics of high-output fistulas
- more likely with proximal bowel (duodenum or proximal jejunum) - less likely to close with conservative management
42
colonic fistulas vs small bowel | - which are more likely to close?
colonic fistulas are more likely to close than those in small bowel
43
nonhealing fistula: patients with persistent fever
need to check for abscess (fistulogram, abdominal CT, upper GI with small bowel follow through)
44
treatment: fistulas
most fistulas are iatrogenic and treated conservatively first: NPO, TPN, skin protection (stoma appliance), octreotide
45
how do most non healing fistulas close?
majority close spontaneously without surgery
46
surgical options of non healing fistulas
resect bowel segment containing fistula and perform primary anastomosis
47
MCC obstruction without previous surgery
Small bowel: hernia | Large bowel: cancer
48
MCC obstruction with previous surgery
Small bowel: adhesions | Large bowel: cancer
49
- pain: intermittent, intense, colicky; often relieved with vomiting - vomiting: large volumes, bilious, frequent - tenderness: epigastric or periumbilical; quite mild unless strangulated - distention: absent - obstipation: may not be present
proximal small bowel obstruction (open loop)
50
- pain: intermittent to constant - vomiting: low volume and frequency; progressively feculent with time - tenderness: diffuse and progressive - distention: moderate to marked - obstipation: present
Distal small bowel obstruction (open loop)
51
- pain: progressive, intermittent constant; rapidly worsens - vomiting: may be prominent (reflex) - tenderness: diffuse, progressive - distention: often absent - obstipation: may not be present
small bowel obstruction (closed loop)
52
- pain: continuous - vomiting: intermittent, not prominent; feculent when present - tenderness: diffuse - distention: marked - obstipation: present
colon and rectum obstruction
53
type of bowel obstruction with no distention
proximal small bowel (open loop)
54
AXR: obstruction
air-fluid level, distended loops of small bowel, distal decompression
55
tx: 3rd spacing of fluid into bowel lumen with obstruction
need aggressive fluid resuscitaiton
56
why is there air with bowel obstruction?
from swallowed nitrogen
57
tx: bowel obstruction
bowel rest, NGT, IVF, -> cures 80% of partial SBO, 40% of complete SBO
58
obstruction: surgical indications
progressing pain, peritoneal signs, fever, increasing WBCs (all signs of strangulation or perforation), or failure to resolve
59
small bowel obstruction from gallstone usually in the terminal ileum
gallstone ileus
60
imaging: what do you see in gallstone ileus?
classically see air in the biliary tree in a patient with small bowel obstruction
61
what causes gallstone ileus?
caused by a fistula between the gallbladder and second portion of duodenum
62
tx: gallstone ileus
remove stone from terminal ileum - can leave gallbladder and fistula if patient too sick - if not too sick, perform cholecystectomy and close duodenum
63
2 ft from ileocecal valve 2% of population usually presents in 1st 2 years of life with bleeding; is a true diverticulum - accounts for 50% of all painless lower GI bleeds in children
meckel's diverticulum
64
what causes meckel's diverticulum?
caused by failure of closure of the omphalomesenteric duct
65
most common tissue found in meckel's (can cause diverticulitis)
pancreas tissue
66
most likely to be symptomatic (bleeding most common) - tissue in meckel's diverticulum
gastric mucosa
67
two types of tissue in meckel's diverticulum
pancreatic and gastric tissue
68
adults: MC presentation of meckel's diverticulum
obstruction
69
when do you remove meckel's diverticulum?
incidental -> usually not removed unless gastric mucosa suspected (diverticulum feels thick) or has a very narrow neck
70
dx: meckel's diverticulum
can get a meckel's scan (99Tc) if having trouble localizing (mucosa lights up)
71
Tx: meckel's diverticulum
diverticulotomy for uncomplicated diverticulitis or bleeding - Need segmental resection for complicated diverticulitis (e.g. perforation), neck has > 1/3 the diameter of the normal bowel lumen, or if diverticulitis involves the base
72
what do you need to rule out in duodenal diverticula?
gallbladder-duodenal fistula
73
primary management: duodenal diverticula
observation unless perforated, bleeding, causing obstruction, or highly symptomatic
74
Frequency of duodenal diverticula
Duodenal > jejunal > ileal
75
Tx: duodenal diverticula
Segmental resection if symptomatic. - if juxta-ampullary usually can't get resection and need choledochojejunostomy for biliary or ERCP with stent for pancreatitis symptoms (Avoid Whipple here)
76
inflammatory bowel disease causing intermittent abdominal pain, diarrhea and weight loss; can also cause bowel obstructions and fistulas. - 15-35 years old at 1st presentation; in Ashkenazi Jews
Crohn's Disease
77
portion of alimentary where crohn's occurs
can occur anywhere from mouth to anus; usually spares rectum
78
extraintestinal manifestations of crohn's
arthritis, arthralgias, pyoderma gangrenosum, erythema nodosum, ocular diseases, growth failure, megaloblastic anemia from folate and vitamin b12 malabsorption.
79
crohn's: most commonly involved bowel segment
terminal ileum
80
crohn's: 1st presentation in 5%
anal / perianal disease - Tx: flagyl - anal disease most common symptom: large skin tags
81
crohn's disease: most common sites for initial presentation
- terminal ileum and cecum: 40% - colon only: 35% - small bowel only: 20% - perianal: 5%
82
Dx: crohn's disease
colonoscopy with biopsies and enteroclysis can help make the diagnosis
83
pathology: crohn's disease
transmural involvement, segmental disease (skip lesions), cobblestoning, narrow deep ulcers, creeping fat, fistulas
84
medical treatment: crohn's
5-ASA and loperamide for maintenance; steroids for acute flares - remicade (infliximab; TNF-alpha inhibitor) - for fistulas or steroid-resistant disease
85
crohn's: agents affecting natural course of disease
no agents affect natural course of disease
86
may induce remission and fistula closure with small bowel crohn's disease
TPN
87
percent of patient needing operation in crohn's
90%
88
surgical indications: crohn's disease
``` obstruction abscess megacolon hemorrhage blind loop obstruction fissures fistulas: enterocutnaeous, perineal, anarectovaginal ```
89
margins in crohn's surgery
do not need clear margins; just get 2cm away from gross disease with surgery
90
obstruction: crohn's
often partial and can be initially treated conservatively
91
abscess: crohn's
usually treated with percutaneous drainage
92
megacolon: crohn's
perforations occurs in 15%; usually contained
93
hemorrhage: crohn's
unusual in crohn's but can occur
94
blind loop obstruction: crohn's
need resection
95
fissures: crohn's
no lateral internal sphincteroplasty in patients with crohn's disease
96
enterocutaneous fistula: crohn's
can usually be treated conservatively
97
perineal fistula: crohn's
unroof and rule out abscess; let heal on its own
98
anorectovaginal fistula: crohn's
may need rectal advancement flap; possible colostomy
99
chron's: management of patients with diffuse disease of colon
proctocolectomy and ileostomy the procedures of choice (no pouches or ilio-anal anastomosis with crohn's)
100
tx: incidental finding of IBD in patient with presumed appendicitis who has normal appendix
remove appendix is cecum not involved (avoids future confounding diagnosis)
101
crohn's: - consider if patient has multiple bowel strictures to save bowel length - probably not good for patient's 1st operation as it leaves disease behind
stricturoplasty (longitudinal incision through stricture, close transversely)
102
complications of stricturoplasty
10% leakage/abscess/fistula rate with stricturoplasty (all of which can usually be treated conservatively)
103
recurrence rate requiring surgery for Crohn's disease after resection
50% recurrence rate
104
chron's: complications from removal of terminal ileum
- decreased b12 uptake can result in megaloblastic anemia - decreased bile salt uptake causes osmotic diarrhea (bile salts) and steatorrhea (fat) in colon - decreased oxalate binding (calcium oxalate kidney stones - hyperoxaluria) - gallstones
105
chron's: mechanisms of megaloblastic anemia
decreased b12 uptake
106
crohn's: mechanism of osmotic diarrhea and steatorrhea
decreased bile salt uptake
107
crohn's: mechanism of hyperoxaluria (calcium oxalate kidney stones)
decreased oxalate binding to calcium secondary to increased intraluminal fat (fat binds Ca) -> oxalate then gets absorbed in the colon -> released in urine -> calcium oxalate kidney stones
108
crohns: mechanism of gallstones
can form after terminal ileum resection from malabsorption of bile salts
109
what produces serotonin in carcinoid?
kulchitsky cells (enterochromaffin cell or argentaffin cell)
110
what is serotonin (carcinoid) a part of?
part of amine precursor uptake decarboxylase system (APUD)
111
breakdown product of serotonin - can measure this in urine
5-hiaa
112
what does carcinoid tumor release?
serotonin | bradykinin
113
carcinoid: caused by bulky liver metastases
carcinoid syndrome (intermittent flushing - kallikrein ; diarrhea - serotonin)
114
hallmark symptoms of carcinoid syndrome
``` intermittent flushing (kallikrein) diarrhea (Serotonin) ``` - can also get asthma-type symptoms (bradykinin) and right heart valve lesions
115
what do you think about: if patient has carcinoid syndrome with small bowel carcinoid primary
it indicates metastasis to liver (liver usually clears serotonin)
116
carcinoid syndrome: what do you do if you perform resection of liver metastases
perform cholecystectomy in case of future embolization
117
carcinoid: best for localizing tumor not seen on ct scan
octreotide
118
highest sensitivity for detecting a carcinoid tumor
chromogranin a level
119
most common site for carcinoid tumor (50% of carcinoids arise here)
appendix carcinoid (ileum and rectum next most common)
120
carcinoid: site where patients are at increased risk for multiple primaries and second unrelated malignancies
small bowel carcinoid
121
tx: carcinoid in appendix | - 2cm or involving base
- 2 cm or involving base: right hemicolectomy
122
tx: carcinoid anywhere else in GI tract aside from appendix
treat like cancer (segmental resection with lymphadenectomy)
123
chemotherapy for carcinoid
streptozocin and 5FU; usually just for unresectable disease
124
useful for carcinoid syndrome palliation
octreotide
125
carcinoid: tx for bronchospasm
aprotinin
126
carcinoid: tx for flushing
alpha blockers (phenothiazine)
127
what can cause false elevations in 5-hiaa?
fruits
128
same colon CA risk as ulcerative colitis
crohn's pancolitis
129
- can occur from small bowel or cecal tumors - most common presentation is obstruction - worrisome in adults as it often has a malignant lead point (i.e. cecal CA) tx: resection
intussusception in adults
130
- most found in duodenum; present with bleeding, obstruction | - need resection when identified (often done with endoscope)
Adenomas - benign small bowel tumors
131
- autosomal dominant - hamartomas throughout GI tract (small and large bowel) - mucocutaneous melanotic skin pigmentation - pts have increased extra intestinal malignancies (mc- breast CA) and a small risk of GI malignancies - no prophylactic colectomy
Peutz-Jeghers syndrome
132
mc extraintestinal malignancy in peutz-jeghers syndrome
breast cancer
133
most common malignant small bowel tumor
adenocarcinoma (rare)
134
where are most small bowel adenocarcinomas found?
high proportion are in the duodenum
135
Symptoms of adenocarcinoma small bowel
obstruction, jaundice
136
tx: small bowel adenocarcinoma
resection and adenectomy; Whipple if in 2nd portion of duodenum
137
duodenal CA risk factors
FAP, Gardner's, poylps, adenomas, von Recklinghausen's
138
- usually in jejunum and ileum; most extraluminal | - hard to differentiate compared with leiomyoma (>5 mitoses/HPF, atypia, necrosis)
leiomyosarcoma
139
what do you need to rule out in leiomyosarcoma?
make sure it is not a GIST (check for c-kit)
140
tx: leiomyosarcoma in small bowel
resection; no adenectomy required
141
- usually in ileum; associated with Wegener's, SLE, AIDS, Crohn's, celiac sprue - usually NHL B cell type - Post transplantation: increased risk of bleeding and perforation
Lymphoma - malignant small bowel tumor
142
dx: lymphoma - malignant small bowel
abdominal ct, node sampling
143
tx: lymphoma - small bowel
malignancy: wide en block resection (include nodes) unless 1st or 2nd portion of the duodenum (chemo-XRT, no Whipple)
144
survival rate small bowel lymphoma
40% 5 year survival rate
145
highest incidence with colostomies; generally well tolerated and do not need repair unless symptomatic
parastomal hernias
146
most common stomal infection
candida
147
(hartmann's pouch) - secondary to lack of short-chain fatty acids - tx: short-chain fatty acids enemas
diversion colitis
148
most common cause of stenosis of stoma | - tx: dilation if mild
ischemia
149
most common cause of fistula near stoma site
crohn's disease
150
underneath stoma stie, often caused by irrigation device
abscesses
151
increased in patients with ileostomy
gallstones and uric acid kidney stones
152
1) anorexia 2) abdominal pain (periumbilical) 3) vomiting - pain gradually migrates to the RLQ as peritonitis sets in - most commonly occurs in patients 20-35 years - patients can have normal WBC count
Appendicitis
153
CT scan in appendicitis:
``` diameter > 7mm wall thickness > 2mm (looks like a bull's eye) fat stranding no contrast in appendiceal lumen try to give rectal contrast ```
154
where is the appendix most likely to perforate?
midpoint of anti-mesenteric border
155
mcc appendicitis in children; can follow a viral illness
hyperplasia
156
mcc appendicitis in adults
fecalith
157
what is the sequence of events in appendiceal luminal obstruction?
luminal obstruction is followed by distention of the appendix, venous congestion and thrombosis, ischemia, gangrene necrosis, and finally rupture
158
appendicitis: nonoperative situtation
CT scan shows wall-offed perforated appendix (usually in elderly) - TX: pecutaneous drainage and interval appendectomy at later date as long as symptoms are improving.
159
follow up: nonoperative appendicitis (walled-off perforated appendix)
consider follow-up barium enema or colonoscopy to rule out perforated cecal colon CA
160
why do children and elderly have higher propensity for appendices rupture?
secondary to delayed diagnosis
161
children often have higher fever and more vomiting and diarrhea
appendicitis
162
elderly: signs and symptoms can be minimal; may need right hemicolectomy if cancer suspected
appendicitis
163
frequency of appendicitis in infants
appendicitis is infrequent in infants
164
appendicitis: patient generally more ill; can have evidence of sepsis
peforaiton
165
mcc of acute abdominal pain in the first trimester
appendicitis
166
when is appendicitis likely to occur in pregnancy?
more likely to occur in the 2nd trimester but is not the most common cause of abdominal pain
167
when in appendicitis more likely to perforate in pregnancy?
more likely to perforate in the third trimester - confused with contractions
168
where do you make the appendectomy incision in pregnancy?
need to make incision where the patient is having pain - the appendix is displaced superiorly (cephalad)
169
appendicitis: possible symptoms in 3rd trimester
ruq pain
170
mortality rate of fetus in appendiceal rupture
35% fetal mortality with rupture
171
management of pregnant women with suspected appendicitis
women with suspected appendicitis need beta-HCG drawn and abdominal ultrasound to rule out OB/GYN causes of abdominal pain
172
appendix: can be benign or malignant mucous papillary tumor; needs resection (should open for these so you don't spill tumor contents)
appendix mucocele
173
tx: malignant appendix mucocele
need right hemicolectomy if malignant
174
spread of tumor implants throughout the peritoneum
pseudomyxoma peritonei
175
mcc of death in appendix mucocele
small bowel obstruction from peritoneal tumor srpead
176
can mimic appendicitis; 10% go on to Crohn's disease
regional ileitis
177
nausea, vomiting, diarrhea
gastroenteritis
178
ddx: presumed appendicitis in women
ruptured ovarian cyst, thrombosed ovarian vein, or regional enteritis not involving cecum - tx: appendectomy (prevents future confounding diagnosis)
179
causes of ileus
surgery (most common), electrolyte abnormalities (decreased K), peritonitis, ischemia, trauma, drugs
180
dilatation is uniform throughout the stomach, small bowel, colon, and rectum without decompression
ileus
181
there is bowel compression distal to the obstruction
obstruction
182
children; get RLQ pain, diarrhea, fever, headaches, maculopapular rash, leukopenia; rare bleeding / perforation - tx: bactrim
typhoid enteritis (salmonella)