Colorectal surgery Flashcards

1
Q

What is the structure of the colon and rectum?

A

–smooth muscle tube

–lined by specialised epithelium

–enteric nerve supply

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2
Q

What is the function of the colon and rectum?

A

–fluid and electrolyte balance

–waste management

–continence

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3
Q

What are surgical problems of the colon and rectum as a result of

Tumour

Inflammation

Degeneration

Abnormal function

Congenital

A
  • Tumour- colorectal cancer
  • Inflammation- ulcerative colitis, Crohn’s disease
  • Degeneration- diverticular disease
  • Abnormal function- constipation, incontinence, IBD
  • Congenital- atresia, Hirschsprung’s disease
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4
Q

What do patients often complain of when there is an issue in the colon and rectum?

A

Change in bowel habit / continence

Bleeding

Pain

Non-intestinal manifestations

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5
Q

What is the innervation associated with visceral pain?

A

Pain receptors are in the smooth muscle

Afferent impulses run with sympathetic fibres accompanying segmental vessels

Pain is usually the result of the colon distending and the smooth muscle contracting to compensate

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6
Q

When is visualisation of the large bowel indicated?

Involves colonoscopy

Sigmoidoscopy with or without barium enema

CT colonography

A

When high risk features exist:

Persistent change in bowel habit

Persistent rectal bleeding without anal symptoms

Right sided abdominal mass

Palpable rectal mass

Unexplained iron deficiency anaemia

Patients in whom there is clinical doubt

Or when there is low risk features that persist or deteriorate, or refuse to watch and wait

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7
Q

What is the major risk attached to rectal bleeding?

A

Bowel cancer

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8
Q

What is the investigation for CRC?

A

•Endoscopy

–colonoscopy and biopsy

•Contrast imaging

–barium enema

•Cross sectional imaging

–CT/ CT colonography

•MRI

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9
Q

What are the considerations when treating CRC?

A
  • Medical vs. surgical
  • Endoscopic vs. invasive
  • Laparoscopy vs. laparotomy
  • Consider:

–resection

–restoration of continuity

–preservation of function

–faecal diversion

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10
Q

How is informed consent ensured?

A

Providing all relevant information

Ensuring the patient has capacity

Having a meaningful discussion

Letting patient have time and reflection

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11
Q

What is involved in perioperative care of CRC?

A

Shared decision making and informed consent

Pre-admission assessment

Admission on the same day of surgery

DVT prophylaxis

Antibiotic prophylaxis

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12
Q

What is important for a bowel anastamosis?

A

Tension free

Well perfused

Well oxygenated

Clean surgical site

Acceptable systemic state

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13
Q

What are complications associated with bowel anastamosis and faecal diversion surgery?

A

Anaesthetic related

Bleeding

Sepsis

VTE

Anastomotic breakdown

Small bowel obstruction

Wound hernia

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