disease of the small bowel and appendix part II Flashcards

1
Q

what are the complications of appendectomy ?

A

pelvic abscess, wound infection, intra - abdominal abscess, ileus, DVT/PE, feacal fistula, portal pyaemia, right sides inguinal hernia

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2
Q

appendix - carcinoid

A
  • can occur in 1/300/400 appendixes
  • it is tumour of the crypts of Lieberkuhn and stains heavily with chromagrannin
  • if >1cm then appendectomy alone is not enough to treat it
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3
Q

what happens in small bowel obstruction ?

A

(pathophys. = fluid, gas, ischaemia and perforation)

> patients experience central colicky pain that comes and goes
absolute constipation
will start feeling sick, vomiting and burping
abdominal distension

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4
Q

what causes small bowel obstruction ?

A
  • lumen = gallstone, lump of food, bezoar (hair)
  • within the wall = Crohn’s, radiation strictures, tumours
  • outside the wall = adhesions, herniation (small bowel herniate)
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5
Q

what would small bowel obstruction look like on an x-ray ?

A

like the patient has swallowed a massive furry caterpillar

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6
Q

small bowel obstruction - presentation

A
  • distension
  • vomiting
  • borborygmi (loud bowel sounds)
  • pain
  • faeculent vomiting
  • presence of a cause
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7
Q

small bowel obstruction - investigations

A
>assessing the state of the patient: 
urinalysis 
bloods 
gases
>confirming diagnosis:
AXR
contrast CT scan of abdomen 
Gastrograffin studies 
>then identifying who needs surgery and whose will settle
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8
Q

small bowel obstruction - treatment

A

“drip and suck”

ie put them on a drip and suck out all the fluid/air via NG tube

  • ABCs
  • analgesia
  • fluids with potassium (are usually hypokalaemic and alkalotic)
  • catheterise them
  • NG tube (Ryles - needs to be big)
  • antithromboembolism measures (at high risk for DVT)

*obviously everything is given IV

conditions:

  • cannot drip and suck for hernias - these need surgical intervention
  • usually drip and suck for 72 hours but earlier intervention is required for = strangulation, perforation, ischaemia
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9
Q

small bowel obstruction - surgical management

A

laparotomy
*can be done laparoscopically

-done with antibiotics, antithromboembolic measures, usually a midline incision, and the obstruction is found by following the collapsed or dilated bowel

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10
Q

mesenteric ischaemia prognosis

A

not a good prognosis, patients often die with dead guts or do not live good lives

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11
Q

causes of mesenteric ischaemia

A

-embolus or thrombosis (arterial and venous)

> embolus is usually patients with AF - formed in the left atrium and lodges into narrow SMA
in site thrombosis from general gubbedness (virchow’s, dehydrated, hypercoaguable, compression, vasoconstricting drugs)

  • can be a chronic problem:
    (atherosclerosis) sort of angina for the guts: their SMA might be stenotic due to stomach etc and these patients will present with cramping that will usually come on after eating

-can be acute:
>if the SMA is compromised then the whole small bowel dies
>if it’s just the IMA then the colon can carry on due to the marginal artery

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12
Q

when should we suspect mesenteric ischaemia ?

A

when people are in extreme pain but everything seems to be pretty much normal

  • acidosis on gases
  • lactate is elevated
  • CRP may be normal and WCC may only be raised slightly
  • CT angiogram
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13
Q

how do we fix acute mesenteric ischaemia ?

A

quickly !

  • prepare patient and family for the worst
  • resect the ischaemic part if non-viable
  • re anastomose or staple and planned return
  • if viable, can perform an SMA embolectomy
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14
Q

complications of mesenteric ischaemia surgery

A

-haemorrhage > ABCs, exclude upper source, vascular malformations, ulceration, CT angiogram, can be managed by interventional radiology

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15
Q

what is Meckel’s diverticulum ?

A
  • theses ‘pouches’ form 2 feet from the ileocaecal valve
  • congenital and presents before 2 years of age
  • it is the remnant of the vitelline duct/omphalomesenteric duct that should’ve been absorbed
  • complications = bleed, ulceration (Meckel’s diverticulitis), obstruction
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