Gastrointestinal operations Flashcards
What are the complications from major abdominal surgery
- adhesions
- bleeding
- infection
- paralytic ileus
- preoperative mortality
- shock
What are the indications of oesophagectomy
- oesophageal cancer
- severe oesophageal stricture
- pre-malignant disease (e.g. high grade dysplasia in Barrett’s oesophagus)
What is the procedure for an oesophagectomy
- performed under GA and single-lung ventilation
- may be complete, sub-total/partial +/- resection of regional lymph noeds
Open surgical procedures include:
- Ivor Lewis (two-stage) vs three-stage
- transhiatial vs transthoracic
Usually performed through two incisions
- 1 thoracotomy - to mobilise the oesophagus
- right lung is usually collapsed using a double-lumen bronchial tube and carbon dioxide is blown into the right pleural cavity to compress the lung
- 1 laparotomy - to dissect and prepare the stomach/intestine for oesophageal reconstruction
- the new oesophagus or gastric tube is then drawn up the chest and connected to the remaining healthy oesophageal stump, usually via and incision in the neck
What are the major complications for oesophagectomy
- anastomotic leak
- pneumonia
- vocal cord palsy
- delayed gastric emptying
- acute respiratory disease
- pancreatitis
- DVT/PE
- tracheal tear
- renal failure
What are the minor complications for oesophagectomy
- AF
- pleural effusion
- atelectasis
- wound infection
- minor tracheal perforation
- C.diff colitis
- Jejunostomy-tube infection
What are the indications for a laparoscopic cholecystectomy
- Biliary colic (repeated attacks)
- Acute cholecystitis
- Chronic cholecystitis
- Cholangitis and gallstone pancreatitis (both can occur when gallstones become stuck in common bile duct)
- Gallbladder cancer
What is the procedure for laparoscopic cholecystectomy
- Several (usually 4) small incisions made to allow insertion of operating ports
- Cystic duct and cystic artery identified and dissected, then ligated with clips and cut
- Removal of gallbladder through one of the ports
What are the complications of a laparoscopic cholecystectomy
- Biliary injury or damage to the bile ducts
- leakage from stump of cystic duct
- wound infection
- urinary retention
- bleeding
- retained stone in common bile duct
- respiratory complications
- cardiac complications
- intra-abdominal abscess
- hernia
- bowel injury
- sepsis
- pancreatitis
- DVT/PE
What happens in biliary injury and what symptoms do they have
- can cause bile leak leading to abdominal pain, fever and sepsis several days following surgery
- increase in serum bilirubin
- increase in serum ALP
What are the indications of right hemicolectomy
- adneocaricnoma of the right colon
- adenocarcinoma of the caecum and appendix
- adenomatous polyps that cannot be removed endoscopically
- carcinoids
- inflammatory bowel disease
- caecal volvulus
- severe appendicitis with involvement of the caecum
- colonic diverticulitis and diverticular disease
- Trauma
- Bowel infarction
what is the procedure of the right hemicolectomy
- Right paramedian incision
Determine extent of resection
- Take right colic and ileocolic vessels at their origins to ensure proper lymph node harvesting
- Take care to preserve the main branch of the middle colic vessels
- Omental attachments to the right colon are generally removed with the specimen
Mobilise the colon
- Separate terminal ileum and caecum from retroperitoneal structures – most importantly ureter and gonadal vessels
Create anastomosis
What are the complications of the right hemicolectomy
- postoperative ileus
- anastomotic leak
- wound infection
What are the indications for a lower anterior resection
- rectal carcinoma in upper 2/3 of the rectum
- diverticulitis
What is the procedure of the lower anterior resection
- Rectum is excised
- Proximal stump of descending colon is anastomosed to rectal stump
- Integrity of completed anastomosis tested by air insufflation of the rectum
- If there is concern about the anastomosis or it is low (<7cm from the anal verge) it is wise to defunction with a temporary loop ileostomy
What are the complications of the lower anterior resection
- low anterior resection syndrome
- anastomotic dehiscence/leak
- ED in males
- local tumour recurrence
What are the symptoms of lower anterior resection syndrome
- faecal incontinence (stool and flatus)
- faecal urgency
- frequent bowel movements
- bowel fragmentation
- some only experience constipation and tenesmus
what is the cause of lower anterior resection syndrome
- cause unclear - could be nerve damage or loss of rectoanal inhibitory reflex
What are the indications for an abdominoperineal excision of the rectum
- rectal carcinoma - in distal 1/3 of rectum
- recurrent or residual anal (squamous cell) carcinoma
What is the procedure of abdominoperineal excision of rectum
- Removal of the anus, rectum and part of the sigmoid colon along with regional lymph nodes
- Incisions made in the abdomen and perineum
- End of remaining sigmoid colon is brought out permanently as a colostomy
What are the complications of abdominoperineal excision of the rectum
- infection of surgical wound
- bowel leakage inside the abdomen
- UTI
- loss of blood supply to the stoma after colostomy
- urinary incontinence
- bowel obstruction
- hernia around colostomy
- ED in males
- adhesion
What are the indications for Hartmann’s operation
→ Initially developed for distal colon adenocarcinoma
- Complicated diverticulitis (stage III or IV)
Rectosigmoid cancer in:
- Emergency – obstruction, perforation or haemorrhage
- Elective – cure, palliation, anticipation of impending obstruction
- Ischaemia
- Volvulus
- Iatrogenic perforation of colon during colonoscopy or by foreign body
- Lymphoma
- Metastatic cancer to the pelvis
- Crohn’s disease
- Trauma
- Anastomotic dehiscence/leak
- Pseudomembranous colitis
- Rectal prolapse
- Leiomyosarcoma
- Ulcerative colitis
- Radiation injuries
- Retroperitoneal bleeding
- Pneumatosis cystoides
What is the procedure for Hartmann’s operation
- resection of the rectosigmoid colon with closure of the anorectal stump and formation of an end colostomy or ileostomy
What are the complications for Hartmann’s operation
- wound infection (most common)
- rectal stump leak
- abscesses around the rectal stump
- fistulae from rectal stump to bowel
- retraction of colostomy
- parastomal hernia
- skin irritation around colostomy
- paralytic ileus
- wound dehiscence
- ureteral injury
Where is a Colostomie (stoma) usually
- usually in the left iliac fossa and flush with the skin
Name the types of colostomies
- loop colostomy
- end colostomy
- Paul-mikulicz colostomy
Describe how a loop colostomy works
- Loop of colon is exteriorised and partially divided, forming two stomas that are joined together (proximal end passes stool, distal end passes mucus)
- Rod under the loop prevents retraction and may be removed after 7d
- Often temporary and performed to protect a distal anastomosis, eg after anterior resection