General GI Surgery Flashcards

1
Q

What is the general approach to acute abdominal pain?

A
Pain assessment (SOCRATES)
PMHx, DHx, SHx

Investigations

Management

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2
Q

What are some investigations that could be performed for acute abdominal pain?

A

Bloods: VBG, FBC, CRP, U&Es (renal profile), LFTs +amylase

Urinalysis + Urine MC&S

Imaging: Erect CXR, AXR, CTAP, CT angiogram, USS

Endoscopy

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3
Q

What are the management approaches for acute abdominal pain?

A

ABCDE approach
Conservative management
Surgical management

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4
Q

What are the differentials for RUQ pain?

A
Bilary Colic
Cholecystitis/Cholangitis
Duodenal Ulcer
Liver abscess
Portal vein thrombosis
Acute hepatitis
Nephrolithiasis
RLL pneumonia
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5
Q

What are the differentials for LUQ pain?

A
Peptic ulcer
Acute pancreatitis
Splenic abscess
Splenic infarction
Nephrolithiasis
Left Lower Lobe Pneumonia
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6
Q

What are the differentials for epigastric pain?

A
Acute gastritis/GORD
Gastroparesis
Peptic ulcer disease/perforation
Acute pancreatitis
Mesenteric ischaemia
AAA (Abdominal Aortic Aneurysm) Aortic dissection
Myocardial infarction
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7
Q

What are the differentials for RLQ pain?

A
Acute Appendicitis
Colitis
IBD
Infectious colitis
Ureteric stone/Pyelonephritis
PID/Ovarian torsion
Ectopic pregnancy
Malignancy
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8
Q

What are the differentials for LLQ pain?

A
Diverticulitis
Colitis
IBD (Inflammatory Bowel Disease)
Infectious colitis
Ureteric stone/Pyelonephritis
PID/Ovarian torsion
Ectopic pregnancy
Malignancy
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9
Q

What are the differentials for Suprapubic pain?

A
Early appendicitis
Mesenteric ischaemia
Bowel obstruction
Bowel perforation
Constipation
Gastroenteritis
UTI/Urinary retention
PID
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10
Q

What is important to note about these differential lists?

A

Not exhaustive

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11
Q

How do patients with bowel ischaemia present?

A

Sudden onset crampy abdominal pain
Severity of pain depends on the length and thickness of colon affected
Bloody, loose stool (currant jelly stools)
Fever, signs of septic shock

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12
Q

What are the risk factors for bowel ischaemia?

A
Age >65 yr
Cardiac arrythmias (mainly AF), atherosclerosis
Hypercoagulation/thrombophilia
Vasculitis
Sickle cell disease
Profound shock causing hypotension
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13
Q

What are the main features of acute mesenteric ischaemia?

A

Small Bowel

Usually occlusive due to thromboemboli (SMA)

Sudden onest (but presentation and severity varies)

Abdominal pain can be out of proportion of clinical signs

e.g. extreme pain + no clinical signs
major clinical signs but patient feels well

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14
Q

What are the two types of bowel ischaemia?

A

Acute mesenteric Ischaemia

Ischaemic colitis

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15
Q

What are the main features of Ischaemic colitis?

A

Large bowel

Usually due to non-occlusive low flow states or atherosclerosis

More mild and gradual (80-85% of cases)

Moderate pain and tenderness

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16
Q

What investigations should you to for bowel ischaemia?

A

FBC: neutrophilic leukocytosis
VBG: Lactic acidosis
(Venous blood gasses)
- metabolic acidosis associated with late stage ischaemia

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17
Q

What imaging should you to for bowel ischaemia?

A

CTAP/CTAngiogram

Detects

Disrupted flow

Vascular stenosis

‘Pneumatosis intestinalis’ (transmural ischaemia/infarction)

Ischaemic colitis: Thumbprint sign (unspecific sign of colitis)

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18
Q

When would you used endoscopy for bowel ischaemia?

A

For mild or moderate cases of ischaemic colitis (oedema, cyanosis, ulceration of mucosa)

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19
Q

What is the conservative management approach to bowel ischaemia?

A

IV fluid resuscitation
Bowel rest
Broad-spectrum ABx - colonic ischaemia can result in bacterial translocation & sepsis
NG tube for decompression - in concurrent ileus
Anticoagulation
Treat/manage underlying cause
Serial abdominal examination and repeat imaging

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20
Q

When would you take a more conservative approach to managing bowel ischaemia?

A

Mild to moderate cases of ischaemic colitis (not suitable for SB ischaemia)

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21
Q

When is surgical management indicated to bowel ischaemia?

A
Small bowel ischaemia
Signs of peritonitis orsepsis
Haemodynamic instability
Massive bleeding
Fulminant colitis with toxic megacolon
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22
Q

What are the two types of surgical management?

A

Exploratory laparotomy

Endovascualr revascularisation

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23
Q

What is exploratory laparotomy?

A

Resection of necrotic bowel +/-open surgicalembolectomy

or mesenteric arterial bypass

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24
Q

What is endovascular revscualrisation?

A

Balloon angioplasty/thrombectomy

In patients without signs of ischaemia

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25
How does acute appendicitis present?
Initially periumbilical pain that migrates to RLQ (within 24hours) Anorexia, nausea +/- vomiting, low grade fever, change in bowel habit
26
What are the important clinical signs in acute appendicitis?
McBurney’s point: tenderness in the RLQ (lateral 1/3 of a hypothetical line drawn from the right ASIS to the umbilicus) Blumberg sign: rebound tenderness especially in the RIF Rovsing sign: RLQ pain elicited on deep palpation of the LLQ - moving perotineum Psoas sign: RLQ pain elicited on flexion of right hip against resistance Obturator sign: RLQ pain on passive internal rotation of the hip with hip & knee flexion
27
What bloods are done for acute appendicitis?
FBC: neutrophilic leukocytosis ↑ed CRP Urinalysis: possible mild pyuria/haematuria Electrolyte imbalances in profound vomiting
28
What imaging is done for acute appendcitis?
CT: gold standard in adults esp. if age > 50 USS: children/pregnancy/breastfeeding MRI: in pregnancy if USS inconclusive
29
When would you do a diagnostic laparoscopy for suspected acute appendicitis?
In persistent pain & inconclusive imaging
30
What is the diagnostic tool used for acute appendicits?
Alvardo score | 6 clinical items
31
What are the clinical items used on the alvardo score?
``` RLQ Tendereness (2) Fever (1) Rebound tenderness (1) Pain migration (1) Anorexia (1) Nausea +/- vomiting (1) WCC > 10,000 (2) Neutrophilia (left shift) (1) ≤4 Unlikely 5-6 Possible ≥7 Likely ```
32
What is the conservative management of acute appendicitis?
IV Fluids, Analgesia, IV or PO Antibiotics In abscess, phlegmon or sealed perforation Resuscitation + IV ABx +/- percutaneous drainage
33
What are the indications for conservative management for acute appendicitis?
After negative imaging in selected patients with clinically uncomplicated appendicitis  In delayed presentation with abscess/phlegmon formation CT-guided drainage 
34
What must you always consider in acute appendicitis?
Consider interval appendicectomy - rate of recurrence after conservative management of abscess/perforation is 12-24%
35
What are the benefits of laparoscopic appenicetomy?
``` Less pain Lower incidence of surgical site infection ↓ed length of hospital stay Earlier return to work Overall costs  Better quality of life scores ```
36
What are the steps of laparoscopic appendicetomy?
Trocar placement (usually 3) Exploration of RIF & identification of appendix Elevation of appendix + division of mesoappendix (containing artery) Based secured with endoloops and appendix is divided Retrieval of appendix with a plastic retrieval bag Careful inspection of the rest of the pelvic organs/intestines Pelvic irrigation (wash out) + Haemostasis Removal of trocars + wound closure
37
Define intestinal obstruction?
restriction of normal passage of intestinal contents
38
What are the two main groups of bowel obstruction?
Paralytic (Adynamic) ileus | Mechanical.
39
How do you classify mechanical intestinal obstruction?
Speed of onset Site Nature Aetiology
40
What are the different speeds of onset for bowel obstruction?
acute, chronic, acute-on-chronic
41
What are the different sites of bowel obstruction?
high or low | roughly synonymous with small or large bowel obstruction
42
What are the different natures of bowel obstruction?
simple vs strangulating Simple: bowel is occluded without damage to blood supply. Strangulating: blood supply of involved segment of intestine is cut off (e.g. in strangulated hernia, volvulus, intussusception)
43
What are the causes of bowel obstruction?
Causes in the lumen - faecal impaction, gallstone ‘ileus’ Causes in the wall - Crohn’s disease, tumours, diverticulitis of colon Causes outside the wall – Strangulated hernia (external or internal) Volvulus Obstruction due to adhesions or bands.
44
What are the main causes of small bowel obstruction?
``` Adhesions (60%) Neoplasia (20%) Incarcerated hernia (10%) Crohn's disease (5%) Other (5%) ```
45
What are the main causes of large bowel obstruction?
``` Colorectal cancer Volvulus Diverticulitis Faecal impaction Hirschsprung's disease ```
46
How does small bowel obstruction present?
Colicky, central pain Early onset vomiting - large amount and bilious Constipation - late sign Abdominal distention is less significant
47
How does large bowel obstruction present?
Colicky or constant pain Vomitting is late onset - initally billous progress to faecal vomiting Constipation is early sign Abdominal distention is early and significant
48
What are other signs of bowel obstruction that are present in both?
Dehydration Increased high pitched tinkling bowel sounds (early sign), or absent bowel sounds (late sign) Diffuse abdominal tenderness
49
What are the three important things about diagonisisng bowel obstruction?
Diagnosed by the presence of symptoms Examination should always include a search for hernias & abdominal scars, including laparoscopic portholes Is it simple or strangulating?
50
What features suggest strangulation?
``` Change in character of pain from colicky to continuous Tachycardia Pyrexia Peritonism Bowel sounds absent or reduced Leucocytosis ↑ed C-reactive protein ```
51
What are common hernial sites?
``` Epigastric Ubmilical Incscional Inguinal Feomral ```
52
What are the different types of hernia?
Neck of sac Strangulated Richter's
53
What are the blood results for bowel obstruction?
WCC/CRP usually normal (if raised suspicion of strangulation/perforation) U&E: electrolyte imbalance VBG if vomiting: HypoCl-,HypoK+ metabolic alkalosis VBG if strangulation: Metabolic Acidosis (lactate)
54
What imaging is done for bowel obstruction?
Erect CXR/AXR  SBO: Dilated small bowel loops >3cm proximal to the obstruction (central) LBO: Dilated large bowel >6cm (if caecum >9cm) predominantly peripheral CT abdo/pelvis → Transition point, dilatation of proximal loops – IV +/- oral contrast if possible
55
What is seen on AXR for small bowel obstruction?
Ladder pattern of dilated loops & their central position Striations that pass completely across the width of the distended loop produced by the circular mucosal folds.
56
What is seen on AXR for large bowel obstruction?
Distended large bowel tends to lie peripherally Show haustrations of taenia coli - do not extend across whole width of the bowel.
57
What can CT scans do re bowel obstruction?
Can localize site of obstruction Detect obstructing lesions & colonic tumours May diagnose unusual hernias (e.g. obturator hernias).
58
What is the supportive mangement for bowel obstruction?
NBM, IV peripheral access with large bore cannula - IV Fluid resuscitation IV analgesia, IV antiemetics, correction of electrolyte imbalances NG tube for decompression, urinary catheter for monitoring output Introduce gradual food intake if abdominal pain and distention improve
59
What is the conservative treatment for bowel obstruction?
Faecal impaction: stool evacuation (manual, enemas, endoscopic) Sigmoid volvulus: rigid sigmoidoscopic decompression - pass tube through bowel to straighten it out SBO: oral gastrograffin (highly osmolar iodinated contrast agent) can be used to resolve adhesional small bowel obstruction
60
What are the indications of surgical management for bowel obstruction?
Haemodynamic instability or signs of sepsis Complete bowel obstruction with signs of ischaemia Closed loop obstruction Persistent bowel obstruction >2 days despite conservative management 
61
What is the surgical process for bowel obstruction?
Exploratory Laparotomy/Laparoscopy  Restoration of intestinal transit (depending on intra-operational findings) Bowel resection with primary anastomosis or temporary/permanent stoma formation
62
How does GI perforation present?
Sudden onset severe abdominal pain associated with distention Diffuse abdominal guarding, rigidity, rebound tenderness Pain aggravated by movement Nausea, vomiting, absolute constipation Fever, Tachycardia, Tachypnoea, Hypotension Decreased or absent bowel sounds
63
What are the features of perforated peptic ulcer?
Sudden epigastric or diffuse pain Referred shoulder pain - diaphragm irritation Phrenic nerve innervates shoulder Hx of NSAIDs, steroids, recurrent epigastric pain
64
What are the features of perforated diverticulum?
LLQ pain | Constipation
65
What are the features of perforated appendix?
Migratory pain Anorexia Gradual worsening RLQ pain
66
What are the features of perforated malignancy?
Change in bowel habit Weight loss Anorexia PR Bleeding
67
What bloods are done for GI perforations?
Change in bowel habit Weight loss Anorexia PR Bleeding
68
What imaging are done for GI perforations?
Erect CXR → subdiaphragmatic free air (pneumoperitoneum)   CT abdo/pelvis → Pneumoperitoneum, free GI content, localised mesenteric fat stranding can exclude common differential diagnoses such as pancreatitis
69
What is the supportive management for GI perforation?
``` NBM & NG tube IV peripheral access with large bore cannula - IV Fluid resuscitation Broad spectrum Abx IV PPI Parenteral analgesia & antiemetics Urinary catheter  ```
70
What is the conservative management for GI perforation?
Conservative management in localised peritonitis without signs of sepsis Very rare IR - guided drainage of intra-abdominal collection Serial abdominal examination & abdominal imaging for assessment
71
What are the stages of surgical management for GI Perforation?
Exploratory laparotomy/laparascopy Primary closure of perforation with or without omental patch (most common in perforated peptic ulcer) Resection of the perforated segment of the bowel with primary anastomosis or temporary stoma  Obtain intra-abdominal fluid for MC&S, peritoneal lavage ++++ If perforated appendix: Lap or open appendicectomy If malignancy: intraoperative biopsies if possible
72
What are the stages of surgical management for GI Perforation?
Exploratory laparotomy/laparascopy Primary closure of perforation with or without omental patch (most common in perforated peptic ulcer) Resection of the perforated segment of the bowel with primary anastomosis or temporary stoma  Obtain intra-abdominal fluid for MC&S, peritoneal lavage ++++ If perforated appendix: Lap or open appendicectomy If malignancy: intraoperative biopsies if possible
73
What are the symptoms of biliary collic?
Postprandial RUQ pain with radiation to the shoulder. | Nausea
74
What are the investigations for biliary collic?
Normal blood results | USS: cholelithiasis
75
How do you manage biliary collic?
Analgesia, Antiemetics, Spasmolytics | Follow up for elective cholecystectomy
76
What are the symptoms of acute cholycystisis?
Acute, severe RUQ pain Fever Murphy's sign
77
What are the investigations for acute cholycystisis?
Elevated WCC/CRP | USS: thickened gallbladder wall
78
What is the management for acute cholycystisis?
Fluids, ABx, Analgesia, Blood cultures | Early (<72 hours) or elective cholecystectomy (4-6 weeks)
79
What are the symptoms of acute cholangitis?
Charcot's triad: jaundice, RUQ pain, fever
80
What are the investigations for acute cholangitis?
Elevated LFTs, WCC, CRP, Blood MCS (+ve) | USS: bilary dilatation
81
What is the management for acute cholangitis?
Fluids, IV Abx, Analgesia | ERCP (within 72hrs) for clearance of bile duct or stenting
82
What are the symptoms of acute pancreatitis?
Severe epigastric pain radiating to the back Nausea +/- vomiting Hx of gallstones or EtOH use
83
What are the investigations for acute pancreatitis?
Raised amylase/lipase High WCC/Low Ca2+ CT and US to assess for complications/cause
84
What is the management for acute pancreatitis?
Admission score (Glasgow-Imrie) Aggressive fluid resuscitation, O2 Analgesia, Antiemetics ITU/HDU involvement