GI Perforation Flashcards
def
perforation of the wall of the GI tract with spillage of bowel contents
aetiology
1 gastroduodenal -commonly perforated gastric or duodenal ulcer 2 large bowel -commonly diverticulitis + colorectal carcinoma -perforated appendix is a common complication of appendicitis -UC (toxic megacolon) 3 small bowel (rare) -infection (typhoid, TB) -CD 4 oesophagus -boerhaaves syndrome -iatrogenic perforation (OGD)
what is boerhaaves syndrome
rupture of oesphageal wall
epi
incidence depends on cause
presentation with abdominal pain is common
history
dependent on cause
sudden onset abdominal pain
nausea + vomiting
examination
signs of peritonitis
guarding
decreased bowel sounds
loss of liver dullness on percussion due to overlying gas
investigations
1 bloods
-FBC, UEs, LFTs, amylase (may be raised), ABGs, clotting
2 erect CXR
-may show gas under diaphgragm (70% of cases in perforated peptic ulcer)
3 AXR
-abnormal gas shadows in tissues
-riglers sign (gas on either side of bowel wall)
4 CT scan
-sensitive for free intraperitoneal gas
-may diagnose underlying pathology
management
1 resuscitation -IV rehydration -correction of electrolyte abnormalities -broad spectrum IV antibiotics 2 conservative -for those with limited signs, minimal contamination, high anaesthetic risk -for gastroduodenal perforations bowel rest, PPIs, IV fluids + antibiotics 3 surgical gastroduodenal -perforation is closed -gastric ulcers should be biopsied for carcinoma large bowel -removal of involved colon
complications
sepis
peritonitis
fistula formation
death
prognosis
gastroduodenal
-higher morbidity + mortality in perforated gastric ulcers than duodenal ulcers
-perforated gastric carcinomas have poor prognosis
large bowel
-better prognosis limited contamination
-faecal peritonitis >50% mortality