Inflammatory Bowel Disease Flashcards

1
Q

What is the definition of severe exacerbation of inflammatory bowel disease

A

Truelove classification

GI symptoms - passage of bloody stools more than 6x per day
Systemic signs - HR over 90 bpm, pyrexia over 37
Lab findings - anaemia Hb under 10.5, C-reactive protein over 30

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2
Q

What are the indications for surgery in acute severe UC

A

Toxic megacolon - transverse colon diameter of at least 6cm on AXR (high risk of peforation and faecal peritonitis)
Perforation - rare in absence of toxic dilatation
Severe GI bleeding

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3
Q

What are the indications for surgery in chronic UC

A

Medical management failure to control symptoms
Malignant transformation
Maturation failure in children

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4
Q

What are the indications for surgery in Crohn’s disease

A

To treat complications not amenable to medical therapy:-
Intra-abdominal abscesses that cannot be drained radiologically
Entero-cutaneous fistulae
Stenosis causing obstructive symptoms
Control of acute/chronic bleeding

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5
Q

What are the hepatobiliary complications of IBD

A
Liver:-
Fatty change
Chronic active hepatitis
Cirrhosis
Amyloid deposition

Gall bladder and bile ducts:-
Gallstones
Sclerosing cholangitis
Cholangiocarcinoma

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6
Q

What are the surgical options for managing UC

A

Subtotal colectomy with ileostomy (+/- mucous fistula) - operation of choice for acute severe colitis
Panproctocolectomy and permanent ileostomy
Restorative proctocolectomy - avoids permanent stoma

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7
Q

What are the surgical options for Crohn’s disease

A

For surgery on the small intestine - as much bowel should be conserved as possible
Limited ileocaecectomy - for distal ileal disease
Intra-abdominal abscesses should be drained
Colonic defunctioning using a loop ileostomy - for patients who have failed medical therapy
Subtotal colectomy and permanent end ileostomy - occasionally needed

*Pouch surgery generally contraindicated in Crohn’s disease

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8
Q

What are the causes of colitis

A
UC
Crohn's
Antibiotic associated colitis - eg. pseudomembranous colitis due to C. diff
Infective colitis - eg. campylobacter
Ischaemic colitis
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9
Q

What is the epidemiology of UC

A

F>M

Two age peaks - 15-30 and 50-70

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10
Q

How do you clinically differentiate between UC and Crohn’s

A

Perianal disease is rare in UC - unlike Crohn’s
Often profuse haemorrhage in UC - uncommon in Crohn’s
Small bowel not affected in UC - unlike Crohn’s

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11
Q

What are the pathology of UC

A
UC:-
Disease extends proximally from rectum
Mucosal involvement only
No fistulas
Pseudopolyps of regenerating mucosa
No thickening of bowel wall
Malignant change common in long-standing cases
No granulomas
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12
Q

What is the pathology of Crohn’s

A

Any part of the colon can be involved (skip lesions)
Transmural involvement
Fistulas in adjacent viscera
No polyps
Thickened bowel wall - cobblestone appearance of mucous membrane
Malignant change rare
Granulomas present

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13
Q

What is the epidemiology of Crohn’s

A

No sex difference

Peak age of onset = 20-40

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14
Q

In what different ways can Crohn’s present

A

Acute Crohn’s disease - similar presentation to appendicitis but history of several days/weeks
Intestinal obstruction - due to wall thickening
Fistula formation
Malabsorption
Diarrhoea
Perianal disease - 10% (ranging from fissures to fistulas)

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15
Q

How do you medically manage Crohn’s

A

Steroids and immunosuppressants (eg. azathioprine) for acute attacks
TNF-alpha (eg. infliximab) - for acute exacerbations and fistulating disease
Sulfasalazine - for mild symptoms

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