Lecture 31 Flashcards

1
Q

Functional conditions of the gut

A

Do not appear to have an obvious pathological cause - no abnormality histologically, macroscoprically or anatomically
-more related to disturbance to gut function
many of the mechanism relate to many other functional gut disorders

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2
Q

Function gut disorders

A

No structural or tissue abnormality (dont detect anything in biopsy)
Defined by a constellation of symptoms but without overt pathology
-group of symptoms characterising a particular condition= syndrome
Thought to be due to disturb function, multiple factors (complex underlying mechanisms)
-disturbed motility (not co-ordinated, enhanced or decreased)
-visceral hypersensitivity (increased pain or stimulous beyond what is normaly percieved by average person)
-brain gut dysfunction (miscommunication, gut effected by brain-anxious or nervous. brain effected by gut-IBS develop problems with mood in response to gut symptoms)
-psychosocial factors (IBS and Stress worsening of symptoms)

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3
Q

No overt pathology means no diagnostic test

A

No biochemical abnormality with conventional testing

No histological or radiological features (biopsy or radiology)

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4
Q

Rome critera

A

Developed by experts of the Rome foundation
Criteria for diagnosis of all functional GI disorders
Mostly used in research and study design
-to ensure people who are entered into research for functional disorders fulfil the same criteria
-not rigidly adhered to in clinical context (need to be aware of what is in criteria but dont need to nescesarily fulfil the criteria for clinical diagnosis of IBS)

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5
Q

Occurrence of functional gut disorders

A

Functional gut disorders make up the most common presentation of people with GI disorders

  • not much to learn re limited anatomical/histological
  • will be most common thing to see re people presenting with GI symptoms
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6
Q

Areas affected by functional gut disroders

A
Oesophagus (hypersensitive oesophagus, symtpoms like reflux but no pathological amount of reflux occuring)
Stomach (most common functional condition is dyspepsia- epigastric discomfort, similar to indigestion, w/o any obvious pathology (ulceration or inflammation))
Small Intestine (not common)
Large intestine (IBS, abdominal pain)
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7
Q

Functional gut disorders in the Oesophagus

A
  1. Globus
    - sensation of lump or something stuck in throat (but without any actual structural problems)
  2. Functional heartburn
    - symptoms of reflux without evidence of GORD (both in endoscopy and pH study) or a motility disorder
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8
Q

Functional gut disorders in the Stomach

A
  1. Functional dyspepsia
    - upper abdomen pain or discomfort (like indigestion) without structural abnormality e.g. no ulcer, pancreas or gallbladder pathology
  2. Functional vomiting/cyclical vomiting syndrome
    - recurrent vomiting; no diagnostic abnormalities and no psychiatric cause (periods of being really well and then periods of recurrent vomiting. sometimes assoc. abdominal pain and headaches) - no obvious structural abnormalities
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9
Q

Functional gut disorders in the Small/Large Intestine

A
  1. Irritable bowel syndrome
    - most common cuase of functional gut disorder
    - abdominal discomfort/bloating associated with defaecation and altered swinging bowel habit (i.e. constipation/diarrhoea or both)(one may predominate)
  2. Functional abdominal pain
    - recurrent or continuous abdominal pain unrelated to defaecation and without disturbed bowel habit - no diagnostic abnormalities
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10
Q

How can a functional gut problem be diagnosed

A
  1. Symptom complex
    - analogous to diagnosis or migraine (consistent symptoms with syndrome)
    - be aware of red flags which make functional gut conditions unlikely (iron deficiency, bleeding, anaemia, weight loss, dysphagia)- warnign to investigate for other pathologies
    - typically presented in young people
  2. Important not to miss other GI diseases
    - symptoms of functional gut disorders can be similar to those with serious pathology
    - diagnosis of functional gut disorders is a “diagnosis of exclusion” (can mimic other functional disorders. need to consider other things to be excluded, and need to do a basic workup atleast)
  3. Always consider other GI diagnoses first before making a diagnosis of functional gut disorder
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