Peptic Ulceration, Neuroendocrine Tumours and Crohns Disease Flashcards
why can people live without a large intestine?
large bowel function is absorption of water not nutrients
secretory diarrhoea
over secretion of water and electrolytes often due to bacterial toxins
affects absorption of water and chloride
inflammatory diarrhoea
cellular damage of mucosa causing hypersecretion
osmotic diarrhoea
osmotically active solutes e.g, lactose intolerance
acute vs chronic diarrhoea
acute - 2 weeks
chronic - 4+ weeks
manifestation of Crohn’s disease
abdominal pain
diarrhoea
weight loss
lethargy
anaemia
mouth aphthous ulcers
other complications associated with Crohn’s disease
skin conditions e.g., erythema nodosum
eye issues - iritis, conjunctivitis
joint problems
Drugs for Chron’s disease
steroids - prednisolone, budenoside
immunosuppressants - methotrexate
biologics - vedolizumab, infliximab
causes of peptic ulcers
NSAID, h-pylori, crohn’s disease
rarely - gastrinoma
management of peptic ulcers
fluid resuscitation
stop NSAID
PPI - omeprazole
the stomach secretes:
acid
water
electrolytes
glycoproteins - mucin, intrinsic factor, enzymes
gastric acid is necessary for:
protein digestion
absorption of Ca+, iron, vitamin B12 and thyroxin
prevents bacterial overgrowth and enteric infections
reduction or elimination of food allergenicity
mechanisms of acid secretion control
hormone - released into blood e.g., gastrin
paracine - released into tissue, reaches target via diffusion e.g., histamine, somatostatin
which neuroendocrine tumours do carcinoid syndrome typically occur in
mainly small bowel neuroendocrine neoplasms
some bronchial NEN
some pancreatic NEN
features of carcinoid syndrome
flushing
diarrhoea
abdominal pain
carcinoid heart disease
telangiectasias - spider veins
bronchospasm
pellagra