Small Bowel Disease Flashcards
What are some luminal causes of small bowel obstruction?
Gallstone ileus
Food
Bezoar (lump of hair)
What is a gallstone ileus?
Large gallstone migrates via fistulas into the small intestine and become lodged
What is the most common fistula associated with the gall bladder and small intestine?
Cholecystoduodenal
What are some bowel wall causes of small bowel obstruction?
Tumours
Crohn’s disease
Radiation enteritis
List some symptoms of small bowel obstruction
Colicky abdo pain Absolute constipation (no flatus/burping) Abdominal distention Faeculent vomiting
What investigations are done for small bowel obstruction?
FBC, urinalysis, blood gases
AXR, contrast CT abdomen
Enema XR if necessary
Is surgery common for small bowel obstruction?
Not really as most settle with management
Outline general treatment of small bowel obstruction
Analgesia
Fluids + potassium (lose K in vomit)
NG tube draining
Anti-embolism measures
When would surgery be done early for small bowel obstruction?
Strangulation
Perforation
Ischaemia
PREVENT DEAD GUTS
In mesenteric/small bowel ischaemia, the colon is usually unaffected. True/False?
True
Marginal artery of Drummond provides collateral supply
What is the typical symptom of mesenteric ischaemia?
Cramping pain
Essentially “angina of the gut”
What is the first-line treatment for mesenteric ischaemia?
Surgery! No faffing around
PREVENT DEAD GUTS
Upon surgery, if part of the intestine is necrotised, what is done?
Resected (up to a limit)
Where does Meckel’s diverticulum occur?
How does it arise?
60cm from ileocaecal valve
Remnant of vitello-intestinal duct from development
When does Meckel’s diverticulum present?
Usually before 2yrs of age
What is the most common cause of small bowel ischaemia?
Mesenteric atherosclerosis, thromboembolism
Which layer of the bowel is most sensitive to hypoxia? Why?
Mucosa
It is the most metabolically active part
Increasing the time of ischaemia increases the depth of small bowel infarction. True/False?
True
List some complications of small bowel ischaemia
Resolution (if short-term ischaemia)
Scarring, fibrosis -> stricture
Gangrene
Perforation
Primary tumours of small bowel are commoner than secondary tumours. True/False?
False Secondary tumours (metastases) are more common
List 3 primary tumours of small bowel
Lymphoma
Carcinoid tumours
Carcinoma
Which cells are lymphomas derived from?
B cells
T cells
What is coeliac disease?
Abnormal reaction to gluten + wheat products resulting in enterocyte damage + reduced absorption
What is the characteristic histological appearance of coeliac disease?
Villous atrophy
Flat mucosal biopsy
Which serology is used to investigate coeliac disease?
Anti-TTG, anti-endomesial, anti-gliadin antibodies