Stomach & Duodenum Flashcards

1
Q

Parts of the stomach

A

Cardia

Fundus (saccus caecus - blind ending & most caudally located)

Body

Pylorus

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2
Q

Parts of the duodenum

A
  • Dilated ampulla immediately after pylorus
  • Curves sharply dorsally, creating the cranial duodenal flexure - pancreas lies within this
  • From cranial flexure, runs caudally, dorsally on the right as the descending duodenum (has v short mesoduodenum)
  • Then runs across base of caecum, curving caudally around ROM to the left side of abdo = the caudal duodenal flexure
  • Ascending duodenum then runs cranially for a short time & is attached to transverse/ descending colon at duodenocolic fold, continuing as jejunum from there
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3
Q

Blood supply to the stomach & duodenum

A

Stomach - celiac aa (supplies liver, spleen, stomach, pancreas & proximal duodenum) via branches of the splenic aa (short gastric aa), gastric & gastroepiploic aas (see image)

Duodenum - from celiac (cranial pancreatoduodenal aa) and cranial mesenteric (caudal pancreatoduodenal) aa - so good collateral supply

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4
Q

Attachments/ligaments of the stomach

A

Greater curvature (left)- greater omentum. Closely assoc w gastrosplenic (greater curvature - hilus of spleen), gastrophrenic (cardia - diaphragm) & phrenicosplenic (spleen - diaphragm) -all 3 continuous.

Greater omentum blends w gastrophrenic ligaments - forms a potential cavity, the omental bursa, entered by the epiploic foramen

Lesser curvature (right)- lesser omentum consisting of hepatogastric and hepatoduodenal ligaments (lesser curvature on the right so remember as liver/duodenum on the right)

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5
Q

Boundaries of the epiploic foramen (and direction of entrapment)

A

Caudate process of liver, caudal vena cava (craniodorsally), right lobe of the pancreas, & hepatic portal vein (ventrally).

Almost all entrapments occur from LEFT to RIGHT

(right to left is reported)

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6
Q

4 distinct areas of gastric mucosa

A
  1. Nonglandular stratified squamous - extensive (50% surface) - no secretory capacity
  2. Cardiac epithelium - glandular belt of tissue adjacent to margo w unknown function, bicarb?, -ve fb for acid secretion?
  3. Proper glandular gastric mucosa; parietal cells (HCl) zymogen cells (pepsinogen), enterochromaffin cells (histamine), G cells (gastrin - enhance acid secretion), D cells (somatostatin - inhibits acid secretion)
  4. Pyloric mucosa.
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7
Q

Where do the bile and pancreatic ducts empty?

And the accessory duts?

A

Bile & pancreatic ducts open within cranial flexure & empty via major duodenal papilla

Accessory pancreatic duct empties approx opposite major, at minor duodenal papilla

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8
Q

What is the migrating myoelectric complex & its 3 phases

A

Cyclic, recurring motility pattern that occurs in the stomach and small bowel during fasting

Phase I – A prolonged period of quiescence (40–60% of total time);

Phase II – Increased frequency of action potentials and smooth muscle contractility (20–30% of total time);

Phase III – A few minutes of peak electrical and mechanical activity (5–10 minutes);

Phase IV – Declining activity which merges with the next Phase I

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9
Q

4 layers of the stratified squamous gastric mucosa

A

From deep to superficial -

  1. Stratum germinavatum
  2. Stratum spinosum
  3. Stratum transitionale
  4. Stratum corneum

GSTC -

Similar to skin BSGLC

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10
Q

Methods of acid protection for the gastric mucosa

A

exceptionally impermeable (transepithelial resistance of 2-3000Ω/cm2) conferred mainly by interepithelial tight junctions in the stratum corneum and secretions from the stratum spinosum.

gastric mucosa is protected from ‘back diffusion’ of H+ by high transepithelial electrical resistance, as well as mucus and bicarbonate secretion and Na+ H+ exchangers

Protection superior in glandular vs squamous region

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11
Q

Repair mechanisms for the gastroduodenal muosa

A
  1. Superficial wounds - epithelial restitution - migration of epithelium adjacent to area of injury
  2. Deep wounds - req repair of submucosal vasculature, occurring through granulation tissue formation, fibroplasia & epithelial migration, likely facilitated by epidermal growth factor
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12
Q

Methods to measure gastric emptying

A

Scintigraphy. Eg 370MBq T99 w egg albumin (for solid phase) & in water (for liquid phase) by NGT after 12hr fast. Liquid & solid phase 50% gastric emptying times are 30 & 90 minutes, respectively, in normal horses

Acetaminophen (paracetamol) - 20mg/kg PO; clearance correlates w scintigraphic emptying

C-octanoic acid - breath samples correlate well w scintigraphic gastric emptying

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13
Q

Dx & Tx of gastric impaction

A

Dx - solid feed filled to or above margo after >16hr fast

Tx - medical; PO fluids, starvation, carbonated no caffeine drinks (coke zero)

Sx - infusion of fluid via 14g needle through greater curvature

Gastrotomy difficult/impossible but reported

Partial gastrectomy & total splenectomy has been used to tx gastric mass (Voss 2020)

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14
Q

Risk factors for gastric impactions

A

Fresian breed

Poor dentition

Link w liver dz

Ingestion of persimmon seeds

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15
Q

Sx tx options for pyloric outflow tract obstruction

A
  1. Hieneke Mikulikze pyloroplasty - Kent 2020 EVR CR; full thickness 4 cm longitudinal incision was made through ventral pylorus & proximal duodenum, between stay sutures. Closure transversely - single layer full thickness SI 0 PDS sutures between the oral & aboral side of the now transverse orientated incision, starting at the centre (the initial commissures of the incision).
  2. Bypass procedures depending on the location of the obstruction. Incl gastroduodenostomy, duodenojejunostomy or gastrojejunostomy. Any anatamosis w jejunum involved needs to be combined w jejunojejunostomy to prevent filling of the proximal segment of jejunum (see diagrams). Can use stapled or hand-sewn techniques. 2 layers (mucosal and seromuscular) sufficient
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16
Q

Indications, procedure & outcomes for gastroduodenostomy (GD) (Zedler 2009 VS)

A
  • GDO performed when there was pyloric obstruction &/or obstruction of the proximal 1–2 cm of duodenum, provided duodenum distal to obstruction could be aligned w stomach without excessive tension
  • 4–5 cm segment of duodenum sutured to stomach w 2-0 PG 910 continuous Lembert
  • Full thickness 3-4cm incisions, made into stomach & duodenum parallel & close to 1st suture line. (If ventilated, gastric incision made between breaths to avoid rapid expulsion of content.
  • Cut edges of the stomach and the duodenum adjacent to original suture line (far side) were then apposed w 2-0 pg 910 in a full thickness simple continuous pattern.
  • The near side-incised edges were apposed with a full thickness, simple continuous pattern, oversewn w a continuous Lembert, w 2-0 or 3-0 pg910.
  • This side to side anastomosis produced an average stoma length of 2.5–3 cm between the stomach and the duodenum
  • 79% long term survival
17
Q

Indications, procedure & outcome for gastrojejunostomy (+/- jejunojejunostomy) (Zedler 2009 VS)

A
  • Used w duodenal obstruction or pyloric obstruction w significant duodenal involvement
  • In most foals, GJO combined w JJO to avoid potential complications assoc w blind loop
  • A 7–8 cm segment of proximal jejunum (20cm aboral to duodenocolic fold) aligned w a relatively avascular region of caudal ventral aspect of stomach, secured w 2-0 pg 910 stay sutures.
  • Jejunum aligned w oral segment to the left side of the foal’s abdomen & aboral segment to the right & distal to the planned anastomosis.
  • Side-side GJO; first suturing the jejunum, slightly off the anti-mesenteric site, to stomach w 2-0 pg910. Far side sutured 1st, then incisions made. Near side closed in 2 layers w 2-0/3-0 pg 910 = 6–7 cm stoma
  • JJO performed by aligning 10–15 cm oral & aboral to GJO site.
  • The JJO was either hand sewn or stapled; stapled anastomoses: autosuture stapling instrument inserted & fired
  • Far edges of stab incisions apposed w single layer simple continuous pattern. Near sides apposed w a simple continuous pattern oversewn w continuous Lembert. Ends reinforced w single cruciate
  • Hand-sewn - 2 layer side-to-side as per GDO/GJO
  • 12/19 & 2/4 GJ+JJ & GJ only respectively LTS (overall - 14/23 = 61%)
  • ie better LTS w GJ + JJ combined
18
Q

Differentiating features of DPJ vs SSI lesions

A

DPJ usually respond well to analgesia/gastric decompression

Often leucocytosis & pyrexia

Surgery generally worsens px for DPJ

19
Q

Main branches of the celiac artery

A
  1. Left gastric artery
  2. Hepatic artery
  3. Splenic artery (gives off short gastric aa to lesser curvature)