Week 5 - Oesophagus, Gastric Disorders & Acute Abdomen Flashcards
Outline dysphagia:
• Sites.
• Symptoms.
• Causes.
• Normally, food - deagglutination, peristaltic movements, food enters stomach (back flow prevented by lower oesophageal sphincter - important anatomic landmark/structure).
• Disorders of the oesophagus - commonest clinical presentation is dysphagia - can be functional or mechanical.
• Dysphagia - difficulty swallowing
- Odynophagia - painful swallowing - inflammation, ulcer.
Sites (3 normal narrowings - strictures common at these sites):
• Oropharyngeal.
• Oesophageal.
• Oesophagogastric.
Symptoms:
• Difficulty with solids - mechanical obstruction - tumours/strictures.
• Solids & liquids - motility disorders - achalasia (increased tone of lower sphincter).
• Liquids - pharyngeal disorders.
Causes:
• Local, systemic, central.
• Mechanical, neural, functional.
• Ulcers, tears, webs, rings, tumours, strictures, neural.
Identify oesophageal disorders.
• Reflux oesophagitis. - Commonest clinically - due to reflux of acid coming up from stomach AKA GORD. Barrett's and cancer are complications of GORD. • Barrett’s oesophagus. • Cancer. • Achalasia. • Fistula. • Hernia. • Stricture (Plummer Vinson syndrome). • Varices - dilation of the veins. • Mallory-Weiss - rupture.
Outline oesophageal varices.
- Dilated veins - lower part.
- Dilation of porta systemic collateral circulation - common whenever there is obstruction to portal circulation in liver e.g. cirrhosis → bleeding more common (dilation → bleeding).
- Pathogenesis - portal hypertension (cirrhosis) → dilation of porta-systemic shunts rupture → massive bleeding.
• Extremely dilated sub-mucosal veins in the lower oesophagus.
Aetiology/Pathogenesis:
1. Portal hypertension (due cirrhosis, hepatic schistosomiasis etc.) results in the development of collateral channels at sites where portal and caval systems communicate in an attempt to allow some drainage of venous blood to occur.
2. Collateral veins develop into congested subepithelial and submucosal venous plexus within the distal oesophagus → varices.
Morphology:
• Tortuous, dilated veins lying within submucosa of distal oesophagus & proximal stomach.
• Haemorrhage in lumen/oesophageal wall → ulcerated and necrotic mucosa.
• Venous thrombosis.
• Evidence of chronic inflammation (in the event of past variceal rupture).
Clinical features:
• Usually asymptomatic.
• Haematemesis due to variceal rupture.
• Haemorrhage due to variceal rupture (medical emergency).
Describe Mallory-Weiss tears (syndrome). What is Boerhaave syndrome?
- Severe/forced vomiting.
- Longitudinal mucosal tear (rupture of mucosa causing acute bleeding following severe dilation. Usually longitudinal mucosal tear).
- Alcohol intoxication, over eating (usually at gastroesophageal junction following severe vomiting e.g. binge drinking, alcoholic intoxication, over eating)
- Hiatal hernia in 75%.
- Spontaneous healing (supportive therapy only).
- Boerhaave syndrome - same but severe with rupture & mediastinitis (Pacific Islands). Total rupture of oesophagus releasing contents into the mediastinum is known as Boerhaave syndrome - seen in Pacific Islands usually following festival/heavy meal.
• Longitudinal tear in the oesophagus near the gastoesophageal junction.
Aetiology/Pathogenesis:
Trauma due to:
• Severe retching or forced vomiting.
- Gastroesophageal musculature fails to relax in prolonged vomiting so the oesophageal wall stretches and tears.
• Vomiting secondary to acute alcohol intoxification
• Hiatus hernia.
Clinical features:
• Vomiting up blood (haematemesis) after violent retching or vomiting.
• Melaena (blood in stool).
• Contributes to about 10% of upper GIT bleeding.
Investigation:
• Endoscopy.
Management:
• Supportive therapy.
• Spontaneous healing.
Outline congenital oesophageal disorders.
• Congenital atresia - total obstruction of oesophagus with just a fibrous thread.
• Fistula - one of the ends communicating with the trachea.
*See diagrams.
Outline motility disorders of the oesophagus.
- More common clinically - disorders of oesophageal motility.
- Achalasia most common - narrowing of LOS due to lack of dilation (of LOS)
- Sliding hernia - when a portion of the stomach gets pulled up following strictures or congenital. Produces hyperacidity and gastric heartburn. Commonest (95%).
- Rolling hernia - herniation of stomach wall. Rare (5%).
Outline oesophagitis.
- Inflammation due to erosions by toxins, alcohol, infections, acids, poisons.
- Acute: erosive, alcohol, infection (in immunocompromised e.g. Candida).
- Chronic: acid reflux (GORD), chemical, alcohol, smoking, candida, radiation, idiopathic (eosinophilic).
Microscopy:
• Acute inflammation.
• Eosinophils - few (reflux) more in eosinophilic.
• Commonest clinically - reflux oesophagitis - inflammation of lower end of oesophagus due to gastric acid escaping into the oesophagus.
• Inflammation of the oesophageal mucosa.
Aetiology/Pathogenesis:
• Irritation/damage to oesophageal mucosa results in inflammation
• Causes include:
- Acute oesophagitis - erosive, alcohol, infection
- Chronic oesophagitis - acid reflux (GORD), chemical, alcohol, smoking, candida, radiation.
Morphology:
• Ranges from mild redness to severe, bleeding ulceration with stricture formation.
• Varies with aetiology.
• Irradiation causes luminal narrowing.
• Candida is characterised by grey-white pseudomembrane (fungal hyphae/inflammation).
• Herpes virus causes punched out ulcers.
Clinical features:
• Poor correlation between symptoms and histological/endoscopic findings.
• Dysphagia (difficulty swallowing).
• Pain.
Outline acid reflux disorders.
• Escape of acid into the oesophagus.
• Gastric acid pH - 1 (million times more acidic than blood).
• Protected by LOS (although it is resistant to mechanical damage by food and very sensitive to acid damage).
• Cause - decreased LOS tone or increased abdominal pressure → GORD.
- Either loss of LOS tone or increased abdominal pressure → escape of acid into oesophagus → results in sudden severe burning pain in epigastrium (typical heartburn AKA GORD).
• Risk factors - alcohol, tobacco, obesity, CNS depressants, pregnancy, hiatal hernia, delayed gastric emptying, increased gastric volume. In many cases, no definitive cause is identified. (Many causes but in most cases clinically may not be able to identify some of these causes. Labelled idiopathic).
Identify the classification of GORD.
Clinical stages:
- Functional heartburn.
- NERD - non erosive reflux disease.
- MERD - minimal erosive reflux disease.
- GORD - erosion, inflammation.
- Barrett’s - metaplasia.
- Adenocarcinoma (rare).
- Clinically, GORD is not one disease. Although patient just presents with heartburn. Typically 75% of patients will have no pathology (oesophageal biopsy is normal - non-erosive or very mild inflammation) - nothing will be seen clinically in 3/4 of patients.
- Significant inflammation is seen in approx. 24%.
- Metaplasia/cancer seen in <1%.
- AET (acid exposure index) and SI (symptoms index) are measured to know the different types of clinical GORD.
- Heartburn - NERD (normal endoscopy 75%), oesophagitis (24%), Barrett’s (1%).
Outline the aetiology of GORD.
• Reflux of gastric juices causes mucosal injury.
• Risk factors include:
- Defective lower sphincter (reduced tone, inappropriate clearance).
- Delayed oesophageal clearance.
- Gastric regurgitation (e.g. hiatus hernia, varicies).
- Defective gastric emptying.
- Obesity and motility disorders (e.g. defective perastalsis).
- Increased intra-abdominal pressure (e.g. pregnancy).
- Inflammatory bowel syndromes.
- Hyperacidity of gastric contents.
- Fat, alcohol, coffee.
- N.B. Smoking, NSAIDS not risk factors.
Describe the pathogenesis of GORD.
- Prolonged reflux of gastric juices causes damage to the oesophageal mucosa → inflammation.
- Basal cell hyperplasia occurs in response to damage.
- Intestinal metaplasia within oesophageal squamous mucosa → Barret’s Oesophagus (change of epithelium from stratified squamous to glandular epithelium. Clear border = Barrett’s).
- Dysplasia of oesophageal mucosa may eventually lead to adenocarcinoma.
Normal → inflammation → hyperplasia → metaplasia (transformation from squamous cell to glandular epithelium known as glandular metaplasia). When further damage occurs → nuclei become irregular, mutations start occurring (dysplasia) → cancer.
- Hyperplastic epithelium due to loss of cells due to acid (damage due to acid).
- Become glandular because producing mucus - more resistant to mucus. Acid digestion.
- Metaplastic cells gradually become more crowded and glandular/irregular → start infiltrating as the cancer.
- When there is metaplasia and cancer - the inflammation becomes well demarcated - clear border.
Describe the morphology of GORD.
- Normal oesophagus - white stratified squamous epithelium.
- Normal gastric - reddish columnar epithelium.
- In the case of reflux oesophagitis and Barrett’s - oesophageal epithelium becomes inflamed → then transforms to columnar epithelium.
Oesophagitis:
• Gross - inflammation/redness. May have bleeding and ulceration.
• Microscopy - mucosa histology often unremarkable, eosinophils, basal zone hyperplasia, elongation lamina propria papillae.
Barrett’s:
• Gross - tongues or patches of red velvety mucosa extending upwards.
• Microscopy - intestinal metaplasia, squamous cells replaced by columnar mucosa, goblet cells with distinct mucous vacuoles that stain blue.
Dysplasia:
• Gross - abnormal mucosa, possible gross tumour mass.
• Microscopy - increased epithelial proliferation, atypical mitosis, immature cells and abnormal glands, invasion of neoplastic cells to lamina propria.
Identify the clinical features of GORD.
• Heartburn and regurgitation (provoke bending, straining, lying down).
- Burning retrosternal discomfort after meals, lying, stooping or straining, relieved by antacids.
• Belching.
• Salivation due to reflex salivary gland stimulation (waterbrash - “my mouth fills with saliva”).
• Dysphagia/odynophagia.
• Cough as reflex fluid irritates larynx.
• Atypical chest pain.
What are the complications of GORD?
• Oesophagitis - inflammation/ulcer (possible bleeding and perforation).
• Benign oesophageal stricture - fibrosis due to long-standing oesophagitis.
• Barrett’s oesophagus - pre-malignant condition characterised by metaplasia.
• Oesophageal tumour
- Adenocarcinoma - Affects lower 1/3 of oesophagus. Causes include acid reflux, GORD & Barret’s oesophagus. More common.
- Squamous carcinoma - Affects upper 1/3 of oesophagus. Environmental causes: Diet, smoking, alcohol, toxins. Less common.
- Ulcers.
- IDA.
Identify differential diagnoses for GORD.
- Oesophagitis (from corrosives, NSAIDs, herpes, Candida).
- Duodenal/gastric ulcers or cancers.
- Non-ulcer dyspepsia.
- Sphincter of Oddi malfunction.
- Cardiac disease.
Outline investigations and management of GORD.
Investigations:
• Endoscopy - generally if patient presents with atypical symptoms. Endoscopy of symptoms >4 weeks, persistent vomiting, GI bleeding/iron deficiency, palpable mass, age >55y, dysphagia, symptoms despite treatment, relapsing symptoms, weight loss.
• Barium swallow may show hiatus hernia.
• 24h oesophageal pH monitoring +/- manometry help diagnose GORD when endoscopy is normal.
Management:
• Lifestyle advice - weight loss, elevation of bed head, smoking caessation, small regular meals. Avoid hot drinks, alcohol, citrus fruits, tomatoes, onions, fizzy drinks, spicy foods, coffee, tea, chocolate and eating <3h before bed (late meals).
• Drugs - antacids relieve symptoms. For oesophagitis,, try a PPI (better than H2 blockers). If unresponsive, try twice daily PPI.
• Surgery - e.g. laparoscopic, aims to increase resting oesophageal sphincter pressure. Consider in severe GORD (confirm by pH monitoring/manometry) if drugs are not working. Atypical symptoms (cough, laryngitis) are less likely to improve with surgery compared to patients with typical symptoms.
Outline the 2 types of oesophageal cancer.
- 2 common types of cancer in the oesophagus - squamous cell carcinoma and adenocarcinoma.
- Squamous carcinoma:
- Upper end and middle 1/3 of oesophagus.
- Common in Asian countries.
- Due to tobacco, diet, toxins.
- Keratin, hard tumour (usually hard due to keratin production).
- Microscopy - keratin pearls.
• Adenocarcinoma:
- Lower end.
- Western countries.
- Reflux disease (due to acid).
- Glands, mucous.
- Glandular cancer, soft and mucous producing adenocarcinoma (multiple glands that produce mucin).
Oesophageal disorders summary.
• Numerous disorders - commonest is reflux disease → transforms to Barrett’s oesophagus → transforms to cancer in rare cases.
• Obstructions - 2 types
- Functional - achalasia and aperistalsis.
- Mechanical - strictures and tumors.
• Oesophagitis - common, infections - immunocompromised. Due to diet/alcohol.
• Chronic oesophagitis commonest - GORD.
• Barrett’s - glandular metaplasia (1% of patients) → dysplasia → adenocarcinoma (precursor for dysplasia and adenocarcinoma).
• Squamous carcinoma - Asian, alcohol, tobacco, toxins, upper end/middle 1/3 of oesophagus.