1.11.2 Perforated Viscus Flashcards

1
Q

Which organs are ‘hollow viscus’ organs?

Why does perforation occur?

A
  • Organs
    • Bladder
    • Stomach, incl Esophagus
    • Gallbladder
    • Small bowel
    • Large bowel
    • Uterus
  • Perforation
    • Often due to full thickness tissue injury or disruption
      • Partial thickness insults can progress, though
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2
Q

Describe the 4 main etiologies of perforated viscus, and describe specific types within each category

A
  • Ischemia
    • Bowel obstruction
    • Embolism
    • Hypotension/poor perfusion
    • Strangulation hernia
  • Infection/Inflammation
    • Appendicitis (look for pneumoperitoneum)
    • Diverticulitis (look for pnptnm)
    • Sepsis
    • Chron’s/IBD
    • Connective tissue d/o’s
  • Erosion
    • Corrosive chemical ingestion
    • GERD
    • Gastric/peptic ulcers
    • Tumors
  • Physical Disruption
    • Intrumentation (EGD, colo, electrocaudery)
    • Trauma (blunt, penetrating, forgein body ingestion)
    • Pressure (Borhaave’s syndrome, bowel obstruction)
    • Post-op leak at anastromosis site
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3
Q

Describe clinical presentation for perforated viscus

Describe the history you will take for this patient

A
  • Presentation
    • Chest vs. back vs. abd pain
      • Depends on location of perf
    • N/v, tachycardia, fever
    • S/s sepsis, hotn
  • History
    • OLDCARTS
    • Recent procedures: EGD, colo, intubation
    • Recent trauma
    • Medications: large pills, osteoporosis meds
    • Hx of odynophagia, GERD, PUD, ETOH, bowel obstruction
    • Personal/family hx GI malignancy
  • Physical Exam
    • Full, with special attention to neck, chest, abdomen
      • Signs of sub q air
        • Puffy face, puffy neck, voice quality (esophageal perf)
      • Evaluate for crepitus, peritonitis, sepsis
      • Rectal exam to check for blood
        • Tumors, GI pathology
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4
Q

Describe diagnostic workup for perforated viscus

A
  • Labs
    • BMP
    • CBC w diff
    • Coags (if possible surgery)
    • LFTs, lipase
      • Biliary tree, upper abd source
    • Lactic acid
      • If septic/concern for ischemia
  • Imaging
    • 3 View Abd Xray
      • Upright chest (eval for pneumomediastinum)
      • May miss pneumoperitoneum
    • CT Scan
      • Gold standard for catching pneumoperitoneum
      • Better delineation of anatomical causes of free air
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5
Q

You get a CT scan when working up perforated viscus patient, what might you find and what’s going on there?

What is general management for both problems?

A
  • Pneumomediastinum
    • Can occur with positive pressure ventilation
    • If septic/anastomotic leak, this would be pathological
    • If not from pathologic cause, no intervention needed typically
  • Pneumoperitoneum
    • Common after abd surgery
      • Espected - typically not pathological
      • Resolves in 3-6d post op
    • Can see after cardiac surgery if peritoneum violated
  • Management
    • NPO
    • IV hydration
    • IV analgesia
    • Surgical consult
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6
Q

How will you work up c/f pneumomediastinum specifically?

A
  • Gastrograffin swallow: Water-soluable contrast
    • If no obvious contrast extravasation, repeat w barium
      • If good, cleared to eat, no problem
    • Contrast extravasation requires surgical evaluation
      • Don’t want barium in mediastinum
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7
Q

Contrast a perforation in the upper versus lower GI tract.

What are antibiotic considerations?

A
  • Upper GI
    • Structures proximal to ligament of Trietz
    • Less bacterial contamination of peritoneal cavity
  • Lower GI
    • Distal to ligament of Trietz
    • Greater bacterial contamination of peritoneal cavity
      • Quickly septic
  • Empiric Abx Therapy
    • Initial: Broad-spectrum gram neg and anerobic agents
      • Pip Tazo
    • Add broad spectrum gram positive
      • Vanco
    • Consider adding fluconazole to cover yeast
      • DM, immunosuppressed - esophageal candidiasis
  • Esophageal/Upper Perforation
    • Acute mediastinitis usually cased by anaerobic or mixed aerobic-anaerobic flora
      • Can also be facultative bacteria
    • Common anaerobes:
      • Prevotella, porphyromonas, peptostreptococcus, B fragilis
    • Common aerobes: alpha hemolytic strep, s aureus, k pneumoniae
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8
Q

Describe complications of perforation

A
  • Pharyngeal or esophageal
    • Mediastinitis
    • Sepsis
  • Ruptured gastric/peptic ulcer
    • Peritonitis
    • Abscess
    • Sepsis
  • Small/large bowel perf
    • Peritonitis
    • Abscess
    • Sepsis
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