Surgery Flashcards

1
Q

What is the pyloric sphincter?

A

It is a ring of smooth muscle that forms the canal between the stomach and the duodenum.

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2
Q

What is pyloric stenosis?

A

Hypertrophy (thickening) of the pylorus which prevents food traveling from the stomach to the duodenum as normal.
After feeding, there is increased peristalsis in the stomach as it tries to push food into the duodenum. Eventually this becomes so powerful that it ejects the food into the oesophagus and out of the mouth as projectile vomiting.

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3
Q

What are the features of pyloric stenosis?

A
  • presents in first few weeks of life
  • hungry baby
  • thinness
  • pallor
  • failing to thrive
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4
Q

What may be seen on abdominal examination of pyloric stenosis?

A
  • firm, round mass felt in the upper abdomen (‘feels like a large olive’) caused by hypertrophic muscle of the pylorus
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5
Q

What can be seen on a blood gas for pyloric stenosis?

A

Hypochloric metabolic alkalosis

- due to baby vomiting HCl from the stomach

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6
Q

How is pyloric stenosis diagnosed?

A

Abdominal USS - visualise thickened pylorus

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7
Q

How is pyloric stenosis managed?

A

Laparoscopic pyloromyotomy (Ramstedt’s)

  • incision in SM of pylorus to widen the canal to allow food to pass from the stomach to the duodenum
  • excellent prognosis
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8
Q

What is Hirschsprung’s disease?

A

A congenital condition where nerve cells of the myenteric plexus (which forms the enteric nervous system) are absent in the distal bowel and rectum.

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9
Q

What is the myenteric nerve plexus responsible for?

A

It runs all the way along the bowel in the bowel wall and is a complex web of neurones, ganglion cells, receptors, synpases and neurotransmitters.

It stimulated peristalsis of the large bowel; without it, the bowel loses its motility and is unable to pass food along its length.

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10
Q

What is the pathophysiology in Hirschsprung’s disease?

A

During foetal development, parasympathetic ganglion cells start higher in the GI tract and gradually migrate to the distal colon and rectum.

In Hischsprung’s, these parasympathetic ganglion cells do not travel all the way down the colon so a section of colon at the end is left without them.

The aganglionic section does not relax so becomes constricted leading to a loss of movement of feaces and obstruction in the bowel.

Proximal to the aganglionic part becomes distended and full.

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11
Q

What risk factors exist for Hirschsprung’s disease?

A
  • genes on various chromosomes have a modifying effect to increase risk
  • family history
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12
Q

What other syndromes is Hirschsprung’s disease associated with?

A
  • Down’s syndrome
  • Neurofibromatosis
  • Waardenburg syndrome
  • multiple endocrine neoplasia type II
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13
Q

How does Hirschsprung’s disease present?

A
  • acute intestinal obstruction shortly after birth
  • delay in passing meconium (>24 hours)
  • chronic constipation since birth
  • abdominal pain and distension
  • vomiting
  • poor weight gain
  • failure to thrive
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14
Q

What is inflammation and obstruction of the intestine in those with Hirschprung’s disease called?

A

Hirschsprung-associated enterocolitis (HAEC)

Occurs in 20% neonates

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15
Q

How is Hirschsprung’s disease managed?

A
  • abdominal x-ray (intestinal obstruction, features of HAEC)
  • rectal biopsy (absence of ganglionic cells)
  • fluid resuscitation and management of intestinal obstruction (in unwell children/enterocolitis)
  • IV abx (HAEC)
  • NG tube

Definitive management:
- surgical removal of aganglionic bowel (may have long term disturbance in bowel function, some incontinence)

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16
Q

What is biliary atresia?

A

A congenital condition where a section of the bile duct is either narrowed or absent resulting in cholestasis where the bile cannot be transported from the liver to the bowel.

17
Q

How does biliary atresia present?

A
  • shortly after birth

- significant jaundice (may be persistent lasting >14 days in term babies, >21 days in preterm)

18
Q

Why does biliary atresia cause jaundice?

A

Bile cannot be excreted due to the narrowing of absence of a section of the bile duct. Conjugated bilirubin is excreted in the bile and so biliary atresia prevents the excretion of conjugated bilirubin.

High levels of conjugated bilirubin leads to significant jaundice.

19
Q

What initial investigation is used for possible biliary atresia?

A

Conjugated and unconjugated bilirubin.

High proportion of conjugated bilirubin suggests the liver is processing the bilirubin for excretion by conjugating it but it is not able to excrete it because it cannot flow through the biliary duct into the bowel.

20
Q

What is the management for biliary atresia?

A

Surgery - Kasai portoenterostomy (attaches a section of small intestine to the opening of the liver where the bile duct normally attaches = clears the jaundice and prolongs survival)

Liver transplant - often required to resolve the condition

21
Q

What is appendicitis?

A

Inflammation of the appendix.

The appendix is attached to the caecum and becomes inflamed due to infection trapped within it by obstruction at the point where the appendix meets the bowel.

Inflammation can quickly proceed to gangrene and ruptutre.

22
Q

What happens if the appendix ruptures?

A

Releases faecal content and infective material into the abdomen leading to peritonitis.

23
Q

What is the peak age of incidence of appendicitis?

A

10-20 years

24
Q

How does appendicitis present?

A
  • abdominal pain (central moving to RIF over time and eventually localised to RIF)
  • tenderness on palpation of the McBurney’s point
  • loss of appetitie
  • N&V
  • Rovsing’s sign (palpation of LIF causing pain in RIF)
  • guarding on abdominal palpation
  • rebound tenderness
  • percussion tenderness
25
Q

Which symptoms suggest peritonitis caused by a ruptured appendix?

A

Rebound tenderness

Percussion tenderness

26
Q

How is appendicitis diagnosed?

A
  • clinical presentation
  • raised inflammatory markers
  • CT scan can confirm diagnosis
  • USS in females to exclude ovarian/gynae pathology
27
Q

Give differential diagnoses for appendicitis?

A

1) Ectopic pregnancy - serum or urine bHCG essential in adolescent girls
2) Ovarian cysts - rupture/torsion
3) Meckel’s diverticulum - usually asymptomatic but can bleed, become inflamed, cause volulus or intussusception
4) Mesenteric adenitis - inflamed abdominal lymph nodes; often associated with tonsilitis or URTI
5) Appendix mass - omentum surrounds and sticks to the inflamed appendix forming a mass in RIF

28
Q

How is appendicitis managed?

A
  • emergency admission to hospital under surgical team

- laparoscopic appendicectomy (preferred over laparotomy as fewer risks and faster recovery)

29
Q

What are complications of appendicectomy?

A
  • bleeding, infection, pain, scars
  • damage to bowel, bladder, other organs
  • removal of a normal appendix
  • anaesthetic risks
  • VTE (DVT/PE)