General - large bowel disease Flashcards

1
Q

Appendicitis

A

Inflammation of the appendix
Most commonly affects those in their second/third decade

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2
Q

Appendicitis pathophysiology

A

Typically caused by direct luminal obstruction, usually secondary to a faecolith, lymphoid hyperplasia, impacted stool or rarely a tumour
When obstructed, commensal bacteria in the appendix can multiply -> acute inflammation
Reduced venous drainage and localised inflammation can result in increased pressure within the appendix, in turn can result in ischaemia
Left untreated -> ischaemia within the appendiceal wall can result in necrosis -> perforation

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3
Q

Appendicitis risk factors

A

Family history
Ethnicity – more common in Caucasians
Environmental – summer

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4
Q

Appendicitis clinical features

A

Pain – initially peri-umbilical, classically dull and poorly localised, but later migrates to the right iliac fossa, where it is well-localised and sharp
Vomiting, anorexia, nausea, diarrhoea or constipation
Examination – rebound tenderness and percussion pain over McBurney’s point, guarding, severe cases
- Rovsing’s sign: RIF fossa pin on palpation of the LIF
- Psoas sign: RIF pain with extension of the right hip (appendix in a retrocaecal position)

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5
Q

Appendicitis investigations

A

Urinalysis, pregnancy test
Routine bloods – FBC, CRP, serum B-hCG if ectopic pregnancy has not been excluded
Imaging – ultrasound is first line if the differential includes gynaecological pathology, CT is able to delineate multiple differentials including GI and urological causes

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6
Q

Appendicitis management

A

Definitive treatment – laparoscopic appendicectomy
Appendix should routinely be sent to histopathology to look for malignancy

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7
Q

Appendicitis complications

A

Perforation – if left untreated can perforate and cause peritoneal contamination
Surgical site infection
Appendix mass
Pelvis abscess – fever with a palpable RIF mass, confirmed on CT scan, management is usually with abx and percutaneous drainage of abscess

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8
Q

Colorectal cancer aetiology

A

Originate from the epithelial cells, most commonly an adenocarcinoma
Develop via a progression of normal mucosa to colonic adenoma to invasive adenocarcinoma (adenoma carcinoma sequence)
Certain genetic mutations:
- Adenomatous polyposis coli (eg. FAP)
- Hereditary nonpolyposis colorectal cancer

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9
Q

Colorectal cancer risk factors

A

Increasing age
Male gender
Family history
Inflammatory bowel disease
Low fibre diet
High processed meat intake, smoking, excess alcohol

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10
Q

Colorectal cancer clinical features

A

Change in bowel habit, rectal bleeding, weight loss, abdominal pain and symptoms of anaemia
Right-sided colon cancers – abdominal pain, iron-deficiency anaemia, palpable in RIF, often present late
Left-sided colon cancers – rectal bleeding, change in bowel habit, tenesmus, palpable mass in LIF/PR exam

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11
Q

Colorectal cancer screening

A

Every 2 years to men and women aged 60-75 years
FIT test is used – utilises antibodies against human haemoglobin to detect blood in faeces
Positive samples – offered an appointment with a specialist nurse and further investigations via colonoscopy

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12
Q

Colorectal cancer investigations

A

Routine bloods – FBC, LFTs, clotting, CEA can be used to monitor disease progression
Imaging – gold standard for diagnosis is via colonoscopy with biopsy
Once diagnosis is made:
- CT chest/abdomen/pelvis to look for distal metastases and local invasion
- MRI rectum (for rectal cancers only)
- Endo-anal ultrasound (for early rectal cancers, T1/T2 only)
Biopsy samples will be assessed using TNM staging, histological subtyping, grading and assessment of lymphatic, perineural and venous invasion

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13
Q

Colorectal cancer surgical management

A

Mainstay of curative management
1) Right hemicolectomy/extended right hemicolectomy – surgical approach for caecal tumours/ascending colon tumours
2) Left hemicolectomy – surgical approach for descending colon tumours
3) Sigmoidcolectomy – sigmoid colon tumours
4) Anterior resection – high rectal tumours
5) Abdominoperineal resection – low rectal tumours
6) Hartmann’s procedure – used in emergency bowel surgery (eg. obstruction/perforation), involves a completed resection of the recto-sigmoid colon

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14
Q

Colorectal cancer chemotherapy

A

Indicated typically in patients with advanced disease
FOLFOX – folinic acid, fluorouracil & oxaliplatin
Newer biologic agents or immunotherapies

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15
Q

Colorectal radiotherapy

A

Can be used in rectal cancer, most often as neo-adjuvant treatment and can be given alongside chemotherapy
Particular use in patients with rectal cancers which look on MRI to have a ‘threatened’ circumferential resection = pre-operative long-course chemo-radiotherapy to shrink the tumour

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16
Q

Crohn’s disease pathophysiology

A

Any part of the GI tract, commonly targets the distal ileum/proximal colon
Characterised by transmural inflammation in the affected region of bowel, producing deep ulcers and fissures (‘cobblestone’ appearance), skip lesions
Non-caseating granulomatous inflammation
Fistulae commonly form

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17
Q

UC vs Crohn’s disease

A

Site involvement – large bowel in UC, entire GI tract in CD
Inflammation – mucosal only in UC, transmural inflammation in CD
Microscopic changes – crypt abcess formation, reduced goblet cells, non-granulomatous in UC, non-caseating granulomatous in CD
Macroscopic changes – continuous inflammation, pseudo polyps and ulcers may form in UC, skip lesions, fissures, deep ulcers, fistula formation in CD

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18
Q

Crohn’s disease risk factors

A

Strong family history
Smoking

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19
Q

Crohn’s disease clinical features

A

Episodic abdominal pain and diarrhoea – colicky pain and diarrhoea may contain blood/mucus
Systemic symptoms – malaise, anorexia and low-grade fever, malabsorption & malnourishment
Oral aphthous ulcers
Perianal disease

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20
Q

Crohn’s disease extraintestinal manifestations

A

MSK – enteropathic arthritis, nail clubbing or with metabolic bone disease
Skin – erythema nodosum, pyoderma gangrenosum
Eyes – episcleritis, anterior uveitis or iritis
Hepatobiliary – PSC, cholangiocarcinoma, gallstones
Renal – renal stones

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21
Q

Crohn’s disease investigations

A

Routine bloods
Faecal calprotectin, stool sample
Colonoscopy is gold standard investigation with biopsies taken to confirm the diagnosis
Imaging – CT scan abdomen pelvis in severe Crohn’s disease, MRI, EUA with proctosigmoidoscopy may be considered to examine and treat perianal fistulae present

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22
Q

Crohn’s disease management

A

Should be referred to a gastroenterologist
Inducing remission – fluid resus, nutritional support, prophylactic heparin, corticosteroid therapy as first line, immunosuppressive agents/biological agents can be trialled as rescue therapy if then needed
Maintaining remission – azathioprine, smoking cessation, colonoscopic surveillance is offered to people who have had the disease > 10 years with > 1 segment of bowel affected
Surgical management – failed medical management or severe complications

23
Q

Crohn’s disease complications

A

GI – fistula, stricture formation, recurrent perianal fistulae, GI malignancy
Extraintestinal – malabsorption, osteoporosis, increased risk of gallstones, increased risk of renal stones

24
Q

Diverticular disease

A

Diverticulum = outpouching of the bowel wall
Diverticulosis – presence of diverticula
Diverticular disease – symptoms arising from the diverticula
Diverticulitis – inflammation of the diverticula
Diverticular bleed – where the diverticulum erodes into a vessel & causes a large volume painless bleed

25
Q

Diverticular disease pathophysiology

A

Aging bowel becomes weakened over time, movement of stool within the lumen will cause an increase in luminal pressure
Results in an outpouching of the mucosa through the weaker areas of the bowel wall
Bacteria can overgrow within the outpouchings, leading to inflammation -> can sometimes perforate

26
Q

Diverticular disease risk factors

A

Age
Low dietary fibre intake
Obesity
Smoking
Family history
NSAID use

27
Q

Diverticular disease clinical features

A

Diverticulosis – asymptomatic and found incidentally during routine colonoscopy or CT imaging
Diverticular disease – intermittent lower abdominal pain, typically colicky in nature & may be relieved by defecation (other symptoms – altered bowel habit, associated nausea and flatulence)
Acute diverticulitis – acute abdominal pain, typically sharp in nature & normally localised in the LIF pain, worsened by movement
Examination – localised tenderness, alongside features of systemic upset

28
Q

Diverticular abscess

A

Diverticular abscess occurs as a sequelae in complicated diverticulitis
Around <5cm can generally be managed conservatively with IV abx, if any bigger, then radiological drainage is first-line treatment
Complicated multi-loculated abscesses will need surgical intervention (laparoscopic washout/Hartmann’s procedure)

29
Q

Diverticular disease investigations

A

Lab tests – initial routine blood tests, group and save, VBG, urine dipstick
Imaging – CT abdomen-pelvis is investigation of choice (thickening of colonic wall, pericolonic fat stranding, abscesses, localised air bubbles, free air)
Flexible sigmoidoscopy is a good initial approach (suspected uncomplicated diverticular disease)

30
Q

Diverticular disease management

A

Uncomplicated diverticular disease – can be managed as an outpatient with simple analgesia and encouraging oral fluid intake
Patients with diverticular bleeds – can often be managed conservatively as most cases will be self-limiting
Those that fail to respond to conservative management may warrant embolization/surgical resection

31
Q

Acute diverticulitis management

A

Most can be managed conservatively – abx, IV fluids and analgesia
Symptoms typically improve within 2-3 after the initiation of treatment for uncomplicated cases
Clinical deterioration should prompt repeat imaging to check for disease progression/complication

32
Q

Diverticular disease surgical management

A

Required in those with perforation with faecal peritonitis or overwhelming sepsis
Usually involves a Hartmann’s procedure (sigmoid colectomy with formation of an end colostomy)
An anastomosis with reversal of colostomy may be possible may be possible at a later date

33
Q

Diverticular disease complications

A

Diverticular stricture – following repeated episodes of acute inflammation, can result in large bowel obstruction, sigmoid colectomy is required
Fistula formation – nearly always require surgical intervention
- Colovesical fistula – gas bubbles in the urine (pneumoturia)
- Colovaginal fistula – copious vaginal discharge or recurrent vaginal infections

34
Q

Pseudo-obstruction

A

Disorder characterised by dilatation of the colon due to an adynamic bowel in the absence of mechanical obstruction
Most commonly affects the caecum and ascending colon

35
Q

Pseudo-obstruction pathophysiology

A

Thought to be due to an interruption of the autonomic nervous supply to the colon resulting in the absence of smooth muscle action in the bowel wall
Variety of causes:
- Electrolyte imbalance or endocrine disorders
- Medication
- Recent surgery, severe illness or trauma
- Neurological disease

36
Q

Pseudo-obstruction clinical features

A

Abdominal pain
Abdominal distension
Constipation
Vomiting
Examination – abdomen will be distended and tympanic

37
Q

Pseudo-obstruction investigations

A

Initial blood tests should be performed to assess for biochemical/endocrine
Plain abdominal films (AXR) – show bowel distension
Should undergo CT abdomen-pelvis scan with IV contrast – will show dilatation of the colon

38
Q

Pseudo-obstruction management

A

Most cases can be managed conservatively – patients should be made nil-by-mouth and started on IV fluids
If patient is vomiting an NGT should be inserted to aid decompression
Endoscopic decompression will be mainstay of treatment if not resolved in 24-48 hours -> insertion of a flatus tube & allows region to decompress, IV neostigmine may also be trialled if suitable
Surgical management – non-responding cases may require segmental resection +/- anastomosis

39
Q

UC pathophysiology

A

Characterised by diffuse continual mucosal inflammation of the large bowel beginning in the rectum and spreading proximally
Backwash ileitis = distal ileum cab become affected in the ileocaecal valve is not competent
Histological changes – non-granulomatous inflammation of the mucosa and submucosa, crypt abscesses and goblet cell hypoplasia

40
Q

UC clinical features

A

Bloody diarrhoea
PR bleeding, mucus discharge, increased frequency and urgency of defecation and tenesmus
Systemic symptoms – malaise, anorexia and low-grade pyrexia
Clinical examination – generally unremarkable

41
Q

UC extra-intestinal manifestations

A

MSK – enteropathic arthritis, nail clubbing
Skin – erythema nodosum (tender red/purple subcutaneous nodules, typically on the shins)
Eyes – episcleritis, anterior uveitis or iritis
Hepatobiliary – primary sclerosing cholangitis (chronic inflammation & fibrosis of the bile ducts)

42
Q

UC investigations

A

Routine bloods
Faecal calprotectin and stool sample
Imaging – definitive diagnosis is via colonoscopy with biopsy (continuous inflammation with possible ulcers & pseudopolyps visible)
Acute exacerbations – AXR or CT imaging
- AXR features: mural thickening and thumbprinting; in chronic cases of UC a lead-pipe colon

43
Q

UC management (inducing remission)

A

Aggressive fluid resus, nutritional support and prophylactic heparin
Medical management – IV corticosteroid agents, immunosuppressive agents, biological agents

44
Q

UC management (maintaining remission)

A

Remission of the disease can be maintained using immunomodulators, typically 5-ASAs eg. mesalazine/sulfasalazine or azathioprine
Colonoscopic surveillance is offered to people who have had the disease for >10 years with >1 segment of bowel affected
Referred to IBD-nurse specialists and patient-support groups

45
Q

UC management (surgical management)

A

Indications: disease refractory to medical management, toxic megacolon or bowel perforation
Elective causes – total proctocolectomy is curative (patient will require an end ileostomy)
Many patients for disease control will initially undergo a subtotal colectomy with ileo-rectal anastomosis or panproctocolectomy with ileo-pouch anal anastomosis

46
Q

UC complications

A

Toxic megacolon – present with severe abdominal pain, abdominal distension, pyrexia and systemic toxicity
Colorectal carcinoma
Osteoporosis
Pouchitis

47
Q

Volvulus

A

Twisting of a loop of intestine around its mesenteric attachment, resulting in a closed loop bowel obstruction
Affected bowel can become ischaemic due to compromised blood supply
Most volvuli occur at the sigmoid colon and are a common cause of large bowel obstruction

48
Q

Volvulus risk factors

A

Increasing age
Neuropsychiatric disorders
Resident in a nursing home
Chronic constipation/laxative use
Male gender
Previous abdominal operations

49
Q

Volvulus clinical features

A

Clinical features of bowel obstruction
Colicky pain, abdominal distension and absolute constipation occur earlier
Rapidity of the onset (over a few hours) and degree of abdominal distension
Examination – abdomen is often very tympanic to percussion

50
Q

Volvulus investigations

A

Routine bloods
CT scan abdomen-pelvis with contrast – much more sensitive and specific for bowel obstruction & also identifies the site and cause
AXR – coffee-bean sign arising from the LIF, if the ileocaecal valve is incompetent – also show signs of small bowel dilatation

51
Q

Volvulus conservative management

A

Most patients are treated conservatively initially with decompression by sigmoidoscope and insertion of a flatus tube
Flatus tube is often left is situ for up to 24 hours after initial decompression to allow the continued passage of contents

52
Q

Volvulus surgical management

A

Indications for surgery: colonic ischaemia/perforation, repeated failed attempts at decompression, necrotic bowel noted at endoscopy
- Usually a Hartmann’s procedure
Patients with recurrent volvulus – may choose to have an elective procedure to prevent further recurrence

53
Q

Volvulus complications

A

Bowel ischaemia and perforation
Risk of recurrence
Complications from stoma
Mortality from surgery