209 - Constipation / IBS Flashcards

1
Q

What is constipation?

A

Infrequent, hard, difficult to pass stooles
+/- abdo pain

Dry, hard, small, large - perceptions vary

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2
Q

What are primary/functional causes for constipation?

A

Never learnt?
Dysmotility = insuficience luminal residue, abnormal neuromuscular activity
Mechanical = Obstructed defaecation syndrome, weak pelvic floor

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3
Q

What are some secondary/organic causes for constipation?

A
Obstruction
Metabolic ( hypothyroid, hypercalcemia, hypokalaemia, hypopituitarism, diabetes)
Drugs (narcotics, iron, psychotropic, non-mg antacids, calcium channel blockers, ganglion blockers)
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4
Q

What are some neuromuscular causes of constipation?

A
CNS disease (parkinsons, stroke, MS, spinal injury)
Hirshsprungs - lack of enteric ganglion cells
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5
Q

What are the first/primary investigations you’d do in constipation?

A

Barium enema
Colonoscopy
AXR

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6
Q

What further tests may you do in constipation?

A

Sigmoidoscopy
colonic transit studies
defaecating proctogram
Endoanal U/S

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7
Q

What physiological testing might you do in constipation?

A

Manometry
Balloon inflation
Pudendal nerve terminal motor latency
EMG recording

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8
Q

Advice is the first step in management of constipation, what advice would you give?

A
Fluid intake - 2l/day
Reduce caffine
Dietry advice - high fibre
Low alcohol
exercise
FODMAP diet?
probiotics?
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9
Q

What is the order you’d try laxatives in constipation?

A

Faecal softener
Bulk-forming
Osmotic
Stimulant (with a softener!)

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10
Q

How do faecal softeners work? 2 examples

A

Docusate, poloxamer combo

Reduce surface tension of stool so allow water to enter and soften it

Good for hard/painful stools

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11
Q

How do bulk forming laxatives work? 1 example

A

Fybogel

Retains fluid and increases mass of stool - stimulates peristalsis

Takes 2-3 days to work

Good if stools small and hard or weak anal sphincter

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12
Q

How do osmotic laxatives work? 3 examples

A

Lactulose, movicol, magnesium hydroxide

Makes hyperosmolar conditions - draws water into bowel, distension, peristalsis, softens.

Good for impaction and chronic constipation

Causes distension + lots of flatulence!

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13
Q

How do stimulant laxatives work? 3 examples

A

Senna, dandtron, sodium picosulfate

Stimulates colonic/rectal nerves - peristalsis

Needs a softener with it

For short term relief, pre-op.

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14
Q

What surgery could be offered as a last resort to chronic constipation due to dymotility issues?

A

Colectomy + IRA (ileorectal anastemosis) - a surgical laxative

Sacral nerve stimulation

ACE - Antegrade colonic enema - flush through stoma

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15
Q

What surgery could be offered for obstructed defaecation / pelvic floor issues?

A

Try repair prolapse/rectal intussusception.
Rectoplexy (sling around rectal prolapse)
Perineal approach (prolapse)
Transperineal surgery + rectocoel repair
Ventral rectoplexy

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16
Q

What is IBS?

A

Irritable bowel syndrome

Recurrent periods of abdo pain/discomfort assoc with:
- improvement with defecation
Change in freq. of stooles
Change in form of stooles

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17
Q

Do you get constipation in IBS?

A

Can be diarrhoea dominant or constipation dominant or a mix of both

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18
Q

What are the management options for IBS?

A

Antispasmodics
Psychological therapy
Antidiarrhoeal drugs
Peppermint oil eg. colpermin

19
Q

What antispasmodics can be used in IBS?

A

Smooth muscle relaxants (anticholinergics)

Antimuscarinic agents eg. Meberverine

20
Q

Why can antidepressants help with IBS?

A

Due to their side effect profile/anticholinergic effect
If diarrhoea a problem - tricyclic
If constipation a prob - SSRI

21
Q

What are some new agents that are being used in constipation management?

A

Selective Serotonin 5HT4 receptor agonists - stimulates serotonin - facilitates peristalsis eg. prucalopride

Selective type 2 chloride channel activator therapy - increases water secretion into lumen

22
Q

What are the 2 nerve plexi that are in the bowel wall?

A

Myenteric (outer one)
Submucosal (closest to lumen)

Between circular and longitudinal muscle

23
Q

How is gut motility controlled?

A

By myogenic, neurogenic and hormonal factors

24
Q

Describe the gut’s motility in the proximal colon

A

Most contractions here

  • Non propulsive segmentation - slow, wave, mixes contents, haustra formed as circular muscles contract
  • Mass peristalsis - 1-3 times a day, simultaneous SM contractions over large areas, distally propels contents
25
Q

Describe the gut’s motility in the distal colon

A

Mainly non propulsive segmentation

26
Q

What controls gut motility?

A

Intramural plexi have direct control, extramural plexi modulate it

  • stimulatory - acetylycholine + substance P
  • Inhibitory - VIP + nitric oxide
27
Q

Which neurotransmitters are involved in stimulatory control of the gut?

A

Acetylcholine

Substance P

28
Q

Which neurotransmitters are involved in inhibitory control of the gut?

A

VIP (vasoactive intestinal polypeptide)

Nitric Oxide

29
Q

The circular muscle layer of the Colon has 2 ways of functioning. What type of activity do the interstitial cells on the outer border make?

A

Produce myenteric oscillations of low amplitude and high freq - for viscous distension and flatus passage

30
Q

The circular muscle layer of the Colon has 2 ways of functioning. What type of activity do the interstitial cells on the INNER border make?

A

Produce regular flow waves - 3cycles/min
High amplitude, low freq
for defaecation

31
Q

What is the gastro-ileal reflex?

A

When food leaves the stomach it causes the caecum and ileocoecal valve to relax

32
Q

What is the delayed gastro-colic reflex?

A

Gastric distension -> desire to defacate 70-180 minutes later.

33
Q

What in the duodenum increases gut stimulation?

A

Fat

34
Q

Describe the steps of defaecation

A

1) cortical perception of filling
2) Voluntary decision taken
3) Straining
4) reduced tone of pelvic floor and sphincter muscles
5) reduced anorectal angle
6) Increased tone of abdo muscles
7) Passage of stool

35
Q

What is the normal colonic transit time?

A

24-48 hrs

36
Q

The anus has 2 sphincters, what are they? What type of muscle makes up each?

A

Internal involuntary sphincter - circular muscle

External voluntary sphincter - striated muscle

37
Q

What part of the NS controls the internal anal sphincter?

A

Autonomic - symp = excitatory/sphincter closed

38
Q

What is sampling? (done by the internal anal sphincter)

A

Senses whether the contents is gas or solid - if gas, allows slight relaxation for gas to pass

39
Q

What nerve innovates the external anal sphincter?

A

Pudendal nerve

40
Q

When there is rectal distension, what occurs to both the internal and external anal sphincter?

A

Internal - involuntary relaxation

External - tonic contraction is increased

41
Q

How is anorectal continence achieved?

A

Sphincter tone > abdo pressure

  • requires:
  • Central control
  • Functioning reservoir
  • Strong pelvic floor
  • Intact sphincters
  • Absence of peripheral neuropathy
42
Q

What imaging modalities could be used in imaging the colon?

A
U/S + endoanal U/S
Barium enema
CT
MRI
CT colonography
Colonscopy
43
Q

What is the apple core sign in radiology?

A

Classic appearance of colon cancer - leaves apple core shape of colon, with shouldering