Common GI Cases Flashcards

1
Q

What are the common GI disorders?

A
Diarrhoea
Vomiting 
Upper GI Bleed
Irritable bowel syndrome 
Inflammatory bowel disease (ulcerative colitis and crohns disease) 
Coeliac disease 
Lactose intolerance
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2
Q

What are the common liver disorders?

A
Alcohol 
Drugs
Hepatitis
Cholestasis
Cholangitis
Cholecystitis
Gallstones
Cirrhosis
Fatty liver
Liver cancer
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3
Q

What are common pancreas disorders?

A

Pancreatitis
Pancreatic carcinoma
Pancreatic insufficiency
Type 1 diabetes

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4
Q

What are the types of diarrhoea?

A

Osmotic
Secretory
Inflammatory

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5
Q

Biochemically what happens in diarrhoea?

A

Loss of bicarbonate
Dehydration
Electrolyte disturbance
loss of K+ and bicarbonate

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6
Q

What occurs due to upper GI losses?

A

Loss of acid = increased bicarbonate
Loss of chloride = metabolic alkalosis
Dehydration can result in low K

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7
Q

What occurs due upper GI bleed?

A

Red blood cells released and reabsorbed

Increased K, urea and urea:Cre

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8
Q

Differences between IBS and IBD

A

IBS: No detectable organic cause. Diagnosis of exclusion. Calprotectin negative

IBD: calprotectin positive
Crohns; any part of tract and commonly starts in terminal ileum. S.cerevisiae Ab +ve and pANCA Ab -ve
Ulcerative colitis; restricted to colon and rectum. S.cerevisiae Ab -ve and pANCA Ab +ve

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9
Q

What is coeliac disease?

A

Gluten sensitivity enteropathy

Immune response against TTG and endomysial

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10
Q

What is lactose intolerance?

What tests can be used?

A

Lactase deficiency; genetic or environmental
Bacteria ferment lactate in the colon and produce gas and diarrhoea

Facial reducing substances
Stool pH
Lactose tolerance test

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11
Q

What causes cholestasis?

A

Obstruction of bile flow; pregnancy, gallstones or pancreatic carcinoma

Non-obstructive cases: drug-induced, inherited, TPN

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12
Q

What are gallstones?

A

Blockages in the ball bladder
80% are cholesterol formed
20% are pigment stones of calcium bilirubinate/polymers containing calcium and copper

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13
Q

What is cholangitis?

What is the common presentation?

A

Inflammation of the common bile duct, usually due to infection.

Charcot’s triad:

1) fever/chills/rigor
2) upper right quadrant pain
3) jaundice

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14
Q

What is cholecystitis?

A

Inflammation of the gall bladder

90% cases due to gall stones, other cases include infection and in rare cases a tumour

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15
Q

What causes haemochromatosis?

A

Acquired: repeated blood transfusion and excess iron therapy
Hereditary: autosomal recessive. 1 in 2000 Caucasians. HFE gene on chromosome 6. Increased intestinal iron absorption, and deposition into tissues

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16
Q

What is Wilson’s disease?

A

Autosomal recessive disorder. ATP7B gene on chromosome 13: ATPase that facilitates copper extraction in bile. Copper accumulation in liver, brain, kidneys and eyes.

17
Q

What is A1AT?

A

Alpha-1 antitrypsin

A protease inhibitor - particularly of neurotrophic elastin which would degrade lung elastin

18
Q

What occurs in A1AT deficiency?

A

A1AT trapped in proteasome and polymerises
Accumulation leads to liver damage and cirrhosis
(And loss of lung elastin)

19
Q

What are the three types of pancreatitis?

A

Acute: Abdo pain, nausea and vomiting. U&E, LFT, calcium and bloods gases

Chronic: follows acute, commonly due to alcohol. Faecel elastase

Hereditary

20
Q

How can the likelihood and severity of pancreatitis be predicted?

A

Ranson’s criteria

21
Q

What happens in type 1 diabetes?

A

Auto antibodies against islet cells

Deficiency in insulin