Clinical Aspects of IBD and Irritable Bowel Syndrome - IBS Flashcards

1
Q

What are the terms in ulcerative colitis when you have involvement of each of the following areas:

  1. Rectum only
  2. Rectum and sigmoid colon
  3. Left colon entirely
  4. Entire colon
A
  1. Rectum only - proctitis
  2. Rectum and sigmoid colon - proctosigmoiditis
  3. Left colon entirely - left-sided colitis or subtotal colitis
  4. Entire colon - pancolitis or universal colitis
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2
Q

What type of IBD is more associated with tenesmus and bleeding?

A

Tenesmus - urgency / straining - more associated with ulcerative colitis due to rectal involvement

Bleeding - more common in ulcerative colitis due to rectal involvement, but occasionally massive bleeding occurs in Crohn disease

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3
Q

Where in the GI tract wall does bleeding generally occur in ulcerative colitis?

A

Typically just mucosal involvement giving pseudopolyps, but may occasionally extend into lamina propria and submucosa (fulminant disease / toxic megacolon)

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4
Q

Are stones more common in Crohn disease or ulcerative colitis?

A

Crohn disease - due to involvement of the distal ileum in failure to resorb bile acids -> increased fatty acids in later GI tract to mop up calcium -> increased oxalate resorption

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5
Q

What are the skin manifestations of IBD? Describe them?

A

Erythema nodosum - red markings due to fat inflammation on extensor surfaces of skin, common on shins

Pyoderma gangrenosum - ulcerating lesion with heaped up edges

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6
Q

What are the eye manifestations of IBD?

A

Episcleritis, uveitis, iritis

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7
Q

What are the joint manifestations of IBD? Which ones are associated with active disease / which ones occur all the time?

A

Peripheral arthritis - occurs only during exacerbations

Central arthritis - sacroilitis / ankylosing spondylitis, not associated with IBD activity - HLA-B27

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8
Q

How do ulcerative colitis and Crohn disease differ with respect to likelihood to find perianal lesions and abdominal masses and why?

A

Abdominal masses - more likely in Crohn disease in RLQ, due to transmural thickening of wall / edema

Perianal lesions - more likely in Crohn disease due to fistula formation from nearby bowel which burrows into skin (transmural inflammation required)

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9
Q

How is ulcerative colitis often told apart from Crohn disease in clinical practice? What is it called when mucosa bleeds easily?

A

Aside from presenting symptoms, endoscopy / colonscopy will show skip regions and common rectal sparing in Crohn disease

Furthermore, ulcerative colitis will show granular, easily-bleeding mucosa (“friable”) while Crohn disease shows linear ulcerations and cobblestoning with normal intervening mucosa

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10
Q

How is the pathology of ulcerative colitis told apart from common acute inflammatory bowel conditions?

A

Glandular distortion -> major component, indicates longstanding interference with glands
= chronic inflammation

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11
Q

What radiological studies are commonly used to diagnose IBD? How do they work?

A

Barium enema - for lower GI X-ray

Upper GI / Barium meal exam - for small bowel series with inclusion of terminal ileum

Narrowing or barium deposition should be distinguishable in ulcerated / affected areas, often with loss of normal barium deposition in affected areas

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12
Q

What aspects of ulcerative colitis increase your susceptibility to cancer, and what are the screening guidelines?

A
  1. Extent of colonic involvement
  2. Duration of disease
  3. Age at symptom onset
  4. Primary sclerosing cholangiitis - associated, and an indepedent risk factor

Colonoscopy with multiple biopsies every 2 years after 8-10 years with disease, with colectomy for at least low-grade dysplasia

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13
Q

What are the surgical indications for IBD?

A
  1. Intractable or fulminant disease
  2. Perforation (could lead to peritonitis)
  3. Cancer or dysplasia
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14
Q

What is the surgical treatment for ulcerative colitis and is it effective? What is the alternative treatment for younger patients?

A

Treatment is total colectomy which is curative in UC because it only affects colon

Usually this is done via colostomy bag, but subtotal colectomy can be done via using terminal ileum as a sac to store stool and directly connecting this to rectum. Patients may only need to go 3-4 times per day with anti-diarrheals.

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15
Q

What are the surgical treatments for Crohn’s and are they effective?

A

Usually resection of affected bowel. Can also do stricturoplasty, abscess drainage, and bypass procedures if need be.

Not curative in Crohn’s disease, as any part of GI tract may be involved.

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16
Q

Is irritable bowel syndrome a mechanical or functional disorder? What are the diagnostic criteria?

A

Functional (no structural changes)

Recurrent pain or discomfort at least 3 days / month in last 3 months, associated with 2 or more of:

  1. Improvement with defecation
  2. Onset associated with a change in frequency of stool
  3. Onset associated with a change in appearance of stool
17
Q

What are the three types of irritable bowel syndrome, and is it common?

A
  1. IBS-C - constipation
  2. IBS-D - diarrhea
  3. IBS-alternating

Very common, more common than hypertension

18
Q

What is the cause of IBS?

A

Problem of disordered motility and/or nociception

  • > multifactorial, and often associated with altered microbiome following infectious enteritis.
  • > Psychosocial factors also play a role
19
Q

What are the nonpharmacologic treatments of IBS? Is medication effective?

A

Changing diets to less fermentable sugars

Fiber supplementation for constipation type

Psychotherapy

A considerable placebo affect is incurred with medications

20
Q

What is the normal workup for a patient with IBS?

A

Typically the diagnosis is met based on history, and you may include celiac serology and general labs to rule out other diagnoses

Colonscopy and extensive workup is generally not required as patient and clinican reach mutual diagnosis