Small Bowel Obstruction Flashcards

1
Q

Describe the incidence of appendicitis?

A
McBurney – 1/3rd along from the umbillicus 
Rare in infancy
Usually childhood/young adulthood
Another peak in the elderly
M:F 3:2 before 25 years thereafter equal
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2
Q

What can cause appendicitis?

A

Obstruction of the lumen with faecolith – stones made of poo
Bacterial
Viral (clustering of cases) – especially in kids
Parasites

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3
Q

Describe the pathology of appendicitis?

A
Lumen may or may not be occluded
Mucosal inflammation – increases blood supply into the appendix
Lymphoid hyperplasia
Obstruction
Build up of mucus and exudate
Venous obstruction
Ischaemia..bacterial invasion through wall – black appendix
Perforation
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4
Q

In what situation can peritonitis be fatal?

A

Age
Immunosuppression
Diabetes
Absence of omentum (previous surgery)

Ruptured - causes peritonitis

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5
Q

What are the clasical symptoms of appendicitis?

A
Central pain that migrates to RIF
Anorexia
Nausea
One or two vomits
May not have moved bowels
Pelvic: vaguer pain localisation: rectal tenderness
Elderly – atypical symptoms
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6
Q

What are the classical signs of appendicitis?

A

Mild pyrexia (never high temp initially) – 37.8-38.2
Mild tachycardia – around 100bpm
Localised pain in RIF
Guarding
Rebound – peritoneum moves fast when your hand it taken away

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7
Q

Name some specific named signs of appendicitis?

A

Rosving’s:
Pressing on the left causes pain on the right
Psoas:
Patient keeps the right hip flexed as this lifts an infmaled appendix off the psoas
Obturator:
If appendix is touching obturator internus, flexing the hip and internally rotting will cause pain
Pointing:
Where did it start, where it is now?

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8
Q

Name 3 rare forms of appendicitis?

A

Retrocaecal appendix: May be very few signs

Pelvic appendix: Diarrhoea, frequency of micturition

Postileal: Rare, diarrhoea, vomiting

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9
Q

How can appendicitis be diagnosed?

A

CLINICAL diagnosis – ultrasound scan useful in women and children but not men

USS useful in women and kids

AXR to exclude other causes – abdo x-ray – lots of radiation though so bad

Bloods (important CRP, WCC)

Urinalysis
MANTRELS mnemonic

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10
Q

What is the management of appendicitis?

A
Analgesia	
Antipyretics
Theatre
Antibiotics
Appendicectomy
- Laparascopic (best)
- Convert to open sometimes (not first line)
- Laparotomy sometimes
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11
Q

What is the management of an appendix mass?

A

Antibiotics first line
Can operate or not –don’t often go to theatre
Theatre if fails or complicated
- Tachycardia
- Worsening pain
- Increase in size
- Vomiting or copious NG aspirates (ileus)

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12
Q

What are the complications of appendicitis?

A
Pelvic abscess
Wound infection
Intra-abdominal abscess
Ileus – bowels just stop working 
Respiratory
DVT/PE
Portal pyaemia
Faecal fistula
Adhesions
Right sided inguinal hernia
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13
Q

Describe a carcinoid of the appendix?

A

Crypts of Lieberkuhn
Stains for chromagrannin

If less than 1cm appendicectomy alone
If greater than 2cm completion right hemi

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14
Q

What are the symptoms of small bowel obstruction?

A
Pain (colicky, central)
Absolute constipation
Vomiting
Burping
Abdominal distension
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15
Q

What causes small bowel obstruction?

A

Within the lumen (gallstone, food, bezoar)
Within the wall (tumour, Crohn’s, Radiation - causes stricture)
Outside the wall (Adhesions, Herniation) - most common

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16
Q

What are the clinical signs of SBO?

A
Distension
Vomiting
Borborygmi
Pain
Faeculent vomiting
Presence of a cause
17
Q

What investigations can be done for SBO?

A
Assessing the state of the patient
- Urinalysis
- Bloods
- Gases
Confirming the diagnosis
- AXR
- Contrast CT scan of abdomen (looks like the pateint has swallowed the very hungry caterpillar)
- Gastrograffin studies – very rare
18
Q

What is the management for small bowel obstruction?

A
"Drip and Suck"
ABC
Analgesia
Fluids with Potassium
They are usually hypokalaemic and alkalotic – need IV fluids
Catheterise – urinary 
NG tube (Ryles tube not a feeding)
Antithromboembolism measures – TED stockings 
Up to 72 hours is standard
Intervene earlier if:
Strangulation
Perforation
Ischaemia
19
Q

When would you not use the drip and suck technique?

A

when the pateint has a hernia

20
Q

What is the surgical management of SBO?

A

Laparotomy

21
Q

What is the cause of Mesenteric ischeamia?

A

Embolus, thrombosis (arterial and venous) from AF

- small intestine does not have a marginal artery so it is easier to be occluded

22
Q

When would you suspect mesenteric ischeamia? (i.e. dead gut)

A

when the patient is requiring more pain relief than they should

23
Q

How is mesenteric ischeamia diagnosed?

A

Pain out of proportion to the clinical findings
Acidosis on gases (low pH, high H+ concentration, high BE)
Lactate elevated
CRP may be normal
WCC may be up a bit
CT angiogram
At laparotomy
Intervene before your patient is moribund – at the point of death

24
Q

How is mesenteric ischeamia managed?

A

Resect if non-viable

Re-anastomse or staple and planned return

If viable you can rarely perform an SMA embolectomy

25
Q

What is Meckel’s diverticulum?

A
60cm from IC valve (2 feet)
2% of population
Present before 2 years of age
Usually incidental
Remnant of the omphalomesenteric duct
Complications	
- Bleed (haematochezia)
- Ulcerate/meckels diverticulitis
- Obstruction
- Malignant change (0.5%)