Diseases of the Small Bowel and Appendix Flashcards

1
Q

obstruction

A
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
pain
absolute constipation
vomiting
burping
abdominal distension
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2
Q

causes for obstruction

A

common = within the lumen (gallstone, food, bezoar)

within the wall

outside the wall

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3
Q

typical presentation

depends on where in the small bowel

A
distension
vomiting
borborygmi
pain
faeculent vomiting
presence of a cause
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4
Q

investigation

A

assessing the state of the patient (urinalysis, bloods, gases)

confirming the diagnosis (AXR, CT, gastrograffin studies)

identify those who need surgery and those who will settle

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5
Q

‘drip and suck’

only adhesional small bowel obstruction
up to 72 hours is standard

A

ABC

analgesia
fluids with K+
usually hypokalaemia and alkalotic
catheterise
NG tube 
atithromboembolism measures
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6
Q

surgical management

A

laparotomy

operative principles
antibiotics
antithromboembolic measures

midline incision
can be laparoscopic

find the obstruction of following collapsed or dilated bowel

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7
Q

mesenteric ischaemia

A

dead intestine

embolus, thrombosis (arterial and venous)

CHRONIC
superior mesenteric artery
cramps
'angina of the guts' - pain after eating
atherosclerosis

ACUTE
small bowel usually gets infarcted = dies
doesn’t have a marginal artery
colon = lives (marginal artery)
continues to get blood from surrounding arteries

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8
Q

causes of mesenteric ischaemia

A

embolus usually from AF
forms in left atrium
sticks in a narrow SMA

in situ thrombosis
virchows triad
dehydrated
hypercoagulable
compression
vasocontricting drugs
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9
Q

diagnosis

A

pain out of proportion to the clinical findings

acidosis of gases (low pH, high [H=+], high BE)

lactate elevated

CRP may be normal

WCC may be up a bit

CT angiogram

laparotomy

intervene before your patient is moribund

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10
Q

treatment

A

quick
prepare the patient and family for the worst

resect if non-viable

re-anastomse or staple and planned return

if viable you can rarely perform an SMA embolectomy

sometimes we have the sad situation of an open and close

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11
Q

small bowel haemorrhage

A

ABC

exclude upper source
vascular malformations
ulcerations
CT angiogram
can often be managed by interventional radiology
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12
Q

meckel’d diverticulum

A

true diverticulum

usually incidental
remnant of the omphalomesenteric duct

complications
bleed
ulcerate/meckels divericulitis
obstruction
malignant change
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13
Q

appendicitis

A

commonest emergency operation

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14
Q

appendix

A

vestigial organ
most are retrocaecal
tip can vary in location

base constant
convergence of the three taeniae

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15
Q

incidence

A

rare in infancy
usually childhood/young adulthood
another peak in the elderly

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16
Q

aetiology

A

no unifying hypothesis

obstruction of the lumen with faecolith

bacterial

viral (clustering of cases)

parasites

17
Q

pathology

A

huge variation in macroscopic disease

lumen may or may not be occluded

mucosal inflammation

lymphoid hyperplasia

obstruction

build up of mucus and exudate

venous obstruction

ischaemia..bacterial invasion through wall

perforation

presence of inflammation in abdomen brings the greater omentum

small bowel adheres

phlegmonous mass

peritonitis can be fatal

18
Q

symptoms

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
19
Q

signs

A
mild pyrexia
mild tachycardia
localised pain in RIF
guarding
rebound
20
Q

specific signs

A

rosvings - pressing on the left causes pain on the right

psoas - patient keeps the right hip flexed as this lifts an inflamed appendix off the psoas

obturator - appendix is touching obturator interns, flexing the hip and internally rotating will cause pain

pointing - where did it start, where is it now

21
Q

special cases

A

retrocaecal appendix

pelvic appendix

postileal

22
Q

other special cases

A

obese
elderly
children
pregnancy - unusual

23
Q

investigation

A
clincial
USS
AXR
bloods
urinalysis
24
Q

management

A
analgesia
antipyretics
theatre
antibiotics 
appendicectomy
25
Q

appendix mass

A

antibiotics first line

can operate or not

26
Q

appendix abscess

A

usually delayed

usually has liquidised

27
Q

complications

A
pelvic abscess
wound infection
intra-abdominal abscess
ileus
respiratory
etc..