The Acute Abdomen Flashcards

1
Q

What is acute abdomen?

A

A combination of symptoms and signs including abdominal pain, which results in the patient being referred for an urgen general surgical opinion

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2
Q

What is the aetiology of acute abdomen?

A

Non-specific pain

Acute appendicitis

Acute cholecystitis

Peptic ulcer perforation

Urinary retention

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3
Q

What should be considered for the pathophysiology of acute abdomen?

A

Peritonitis

Intestinal obsruction

Abdominal pain

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4
Q

What is the surface area of the peritoneum?

A

About 2m2

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5
Q

What activity is done by the peritoneum?

A

Fibrinolyric (blood clotting)

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6
Q

What are the 2 layers of the peritoneum?

A

Parietal and visceral

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7
Q

What is peritonitis?

A

Infections of the peritoneum

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8
Q

What are some routes of infection for peritonitis?

A

Perforation of GI/biliary tract

Female genital tract

Penetration of the abdominal wall

Haematogenous spread

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9
Q

Are anaerobes or aerobes more likely to cause diffuse pritonitis?

A

Aerobes

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10
Q

Are anaerobes or aerobes more likely to cause abscess?

A

Anaerobes

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11
Q

What are the 2 vague kinds of peritonitis?

A

Localsied or generalised

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12
Q

When does generalised peritonitis occur?

A

Contamination too rapid

Contamination persists

Abscess ruptures

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13
Q

What are cardinal features of intestine obstruction?

A

Pain

Vomiting

Distension

Constipation

Borborygmi

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14
Q

What do symptoms of obstruction depend on?

A

Site (proximal vs distal)

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15
Q

What abdominal pain, what must be asked?

A

Character of pain

Site of pain

Severity of pain

Systemic upset

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16
Q

What receptors are responsible for visceral pain?

A

Pain receptors in smooth muscles

17
Q

Where does afferent impulses of viseral pain run?

A

With sympathetic fibres accompanying segmental vessels

18
Q

Is visceral pain well or poorly localised?

A

Poorly localised

19
Q

What receptors are responsible for somatic and reffered pain?

A

Receptors in parietal peritoneum or abdominal wall

20
Q

What do afferent signals of somatic and referred pain travel with?

A

With segmental nerves

21
Q

Is the localisation of somatic and refered pain good or bad?

A

Accurate localisation

22
Q

What are the clinical consequences of peritonitis and intestinal obstruction?

A

Causes fluid loss and sepsis

Then circulatory collapse

Then death

23
Q

What are the steps for managing acute abdomen?

A

1) Assess (and resuscitate if required)
2) Investigate
3) Observe
4) Treat

24
Q

What is required for the assessment of acute abdomen?

A

History

Examination

Investigation

25
Q

What investigations can be done for acute abdomen?

A

Ward tests (urine)

Lab tests (FBC, U&E, LFT)

Radiology (plain, US, axial CT)

Laparoscopy vs laparotomy

26
Q

What steps are involved in resuscitation for acute abdomen?

A

Restore circulating fluid volume

Ensure tissue perfusion

Enhance tissue oxygenation

Treat sepsis

Decompress gut

Ensure adequate pain relief

27
Q

What is the treatment for acute abdomen?

A

Pain relief

Antibiotics

Definitive interventions such as surgery