Hepato-Biliary Surgery Flashcards Preview

Yr2 Alimentary > Hepato-Biliary Surgery > Flashcards

Flashcards in Hepato-Biliary Surgery Deck (18)
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1
Q

What are the sommon diseases of the gall bladder?

A
  • Gallstones (Cholelithiasis)
  • Cholesterosis (cholesterol in cells lining gallbladder wall)
  • GB Polyps
2
Q

What are the types of gall stones?

A

Some are all cholesterol
Some are all pigments
Most are mixed

3
Q

What are the risk factors for gall strones?

A

Age
Female
High cholesterol (e.g. obese)
Pigment conditions (e.g. bile infection or haemolytic anaemia)
Female sex hormones e.g. OCP, hormone replacement

Remmeber 5Fs (Fat Female Fertile Forty Fair) but don’t say them to patients its derogatory man

4
Q

How can gallstones present?

A
  • Asymptomatic
  • Biliary Colic (RUQ or epigastric pain)
  • Sometimes nausea, heatburn, dyspepsia & flatulence
  • Jaundice if in the CBD or impacted in the neck of the cystic duct (Mirrizis syndrome)
5
Q

What is gallstone ileus?

A

Gallstones become stuck in the narrowest part of the ileum

6
Q

What is choledocho-lithiasis?

A

Lithiasis = Formation of stones in the body
Chole - in gall bladder
Choledoco - In biliary ducts

So basically stones forming or collecting in the bile ducts. Can cause obstructive jaundice, acute pancreatitis and ascending cholangitis

7
Q

What is mirrizis syndrome?

A

A gallstone impacted in the cystic duct/neck of gallbladder

Results in obstruction jaundice

8
Q

What investigations are there for gall stones?

A

LFTs, Amyase, Lipase, WCC
Ultrasound/Endoscopic ultrasound
CT scan
MRCP

9
Q

What treatment is there for gall stones?

A

If asymptomatic just leave them

Non-operative:

  • Dissolution (bile acid therapy)
  • Lithotripsy (shock waves)

Operative:
- Laparascopic Cholecystectomy +/- on table cholangiography

For common bile duct stones: (Indicated by a dilated CBD on US, Elevated liver or pancreatic enzymes & biliary colic)
- ERCP +/- adjunct lithotripsy or stenting

10
Q

List some benign biliary tract disease?

A

Congenital:

  • Biliary Atresia
  • Choledochal Cysts (congenital cystic dilatation of bile ducts)

Benign Biliary stricture:

  • Iatrogenic
  • Gallstone related (mirrizis syndrome)
  • Inflammatory stricture

Biliary Enteric Fistula

11
Q

Jaundice can be caused by tumours, what kind?

A
Cholangiocarcinoma
 - Intrahepatic
 - Extrahepatic (hilar or distal)
 - Gallbladder
 - Ampullary
Cancer of the head of the pancreas
12
Q

What are the types of cholangiocarcinoma?

A

Mass Forming
Peri-ductal
Intra-ductal

13
Q

How does a cholangiocarcinoma present?

A
  • Non-specific systemic symptoms
  • Pruritis
  • Obstructive Jaundice
14
Q

What investigations are there for cholangicarcinoma?

A
  • Lab Tests
  • Radiology (US, CT)
  • ERCP
15
Q

Management of a cholangiocarcinoma?

A

Curative:
- Surgery

Palliative:

  • Surgical bypass or stenting (percutaneous/endoscopic)
  • Palliative radiotherapy or chemo
16
Q

Whats the prognosis for gall bladder cancer?

A

Very poor as rarely caught until very advanced.

Only good if caust early incidentally in gallstones

17
Q

What inherited condition is associated with ampullary tumours?

A

FAP (Familial Adenomatous Polyposis)

18
Q

What are the treatment options for ampullary tumours?

A

Endoscopic Excision
Trans-duodenal excision
Pancreatico-duodenectomy (removes fucking everything)