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BY PROF. SALEH MOHAMMED AL SALAMAH At the end of this lecture students will be able to describe:  The clinical presentation and Management of Small.

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Presentation on theme: "BY PROF. SALEH MOHAMMED AL SALAMAH At the end of this lecture students will be able to describe:  The clinical presentation and Management of Small."— Presentation transcript:

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2 BY PROF. SALEH MOHAMMED AL SALAMAH

3 At the end of this lecture students will be able to describe:  The clinical presentation and Management of Small bowel obstruction.  The clinical features and Management of Crohn’s disease.  Presentation and Management of Small bowel tumors.  Clinical features and Management of Small bowel ischemia.  Short bowel syndrome, causes and management.  Meckel’s Diverticulum, presentation and management.

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7 CLASSIFICATION  MECHANICAL (Dynamic) vs ILEUS (Adynamic)  ACUTE vs CHRONIC  SMALL vs LARGE INTESTINAL

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11 CLINICAL FEATURES  Colicky central abdominal pain  Vomiting  Abdominal distension  Constipation

12  Complete Blood Count  Blood Chemistry  Abdominal X Ray, erect and supine films  CT abdomen with oral and I/V contrast  Investigations required for GA fitness if surgery is planned

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18  This may be defined as a state in which there is failure of transmission of peristaltic waves secondary to neuromuscular failure.  The resultant stasis leads to accumulation of fluid and gas within the bowel, with associated distension, vomiting, absence of bowel sounds and constipation.

19 Post open cholecystectomy paralytic ileus

20  Arterial or Venous  Acute or Chronic  Symptoms: Acute: Sudden abdominal pain, passage of altered blood, shock. Chronic: Abdominal angina, weight loss or diarrhoea.  Investigations: AXR, CT angiography  Treatment: Resuscitation, Gut Resection, Embolectomy, Vascular bypass or Endarterectomy.

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24  A disease of uncertain aetiology, but thought to be result of inflammation caused by an unusual strains of mycobacteria.  It is characterized by full thickness inflammatory process of any part of GIT from lips to anal margin.  Pathological features include full thickness inflammation, edema, fissures/ulceration, non- caseating foci of epithelioid and giant cells.

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28  ACUTE  Pain right iliac fossa with tenderness mimicking acute appendicitis.  Features of low small bowel obstruction  Rarely perforation of small intestine causing peritonitis.  CHRONIC  Colicky abdominal pain with diarrhoea  Weight loss  Perianal fistulas  Fistulation into adjacent organs like bladder, colon, vagina.

29 INVESTIGATIONS  Barium meal and follow through  CT abdomen with oral and I/V contrast  Blood : Anemia, high C- reactive protein and low Vit-B12 levels  Colonoscopy/ Enteroscopy with biopsy

30 Barium follow through showing “ String sign of Kantor ”

31 TREATMENT Corticosteroids Aminosalicylates Immunomodulators e.g. azathioprine Monoclonal antibodies Antibiotics for perianal disease Surgery: Resections, strictureplasty or colectomies.

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33  Embryological remnant of Vitello-intestinal duct.  Occurs in 2% population, 2 feet from ileocecal valve and 2 inches long and 2 times common in men.  Presents as : o Persistent vitello-intestinal fistula o Acute diverticulitis o Perforation and peritonitis o Intestinal obstruction o Bleeding due to ectopic gastric mucosa.

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36 Asymptomatic and incidentally discovered Meckel’s diverticulum are left as such. Narrow necked, inflamed or symptomatic diverticulum is excised.

37 Primary tumours of small gut are uncommon and form only 5% of the GIT neoplasms. Aetiological factors include: A. Inherited Conditions: Polyposis coli, Peutz-Jegherz Syndrome, Gardner's syndrome. B. Immunocompromised states: Coeliac disease, AIDS, transplant recipients. C. Geographical Areas: Lymphomas more common in Middle East.

38 Benign  Adenomas  GIST (Gastrointestinal Stromal tumours)  Lipomas  Neurofibromas Malignant  Lymphomas both primary and part of generalised disease.  Adenocarcinomas  Carcinoids  Secondary tumours from lung, breast or malignant melanoma.

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40  It can be Acute or Chronic  Acute presentation is with intestinal obstruction, GI bleeding or perforation leading to peritonitis.  Chronic symptoms include malaise, abdominal pain, weight loss, diarrhoea and anaemia.

41  Blood : Anemia and high ESR, Tumour markers, high 5-HIAA levels in Carcinoids.  Radiological: CT or MRI abdomen with oral and intravenous contrast.  Endoscopy: Upper GI endoscopy, Enteroscopy, Colonoscopy. TREATMENT : This depends upon presentation, stage and type of the tumour.

42  Short gut syndrome has been arbitrarily defined as the presence of less than 200 cm of residual small bowel in adult patients. OR  A functional definition, in which insufficient intestinal absorptive capacity results in the clinical manifestations of diarrhoea, dehydration and malnutrition.

43  Crohn's disease;  Mesenteric infarction  Radiation enteritis  Midgut volvulus  Multiple fistulae  Small-bowel tumours

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45  Nutritional Support including TPN.  Gut lengthening procedures  Intestinal Transplantation

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