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Home | Viva | Operative Surgery | General Surgery

Bowel obstruction

Features

  1. Pain: colicky
    • Epigastrium / umbilical = small bowel
    • Suprapubic = large bowel
  2. Vomiting
    • Consequences: dehydration, metabolic alkalosis/respiratory acidosis - hypoxia
    • More distal lesions, later the vomiting
    • Contents: pyloric = watery; high = bilious; low = faeculent
  3. Distension
    • Depends on level of obstruction
  4. Constipation
  5. Pyrexia, septicaemia

Causes

  1. Luminal
    • Intussuception
  2. Mural
    • Malignancy
    • Inflammatory bowel disease
  3. Extra-mural
    • Hernia
    • Adhesions

Frequency of causes

  1. Adhesions - 60%
  2. Herniae - 15%
  3. Malignancy - 6%
  4. IBD
  5. Ischaemic bowel

Pathophysiology

  1. Bowel dilatation proximal to obstruction
    • Results in gas / fluid accumulation with bowel wall and lumen (proximally)
    • Impairs resorption
  2. Mucosal oedema impairs venous / arterial flow
    • Bowel becomes strangulated
  3. Ischaemia leads to haemorrhagic infarction
    • Further dilation leads to bowel perforation
  4. Bacterial translocation leads to sepsis

 

Principles of Management

  1. History
    • Previous operations
    • Abdominal diseases
    • Previous obstruction
  2. Examination
    • Previous scars
    • Presence of hernia
    • Bowel sounds: tinkling / hyperactive
  3. Investigations
    • Plain AXR - distended bowel loops (and level of obstruction) - small plicae circulares; large haustrae
    • Plain CXR - exclude free air
    • FBC: WCC, anaemia
    • Electrolytes
    • ABG: Lactate / acidosis
  4. Resuscitation
    • IV crystalloid
    • Correct acid-base
    • NGT
    • Catherise
    • Analgesia

Indications for surgery

  1. Absolute
    • Peritonitis
    • Perforation
    • Incarcerated hernia
  2. Relative
    • Palpable mass
    • Virgin abdomen
    • Failure of conservative treatment

Surgical options in Large bowel disease

  1. One stage (medially optimised patient)
    • resection of tumour/lesion, decompression of bowe, lavage with primary anastamosis
  2. Two stage (unwell patients who may be optimised)
    • Hartmann's procedure with resection of tumour
    • Later reversal of colostomy
  3. Three stage (sick patients/moribund/advanced disease)
    • Emergency defunctioning colostomy (until patient fit for further operation)
    • resection of tumour and anastamosis in 2nd operation
    • Final closure

 

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