Definition:
Partial or complete blockage of the bowel that results in the failure of intestinal contacts to pats through.
Classification:
According to the presence or absence of peristalsis
1- Dynamic (mechanical).
-the onset: Acute Vs chronic.
-the site: high (small bowel) Vs low (larger bowel).
-nature: simple Vs strangulated.
For example: acute high strangulated obstruction.
2-Adynamic "Paralytic/neurogenic ileus": where there is no peristalsis.
According to Etiology: causes could be:
1-Inside the lumen: fecal impaction, food (bezoars in excessive fiber intake), gallstone ileus (duodenal
fistulization and passage of large gallstone), parasites (ascaris lumbricoides), intussusceptions.
2-In the wall: congenital atresia, Crohns disease (strictures), tumors, colonic diverticulitis.
3-outside the wall: strangulated hernia, Volvulus, bands and adhesions.
Classification in age-wise manner:
1. Neonatal obstruction: congenital anomalies, Hirschsprungs disease (congenital absence of
submucosal or myenteric plexuses, leading to obstruction and proximal dilation), and meconium ileus.
2. Infants: intussusception, Hirschsprungs disaese, strangulated hernia, obstruction due to Meckels
diverticulum.
3. Young adults:
Miscellaneous;
Pseudo-obstruction;
strangulated hernia,
5%
5%
adhesions and bands,
Crohns.
Fecal
impaction; 8%
4. Elderly: strangulated
hernia, CA, diverticulitis,
impacted feces, sigmoid
volvulus
Hernias; 12%
Adhesions;
40%
CA; 15%
Inflammatory;
15%
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Pathophysiology
Loops DISTAL to obstruction will have normal peristalsis and absorption until they are empty, then
collapse
Loops PROXIMAL to obstruction go into two phases:
Dehydration is caused by
Signs of dehydration: dry skin, sunken eyes, oliguria, poor venous filling.
Periumbilical pain
Early profuse vomiting with rapid dehydration
Minimal distension
No air fluid levels on AXR.
Periumbilical pain
Delayed vomiting
Central distension
Multiple central air fluid levels
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Large bowel obstruction
SOCRATES
Periumbilical vs suprapubic
Frequency may indicate the site
Small bowel : 2-20 minutes
Large bowel: 30 minutes or more.
Distension
More in chronic large bowel obstruction and volvulus of the sigmoid.
Absolute constipation
Vomiting
Feculent vomiting : smells like feces, because of bacterial metabolism of obstructed food.
Fecal vomiting: means vomiting fecal material, occurs when theres a gastrocolic fistula (gastric CA,
colon CA)
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Physical examination
General:
Signs of dehydration
Elevated pulse
Normal temperature.
Visible peristalsis (not diagnostic)
Strangulation
Bowel strangulation: Twisting of the bowel often around fibrous bands, causing decreased blood supply
and death of bowel tissue. Up to 15% mortality rate. Clinically its very difficult to differentiate simple
from strangulated obstruction.
Irreducible hernia; means that the contents of the hernia sac cannot be reduced into the abdomen. Irreducible
hernia can be associated with three other categories of complications strangulation, obstruction, incarceration.
Incarcerated means that contents are literally imprisoned in the sac of the hernia (usually by adhesions) but are
alive and functioning normally. An incarcerated hernia is not tender.
Obstructed means that a loop of bowel is kinked or trapped within the sac of the hernia in such a way that its
lumen but not blood supply is obstructed, the bowel is therefore alive and the patient has the signs and symptoms
of intestinal obstruction but not strangulation, the hernia will not be unduly tender.
Strangulation means that the blood supply to the contents of the sac has been cut off and they are dying. The
patient will usually be obviously unwell and the swelling will be acutely tender. An entrapment that interferes
with the blood supply to the bowel will usually obstruct its lumen, so most strangulated herniae have intestinal
obstruction.
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Features of strangulation:
Investigations
Lab: leukocytosis (neutrophils) and raised CRP
Abdominal X-ray (AXR): erect and supine.
Distended loops
Air-fluid levels.
High obstruction: ladder pattern, central and striations.
Low obstruction: haustrations, peripheral.
5% show normal AXR!
Principles of treatment
-Acute obstruction with the risk of strangulation needs urgent surgical intervention.
-Pre-operative preparation:
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Dead bowel segment is determined by
Loss of peristalsis
Loss of normal sheen "seen during operation"
Color (greenish/black is non-viable, but purple may recover)
Loss of arterial pulsation in the mesentery
Adhesions
It represents 40% of all common causes of obstruction, and 75% of small bowel obstruction cases. Most
commonly caused by previous surgery, that may occur just post-operatively or many years after surgery.
Can be easy flimsy or difficult dense. Most are
asymptomatic!
Follow the principles of treatment:
NG decompression and IV fluids.
Urgent laparotomy if suspect strangulation, peritonitis or nonresponse
Prevention:
Treatment:
Conservative treatment is usually curative.
Surgery: divide (release) the adhesion.
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Volvulus
Definition:
A twisting of a portion of bowel around its
mesenteric axis. When complete it forms a
closed loop of obstruction with resultant
ischemia secondary to vascular occlusion at
the base of the involved mesentery.
Common sites:
Etiology:
Primary:
-Congenital malrotation of the gut, i.e. abnormally mobile loop of intestine, e.g. congenital failure of
rotation of the small intestine (midgut volvulus), or long sigmoid colon.
-Abnormal mesenteric attachment, i.e. a loop of bowel with a narrow mesenteric attachment.
-Congenital band or adhesion, i.e. a loop fixed at its apex by adhesions around which it rotates.
Secondary:
-Rotation of a piece of bowel around an acquired adhesion or stoma.
-An abnormally loaded loop, as in the pelvic colon of chronic constipation.
Signs & symptoms:
-Regardless of cause, volvulus causes symptoms by two mechanisms:
-One is bowel obstruction, manifested as abdominal distension (due to accumulation of gas and fluid in
the obstructed bowel) and vomiting.
-The other is ischemia (loss of blood flow) to the affected portion of intestine.
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Volvulus neonatorum
Causes:
Congenital malrotation of the bowel.
Narrow mesentery of midgut.
Clinical feature:
Bilious vomiting.
Blood stained stools.
Abdominal distension.
Treatment :
Laparotomy :
untwisting the volvulus
widen the base of small bowel mesentery
divide adhesions (ladds bands).
Appendectomy : unusual position of appendix cause a diagnostic difficulty in the future.
Paralytic ileus
Definition:
-A state in which there is failure of transmission of peristaltic wave (atony or paralysis) due to
neuromuscular failure, the resultant stasis lead to accumulation of gas and fluid in the bowel with
associated distension, constipation, vomiting , absence of bowel sound & Pain.
- Paralytic ileus should not be confused with mechanical obstruction, although it is a sequale of the
end-stages of mechanical obstruction.
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Clinical feature
On examination:
Anxious, uncomfortable
Silent, distended & tender abdomen.
A plain x-ray:
The appearance of generalised adynamic ileus
on plain film is quite characteristic. The large
and small bowel are extensively airfilled but not
dilated, this may be described as the large and
small bowel "looking the same".
Etiology:
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Management
Management is conservative with bowel rest, nasogastric aspiration and fluid and electrolyte support.
Treatment is otherwise focused on the underlying cause.
In prolonged stubborn ileus:
Metoclopramide (motility stimulant)
erythromycin (stimulate the motilin receptor)
Pseudo-obstruction
Definition:
Known as adynamic ileus or Ogilvies syndrome,
is a form of paralytic ileus, mainly affect the
large bowel, it result from interference with
autonomic supply to the gut.
Etiology:
Clinical feature:
Absolute constipation
Colicky abdominal pain
Abdominal distension
Treatment:
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Closed loop obstruction
A condition where one bowel segment is totally obstructed distally with a valve-mechanism proximally
that allows the bowel to fill, but prevents reflux.
-No early distension of proximal segments
-Most commonly in right colonic obstruction with a competent ileocecal valve.
-Complicated by cecal perforation and fecal peritonitis.
-X-ray shows the characteristic cecal dilation.
-Other examples: volvulus, complication of Polya gastrectomy.
Hirschsprung Disease
Hirschsprung disease (HD) is congenital megacolon characterized by the absence of myenteric and
submucosal ganglion cells in the distal alimentary tract; resulting in loss of peristaltic activity distal
to the area that is absent of ganglionc cells that leads to intestinal obstruction.
Hirschsprung disease results from the absence of parasympathetic ganglion cells in the
myenteric and submucosal plexus of the rectum and/or colon.
Ganglion cells derived from the neural crest migrate caudally to anorectal area with the
vagal nerve fibers along the intestine.
Arrest in migration leads to an aganglionic segment.
These ganglion cells arrive in the proximal colon by 8 weeks of gestational age and in the
rectum by 12 weeks of gestational age.
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Epidemiology
Classification:
HD can be classified by the extension of the aganglionosis as follows:
1. Classical HD (75% of cases): Rectosegmoid area and distally to it will be aganglionic and its
the most common type.
2. Long segment HD (20% of cases): any part of the colon beyond the recto sigmoid area is
affected. (More than half of the colon -DHMC)
3. Total colonic aganglionosis (3-12% of cases): the terminal ileum will be aganglionic and
distally to it.
4. Rare variants include the following:
Total intestinal aganglionosis: its incompatible with life because the whole GI tract
dont have ganglion.
Ultra-short-segment HD: involving the distal rectum below the pelvic floor and the
anus. The aganglionic segment in ultra short is limited to internal sphincter, ganglion
cells present on rectal suction biopsy but rectal motility is abnormal.
Clinical presentation:
Most of the patients diagnosed at first month so in the:
Newborns:
1. Failure to pass meconium within the first 48 hours of life (meconium is a green blackish first
stool that the child passes and at first 24 to 48 hours), and 95% of HD patients have delay in
passging the stool.
2. Abdominal distension that is relieved by rectal stimulation (then the mother inserts rectal
thermometer to take temp or enema, she notes that the child will pass stool after a while)
3. If the child wasnt diagnosed early he will complain of serious intestinal obstruction like
vomiting fecal material, severe dehydration and rarely enterocolitis and the mortality rate is
20-30 % without treatment but with, it will reach 100%.
4. failure to thrive (the normal gaining weight is 25 gm/day)
Older children and adults
Severe constipation
Abdominal distension
Bilious vomiting
Failure to thrive
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Diagnostic workup
Clinically: we take a good history that will reveal abdominal distention, then we do a rectal
examination and we see that there is stool on the finger because when we do PR we make
relaxation of the internal sphincter, and some of the stool or gas will come out.
Investigations:
1. Plain abdominal x-ray: we see distended colon because of the obstruction, later on the
small bowel will be distended also.
2. Contrast enema: barium or gastrografin enema, we see:
A transitional zone will appear between the normal bowl and the abnormal one.
Abnormal, irregular contractions of aganglionic segment.
Delayed evacuation of barium (so even taking image after 24 h will show that
barium is still there).
3. Manometry: its like a defecation reflex, normally the colon contains the stool and the
rectum is empty, so when we defecate the stool goes to the rectum. The idea is we put a
balloon in the rectum and we inflate it, and we put a manometer in the anal sphincter.
Normally when the balloon is inflated the sphincter relaxes. In HD patients the anal
sphincter remains contracted because absence of ganglionic cells.
4. Biopsy: we take biopsy from the rectum to the histopathology lab to see if there any
ganglionic cells or not. One ganglionic cell is sufficient to exclude HD.
Types of biopsy are rectal suction biopsy (that involves the mucosa and submucosa) and Full
thickness biopsy.
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Treatment
The treatment is surgical removal or bypass of the aganglionic bowel with preservation of the
sphincter because we dont want to end with incontinence.
Complications
HD associated enteropathy: its exactly like the gastroenteritis that happens in children which is
very common. Because of the stagnation of the stool, bacterial overgrowth will occur and starts to
secrets toxins, besides that the mucosa isnt healthy which finally lead to early sepsis.
So the patient will come firstly with fever, abdominal distention, and even diarrhea (the diarrhea
here because of the overflow that resulted from the inflammatory process and secretions from the
colon), lethargy (drowsiness), rectal bleeding, or shock. So the patient will rapidly deteriorate
because of sepsis and dehydration.
Mortality rate is with treatment is 20%.
Treatment: rehydration, IV antibiotics, colonic washout to treat the primary cause which is stool
stagnation.
Prognosis
Usually they complain of constipation, because of not extracting all aganglionic cells in
surgery, so we give those suppositories, enemas, lactulose. But in general they live normally.
Some investigators report a high degree of satisfaction, while others report a significant
incidence of constipation and incontinence.
Approximately 1% of patients with Hirschsprung disease require a permanent colostomy to
correct incontinence.
Patients with associated trisomy 21 have poorer clinical outcomes.
Intussusception
Intussusception, the invagination of one portion of the intestine into an adjacent segment, is
uncommon but may be life-threatening. Intussusception typically causes a strangulating bowel
obstruction, which can progress to gangrene and perforation. Intussusception is classified according
to the site of the inner intussusceptum and outer intussuscipiens. In children, more than 80% are
ileocolic, beginning several centimetres proximal to the ileocaecal valve with their apex in the
ascending or transverse colon.
In the majority of affected infants, intussusception is caused by hyperplasia of gut lymphoid tissue,
which may in turn be secondary to viral infection. In 10% of children, intussusception is secondary
to a pathological lead point such as a Meckels diverticulum, enteric duplication cyst or even small
bowel lymphoma. Such cases are more likely in children over the age of 2 years and in those with
recurrent intussusception.
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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION
Presentation
Intussusception can develop at any age and affect
either sex but the peak incidence is between 5 and
10 months of age.
Classically, a previously healthy infant presents with
colicky pain and vomiting (milk then bile). Between
episodes the child initially appears well. Later, they
may pass a redcurrant jelly stool.
Clinical signs include dehydration, abdominal
distension and a palpable sausage-shaped mass in
the right upper quadrant.
A plain radiograph commonly shows signs of small
bowel obstruction and crescent sign (see figure).
Diagnosis can be confirmed by an abdominal
ultrasound scan or contrast enema.
Management
After resuscitation with intravenous fluids, broad-spectrum antibiotics and nasogastric drainage,
non-operative reduction of the intussusception can be attempted using an air or barium enema.
This type of reduction (non-operative one) is contraindicated in cases of peritonitis or perforation,
strangulated bowel and pathological lead points are unlikely to reduce.
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