600 likes | 1.14k Views
GASTROINTESTINAL COMPLICATIONS. scope. Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction Acute Abdominal Compartment Syndrome Postoperative Gastrointestinal Bleeding Stomal Complications Anastomotic Leak Intestinal Fistula Pancreatic Fistulas. scope. Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction
E N D
scope • Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction • Acute Abdominal Compartment Syndrome • Postoperative Gastrointestinal Bleeding • Stomal Complications • Anastomotic Leak • Intestinal Fistula • Pancreatic Fistulas
scope • Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction • Acute Abdominal Compartment Syndrome • Postoperative Gastrointestinal Bleeding • Stomal Complications • Anastomotic Leak • Intestinal Fistula • Pancreatic Fistulas
Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction
Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction • Obstruction occurring within 30 days after surgery • Functional Obstruction • adynamicor paralytic ileus • Mechanical Obstruction • luminal, mural, or extraintestinal
Postoperative bowel motility • Small bowel motility within several hours • Gastric motility within 24 to 48 hours • Colonic motility within 48 to 72 hours Presence of bowel sounds, flatus, and bowel movements.
Causes of Intestinal Paralytic Ileus • prolonged surgical procedure and exposure of abdominal contents • Intra-abdominal infection (peritonitis or abscess) • Retroperitoneal hemorrhage and inflammation • Electrolyte abnormalities • Medications (narcotics, psychotropic agents)
Causes of Mechanical postoperative small bowel obstruction • Adhesions (92%) • Phlegmonor abscess • Internal hernia • Intestinal ischemia • Intussusception
Differentiation between adynamicileus and mechanical obstruction Adynamicileus -Diffuse discomfort -No sharp colicky pain and distended abdomen. -Quiet abdomen with few bowel sounds - Radiographs : reveal diffusely dilated bowel throughout the intestinal tract Mechanical obstruction -High-pitched -Tinkling sounds -Fever and sepsis -Tachycardia -Hypovolemia - Radiographs : small bowel dilation with air-fluid levels and thickened valvulaeconniventesin the bowel proximal to the point of obstruction and little or no gas in the bowel distal to the obstruction
Management • Three-step approach • Resuscitation • Investigation • Surgical intervention
Treatment • Adynamicileus • expectantly waiting for resolution • Partial mechanical small bowel obstruction • initially managed expectantly 7 to 14 days, • If stable and clinical and radiologic improvement continues • Emergency relaparotomy • (closed-loop, high-grade, or complicated small bowel obstruction, intussusception, or peritonitis) • During this time nutritional support and surgical intervention are signs of deterioration or no improvement.
scope • Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction • Acute Abdominal Compartment Syndrome • Postoperative Gastrointestinal Bleeding • Stomal Complications • Anastomotic Leak • Intestinal Fistula • Pancreatic Fistulas
Acute Abdominal Compartment Syndrome • Increased intra-abdominal pressure greater than 12 mm.Hg • Associated with • Rising peak airway pressure • Hypoxia • Difficult ventilation • Oliguriaor anuria
Most commonAbdominal Compartment Syndrome • Multiple trauma • ileus, coagulopathy, capillary leak, and massive fluid resuscitation and transfusion • ICU setting (nontrauma setting) • ascites, retroperitoneal hemorrhage
Presentation and Diagnosis • Difficulty breathing ,elevated peak airway pressure, hypoxia, worsening hypercapnia • Abdomenal distention and tense • Reduced Cardiac output • Oliguria • Neurologic deterioration
Prevention of Abdominal Compartment Syndrome • Organ function is monitored and assessed: • Lungs: hypercapnia, hypoxia, difficult ventilation, elevated pulmonary artery pressure, drop in Pao2/Fio2 ratio, decreased compliance, intrapulmonary shunt, increased dead space • Heart: decreased cardiac output and cardiac index and need for vasopressors • Kidneys: oliguria unresponsive to fluid therapy • Central nervous system: Glasgow Coma Scale score less than 10 or neurologic deterioration in the absence of neurotrauma • Abdomen: distention. Computed tomography scan to check for fluid collections, narrowing of the inferior vena cava, compression of the kidneys, and rounding of the abdomen
Treatment • surgical • organ dysfunction + intra-abdominal hypertension (15 to 20 mm Hg ) • Decompression • abdomen is tense + signs of extreme ventilatory dysfunction + oliguria
scope • Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction • Acute Abdominal Compartment Syndrome • Postoperative Gastrointestinal Bleeding • Stomal Complications • Anastomotic Leak • Intestinal Fistula • Pancreatic Fistulas
Postoperative Gastrointestinal Bleeding • Stress ulceration is a serious complication • Clinically significant bleeding • Hemodynamic instability • Transfusion of blood products • Operative intervention less than 5% • Associated with significant mortality
Risk Factors for Stress Erosions • Multiple trauma • Head trauma • Major burns • Clotting abnormalities • Severe sepsis • Systemic inflammatory response syndrome • Cardiac bypass • Intracranial operations
Presentation and Diagnosis • Melena • Hematemesis • Hematochezia • Hemodynamic compromise • Decresehematocrit
Treatment The basic principles of management of postoperative GI bleeding include the following: 1. Fluid resuscitation 2. Checking and monitoring clotting parameters and correcting abnormalities 3. Identification and treatment of aggravating factors 4. Transfusion of blood products 5. Identification and treatment of the source of the bleeding
scope • Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction • Acute Abdominal Compartment Syndrome • Postoperative Gastrointestinal Bleeding • Stomal Complications • Anastomotic Leak • Intestinal Fistula • Pancreatic Fistulas
Etiology • Stomas are widely used in the treatment of colorectal, intestinal, and urologic diseases • ileostomy, colostomy, or urostomy • occur within 30 days after surgery
Treatment • Surgical technique is imperative • Ischemia immediate revision • Necrosis beyond the fascia immediate reoperation. • Ischemia limited to a few millimeters is observed • Stenosis can be repaired via laparotomy Chemical dermatitis cleaning, barriers Candida dermatitis Nystatin Traumatic dermatitis patient education ,application of a skin barrier Allergic dermatitis symptomatic relief with oral antihistamine, topical or oral steroid therapy
Technical Aspects of Stoma Construction • Abdominal Wall Aperture Excision of a circular piece of skin about 2 cm in size Preservation of subcutaneous fat to provide support for the stoma Transrectus muscle placement of the stoma Fascial aperture to admit two fingers • Stoma Selection of normal bowel for the stoma Adequate mobilization of bowel to avoid tension on the stoma Preservation of blood supply to the end of bowel (the marginal artery of the colon and the last vascular arcade of the small bowel mesentery must be preserved) The small bowel serosa must not be denuded of more than 5 cm of mesentery • Maturation Primary maturation of the end stoma or the afferent limb of the loop ileostomy Avoidance of traversing the skin with sutures during maturation • Other Maneuvers Tunneling of bowel through the extraperitoneal space of the abdominal wall Mesenteric-peritoneal closure Fixation of mesentery/bowel to the fascial ring Use of a supportive rod with loop stomas
scope • Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction • Acute Abdominal Compartment Syndrome • Postoperative Gastrointestinal Bleeding • Stomal Complications • Anastomotic Leak • Intestinal Fistula • Pancreatic Fistulas
Etiology • level of the anastomosis • esophageal, pancreatico-enteric, and colorectal • Microcirculation at resection margins • Intraluminal distention • Emergency bowel surgery
Presentation and Diagnosis • The clinical manifestations result of intestinal contents • purulent discharge • Malaise, fever, abdominal pain, ileus, localized erythema around the surgical incision, and leukocytosis, • Bowel obstruction,pneumaturia, fecaluria, and pyuria
Treatment • Resuscitation is started immediately • crystalloid fluids , blood transfusion • NPO • NG tube • Incised and drained • Reoperation (peritonitis, intra-abdominal hemorrhage, suspected intestinal ischemia)
scope • Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction • Acute Abdominal Compartment Syndrome • Postoperative Gastrointestinal Bleeding • Stomal Complications • Anastomotic Leak • Intestinal Fistula • Pancreatic Fistulas
Intestinal Fistula • Abnormal communication between • two epithelializedsurfaces or • two digestive organs or • hollow organ and the skin • most commonly iatrogenic
Presentation and Diagnosis Severity depend on the surgical anatomy and physiology of the fistula • Anatomy • -enteroenteric fistula • -Enterovesical • -enterocutaneous and pancreatic fistula • -enterovaginal fistula • Physiology • -low output (<200 mL/24 hr) • -moderate output (200-500 mL/24 hr) • -high output (>500 mL/24 hr) • Hypovolemia and dehydration, electrolyte and acid-base imbalance, loss • of protein and trace elements, and malnutrition • Skin and surgical wound -irritation, excoriation, ulceration, and infection • of the skin
Treatment • IV fluid and electrolyte imbalance is corrected. • NPO • Broad-spectrum IV antibiotic • H2 antagonists or proton pump inhibitors • Somatostatin analogues • Skin protection • surgical procedure
scope • Early Postoperative Bowel Obstruction • Acute Abdominal Compartment Syndrome • Postoperative Gastrointestinal Bleeding • Stomal Complications • Anastomotic Leak • Intestinal Fistula • Pancreatic Fistulas
Pancreatic Fistulas • Diagnosis • Cloudy fluid with a high amylase content • management • Octreotide therapy • ERCP • Fistuloenterostomy
Bile Duct Injuries • The most dreaded complication of gallbladder surgery is injury to the extrahepatic bile duct • Iaparoscopiccholecystectomy 0.4% to 0.7% • Open cholecystectomy 0.2%
Bile Duct Injuries • Presentation • Bile leak upper quadrant pain, fever, nausea, abdominal distention, and malaise • Bile duct strictures cholangitis, pain, fever, chills,jaundice,leukocytosis and elevated bilirubin • Diagnosis • CT scan • ERCP • Percutaneoustranshepaticcholangiography • Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography
Bile Duct Injuries • Prevention • proper surgical technique + adequate identification of the anatomy • Treatment • adequate resuscitation, antibiotics, and drainage, • Sphincterotomyor stent • Surgical intervention
scope • Epistaxis • Acute Hearing Loss • Nosocomial Sinusitis • Parotitis
Epistaxis • Associated with leukemia and hemophilia, excessive anticoagulation, and hypertension. • Two general categories: • anterior • Posterior • Management • Firm pressure to the nasal ala and held for 3 to 5 minutes • packing with strip gauze for 10 to 15 minutes • Foley catheter with a 30-mL balloon • ligation of the sphenopalatine a. or anterior ethmoidal a.