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Itis Update What’s New in General Surgery 2019

Stay up-to-date with the latest developments in general surgery, including the management and treatment of diverticulitis, cholecystitis, perianal abscess and fistula, and appendicitis. Learn about risk factors, diagnostic approaches, surgical interventions, and more.

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Itis Update What’s New in General Surgery 2019

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  1. Itis UpdateWhat’s New in General Surgery 2019 Fernie, Oct 2019

  2. Topics • Diverticulitis • Cholecystitis • Perianalitis (perianal abscess and fistula) • Appendicitis

  3. Disclosures • None

  4. Diverticulitis • 4-15% of pts with diverticulosis • 3rd most common GI illness requiring hospitalization • Most common reason for elective colon resection

  5. Diverticulitis • Risk Factors • Diet • Obesity • Inactivity • Smoking • Low Risk lifestyle associated with 50% lower risk of diverticulitis

  6. Diverticulitis • Diet • Fiber • High fiber diet likely reduces risk of progression from asymptomatic to symptomatic disease • High fiber diet may not reduce symptoms in pts who already have symptomatic disease • Seeds and Nuts • Health Professionals Follow-up Study (JAMA 2008:300(8):907) • 47,000 men, age 40-75, from 1986-2004 • Inverse association between nut/popcorn consumption and diverticulitis

  7. Diverticulitis • Antibiotics • Gold standard despite lack of evidence • Swedish RCT 2012 and Dutch Diabolo Trial 2017 • CT confirmed uncomplicated diverticulitis randomized to antibiotics or placebo • No significant difference in • Abscess/perforation • Chronicity and recurrence • Surgery • readmission

  8. Diverticulitis • What I do • Inpatient management: Abx • Outpatient management • Discuss controversy surrounding Abx • Give pt script for Abx to start only if symptoms worsen • Colonoscopy (higher incidence of colon cancer compared with age matched controls)

  9. Acute Cholecystitis • Occurs in 10% of pts with symptomatic gallstones over 10yrs • Pathogenesis • Cystic duct obstruction not the only cause • Likely inflammatory mediator contribution • Only 50% of aspirates are culture positive

  10. Acute Cholecystitis • Clinical: pain>6 hrs, Murphy’s sign, • Labs:↑ WBC, CRP • Ultrasound: • gallstones, wall edema, pericholecystic fluid • Operator dependant (88% sensitivity, 80% specificity)

  11. Acute Cholecystitis • Treatment • Pain Control: • NSAIDs better than opioids • All opioids increase sphincter of Oddi pressure • Abx: • Can be omitted in mild cases

  12. Acute Cholecystitis • Surgery • Early surgery • Shorter hospital stay (3 days), fewer work days missed • No increase in complications • ASA I and II pts (?III) • Timing • Ideally within 72 hrs of onset of symptoms • Still ok after 72 hrs of symptoms but higher risk of conversion to open

  13. Perianal Abscess • Demographics • 16 per 100,000 per year • Mean age of 40 (range 20-60) • Males 2x more likely than females • Etiology • Obstructed anal crypt gland • 30-50% associated with fistula or go on to develop fistula after I&D

  14. Perianal Abscess: Location

  15. Perianal Abscess: Treatment • I&D • As close to anal verge as possible • Aspirate with 16 gauge needle before incision • Packing: • 2 RCTs showed no difference in recurrence/fistula formation) • Abx • Reduces fistula rate from 24% to 16% (2 RCTs) No difference in recurrence. • 5 days of Cipro/Flagyl or Clavulin

  16. Appendicitis • Demographics • 8.6% lifetime risk for males • 6.7% lifetime risk for females • Mechanism • Luminal obstruction • Lymphoid hyperplasia in younger pts • Fibrosis, fecaliths, tumours more common in older pts • Perforation • 20% perforate within 24 hrs of symptoms

  17. Appendicitis

  18. Appendicitis • Treatment • Uncomplicated: surgery • Abscess: drainage and abx • Phlegmon: abx • Interval Appendectomy • Colonoscopy before surgery (rule out tumour or IBD) • 20% incidence of neoplasm in this population

  19. Appendicitis • Non-operative management • 6 RCTs • 10% failure rate initially, 90% respond • Lower/similar pain scores, quicker return to work • 30% recur within 1st year (avg 5 months) • No long-term follow-up • Risk of missed neoplasm

  20. Appendicitis • Timing of Surgery • 12-24 hr delay in surgery not associated with higher risk of perforation • >48 hr delay associated with increase risk

  21. Appendicitis - Children • Anatomy • Appendix is funnel-shaped in first year of life (lower risk of obstruction) • Lymphoid follicles reach maximal size during adolescence (peak incidence of appendicitis) • Omentum: underdeveloped in young children so higher risk of diffuse peritonitis

  22. Appendicitis - Children • 0-5 years old • <5% of appendicitis • >50% have advanced disease • Variable presentation • localized RLQ pain occurs in <50% of patients • Best managed in pediatric hospital

  23. Appendicitis - Children • School-age (5-12 yrs.) • Abdominal pain and emesis are common • May not have typical migration of pain • Adolescent • Similar presentation to adults

  24. Appendicitis - Children • Diagnosis • No need to withhold pain medication • Abx may lower confidence regarding exam • Rebound testing unnecessary (high false positive results)

  25. Appendicitis - Children • Scoring Systems • Pediatric Appendicitis Score (PAS) • Low-Risk Appendicitis Score • Alvarado score • Pediatric Appendicitis Risk Calculator (pARC) • Reliance on clinical factors (for which there is significant variation) • Low score helpful in ruling out appendicitis • Intermediate score helpful in assessing need for imaging • Not been shown to improve outcomes

  26. Summary • Diverticulitis • Lifestyle (obesity, exercise, smoking, diet) • Consider omitting antibiotics • colonoscopy • Cholecystitis • Most patients should have early operative management

  27. Summary • Perianal Abscess • Superficial abscess can be drained at bedside • No packing • 5 days of Abx • Appendicitis • Surgery still standard of care; ideally within 24 hrs of presentation • Abx can be an option for select patients • Children<5 should be sent to Children’s Hospital

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