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Crohn’s Disease and other Diseases of the Small Bowel. Anir Gupta, MD, FRCSC Assistant Professor Department of Surgery. Case 1. A 45 yo M with a history of AIDS presents to your ED with nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and severe abdominal pain. How would you approach this patient?. CMV Enteritis.
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Crohn’s Disease and other Diseases of the Small Bowel Anir Gupta, MD, FRCSC Assistant Professor Department of Surgery
Case 1 • A 45 yo M with a history of AIDS presents to your ED with nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and severe abdominal pain. How would you approach this patient?
CMV Enteritis • Most commonly affects the distal ileum and right colon • Colonoscopic findings include hemorrhagic, ulcerated lesions • Cytology: nuclear inclusions “owl’s eye” • Treatment: medical, not surgical • Gancyclovir/foscarnet
Case 2 • A 35 yo M who is otherwise healthy presents to your ED with fever, diarrhea and RLQ abdominal pain. How would you approach this patient?
Acute Ileitis • Etiology may be infectious or inflammatory (ie Crohn’s Disease) • Predominant etiology: infectious • Usual suspects: • Campylobacter • Yersinia • Salmonella • Shigella • Investigations – do a C&S, O&P ! • Mimics: appendicitis, crohn’s disease • Treatment: antibiotics, not surgery!
Case 3 • 57 yo man presents to your hospital with nausea, vomiting, and crampy abdominal pain. Past medical history significant for Crohn’s Disease. How would you approach this patient?
Crohn’s Disease • Prevalence • 4-10 per 100,000 • More prevalent in northern US and Ashkenazi pop. • Bimodal distribution (30’s and 60’s) • Genetic and environment • 1:5 have a family member with Crohn’s • NOD2 gene mutation = 40X risk of crohn’s • Chronic disease with acute flares • Different treatments for each phase • Goal is to delay surgery and improve QOL • No cure, only palliation
Symptoms of Crohn’s Disease • Abdominal pain • Diarrhea • Weight loss • Failure to thrive for children • Complications • Abscess – fevers • Fistulas – draining wounds, diarrhea • Obstruction
Crohn’s Disease • Often difficult to delineate between Crohn’s and Ulcerative Colitis • 15% have “indeterminate” colitis • Crohn’s • Sustained inflammation • Mouth to anus • Transmural • Types • Fistulizing • Fibrostenotic (stricturing) • Inflammatory
Crohn’s Disease • Areas of involvement • Ileocecal – 70% • Colon only – 20% • Small bowel only ~ 5% • Perineal/anorectal ~ 10% • Esophagus, stomach, duodenum ~ 1-5%
Pathologic findings • Endoscopy • Linear ulcers • Cobblestone (coalescence of ulcers) • Skip lesions • Biopsy • Transmural involvement • Apthous ulcers • Noncaseating Granulomas
Endoscopic findings in Crohn’s Serpiginous ulcer Linear ulcer
Endoscopic findings in Crohn’s Cobblestoning
Treatment of Crohn’s • Goals change based on presentation • Acute • Treat complications (abscess, fistula, obstruction) • Improve symptoms • Avoid surgery?? • Return to chronic phase • Chronic phase • Improve QOL • Maintain remission • Prevent flares
Medical Treatment for Crohn’s • Acute phase • Antibiotics for abscess/infection • Drain placement for large abscesses • Steroid pulse (systemic) • Immunomodulators • Infliximab (remicade) or adalimumab (humira) • NPO status • Nutritional support
Medical Treatment for Crohn’s • Chronic phase (Maintenance therapy) • Anti-inflammatory • 5-Aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) • Mesalamine, mesalazine, sulfasalazine, Pentasa • Steroids • Topical and systemic • Antibiotics • Cipro for perineal disease • Flagyl following surgical resection • Immunomodulators • Azathioprine • 6-mercaptopurine (6-MP) • Cyclosporine • Methotrexate • Infliximab (remicade) • Monitor for development of neoplasia/dysplasia • Colonoscopy every 2-3years after first 10 years of diagnosis
Surgery for Crohn’s Disease • Indications • Complications • Abscess, perforation, fistula, obstruction, bleeding • Failure of medical management • Intolerance of medical therapy • Development of neoplasia • Most patients will eventually require surgery
Surgery for Crohn’s Disease • Removal of diseased intestine • Most common operation is ileocecectomy • Several segmental resections better than one long segment resection • Stricuroplasty for short or numerous strictures • Drainage of abscesses
Surgery for Crohn’s “Creeping fat” Inflammation of terminal ileum (right) and cecum (left) in ileocolectomy specimen
Surgical outcomes • Complication rates high • 15-30% • Wound infection • Anastomotic leaks • Good short-term resolution of symptoms • Duration of benefit dependent on severity of disease • Surgery begets more surgery for crohn’s patients
Case 4 • 57 yo F comes to your hospital with a 2 day history of nausea, vomiting, and abdominal pain. Her past surgical history is significant for a c-section in the past. She does not take any meds, no drug allergies, no other medical problems. She is mildly tachycardic, otherwise VSS. How would you approach this patient?
Case 5 • 72 yo F comes into your ED with 3 day history of nausea, vomiting and obstipation. She is tachycardic, has a low grade fever, and her SBP is 90. Labs reveal a WBC of 13,000. How would you approach this patient?
Case 6 • You are asked to see an 69 yo F on the medical service. She has been obstipated for 2 days. She is tachycardic, her SBP is 90, her abdomen is distended and tympanitic. The ER doctor is concerned about a mass in her right groin that he feels is concerning for an abscess. How would you approach this patient?
Case 7 • A 54 yo M comes to your hospital with a 3 day history of nausea, vomiting and severe abdominal pain. He states that he has been suffering from chronic abdominal pain for several months now. He has lost 20 lbs in the past few months. He is tachycardic, with a distended, diffusely tender abdomen. How would you approach this patient?
Case 8 • A 65 yo F with a previous history of melanoma presents to your hospital with nausea, vomiting and recurrent abdominal pain. She is anemic. How would you approach this patient?
Case 9 • You have been referred a patient with chronic intermittent abdominal pain. EGD is normal. Colonoscopy is normal. Patient is not obstipated, but does experience intermittent bloating and “constipation” along with his pain. How would you evaluate this patient?
Case 10 • A 65 yo F presents to your ED with nausea, vomiting and abdominal pain. She is obstipated. She has had surgery and adjuvant therapy in the past for ovarian cancer. How would you approach this patient?
Bowel obstruction • Definition: a mechanical blockage of the intestine preventing passage of intestinal secretions and contents • Etiology: • Intraluminal • Intramural • Extrinsic • Most common reason for emergency general surgery admission • Approximately ½ million yearly • 300,000 per year will be operated on for SBO
Etiology of Bowel Obstruction • Previous operation – about 50% will need surgery • Adhesions – account for 75% of all obstructions • No previous operation – all need surgery/intervention • Hernia • Malignancy/tumor • Crohn’s disease • Malrotation/volvulus • Intussusception • Diverticulitis • Stricture (ischemic, radiation, crohn’s)
Bowel obstruction pathophysiology • gas and fluid accumulation proximal to obstruction • increased intraluminal pressure • bowel distension • decreased motility • increased bacterial load and change to anaerobes
Classification of Bowel Obstruction • Partial • Adhesions • Complete • Adhesions • Hernia • Malignant • Closed loop • Adhesions • Volvulus