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Necrotizing Enterocolitis

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Title: Necrotizing Enterocolitis


1
Necrotizing Enterocolitis
Priscilla Joe, MD Childrens Hospital and
Research Center Oakland
2
Incidence
  • Most common GI emergency in premies
  • 2-10 of VLBW infants lt 1500 grams
  • Inverse relationship with gestational age
  • Males and females equally effected
  • Mean age _at_ diagnosis 20 days (premies) vs. 7 days
    (term)
  • Jejunum, ileum, and colon most commonly affected
  • 10 term infants (usually in those with
    pre-existing illness)

3
Clinical Findings
  • Abdominal distension (70-98)
  • Increased gastric residuals ( gt70)
  • Emesis (gt70)
  • Gross blood per rectum (25-63)
  • Occult GI bleeding (22-59)
  • Diarrhea (4-26)
  • Lethargy, temperature instability,
    apnea/bradycardia, hypotension

4
Physical Findings
  • Absent bowel sounds
  • Abdominal tenderness
  • Abdominal wall erythema
  • Fixed abdominal mass (RLQ)

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Pathophysiology
  • Bacterial proliferation
  • Ischemic mucosal damage
  • Transmural necrosis allowing bacterial
    translocation, increasing risk for perforation
  • Endotoxin activation of inflammatory cascade

8
Risk Factors
  • Prematurity
  • Feeding
  • Circulatory Instability
  • Medications (vasoactive agents, indocin)
  • Bacterial Overgrowth/Infection

9
Prematurity
  • Deficient mucosal barrier (suppressed GI hormones
    and mucosal enzymes)
  • Dysfunctional intestinal host defense system
  • Decreased motility
  • Dysregulation of intestinal microcirculation
    (increased bacterial overgrowth)

10
Feeding and NEC
  • 90 of babies receive enteral feedings
  • Disrupts mucosal integrity
  • Reduces gut motility
  • Alters GI blood flow
  • Abnormal bacterial colonization
  • -Formula Enterobacter
  • -Breastmilk Enterobacter and Bifidobacterium
  • Rate of feeding advancement
  • Hyperosmolar feeding

11
Intestinal Ischemia
  • Term infants (polycythemia, asphyxia, exchange
    transfusion, congenital heart disease, IUGR)
  • PDA
  • Indocin
  • Cocaine exposure in utero
  • UAC lines?
  • Gastroschisis

12
Bacterial Colonization
  • High risk infants susceptible to bacterial
    overgrowth
  • Breast milk (lactobacilli and facultative
    anaerobes)
  • Formula fed (potentially pathogenic gram-negative
    bacteria)

13
Work Up
14
Radiographic Findings
  • Intestinal ileus
  • Dilated and thickened bowel loops, air-fluid
    levels
  • Intramural gas (pneumatosis intestinalis) cystic
    and/or linear patterns, terminal ileum and
    proximal colon
  • Free air (football sign)
  • Portal venous gas
  • Fixed or persistent dilated loop of bowel
    (sentinel loop)
  • Gasless abdomen with ascites

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20
Laboratory Findings
  • CBC
  • Elevated or decreased WBCs
  • Thrombocytopenia
  • Low ANC poor prognosis
  • Elevated CRP
  • Cultures (blood, /- stool, /- CSF)
  • Usually reveals enteric flora
  • Stool Analysis - heme , check for C. diff toxin

21
Laboratory Findings
  • Coagulopathy
  • Prolonged PT/PTT
  • Low fibrinogen
  • Elevated D-dimers
  • Electrolytes
  • Hypo- or hyperglycemia
  • Hyponatremia
  • Low bicarb
  • ABG/VBG
  • Metabolic acidosis

22
Differential Diagnosis
  • Sepsis with ileus
  • Bacterial enterocolitis C. diff, other gram
    negatives
  • Mechanical bowel obstruction
  • Hirschsprung
  • Ileal atresia
  • Volvulus
  • Meconium ileus
  • Intussusception
  • Isolated gastric perforation (indocin, steroids)

23
Mean Age at Presentation
  • Gestational age (weeks)
  • lt 30
  • 31-33
  • 34
  • Full term
  • Age at onset (days)
  • 20
  • 14
  • 5
  • 2

24
Clinical Management
  • Medical Vs. Surgical

25
Medical Management
  • Successfully treats ½ to 2/3 of patients
  • Consult surgery from the start
  • Bowel rest - NPO, gastric decompression, TPN
  • Broad spectrum antibiotics for 7-14 days
  • Cardiopulmonary support
  • Correction of metabolic acidosis and electrolyte
    abnormalities
  • Treatment of coagulopathy and/or
    thrombocytopenia
  • Serial exams, labs, and x-rays

26
Signs Of Ongoing Necrosis
  • Increasing distension
  • Persistent
  • Metabolic acidosis
  • Thrombocytopenia
  • Hypotension from third spacing

27
Indications for Surgical Intervention
  • Severe peritonitis
  • Pneumoperitoneum
  • Intra-abdominal abscess
  • Positive paracentesis findings (bile stool)
  • Portal venous gas seen on X-ray

28
Surgical Management
  • 34-50 of patients
  • Laparotomy with resection, formation of
    enterostomy and mucous fistula
  • Patch, drain, and wait
  • Primary peritoneal drainage
  • Eventual reanastomosis

29
Potential Complications
  • Short bowel syndrome
  • TPN-associated cholestasis with liver cirrhosis
    and liver failure
  • Catheter related sepsis
  • Intestinal strictures and partial small bowel
    obstruction
  • Enterocolic fistulas
  • Developmental and growth delay (50)

30
Long-term Outcome Whats Important?
  • Length of residual bowel
  • Ileum vs. jejunum (better adaptation)
  • Presence of ileocecal valve
  • Presence of intact colon
  • Maturity of infant and general condition

31
Survival Without Transplantation
  • Patients with gt 25cm of normal bowel who have an
    intact ileocecal valve
  • Normal bowel length
  • Term infants 200-300 cm
  • Preterm infants 100-200 cm
  • Patients with gt40cm of normal bowel who have no
    ileocecal valve

32
Short Bowel Syndrome
  • Fluid electrolyte losses
  • Bile acid and Vit B12 malabsorption
  • Gastric acid hypersecretion inactivates
    pancreatic enzymes and causes fat malabsorption
  • Secretory diarrhea
  • Bacterial overgrowth
  • - Increases malabsorption, lactic acidosis,
    colitis, Vit B12 deficiency

33
Malabsorption
  • Fat Bacterial deconjugation of bile salts and
    acids
  • Protein and carbohydrates enzyme and transport
    deficiencies
  • Vit B12 bacterial uptake

34
Sites of Nutrient Absorption
  • Duodenum iron
  • Jejunum Carbohydrates, proteins, fats and
    vitamins, copper
  • Ileum Bile acids, Vit B12

35
Short Gut Symptoms
  • Distension
  • Diarrhea
  • Cramping
  • Weight loss
  • Anemia (occult blood loss, Vit B12 deficiency)

36
Treatment of Short Gut Syndrome
  • Promotion of villous hyperplasia
  • Drip feedings using elemental formulas
  • Long-chain fats stimulate intestinal adaptation
  • MCT diet bypasses need for bile acids
  • Hydrolyzed proteins absorbed rapidly
  • Cholestyramine (bile acid binder)
  • Trimethoprim-sulfa, metronidazole treats
    bacterial overgrowth
  • Proton pump inhibitors or H2 blockers

37
Formulas
  • Elemental
  • Require minimal digestive function and cause less
    pancreatic secretion
  • Individual amino acids or short peptides
  • Glucose polymers
  • Low fat (long chain triglycerides)
  • MCT absorbed in absence of lipase or bile salts

38
Monitoring
  • Stool output for fluid losses
  • Carbohydrate malabsorption (low stool pH or stool
    reducing substances)
  • Anticipate slow gut adaptation over years
  • Weight gain and growth

39
Lengthening Procedures
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Prevention of NEC
  • Prenatal steroids
  • Correction of hypovolemia and hyperviscosity
  • Slow, gradual advancement of feeds
  • Breastfeeding
  • Probiotics - Oral immunoglobulins and
  • bifidobacterium?
  • Oral antibiotics?
  • Acidification of feedings (avoidance of PPIs and
    H2 blockers)?
  • Glutamine or arginine supplemenation?

42
Trophic Feedings
  • No increased risk of NEC
  • Increases gut motility
  • Reduces cholestasis
  • Improves tolerance of subsequent feedings
  • May prevent gut atrophy, inflammation, and
    bacterial translocation
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