Title: Emergency General Surgery
1Emergency General Surgery Peter Mitchell SpR
General Surgery South Manchester University
Hospitals NHS Trust Sept 2008
2Emergency General Surgery Topics
- Can you talk through these topics??
- Acute abdomen
- Biliary Emergencies / pancreatitis
- Swallowed FBs
- GI bleeding
- Appendicitis and RIF pain
- Abdominal pain in children
- Peritonitis
- Intestinal obstruction
- Pseudo-obstruction
- Strangulated hernia
- Intestinal ischaemia
- Superficial sepsis and abscesses
- Acute anorectal sepsis
- Ruptured AAA
- Acutely ischaemic limb
- Acute urological emergencies
- Acute gynae presentations
3Emergency General Surgery Procedures
- Large bowel obstruction
- Colonic perforation
- Hartmanns Procedure
- Colostomy
- Appendicectomy
- Drainage ano-rectal sepsis
- Laparotomy for trauma
- Laparotomy post-op complications
- Exploration of scrotum
- Paraphimosis
- Embolectomy
- Fasciotomy
- Can you talk through these ??
- Abscess drainage
- Tracheostomy
- Catheterisation (inc suprapubic)
- Thoracotomy
- Laparoscopy
- Perf DU
- Upper GI bleed endoscopy / surgery
- Cholecystectomy
- Splenectomy
- Hernia
- Small bowel obstruction / resection
- Ileostomy
4Acute Abdomen
- Abdo pain lt1w duration, requiring admission, not
previously investigated - CEPOD senior involvement
- 35 NSAP
- Care with labelling, esp. older patients
- Careful history and examination
- Early resuscitation and analgesia
- Careful and appropriate Ix
5Acute abdomen Early Investigations
- Blood tests
- Specific diagnostic tests
- Baseline
- Indicators of areas of pathology
- X-rays
- Erect CXR
- Supine AXR only when indicated (obstr, perf,
?renal stones) - Contrast studies
- Large bowel obstruction
- ?Upper GI perf
- ?Small bowel obstruction
Regular active re-assessment is as important as
any investigation in influencing management
decisions
6Acute abdomen Other Investigations
- Ultra-sonography
- Early diagnosis of gallstones, gynae pathology,
?appendicitis - CT scanning
- Increasingly important in early and continuing
assessment - Laparoscopy
- Early laparoscopy is beneficial in improving
diagnosis and outcomeDecadt et al. Br J Surg
1999861383-6
7Case One
- 55yr old male
- Hx - Epigastric pain severe, Vomit x 1, Recent
Shoulder injury. - O/E Unwell, Guarding Epigastrium. No BS.
- Ix Bloods, X rays. ??
- Differential Diagnosis.
- DU Perforation Resuscitation Surgery.
8Gastroduodenal Perforation
- Symptoms Abdo pain severe, constant, sudden
onset. - Nausea and Vomiting
- Collapse
- Hx of Peptic Ulcer disease (20-50 no Hx of PUD)
- Drugs- NSAIDS, Steroids.
- SIGNS- Pale, Clammy, Tachycardia, Hypotension,
Tachypnoeic ,Peritonitis . - INVESTIGATIONS - Erect CXR,FBC,U/E, LFTs,
Clotting, Cross-match. Amylase, ECG. - 80 have pneumoperitoneum on erect CXR.
-
9Gastroduodenal Perforation
- MANAGEMENT ABC, Resuscitation, Catheter, Plan
for theatre. - SURGERY - Thorough lavage of peritoneal cavity.
Omental patch repair. Partial gastrectomy if
duodenum destroyed, biopsies of gastric ulcers ?
Malignant. - PPI Therapy, Antibiotics, DVT prophylaxis,
eradication therapy. - Conservative Management - Elderly if too unfit
for surgery. - ? In patients who are well with no tenderness
up to 30 will need surgery. May miss other
pathology.
10Case Two
- 65yr old male
- Hx Severe epigastric and chest pain, vomiting
x10, Alcohol - O/E Unwell, shocked, Guarding in upper abdomen,
?creps Left lung base. - Ix- Bloods, Xrays, ?CT
- Differential Diagnosis.
- Oesophageal Perforation.
11Oesophageal Perforation
- Symptoms Macklers Triad Chest pain,
vomiting/retching and subcutaneous emphysema. - Signs Shock, unwell.
- Mediastinits Fever, AF, Tachypnoea
- Respiratory Distress.
- Symptoms can be vague and difficult to assess
therefore think of diagnosis.
12Oesophageal Perforation
- Spontaneous rupture (Boerhaaves syndrome)
- Post-emetic (80-90) Alcohol excess
Hyperemesis
gravidarum - Barogenic Parturition
Heimlich manouvre Heavy weight
lifting - Neurology Seizures
- Underlying disease Malignancy, ulceration
- Traumatic Perforation
- Penetrating
- Blunt
- Ingestion injuries
- Corrosive agents
- Foreign bodies
13Oesophageal Perforation
- Iatrogenic Perforation
- Intraluminal injury Flexible/rigid endoscopy
Post-dilatation
Variceal
sclerotherapy
Laser/PDT
Endoprosthesis/stent
- Operative injury Antireflux surgery
Cardiomyotomy
Thoracic aneurysm repair
14Oesophageal Perforation
- Spontaneous affects usually lower third
- comparatively thinner and weaker mural structure
- along longitudinal axis
- left postero-lateral (lack of support/longitudinal
muscle fibres) - 0.6 to 9 cm
- mucosal tear longer than muscle tear
15Differentials?
- Acute MI
- Pancreatitis
- Perforated DU
- Dissecting aortic aneurysm
- Pneumonia
- Spontaneous pneumothorax
- Pericarditis
- Gastric volvulus
- Diaphragmatic hernia
- Mesenteric thrombosis
16Investigations
- Erect CXR pleural effusions
pneumo-mediastinum subcutaneous
emphysema hydrothorax
hydropneumothorax pneumo-peritoneum - Contrast XR
- CT scan
- Endoscopy
- Thoracocentesis
17Management
- Supportive Resuscitation, analgesia, Catheter,
Oxygen, Antibiotics, PPIs, HDU care/input, Chest
drainage. Strict NBM. - Conservative vs Surgery.
- Conservative has limited role in unfit patients,
minimal contamination, late diagnosis, small
ruptures, Iatrogenic perforations.
18- Surgery
- Lavage
- ? Repair
- ? Resection
- ? Create Fistula
- Nutrition
- ? Covered Stent
19Surgery for oesophageal perforation
Repair
T tube
Chest drain
Diaphragm
Gastrostomy
Feeding Jejunostomy
20Case Three
- 75yr old woman
- Hx 9 days -Abdo pain, vomiting, constipated.
- O/E Dehydrated, distended, mild tenderness.
- Ix WCC13, Creat 260, X rays SB loops.
- Differential Diagnosis.
- SBO Gallstone Ileus.
21Small Bowel Obstruction
- Symptoms of Obstruction
- Colicky abdo pain
- Distension
- Vomiting
- Bowels not open.
- Previous surgery ?
- Difference between SBO and Ileus??
22Small Bowel Obstruction
- Extra luminal Adhesions
- Hernia
- Volvulus
- Intussuception
- Inflamm/neoplastic mass
- Congenital bands
- Within bowel Wall Crohns
- Cancer
- TB
-
- Luminal Gallstones
- FB
- Parasites
23Small Bowel Obstruction
- On examination Scars?, Distension, Peristalsis,
hernia orifices. Bowel sounds. - Investigations AXR
- Difference between SB and LB on AXR?
- Anatomy Question difference between jejunum and
ileum?? - Contrast Studies Gastrograffin films, CT scan.
24Management
- Conservative Drip and Suck - Fluid balance,
catheter, DVT prophylaxis, NG tube. - Surgery Laparotomy.
- Case three patient Gallstone removed through
enterotomy. GB? left alone.
25Case Four
- 66yr old male
- Hx 5 days post CABG, abdo pain, distension,
difficulty in breathing. - O/E Distension , Tender RIF.
- Ix bloods, Xrays. CE CT scan
- Differential diagnosis.
- Pseudo Obstruction.
26Large Bowel Obstruction
- Mechanical
- Outside Bowel, Within bowel wall, In the bowel.
- Common causes in colon
- Cancer
- Strictures DD, IFB.
- Volvulus sigmoid.
- Pseudo Obstruction presents as colonic
obstruction but no cause found. Risk factors
recent Major surgery (Cardiac and orthopaedic),
Retroperitoneal disease, elderly, bed bound,
electrolyte disturbances. - Closed Loop.
27Large bowel Obstruction
- Change in bowel habit
- /- vomiting ? Closed loop
- Weight loss
- Management
- Drip and Suck
- Imaging
- CE CT scan.
- Contrast enema.
28Surgery for Large bowel obstruction
- Can you talk through
- Right hemicolectomy
- Hartmanns Procedure
- How would you anastomose bowel?
- Consent Patient for Laparotomy for large bowel
obstruction. - Blood supply to colon
- Colonic Stenting
29Mx of Pseudo Obstruction
- Correct Electrolyte abnormalities
- Treat possible underlying causes e.g. chest
- Oxygen
- Nutritional support
- Fluid balance
- Flatus tube/ Sigmoidoscopy
- Colonoscopy
- Neostigmine
- Surgery-tender caecum, competent valve.
30Case Five
- 45yr old female
- Hx Severe abdo pain. NV. Not managing
diet/fluids. Pain radiates into back. - O/E Guarding epigastrium. Unwell. Dry.
- Ix Bloods, Amylase, ABG, eCXR, AXR.
- Differential Diagnosis.
- Acute pancreatitis.
31Acute Pancreatitis- What to know?
- Definition
- Epidemiology and aetiology
- Pathogenesis
- Scoring systems / severity
- Antibiotics
- CT scanning
- ERCP
- Diagnosis of infection
- Surgical treatment indications and techniques
- Outcome and further management
- Timing of cholecystectomy
32Acute pancreatitis-definition
An acute inflammatory process of the pancreas,
with variable involvement of other regional
tissues or remote organ systems. Atlanta
Classification, 1992 Classification
Mild AP Associated with minimal organ
dysfunction and uneventful recovery Severe
AP Associated with organ failure or local
complication
33Causes
Alcohol Hypercalcaemia Gallstones Postopera
tive Tumours Trauma ERCP Ischaemia Infection
CMV, mumps Drugs Anatomical abnormalities Scorpion
venom Lipid abnormalities Idiopathic Hypotherm
ia
34Acute pancreatitis - pathophysiology
- Acinar damage by enzymes
- Maybe due to hypersecretion and ductal
obstruction or reflux of duodenal contents. - Proteolytic enzymes cause ischaemia and
haemorrhage. - Systemic effects
- Main enzymes released trypsin, amylase, lipase
- Oedematous, Haemorrhagic, Necrotizing.
35Acute pancreatitis - pathophysiology
- Systemic Inflammatory Response Syndrome
- SIRS
- Two of four
- Temp gt38 or lt36
- RR gt22
- HR gt90
- WCC gt14 or gt4
- Multiple Organ Failure
- ARDS
- Renal Failure
- Cardiac Failure
- GI compromise
-
-
36Acute pancreatitisinvestigation and management
- Initial resuscitation and management
- Assessment of severity of disease
- Identification management of precipitating
factors - Specific aspects of management
37Acute pancreatitisInitial resuscitation and
management
General supportive care Analgesia Intravenous
fluids Support cardiovascular, Renal and
respiratory systems.
Investigations FBC U/E, glucose serum amylase
clotting LFT ABG CXR AXR USS CT scanning
Monitoring Pulse, BP Hourly Urine
Output BMs Sats CVP/Arterial line HDU / ITU
38Acute pancreatitis - Assessment of severity of
disease
On admission At 48 hours age gt 55y Hct
decrease gt 10 glucose gt 200mg serum Ca2 lt
8mg WCC gt 16000/mm3 base deficit gt 4mEq/L LDH
gt 700 IU/L urea increase gt 5mg GOT gt 250
IU/L fluid sequestration gt 6L arterial
pO2 lt 60mmHg Ranson et al 1974
39Modified Glasgow Score
- P PaO2 lt8KPA
- A Albuminlt32
- N Neutrophils (WCC gt15)
- C Calcium lt2mmol/L
- R uRea gt16mmol/L
- E Enzymes LDHgt600
- A AST gt200
- S Sugar- Glucosegt10mmol/L
- Validated for Gallstone and Alcohol
Pancreatitis. Ransons for alcohol induced only.
40Acute pancreatitis - Assessment of severity of
disease
- Clinical Assessment
- Ranson Criteria
- Imrie / Glasgow Score
- APACHE II
- CT scanning
- Individual markers
- CRP(gt200, or persists gt150)
- IL 6 gtResearch setting
- TAP gtResearch setting
41Acute pancreatitis Identification management
of precipitating factors
Cholelithiasis ERCP ES, cholecystectomy Alcohol
Abstention, counselling. Ischaemia Careful
support, Correct cause Malignancy Resection or
bypass Hyperlipidaemia Diet, lipid lowering
drugs Anat. Abnormalities Correction if
possible Drugs Stop or change
42Acute pancreatitis Specific aspects of management
- CT scanning
- Antibiotics
- Diagnosis of infection
- ERCP in gallstone pancreatitis
- Nutrition
- Manipulation of the inflammatory response
43Acute pancreatitis - CT scanning
- Occasionally helpful in diagnosis
- Useful in severe disease
- Days 4-10 to identify necrosis
- Not useful in predicting severity
- Useful for complications
- Acute fluid collections
- Abscess
- Necrosis
- Monitoring progress of disease
44Acute pancreatitis - Antibiotics
- Imipenem reduced sepsis in severe pancreatitis,
but not operation rate or mortality. - Pederzoli et al. 1993 Multicentre randomised
control trial 74 patients - Cefuroxime reduced mortality from severe
disease. - Sainio et al. Lancet 1995 single centre ,
randomised 60pts. - However most in the cefuroxime arm had a change
in antibiotic therapy. - Selective gut decontamination- to prevent
translocation. - Recent evidence of severe fungal infections in
those - administered antibiotics
- Antibiotics can reduce the risk of infected
pancreatic necrosis but may not influence
mortality. - If used they should be restricted to patients
with proven pancreatic necrosis/ severe
pancreatitis.
45Acute pancreatitis - Diagnosis of infection
? Sepsis or systemic inflammatory response
syndrome ?
CT guided FNA of pancreatic necrosis in the
context of SIRS is recommended to diagnose actual
infection but is still not universally practised
- Until then no antibiotics until specifically
indicated - Infected necrosis is an indication for surgery
46Acute pancreatitis - ERCP ES
- Controversial ?
- Reduces complications LOS in severe gallstone
AP - Neoptolemos Lancet 1988,
- Fan New Eng J Med1993,
- Nowak 1995
- Definitely indicated in those with gallstone
pancreatitis - jaundice and cholangitis
47Acute pancreatitis - Nutrition
- Nutrition vitally important, despite previous
theories - about resting the gland
- Enteral feeding is superior to parenteral
feeding - Kalfarentzos et al., Br J Surg 1997
- Nasogastric feeding is tolerable in most cases,
and - not associated with any increase in
complications
48Acute pancreatitis - Outcome
- Variable outcome
- Mortality 9-20
- Mortality higher with
- severe disease
- age
- ERCP-induced or post-op. pancreatitis
49Questions