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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION

INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION. A. VAYDA department of surgery with urology and anesthesiology.

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INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION

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  1. INTESTINAL OBSTRUCTION A. VAYDA department of surgery with urology and anesthesiology

  2. Intestinal obstruction is a complete or partial disturbance of intestinal evacuation and peristalsis resulting from various causes which manifests by specific clinical course and morphologic changes of involved part of the bowel Intestinal obstruction occursapproximately in 9.4 % among urgent abdominal pathology, consisting 1.2 % of all surgical diseases.

  3. Classification (by D.P.Chuhrienko) 1. Dynamic intestinal obstruction: a) paralytic; b) spastic. 2. Mechanical intestinal obstruction: a) strangulation; b) obturation; c) mixed (invagination). II. According to the course of pathological process. 1. Stage of acute disturbance of intestinal evacuation and peristalsis. 2. Stage of hemodynamic disorders of the bowel wall and its mesentery. 3. Stage of peritonitis.

  4. Etiologic and contributing factors • Adhesions (50 %). • Tumours. • Bile stones. • Inflammatory infiltrates in the abdominal cavity. • Internal hernias. • Increasing of abdominal pressure. • Defects of the peritoneum. • Long mesentery of the bowel.

  5. Pathogenesis Intestinal block Accumulation of intestinal contents Distention of intestinal wall Transudation of intestinal juice Vomiting Loss of electrolytes, dehydratation, loss of potassium, loss of proteins Peritonitis Necrosis of the bowel Intoxication, hemodynamic disturbances More higher the obstruction, more severe the pathologic changes

  6. Pathogenesis

  7. Peculiarities of strangulated intestinal obstruction • Transfusion of large quantity of proteins; • Transfusion of erythrocytes and decreasing of volume of circulating blood; • Severe dehydratation, caused by additional edema of the bowel wall; • Rapid necrosis of intestinal wall with subsequent peritonitis and intoxication.

  8. Clinical manifestation It depends on the level of the block, type and degree of obstruction and its cause. 1. Acute onset of the disease. 2. Periodic acute diffuse painof wavelike character which results in shock. 3. Constant vomiting and nausea without any relief. 4. Signs of dehydratation and intoxication (The patient looks anxious, with drawn features, hollowed-eyed, his lips and tongue are dry, with brown fur). 5. Retention of stool and gases.

  9. Objective examination 1. Signs of shock. 2. Distended and asymmetric abdomen. 3. Splashing sound (Sklyarov’s sign). 4. Increased peristalsis in early period with further absence. 5. Wahl’s sign - high tympanic sound over the distended bowel. 6. PR: empty and distended anus and rectal ampoule - (Grekov’s sign). 7. In intestinal strangulation and advanced cases of obstruction - peritoneal signs.

  10. X-ray examination 1. Kloiber's cups (air-fluid level) 2. Intestinal pneumatisation

  11. Periodic acute diffuse pain Constant vomiting and nausea without any relief Retention of stool and gases Abdominal distension On X-ray of theabdomen Kloiber's cups (air-fluid levels) Splashing sound, increased peristalsis Sharp acute diffuse pain Ulcerative anamnesis Absence of hepatic dullness On X-ray of the abdomen air above the liver (air sickle) Rigidity of anterior abdominal wall Differential diagnostics of acute intestinal obstruction with perforative peptic ulcer

  12. Periodic acute diffuse pain Constant vomiting and nausea without any relief Retention of stool and gases Abdominal distension On X-ray of theabdomen Kloiber's cups (air-fluid levels) Splashing sound, increased peristalsis Sharp acute constant girdle pain with irradiation into left scapule Vomiting and nausea without any relief Mayo-Robson symptom Increased serum amylase Increased urinary diastase No retention of stool and gases Abdominal distension only in advanced cases. No increased peristalsis Differential diagnostics of acute intestinal obstruction with acute pancreatitis

  13. Periodic acute diffuse pain Constant vomiting and nausea without any relief Retention of stool and gases Abdominal distension On X-ray of theabdomen Kloiber's cups (air-fluid levels) Splashing sound, increased peristalsis Sharp acute constant pain which results in shock Abdominal distension. Decreased peristalsis Blood stool Concomitant cardiac pathology Peritoneal signs Differential diagnostics of acute intestinal obstruction with mesentericthrombosis

  14. Periodic acute diffuse pain Constant vomiting and nausea without any relief Retention of stool and gases Abdominal distension On X-ray of theabdomen Kloiber's cups (air-fluid levels) Splashing sound, increased peristalsis Acute pain in a right hypohondrium with irradiation to the scapula Muscular tenderness in a right hypohondrium Vomiting by bile and nausea without any relief Ortner's symptom, phrenic symptom, Murphy’s sign Increased serum bilirubin Differential diagnostics of acute intestinal obstruction with acute cholecystitis

  15. Conservative treatment Conservative treatment is indicated only in: 1. Adhesive obstruction without signs of strangulation. 2. Initial stages of invagination. 3. Initial stages of low obturation • Gastric decompression • Siphon enema • Paranephral procaine block • Ganglio- and sympatholytics • Correction of water-electrolyte balance

  16. Surgical treatment is indicated only if no improvement during 3-4 hours of conservative treatment • Wide laparotomy • Procaine block of mesenteric root • Revision of intestine and detecting of the level and cause of obstruction • Decompression of intestine proximal to the obstruction • Assessing of viability of the bowel (peristalsis, colour, vascular pulsation) • Removal of the obstruction (division of adhesions, intestinal resection, collateral anastomosis) • External drainage of intestine(nasogastrointestinal intubation, rectal tube)

  17. Strangulation intestinal obstruction 1. Volvulus, (torsion). 2. Nodulus (knots). 3. Hernial strangulation (incarceration). 4.Invagination (refers to mixed forms of intestinal obstruction) • Causes • Elongation of intestinal loop. • Increasing of abdominal pressure. • Long mesentery of the bowel. • Cicatrical shortening of mesenteric root. • Adhesions • Extensive functional overload of the bowel.

  18. Volvulus (torsion) Small intestine volvulus Clinically manifests by high strangulation intestinal obstruction Cecal volvulus, sigmoid volvulus Clinically: low strangulation intestinal obstruction asymmetric abdomen by palpation enlarged and displaced colon (like balloon) retracted right or left iliac region Treatment:detorsion, division of adhesions, cecopexia, colon resection

  19. Nodulus It is the most severe type of strangulation with manifestation of a high strangulated obstruction which rapidly results in shock, bowel necrosis and peritonitis • Treatment: • very short preoperative period (less 1 hour) • untie of the bowel node (till 4-5 hours from the onset) • resection of the bowel

  20. Invagination It is the insertion of one part of the bowel into the lumen of another • Clinically: • signs of obturation and in advanced cases the strangulation ileus • elastic, painful, tumourlike formation in the abdomen • blood in stool (or during rectal examination) Treatment: desinvagination or resection

  21. Abdominal peritonitis mesenteric thromboses hemoperitoneum pancreatitis postoperative ileus Retroperitoneal phlegmone hematoma renal colic spinal trauma Other cranial trauma acidosis diminished potassium hypoproteinemia uremia Paralytic ileus

  22. Abdominal hepatic colic ascaridosis Retroperitoneal renal colic Other lead poisonong Spastic ileus

  23. Treatment of dynamic ileus 1. Cholynomymetics (Proserin, ubretid). 2. Intravenous infusion of hypertonic solution (10 % NaCl). 3. Hypertonic enema. 4. Oil enema. 5. Gastric decompression. 6. Paranephral novocaine block. 7. Ultrasound stimulation.

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