Andre Tan Surgical Notes

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 117

CONTENTS

Surgery Notes
For the M.B.B.S.
By Andre Tan

TRAUMA (MULTI-SPECIALTY APPROACH)

Page
2

II

APPROACH TO ABDOMINAL PAIN

10

III

APPROACH TO ABDOMINAL MASSES

11

IV

OESOPHAGEAL DISEASES

12

UPPER BLEEDING GIT AND ITS CAUSES

21

VI

COLORECTAL DISEASES

19

VII

LIVER DISEASES

39

VIII

PANCREATIC DISEASES

45

IX

BILIARY TRACT DISEASES

51

BREAST DISEASES

60

XI

HEAD AND NECK MASSES

69

XII

SALIVARY GLAND SWELLINGS

74

XIII

THYROID DISEASES

78

XIV

PERIPHERAL ARTERIAL DISEASE

85

XV

ABDOMINAL AORTIC ANEURYSM

93

XVI

PERIPHERAL VENOUS DISEASE

95

XVII

UROLOGICAL DISEASES

99

XVIII

SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS

110

TRAUMA (MULTI-SPECIALTY APPROACH)

ADVANCED TRAUMA LIFE SUPPORT ALGORITHM


MAIN PRINCIPLES:
- Treat greatest threat to life first
- Definitive diagnosis is less important
- Time is important the golden hour after trauma is when 30% of trauma deaths
occur, and are preventable by ATLS
APPROACH
1. Primary survey and Resuscitation with adjuncts
2. Re-evaluation of the patient
3. Secondary survey with adjuncts
4. Post-resuscitation monitoring and re-evaluation
5. Optimise for transfer and definitive care
PRIMARY SURVEY ABCDE
1. AIRWAY
Assessment of airway patency

Is patient alert, can patient speak?


Gurgling, stridor
Maxillofacial injuries
Laryngeal injuries
Caution: C-spine injury

Establishing patent airway

Chin-lift or modified jaw thrust (protect C-spine)


Remove any foreign objects in the mouth where possible
Oro/nasopharyngeal airway
Definitive airway endotracheal tube, cricothyroidotomy, tracheostomy

2. BREATHING
Assessment of breathing

Look, listen, feel: chest rise, breath sounds rhythm and equality bilaterally
Rate of respiration
Effort of respiration
Colour of patient
Percuss chest
Look for chest deformities e.g. flail chest

Management of breathing

Supplemental oxygen
Ventilate as required if patient requires assistance with breathing
Needle thoracotomy for tension pneumothorax, followed by chest tube
Occlusive dressing for open pneumothorax

3. CIRCULATION
Assessment of organ perfusion

Level of consciousness
Skin colour and temperature, capillary refill
Pulse rate and character all major pulses
Blood pressure

Classes of haemorrhagic shock


Bld loss
Amt (ml)
Percentage
Ht rate
BP
Cap refill
Resp rate
Ur output (ml/h)
Mental state
Fluid
replacement

II

III

IV

<750
<15
<100
Normal
Normal
14-20
>30
Sl anxious

750-1500
15-30
>100
Normal
Prolonged
20-30
20-30
Mild anxiety

Crystalloid

Crystalloid

1500-2000
30-40
>120
Decreased
Prolonged
30-40
5-15
Anxiousconfused
Crystalloid +
blood

>2000
>40
>140
Decreased
Prolonged
>35
Oliguric-anuric
Confusedlethargic
Blood

Management

- Sources of bleeding apply direct pressure or pressure on proximal pressure


point
- Be suspicious about occult bleeding e.g. intraperitoneal, retroperitoneal (pelvic
fracture), soft tissue (long bone fracture)
- Venous access large bore, proximal veins
- Restore circulatory volume with rapid crystalloid infusion Ringers lactate
- Blood transfusion if not responsive to fluids or response is transient
- Reassess frequently

3
SECONDARY SURVEY

4. DISABILITY
- Glasgow coma scale
Eye
Spontaneous opening
Opens to voice
Opens to pain
No response

When to do secondary survey


4
3
2
1

Verbal
Oriented speech
Confused
Inappropriate
Incomprehensible
No verbal response

5
4
3
2
1

Motor
Obeys
Purposeful
Withdraws
Flexion response
Extension response
No response

6
5
4
3
2
1

GCS: 14-15 (minor); 8-13 (moderate); 3-7 (severe)


- AVPU score: Alert, Verbal stimuli (responds to), Pain stimuli, Unresponsive
- Pupillary reactivity

- Primary survey and resuscitation completed


- ABCDEs reassessed
- Vital functions returning to normal i.e. no need for active resuscitation at the moment
1. AMPLE HISTORY
- Allergy
- Medications
- Past history
- Last meal
- Events leading to injury, Environment in which trauma occurred
2. COMPLETE HEAD-TO-TOE EXAMINATION

- Call for neurosurgical consult as indicated

Head

5. EXPOSURE
- Remove all clothes
- Check everywhere for injuries (log-roll to look at the back)
- Prevent hypothermia

Complete neurological examination


GCS or AVPU assessment
Comprehensive examination of eyes and ears for base of skull fractures
Caution: unconscious patient; periorbital oedema; occluded auditory canal

Maxillofacial

6. ADJUNCTS TO PRIMARY SURVEY


Monitoring

- Vital signs BP, pulse rate, saturation (pulse oximeter)


- ECG monitoring
- Arterial blood gas

Cervical spine

Diagnostic tools

- Screening X-ray films (trauma series): CXR, AP pelvis, lateral C-spine


- Focused abdominal sonography in trauma (FAST)
- Diagnostic peritoneal lavage
Urinary catheter

- Functions: decompress bladder, measurement of urinary output


- Caution in urethral injury: blood at urethral meatus,
ecchymosis/haematoma, high-riding prostate

Bony crepitus/deformity
Palpable deformity
Comprehensive oral/dental examination
Caution: potential airway obstruction in maxillofacial injury; cribriform plate
fracture with CSF rhinorrhoea do not insert nasogastric tube

perineal

Gastric catheter (orogastric or nasogastric)

- Function: decompress stomach, look at aspirate (bloody? bilious?)


- Caution in base of skull fracture: CSF otorrhoea/rhinorrhoea, periorbital
ecchymosis, mid-face instability (grab the incisors and rock), haemotympanum
insert orogastric tube instead of nasogastric

Palpate for tenderness, any step deformity


Complete neurological examination
C-spine imaging
Caution: Injury above clavicles; altered consciousness (cannot assess
accurately); other severe, painful injury (distracts from cervical spine pain)

Neck (soft tissues)

Blunt versus penetrating injuries


Airway obstruction, hoarseness
Crepitus (subcutaneous emphysema), haematoma, stridor, bruit
Caution: delayed symptoms and signs of airway obstruction that progressively
develop; occult injuries

Chest

Inspect, palpate, percuss, auscultate


Re-evaluate frequently
Look at CXR
Caution: missed injury; increase in chest tube drainage

Abdomen

Inspect, palpate, percuss, auscultate


Abrasions and ecchymosis seat-belt sign
Lower rib fractures liver and spleen injury
Re-evaluate frequently
Special studies: FAST, DPL, CT scan
Caution: hollow viscus and retroperitoneal injuries; excessive pelvic
manipulation

Perineum

- Contusions, haematomas, lacerations


- Urethral blood
- DRE: Sphincter tone, high-riding prostate, pelvic fracture (may feel fragments of
bone); rectal wall integrity; blood
- Vaginal examination: blood, lacerations
Musculoskeletal extremities

Contusion, deformity
Pain
Perfusion
Peripheral neurovascular status
X-rays as appropriate
Caution: potential blood loss is high in certain injuries (e.g. pelvic fracture,
femoral shaft fracture); missed fractures; soft-tissue or ligamentous injuries;
examine patients back

3. ADJUNCTS AND SPECIAL DIAGNOSTIC TESTS


- As required according to suspicion, but should not delay transfer
4. FREQUENT RE-EVALUATION
- Have a high index of suspicion for injuries to avoid missing them
- Frequent re-evaluation and continuous monitoring rapidly recognise when
patient is deteriorating
5. PAIN MANAGEMENT
- Intravenous analgesia as appropriate

ABDOMINAL TRAUMA
TYPES OF INTRA-ABDOMINAL INJURY IN BLUNT TRAUMA
- Solid organ injury: spleen, liver bleeding (may be quite massive)
- Hollow viscus injury with rupture
- Vascular injury with bleeding
INDICATIONS FOR IMMEDIATE LAPAROTOMY
- Evisceration, stab wounds with implement in-situ, gunshot wounds traversing
abdominal cavity
- Any penetrating injury to the abdomen with haemodynamic instability or peritoneal
irritation
- Obvious or strongly suspected intra-abdominal injury with shock or difficulty in
stabilising haemodynamics
- Obvious signs of peritoneal irritation
- Rectal exam reveals fresh blood
- Persistent fresh blood aspirated from nasogastric tube (oropharyngeal injuries
excluded as source of bleeding)
- X-ray evidence of pneumoperitoneum or diaphragmatic rupture
INVESTIGATIONS
- If patient is stable: FAST and/or CT scan
- If patient is unstable: FAST and/or DPL
FOCUSED ABDOMINAL SONOGRAPHY IN TRAUMA (FAST)
- Ultrasonographic evaluation of four windows: Pericardial, right upper quadrant, left
upper quadrant, pelvis
- Advantages

Portable
Can be done quickly in <5min
Can be used for serial examination
Does not require contrast, no radiation risk

- Disadvantages

Does not image solid parenchymal damage, retroperitoneum, diaphragmatic


defects or bowel injury
Compromised in uncooperative, agitated patient, obesity, substantial bowel gas,
subcutaneous air
Less sensitive, more operator-dependent than DPL and cannot distinguish blood
from ascites
Intermediate results require follow-up attempts or alternative diagnostic tests

5
CT SCAN
- Only suitable for stable patient as quite long time involved in imaging with only
patient in the room can collapse
- Advantages

Able to precisely locate intra-abdominal lesions preoperatively


Able to evaluate retroperitoneum
Able to identify injuries that can be managed non-operatively
Not invasive

- Disadvantages

Expensive
Time required to transport patient
Use of contrast
DIAGNOSTIC PERITONEAL LAVAGE (DPL)
- Involves making a cut in the infraumbilical region and inserting a catheter into the
peritoneal cavity, aspirate, then instillation of saline and re-aspiration
- Positive DPL

Frank blood (>5ml) or obvious bowel contents aspirated


Lavage fluid seen to exit from chest drain or urinary catheter
RBC >100,000 per mm3, WBC >500, Gram stain positive for bacteria in effluent
- Indications:

Any unstable patient with suspicion of abdominal trauma or where clinical exam
is difficult or equivocal
Unexplained hypotension in multiple trauma
Patient requiring immediate surgery for extra-abdominal injuries
- Contraindications

Absolute indication for laparotomy already exists


Previous abdominal surgery or infections
Gravid uterus
Morbid obesity
Coagulopathy

- Advantages

Can promptly reveal or exclude the presence of intraperitoneal haemorrhage


Valuable in discovery of potentially lethal bowel perforation
- Disadvantages

Morbidity involved wound complications (haematoma, infection);


intraperitoneal injury
False negative rate of 2% when there is failure to recover lavage fluid, early
hollow viscus injury, diaphragmatic injuries, injuries to retroperitoneal structures

CARDIOTHORACIC TRAUMA
There are 5 clinical scenarios in chest trauma where bedside procedures are lifesaving:
cardiac tamponade, airway obstruction, flail chest, haemothorax, and pneumothorax.
CARDIAC TAMPONADE
- High index of suspicion required
- Clinical features

Chest trauma and hypotension


Becks triad (hypotension, muffled heart sounds, distended neck veins) only
seen in 50% of cases as hypovolaemia may prevent neck vein distension; muffled
heart sounds are least reliable
Pulseless electrical activity
Kussmauls signs (increased neck distension during inspiration, pulsus paradoxus)
- Diagnostic clues

Enlarged cardiac shadow in CXR (globular heart very rarely seen)


Small ECG voltages, electrical alternans (uncommon)
Pericardial fluid demonstrated on FAST or 2D-echo - definitive
- Management

Aggressive fluid resuscitation helps maintain cardiac output and buys time
Pericardiocentesis: ECG lead-guided or 2D-echo guided
AIRWAY OBSTRUCTION
- Chin lift or jaw thrust
- Remove any foreign body manually, suction blood/secretions
- Definitive airway ETT, cricothyroidotomy, tracheostomy
FLAIL CHEST
- When 2 or more ribs are fractured at 2 points forming a flail segment that moves
paradoxically with breathing
- Results in hypoxaemia mainly due to underlying pulmonary contusion, contributed to
by pain with restricted chest wall movement
- Management: ensure adequate oxygenation and ventilation; judicious fluid therapy
(avoid fluid overload); adequate intravenous analgesia
- Consider mechanical ventilation in high risk patients: shock, severe head injury,
previous pulmonary disease, fracture of >8 ribs, age > 65, >3 associated injuries

HAEMOTHORAX
- Chest tube insertion in the triangle of safety (bound by the lateral border of the
pectoralis major medially, a line just anterior to the mid-axillary line laterally, and the
upper border of the fifth rib inferiorly)
- Be wary of sudden cessation of chest tube drainage as tube can get blocked by clot
- If blood >1500mls massive haemothorax, call urgent cardiothoracic consult

(b) Subdural haemorrhage


Crescent shaped haematoma under the dura (between the dura and the
arachnoid)
More severe than EDH (usually due to nature of injury that causes SDH to
occur associated with higher impact, thus brain has other injuries)
Pathology: underlying brain damage in addition to expanding SOL
Removal of blood does not solve underlying brain damage poorer results

PNEUMOTHORAX (OPEN/TENSION)
- Tension pneumothorax is a clinical diagnosis (CXR will only delay treatment, and
may cause death) signs of pneumothorax, hypotension, neck vein distension, severe
respiratory distress
- Immediate needle thoracotomy in second intercostal space in mid-clavicular line
- Followed by chest tube insertion

(c) Traumatic subarachnoid haemorrhage


Usually only small amount of blood conservative treatment sufficient
(d) Intraparenchymal haemorrhage
Any shape, size, location
If large haematoma, will require evacuation
4. Diffuse axonal injury

- Open pneumothorax occurs in a large chest wall defect with equilibration between
intrathoracic and atmospheric pressure, producing a sucking chest wound
- Cover defect with a sterile dressing, taping it down on 3 sides to produce a fluttervalve effect, letting air out of the pleural cavity but not back in
- Insert chest tube (not through the wound)

- Global injury of axons


- Arises from injury that causes rotational and shearing forces (high impact
injury) rapid acceleration and deceleration of brain in the intracranial cavity
against relatively fixed points of attachment at the falx and tentorium
- Maximal effects at corpus callosum and brainstem
- If severe, will see punctate haemorrhages at the grey-white border
5. Cerebral oedema (2 types)

NEUROSURGICAL TRAUMA
AIM in management of head injuries is the prevention of secondary brain injury (from
hypotension, hypoxaemia, increased ICP etc) since neuronal death is irreversible.
PATHOLOGIES:

(a) Hypoxic (cellular)


Decreased blood supply (oxygenation) loss of function of Na-K pump as
ATP decreases increased intracellular sodium cellular swelling
(b) Interstitial
Breakdown of blood-brain barrier proteins enter interstitial space
oedema

1. Concussion

- Physiological dysfunction without anatomical or radiological abnormality


- (Physiological dysfunction is the first step towards cell death, but is reversible if
no further insult occurs)
- Usually recovers in 2-3 hours
2. Contusion

- Small haematoma <1cm

PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
1. Monroe-Kellie doctrine

- Intracranial cavity is of fixed volume and its contents (brain, CSF, blood) are
relatively incompressible
- Thus increase in intracranial volume raised ICP
Cerebral perfusion pressure = Mean arterial pressure Intracranial pressure

3. Intracranial haemorrhage

(a) Extradural haemorrhage


Lens-shaped haematoma outside the dura (between skull and dura)
Pathology: expanding space-occupying lesion
20% of patients with EDH are alert and well; underlying brain is minimally
damaged, thus drainage gives good results

- Compensatory mechanisms:
(a) Hyperventilation vasoconstriction of cerebral vessels due to increased
partial pressure of carbon dioxide decrease in blood volume
(b) CSF pushed into spinal canal (but limited volume available)
- Removal of any reversible cause of raised ICP will improve cerebral perfusion

7
2. Fixed dilated pupil

- Constrictor fibres to the pupil run in the oculomotor nerve, which exits the
brainstem at the upper midbrain nerve fibres lie just under the tentorium
- Uncus of the temporal lobe sits on the tentorium
- In raised ICP, the uncus herniates over the edge of the tentorium,
compressing the fibres of the oculomotor nerve just below
- Thus a fixed dilated pupil occurs on the side of the compression due to
unoppressed sympathetic supply (dilates the pupil)
3. Cushings reflex

- A triad of:
(a) Raised ICP
(b) Hypertension
(c) Bradycardia
- From Monroe-Kellie doctrine, an increase in mean arterial pressure helps to
maintain cerebral perfusion pressure when ICP is raised
- Increase in mean arterial pressure achieved by sympathetic overdrive:
(a) Increased heart rate
(b) Increased contractility
(c) Increased vasoconstriction increased total peripheral resistance
(a) and (b) increase cardiac output increased BP; (c) increases BP
- Baroreceptors detect abnormally raised blood pressure and try to decrease it
heart rate falls
MANAGEMENT

3. Moderate head injury

- All will be CT-scanned at ED NES will operate if any indication to do so


- In ward: as per mild head injury
4. Severe head injury

- Must scan to look for reversible causes of raised ICP but stabilise patient first
- Medical methods to lower ICP
(a) Intubate and hyperventilate
(b) IV mannitol (must catheterise patient also; do not give if patient is unstable)
- Screen for other life-threatening injuries (likely to be multi-trauma patient)
- Achieve haemodynamic stability
(a) Check for long bone fractures
(b) FAST for bleeding into abdominal cavity
(c) ABG to detect acidosis
(d) Keep monitoring patient and re-investigate where appropriate
- Operate if reversible cause found
(a) Craniectomy (i.e. bone flap not replaced) or craniotomy (bone flap replaced
after blood evacuated) [Burrhole usually not big enough to drain an acute
bleed]
(b) Evacuate clot
(c) Insert endoventricular drain (EVD) if there is hydrocephalus
- Total sedation after operation, ward in ICU
Prevents patient from struggling which will raise ICP

1. Assessment

- 3 important parameters: ABCs, GCS, pupil size


- Glasgow coma scale (see above) Minor head injury: 14-15; moderate injury: 813; severe injury: 3-7

5. Depressed skull fracture

- Can leave alone unless depression is greater than the thickness of the skull bone
6. Compound depressed fracture

2. Minor head injury

- Most common
- Indications for admission:
Persistent headache and/or vomiting
CSF leak
Neurological deficit
Skull fracture
History of loss of consciousness
Amnesia
- In ward: NBM, IV drip (no dextrose saline!), no sedation, monitor GCS
- If patient deteriorates CT scan, exclude metabolic causes (e.g. hypoglyc), do
septic workup (exclude sepsis)

- There is through-and-through skin laceration over the fracture


- Always explore to ensure underlying dura is intact, and repair if dura is torn
(since meningitis can occur with a torn dura)

MUSCULOSKELETAL TRAUMA
GENERAL POINTS
- Extremity trauma tends not to be life-threatening
- But occult blood loss can occur in large volumes especially in certain types of
injuries pelvic fracture (up to 3L), femoral shaft fracture (up to 2L)
- Need to have high level of suspicion and treat with urgency
- Look out for any tachycardia, early signs of shock
- Prepare to resuscitate patient
ASSESSMENT OF THE EXTREMITY
- Perfusion: colour, pulses, skin temperature, capillary refill
- Deformity
- Wounds open or closed injury; abrasion over a fracture is considered open fracture
- Soft tissue assessment
- Abnormal joint mobility ligamentous injury around the joint; if in the knee, highly
likely that the popliteal artery is injured as well
- Neurological assessment
- Viability of the limb
THE PULSELESS EXTREMITY
Things to consider

Is pulselessness due to shock?


Arterial or venous compromise?
Is there compartment syndrome (pulselessness is a very late sign)
Any pre-existing vascular disease?

Wound care

Swabs of the wounds for culture and sensitivity


IV antibiotic prophylaxis
Tetanus toxoid cover
Photograph wound (to prevent re-opening of wound by every doctor that comes to
see patient)
- Betadine dressing
- In OT: generous debridement, irrigation (within 4-8 hours, especially in open
fractures), fracture stabilisation (internal or external fixation depending on Gustilo
classification)
- Leave wound OPEN
MANAGEMENT OF FRACTURES
- Recognise fracture and/or dislocation
- Complete neurovascular examination of the limb involved before reduction
- Appropriate X-rays (at least 2 planes)
- Analgesia
- Correction of deformity
- Temporary immobilisation backslab, malleable splint
- Neurovascular examination; examine for compartment syndrome
- Circulation chart
OPEN FRACTURES
Definition: there is communication between the fracture or fracture haematoma and the
external environment
Gustilo-Andersen classification

Physical examination

- Any limb deformity (can result in kinking of vessels)?


- Any joint instability (dislocation of a joint can result in intimal tear in the major
vessel running across it, with thrombosis and occlusion)?
- Skin colour/temperature
- Post-reduction tibial pulse in knee dislocation if still absent, do an urgent
angiogram!

Type I

<1cm AND clean

Type II

>1cm AND no extensive soft tissue damage, avulsions or flaps

Type IIIA

Extensive soft tissue damage, avulsions or flaps but adequate soft


tissue coverage of bone OR
High-energy trauma cause irregardless of size of wound

Type IIIB

Extensive soft tissue loss with periosteal stripping and exposure of


bone.
Massive contamination common

Type IIIC

Arterial injury requiring repair

SOFT TISSUE INJURIES


Types

Open: laceration, abrasion


Crushing
Degloving: open or closed
Closed

9
- Grade I
Low velocity injury, prognosis similar to closed fracture
Treat with ORIF within 6 hours
- Grade II
Moderate velocity, more trauma
- Grade IIIA
Skin graft usually possible
- Grade IIIB
Skin graft alone often not adequate
Local and free flaps will be necessary
Secondary bone procedures
- Grade IIIC
Neurovascular injuries present in addition to musculoskeletal injuries

Management of open fractures

Recognise an open fracture


Stabilise patient first
Pain relief and analgesia
Cover the wound with moist gauze
Temporary immobilisation and splinting
IV broad spectrum antibiotics
Appropriate X-rays
Nil by mouth
Pre-op investigations: FBC, U/E/Cr, PT/PTT, GXM, ECG, CXR
Arrange for emergency operation
Angiogram if needed

Surgery involves:

(a) Generous debridement of the wound with irrigation to decrease bacterial load
(b) Treat any soft-tissue injuries
(c) Stabilise fracture usually using external fixator

ABDOMINAL PAIN
RHC
Thoracic
Pneumonia
Pleural effusion
Biliary
Cholangitis
Cholecystitis
Gallstone disease

Epigastric
Hepatic
Hepatitis (viral, autoimm etc)
Hepatomegaly
Abscess

Thoracic
MI
Pericarditis
Aortic aneurysm

Others
Subphrenic abscess
Pancreatitis
PUD
Appendicitis

Gastrointestinal
Oesophagitis
GERD
PUD
Gastric outlet obstructn
CA stomach

Rt Loin

Periumbilical

Biliary (see RUQ)

Gastrointestinal
Appendicitis (early)
I/O
Mesenteric ischaemia
Colitis
IBD

Urological
Infection
Pyelonephritis
Abscess
Others
PKD
Renal cyst
Angiomyolipoma
Infarction

Obstruction
Hydronephrosis
Nephrolithiasis
Ureteral obstruction
CA
RCC
TCC renal pelvis
Bladder ca (ureteral obstructn)

10

Thoracic
Pneumonia
Pleural effusion
MI

Others
Subphrenic abscess
Splenomegaly
Pancreatitis

Gastrointestinal
PUD
Diverticulitis
Mesenteric ischaemia

Lt Loin
Others
Aortic Aneurysm
Pancreatitis

Splenic disease
Urological (see Rt Loin)

Others
Appendicitis

RIF
Gastrointestinal
Appendicitis
Terminal ileitis
Meckels diverticulitis
Mesenteric ischaemia
Mesenteric adenitis
IBD
Colitis
Colorectal CA
Hernia

LHC
Others
Pancreatitis

Hypogastric
O&G
Ovarian cyst
Ovarian torsion
Ectopic pregnancy
PID
Orthopaedics (See LIF)

Gastrointestinal
Colorectal CA
Urological
ARU
Bladder calculi
Cystitis / UTI

LIF
O&G
Ectopic pregnancy
Abortion
PID
Uterine rupture
Fibroid complications
Adenomyosis
Endometriosis

Orthopaedics
Infection
Septic hip arthritis
TB hip
Degeneration
OA hip
Inflammation
RA hip
Ankylosing spondylitis
Reiters syndrome
Inflitration
1o bone tumour (hip)
Metastasis to hip
Destruction
# - NOF, pubic rami
Radiation
Back pathologies (referred
pain)

Paediatric ortho conditions


Transient synovitis
Perthes dz
SCFE
Gastrointestinal
Diverticulitis
IBD
Colitis
Colorectal CA
Hernia
O&G (see RLQ)

11
ABDOMINAL MASS
RHC
Liver
Massive
Cancer: HCC
Metastases
Myeloprolftve dz
Alcoholic liver dz
Rt ht failure/tricuspid regurg
Moderate
Above causes
Lymphoprolftve dz
Haemochromatosis
Amyloidosis
Mild
Above causes
Infxns: Viral Hep, IMS
Bacterial abscess
Parasitic hydatid
cyst, amoebic abscss
Biliary obstruction
Cirrhosis

Epigastrium
Gallbladder
Pancreatic/periampullary ca
Acute cholecystitis
Hydrops
Empyema
Mirizzi syndrome
Ascending colon
Cancer
Diverticular mass/abscess
Faeces

Orthopaedics
Chondroma/sarcoma of ilium
Bony metastasis

Transverse colon
Cancer
Diverticular mass/abscess
Faeces

Aorta
Aortic aneurysm
Retroperitoneal lNpathy
Lymphoma
Teratoma
Other malignancies

Massive
Infxns
CML
Myelofibrosis
Moderate
Above causes
Portal hypt
Lymphoprolftve dz
(lymphoma, CLL)
Hlytic anaemia (thal, HS)
Storage dz (Gauchers)

Stomach
Descending colon
Cancer
Diverticular mass/abscess
Faeces
Left kidney(see Rt lumbar)
Left adrenal gland

Mild
Above causes
Infxns: Viral hep, IMS
Endocarditis
Autoimm SLE, RA, PAN
Myeloprolftve dz PRV,
essential thrombocytopaenia
Infiltratn sarcoid, amyloid

Right kidney(see Rt lumbar)

Umbilical

Left Lumbar

Right adrenal gland

Liver (see RHC)

Pancreas (see Epigastrium)

Spleen (see LHC)

Liver (see RHC)

Stomach(see Epigastrium)

Aorta
Aortic Aneurysm

Left kidney (see right lumbar)

Ascending colon mass


Cancer
Diverticular mass/abscess
Faeces

Small intestine
Obstruction

RIF
Gastrointestinal
Appendiceal mass/abscess
TB gut
Ca caecum
Distended caecum (due to
distal obstruction)
Crohns dz (terminal ileitis)

Pancreas
Pseudocyst
Tumour

Stomach
Cancer
Distension (GOO)

Right adrenal gland

Right Lumbar
Right Kidney
Hydro/pyonephrosis
Cancer RCC
Polycystic dz
Single cyst
Amyloidosis
Tuberous sclerosis, VHL

Liver (see RHC)

LHC
Spleen

Mesenteric cyst

Retroperitoneal lNpathy
Lymphoma
Teratoma
Other malignancies

Hypogastrium
O&G
Ovarian cyst/tumour
Fibroids

Bladder
Acute retention of urine
Chronic retention of urine

Others
Transplanted kidney
Iliac artery aneurysm
Psoas abscess
Iliac lymphadenitis
Malignant change in undesc
testis

Anal/rectal mass
Cancer

Descending colon
Cancer
Diverticular mass/abscess
Faeces

LIF
Uterus
Gravid uterus
Fibroids
Tumour
Ovary
Cyst
Tumour

Gastrointestinal
Diverticular mass/abscess
Ca colon/sigmoid
Crohns dz (terminal ileitis)
Faeces
Orthopaedics
Chondroma/sarcoma of ilium
Bony metastasis

O&G
Ovarian cyst/tumour
Fibroids
Others
Transplanted kidney
Iliac artery aneurysm
Psoas abscess
Iliac lymphadenitis
Malignant change in undesc
testis

OESOPHAGEAL DISEASES
ANATOMY
- Oesophagus is a muscular tube that is 25cm (10 inches) long
- Starts at the cricoid cartilage (C6 vertebra) from the oropharynx and continues into
the stomach at the level of T10
- Upper oesophageal sphincter is formed by cricopharyngeus muscle
- Lower sphincter is not an anatomical sphincter, but physiological:
(i) Increased tone of the muscularis propria at the lower oesophageal sphincter
(ii) Fibres of the right diaphragmatic crus loop around the cardio-oesophageal
junction and ontract during coughing, sneezing etc when intra-abdominal
pressure increases, thus preventing reflux
(iii) Angle of His where the oesophagus joins the stomach acts as a valve
(iv) Intra-abdominal pressure being higher than intra-thoracic pressure
- 3 narrow points along the course of the oesophagus
(i) Cricopharyngeus muscle (15cm from incisor teeth)
(ii) Carina where the left bronchus crosses the oesophagus (27cm from incisors)
(iii) Where the oesophagus passes through the diaphragm (40cm from incisors)
- Structure: mucosa, submucosa, muscularis propria, adventitia (no peritoneal lining
except for a short segment of intra-abdominal oesophagus)
Muscularis propria is composed of striated muscle in the upper one-third, striated and
smooth muscle in the middle third, and smooth muscle in the lower third
- Blood supply (roughly divided into thirds): Inferior thyroid artery to upper third,
oesophageal branches of the aorta to the middle third, oesophageal branches of left
gastric artery to lower third
- Venous return also divided into thirds: Brachiocephalic veins (upper), azygos veins
(middle), left gastric vein (lower) --- a portosystemic anastomosis exists at the lower
oesophagus thus leading to formation of varices in portal hypertension

- Pharyngeal muscles contract to propel food bolus past the relaxed cricopharyngeus
into the oesophagus
- Once in the oesophagus, involuntary contractions of the muscularis propria form
peristaltic waves to propel food bolus into stomach

APPROACH TO DYSPHAGIA
CAUSES OF DYSPHAGIA
- Dysphagia can be divided into oropharyngeal and oesophageal dysphagia
- In each anatomic region the dysphagia can be caused by neuromuscular dysfunction
(impaired physiology of swallowing) or mechanical obstruction to the lumen
Oropharyngeal

Oesophageal

Neuromuscular diseases

Neuromuscular diseases

Stroke
Parkinsons disease
Brain stem tumours
Degenerative conditions e.g. ALS, MS
Peripheral neuropathy
Myasthaenia gravis
Myopathies e.g. myotonic dystrophy

Obstructive lesions
Tumours
Inflammatory masses e.g. abscess
Oesophageal webs
Pharyngeal pouch (Zenkers divert)
Anterior mediastinal mass

Achalasia
Spastic motor disorders
Diffuse oesophageal spasm
Hypertensive lower oesophageal sphincter
Nutcracker oesophagus

Scleroderma

Obstructive lesions
Intrinsic structural lesions
Tumours
Strictures: Peptic (reflux oesophagitis)
Radiation
Chemical (caustic ingestion)
Medication

Lower oesophageal rings (Schatzkis ring)


Oesophageal webs (Plummer-Vinson)
Foreign bodies

Extrinsic structural lesions


PHYSIOLOGY OF SWALLOWING
- Process of mastication forms a food bolus on the dorsum of the tongue
- The tongue then contracts upwards and backwards pushing the food bolus against the
hard palate
- Soft palate elevates (contraction of palatoglossus) to close off nasopharynx
- Further elevation of tongue pushes food bolus into oropharynx
- As the base of the tongue is elevated posterior, the epiglottis falls back; at the same
time, the pharyngeal muscles contract to bring the posterior surface of the larynx
upwards to make the laryngeal inlet smaller closed off by the epiglottis

12

Vascular compression (enlarged aorta or


left atrium)
Mediastinal masses retrosternal thyroid,
lymphadenopathy

Others
Oesophagitis:

Reflux
Infectious (candida, herpes)
Radiation-induced
Medication-induced
Chemical-induced (alcohol)

13
HISTORY:
1. Is there odynophagia (pain associated with difficulty swallowing)?

- Signifies some form of oesophagitis: infectious (candida, herpes), post-radiation,


chemical-induced (usually alcohol), reflux oesophagitis
- Oesophageal spasm
- Scleroderma
- Pain occurs late in achalasia and oesophageal cancer (not painful from the start)
2. Differentiating oropharyngeal from oesophageal dypshagia

(i) Oropharyngeal
- Presenting complaint is usually of difficulty in initiating swallowing
- May be associated with choking, coughing, nasal regurgitation
- Voice may sound nasal (bulbar palsy)
- Cause of oropharyngeal dysphagia is usually neuromuscular rather than
mechanical; stroke is the most common cause
(ii) Oesophageal
- Presenting complaint is that of food getting stuck in the throat or chest
- Patients localisation of the symptom often does not correspond to actual site
of pathology
- Can be due to either neuromuscular dysfunction or mechanical obstruction
3. Differentiating mechanical obstruction from neuromuscular dysfunction

(i) Mechanical
- Patient complains of more difficulty swallowing solids than fluids
- May have regurgitation of undigested food
- Recent onset dysphagia that is progressively worsening, with loss of weight
high suspicion of oesophageal cancer
- Intermittent symptoms are suggestive of webs, rings
(ii) Neuromuscular
- Patient complains of more trouble swallowing fluids than solids
- Dysphagia more long-standing, slowly progressive
- Intermittent symptoms suggestive of diffuse oesophageal spasm, nutcracker
oesophagus
- May have history of stroke, neuromuscular disease
4. History of predisposing conditions

- Reflux symptoms e.g. retrosternal burning pain (heartburn), sour fluid reflux into
mouth (acid brash), excessive salivation (water brash), postural aggravation on
lying down
- Caustic chemical ingestion in the past
- Smoking, chronic alcohol intake
- Radiation to the chest

- Medication history
- Symptoms of systemic disease e.g. stroke (focal neurological deficits),
scleroderma (telangiectasia, sclerodactyly, calcinosis, Raynauds), Parkinsons
5. Systemic review

- Loss of weight occurs in cancer and achalasia, but of much later onset in
achalasia compared to cancer
- Symptoms of anaemia (bleeding from tumour, or as part of Plummer-Vinson
syndrome)
- Symptoms of aspiration pneumonia fever, cough, shortness of breath
6. Tumour spread

Hoarseness (recurrent laryngeal nerve)


Fever, cough and haemoptysis (tracheo-oesophageal fistula)
Haematemesis (invasion into aorta)
Neck lump (lymph node)

PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
1. General condition

- Vitals: the patient may be hypovolaemic from vomiting/decreased intake


- Nutrition: presence of cachexia
- Conjunctival pallor: bleeding from tumour, oesophagitis ulcerations, or
associated with P-V syndrome
- Scleral icterus: metastases to liver
- Dehydration (mucous membranes, skin turgor, etc)
2. Disease

Presence of cervical lymph nodes (esp Virchows node)


Scars/marks over the chest and abdomen suggesting previous surgery, radiation
Palpable mass in abdomen (not likely)
Hepatomegaly
Ascites
PR examination for malaena

3. Complications of disease

- Signs of pneumonia: patient febrile, may be toxic, lung crepitations, decreased


air entry usually over right lower lobe
4. Treatment

- Tube feeding through NG tube, gastrostomy/jejunostomy if aspirates seen,


what is the colour?
- Total parenteral nutrition

MANAGEMENT
1. Stabilise patient

- Resuscitate if patient is haemodynamically unstable


- IV fluids (correct fluid deficits and also any electrolyte derangements)
- Consider feeding with fluids if patient can tolerate it (only having problems with
solid food) otherwise consider tube feeding or TPN need to correct patients
nutritionally debilitated state
- Keep NBM if patient cannot tolerate even fluids
- Treat any aspiration pneumonia NBM, IV antibiotics

3. Manometry
- Gold standard for diagnosing achalasia:
(i) Absence of peristalsis
(ii) Very high pressures at the lower oesophageal sphincter
(iii) Absence of relaxation at the LES on swallowing food

2. Investigate for underlying cause and treat it

4. Videofluroscopic examination of swallowing (VFES) or flexible-endoscopic


examination of swallowing (FEES)
- Used to assess oropharyngeal dysphagia (neuromuscular causes) by looking for
penetration and aspiration of various consistencies of food during swallowing

INVESTIGATIONS

Supportive

Diagnostic

1. Barium swallow
- Advantage of barium swallow is that it is less invasive than OGD, especially
when suspecting webs, diverticula in the oesophagus where OGD may cause
perforation; however if patient is at high risk of aspiration, barium swallow is
dangerous.
- Visualisation of obstructive lesions:
o Shouldering of a stricture (benign strictures form a smoother contour
whereas malignant strictures form a more right-angled contour)
o Birds beak sign of achalasia

1. Blood investigations:
- Full blood count Low Hb (anaemia from chronic blood loss)
High TW (aspiration pneumonia)
- Urea, electrolytes, creatinine electrolyte disturbances from vomiting, poor
intake; raised creat and urea in dehydration (creat will be raised more than urea if
patient has prerenal failure from dehydration)
- Liver function tests low albumin with nutritional deprivation
2. CXR
- Consolidation (aspiration pneumonia)
3. 24-hour pH probe monitoring
- If patient complains of reflux symptoms and no signs are seen on OGD (see later
section on Gastro-oesophageal reflux disease)

Achalasia
Benign stricture
Carcinoma
- Visualisation of pharyngeal pouch or oesophageal diverticulum
- Diffuse oesophageal spasm gives a corkscrew appearance
2. Oesophagogastroduodenoscopy (OGD)
- Advantage is direct visualisation of the lesion and ability to take tissue biopsy
(especially useful in malignancy), may also be therapeutic (stopping bleeding
from a tumour, stenting the lumen, etc)

14

15
CANCER OF THE OESOPHAGUS

STAGING
T

EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Third most common gastrointestinal tract cancer in Singapore
- Male predominance
- Increasing incidence with age
RISK FACTORS
- Smoking (100x increased risk for SCC, 10x for adenocarcinoma)
- Alcohol (2x increased risk)
- Obesity (related to reflux, increases adenocarcinoma incidence)
- Diet: Hot beverages, preserved foods (nitrosamines), betel nuts; vitamin and mineral
deficiencies (selenium, vitamin E, beta-carotene)
- Tylosis (autosomal dominant disorder with keratosis of palms and soles
- Barretts oesophagus (intestinal metaplasia of oesophageal mucosa due to reflux;
increased risk of cancer due to metaplasia-dysplasia-carcinoma sequence; risk is 3040x higher than in individual without Barretts, and is about 1% per year)
- Achalasia (2-8% incidence of SCC)
- Caustic injury (ca occurs at site of scar/stricture, mostly middle third of oesophagus)
- Plummer-Vinson (or Paterson-Brown-Kelly) syndrome Post-cricoid oesophageal
web and iron deficiency anaemia. (10% develop cancer in upper third of oesophagus)
PATHOLOGY
- 70% squamous cell carcinoma, 30% adenocarcinoma
- SCC can arise anywhere in the oesophagus while adenocarcinoma occurs in lower
third and gastro-oesophageal junction (related to reflux and Barretts oesophagus)
- Overall: 10% of cancers occur in the upper third, 60% in the middle third, 30% in the
lower third
- Three growth patterns:
Fungating (60%)
Ulcerative (25%)
Infiltrative (15%)
- Tumour spread: direct extension into surrounding structures, vascular invasion,
lymphatic spread
- Common sites of metastases: liver, lung, bone

Tis
T1a
T1b

T2
T3
T4
N1

M M1a
M1b

High-grade dysplasia/carcinoma in-situ


Tumour invading lamina propria or
muscularis mucosa
Tumour invading submucosa but does
not breach submucosa
Tumour invades the muscularis propria
Tumour invades adventitia
Invasion of surrounding structures
Regional node involvement (1-3 nodes
involved =1a; 4-7=1b; >7=1c)
Nonregional lymph node involvement
Other distant metastases

Stage
0
I
IIA
IIB
III
IVA
IVB

is
1
2/3
1/2
3
4
any
any

0
0
0
1
1
any
any
any

0
0
0
0
0
0
1a
1b

PRESENTATION
Usually of insidious onset, with earliest symptoms being non-specific e.g. retrosternal
discomfort, indigestion, and most patients already have advanced disease when they
are diagnosed 75% have lymph node involvement at time of diagnosis.
1. Dysphagia
- Present in 80% of patients most common presentation
- Pain develops late and is usually due to extra-oesophageal involvement
2. Weight loss
3. Regurgitation
4. Anaemia (with or without malaena/frank haematemesis bleeding is usually occult)
5. Vocal cord paralysis (left more than right)
6. Aspiration pneumonia
7. Tracheo-oesophageal or broncho-oesophageal fistula
INVESTIGATIONS
Diagnosis

1. Barium swallow
- 92% accuracy in showing mucosal irregularity and annular constrictions but not
able to diagnose malignancy with confidence
2. Oesophagogastroduodenoscopy
- Allows biopsy of the lesion confirmatory histological diagnosis
Staging

1. Endoscopic ultrasound
- If endoscope can pass around the lesion, the EUS is good for T staging, and also
to identify enlarged regional lymph nodes

2. Chest X-ray
- Presence of any lung metastases
- Aspiration pneumonia
- Pleural and/or pericardial effusion
- Tracheal deviation or extrinsic compression of tracheobronchial system
- Widened superior mediastinum in an upper oesophagus tumour
- Raised hemidiaphragm with phrenic nerve involvement
3. CT scan or MRI of the thorax with extension to include liver and adrenals
- Can be used for T, N, and M staging
4. Bronchoscopy
- Exclude bronchial involvement especially in tumours involving upper two-thirds
of oesophagus
5. Bone scan for bony metastases
6. Laryngoscope to assess for vocal cord paralysis
Supportive

1. Full blood count Low Hb (anaemia from chronic blood loss)


High TW (aspiration pneumonia)
2. Urea, electrolytes, creatinine electrolyte disturbances from vomiting, poor intake;
raised creat and urea in dehydration (creat will be raised more than urea if patient
has prerenal failure from dehydration)
3. Liver function tests low albumin with nutritional deprivation
TREATMENT
Principles

- Three modalities available surgery, chemotherapy, radiotherapy used singly or in


combination
- Aims of treatment: Curative or palliative (50% of patients have unresectable cancer
on presentation)
- Surgical treatment is usually performed with curative intention, but can also achieve
good long-term palliation of symptoms
- Choice of treatment depends on several patient factors: age, co-morbidities,
nutritional state, life expectancy, and prognosis of cancer
Surgery

- Curative in early lesions (in-situ, T1a) and part of multimodal therapy in more
advanced stages
- Resection should not be done in patients with distant metastases or contraindications
to surgery

16

- Endoluminal surgery for early lesions; no attempt to remove any LNs (usually no
LN involvement)
- Oesophagectomy
(i) Ivor-Lewis
Two-stage procedure involving gastric mobilisation (first stage, done through
upper midline abdominal incision), oesophagectomy and gastro-oesophageal
anastomosis in the chest (second stage, through right thoracotomy incision)
(ii)

Trans-hiatal
Done via two incisions one in the abdomen and one in the neck
Blunt oesophagectomy, gastric mobilisation, and gastro-oesophageal
anastomosis in the neck
Less morbidity than Ivor-Lewis as the chest is not opened, but controversial

(iii) Tri-incisional
Three incisions abdominal, chest, and also left neck incision for gastrooesophageal anastomosis in the neck
Performed with two-field lymphadenectomy (upper abdominal and mediastinal)
No difference in survival between trans-hiatal and I-L modalities; the stage of the
cancer when the operation is performed is a greater factor influencing survival
Radical en-bloc dissections not shown to improve survival
Oesophagectomies have high mortality (5%) and morbidity (25%) rates, thus
patients have to be carefully selected in order to maximise survival benefit from
surgery
Complications of surgery dependent on extent of surgery and incisions used
- Intraoperatively, injury to lung, thoracic duct, RLN can occur
- Respiratory complications higher in thoracotomies atelectasis, pneumonia
- Anastomotic leak and resultant mediastinitis (for chest anastomosis) most feared
- Reflux can result in the long term due to loss of the LES
- Anastomotic stricturing can also occur
- Palliative debulking for obstructive symptoms
Radiotherapy

- Usually given in combination with chemotherapy


- Primary treatment for poor-risk patients; palliation for unresectable lesions with
obstructive symptoms, pain and bleeding
- SCCs are radiosensitive
- Modalities: External beam radiation or brachytherapy
- Obstructive symptoms may worsen temporarily after radiotherapy due to oedema
- Complications: tracheo-oesophageal fistula, stricture

17
Chemotherapy

GASTRO-OESOPHAGEAL REFLUX DISEASE (GORD)

- Current regimen: 5-Fluorouracil and cisplatin


- Addition of chemotherapy to external beam radiation for unresectable cancers shown
to have improved survival compared to EBRT alone
- Chemotherapy given preoperatively and postoperatively improves survival

EPIDEMIOLOGY
Incidence in Singapore not known
Increasing prevalence, more common in males than females

Overall curative treatment

Preoperative neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy (increases rates of complete resection),


oesophagectomy, and postoperative adjuvant chemoradiotherapy for responsive
tumours
Palliative treatment

Surgical debulking
Bypass surgery rarely done nowadays
Endoscopic laser fulguration to relieve obstruction
Photodynamic therapy is a new treatment option
Stenting to maintain lumen patency

Feeding in oesophageal obstruction

- Feeding via oropharyngeal route is preferred unless the passage is obstructed or it is


unsafe for the patient to feed via that route (i.e. risk of aspiration)
- If still able to pass NG tube around tumour feed via NG (but also consider
complications with long-term NG placement e.g. erosions around nasal area,
sinusitis); consider PEG placement for long-term feeding if able to get scope around
tumour
- If unable to pass tube or scope around tumour, consider open gastrostomy
- Total parenteral nutrition is another option but has more complications, more costly
- Relief of obstruction via various techniques as listed above help to enable oral
feeding, but most techniques are not long-lasting and dysphagia will return with
tumour growth
PROGNOSIS
- 80% mortality at 1 year, overall 5-year survival <10%

PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Lower oesophageal sphincter is a physiological sphincter with various mechanisms
that help to prevent reflux (see above, Anatomy of the oesophagus)
- Some physiological reflux occurs that is rapidly cleared by peristaltic movements in
the oesophagus
- GORD results from various pathophysiological factors (loss of the normal protective
mechanisms, or the mechanisms are overwhelmed) singly or in combination:
Loss of LES function decreased tone, hiatal hernia, iatrogenic injury
Delayed gastric emptying
Increased intra-abdominal pressure obesity, tight garments, large meal
Motor failure of oesophagus with loss of peristalsis
- Acid incites inflammation in the lower oesophagus extent of inflammation
increases with increasing duration of contact with acid
- Chronic inflammation results in complications of GORD: oesophagitis, stricture,
Barretts oesophagus
CAUSES/RISK FACTORS
- Malfunction of LES
- Motility disorder of oesophagus e.g. scleroderma
- Hiatal hernia (loss of normal LES mechanisms)
- Chronically increased intra-abdominal pressure pregnancy, chronic cough, obesity,
constipation, etc
- Drugs that cause smooth muscle relaxation e.g. calcium channel blockers, sedatives,
beta agonists, anticholinergics, etc. Coffee and smoking also cause LES relaxation.
- Eating habits lying down after a heavy meal
- Any cause of decreased gastric emptying
PRESENTATION
- Heartburn: retrosternal pyrosis
- Acid brash: reflux of sour gastric juices into back of mouth i.e. regurgitation
- These symptoms occur usually after food, particularly a heavy meal, and are
aggravated by lying flat (posturally related)
- Long-standing disease can lead to dysphagia due to stricture formation; dysphagia
can also result from an underlying oesophageal motility disorder; odynophagia
suggests oesophagitis with ulceration

- Reflux can also lead to pulmonary symptoms: chronic cough, chest infections
(aspiration)
- Other symptoms: globus (feeling of a lump at the throat), chest pain (can mimic
anginal pain with radiation to neck, jaw, arm), nausea, water brash (hypersalivation in
response to reflux)
COMPLICATIONS
1. Pain and spasm
2. Stricture
3. Haemorrhage (occult more common than frank)
4. Shortening of oesophagus
5. Ulceration
6. Barretts oesophagus (see below)
7. Dysmotility
8. Schatzkis ring (constrictive ring at the squamocolumnar junction composed of
mucosa and submucosa)
9. Malignancy (adenocarcinoma arising from Barretts oesophagus)
DIAGNOSIS
1. History is important as most patients with reflux are seen in the primary setting
with no facilities for detailed investigation
- Exclude cardiac cause of chest pain, and exclude malignant cause of dysphagia
2. Oesophagogastroduodenoscopy
- Cannot actually diagnose reflux
- Can visualise and grade oesophagitis if present, and take biopsy specimens for
confirmation (see below)
- May see a hiatal hernia which is associated with reflux (though not all patients
with hiatus hernia will have reflux)
3. Oesophageal pH probe
- Confirmatory test for reflux is the ambulatory 24hr oesophageal pH probe
especially if oesophagitis is not seen on OGD
- Antimony probe most commonly used; alternative is the Bravo capsule (a
wireless capsule that is temporarily attached to the oesophageal wall)
- The probe is placed 5cm above the manometrically-determined upper limit of the
LES (for the wired probe), or 6cm above the endoscopically-determined
squamocolumnar junction (for the wireless capsule)
- Diagnosis based on the percentage of time in 24hrs the pH reading is below 4
4. Barium swallow and follow-through
- Not of much value in diagnosing reflux

18

- Can detect motility disorders that cause reflux, and also pick up oesophageal
ulceration and stricturing resulting from reflux
- Can sometimes see reflux of barium contrast into oesophagus
5. Manometry
- No value in reflux except for detecting motility disorder
GRADING OF OESOPHAGITIS
1. Savary-Miller classification

Grade I:

One or more supravestibular non-confluent reddish spots, with or


without exudates
Grade II: Erosive and exudative lesions, may be confluent but not circumferential
Grade III: Circumferential
erosions
covered
by
haemorrhagic
and
pseudomembranous exudate
Grade IV: Presence of chronic complications such as deep ulcers, stenosis, or
scarring with Barretts metaplasia
2. Los Angeles classification

Grade A: one or more mucosal breaks, each <5cm in length


Grade B: at least one mucosal break >5cm long, but not between the tops of
adjacent mucosal folds
Grade C: at least one mucosal break that is continuous between the tops of adjacent
mucosal folds, but which is not circumferential
Grade D: mucosal break that involves at least three-quarters of the luminal
circumference
- Relevance of classification schemes: subjective and dependent on assessment by the
endoscopist; also, due to the multitude of classification schemes available, just
mentioning a grade may not have any meaning if the actual abnormalities are not
described
TREATMENT
Lifestyle

1. Diet and eating habits


Avoid coffee, chocolate, fatty foods, or anything that worsens symptoms
Do not eat 2 hours prior to sleeping
Walk after eating
Avoid excessive eating; eat small meals
2. Avoid drugs that relax LES e.g. anticholinergics, muscle relaxants, etc.
3. Weight reduction if obese
4. Elevate head of bed
5. Smoking and alcohol intake cessation

19
Medication

1. Acid suppression therapy: proton pump inhibitors or H2-receptor antagonists


2. Prokinetics to increase LES pressure e.g. domperidone, metoclopramide
Surgical

- Indications:
Failure of medical therapy (or incomplete resolution of symptoms)
Oesophagitis with frank ulceration or stricture
Complications of reflux oesophagitis respiratory complications, Barretts
oesophagus
Severe symptoms or progressive disease
Compliance problems - patient does not want to be on medication for life
(despite good results)

- Outcome of surgery
80-90% Excellent to good (no symptoms, no medications and lifestyle changes
required)
10-15% Satisfactory (some residual symptoms)
<5% Unsatisfactory
<1% Mortality
5-40% need for acid suppression therapy at 5 years due to symptoms
- Management of stricture
Rule out malignant cause of stricture by taking biopsy
Dilatation (variety of means available balloon, dilators, etc)
Treatment of underlying reflux
If resistant to dilatation resection and reconstruction

- Goal of surgery:
Increase pressure at the gastro-oesophageal junction but not so much that it
prevents food from entering the stomach (too tight dysphagia)
- Surgery versus conservative treatment
Surgery has higher rates of cure and better long-term results
No need to adhere to strict lifestyle and diet change as well as long-term
medication
Disadvantage of surgery is the associated morbidity and mortality
- Fundoplication is the mainstay of surgical therapy
Can be done via open surgery or laparoscopic surgery (most laparoscopic now)
Nissen fundoplication is the most commonly done a 360 degree (total) wrap of
the fundus around the gastro-oesophageal junction
Partial fundoplications can also be done in patients where oesophageal motility
is poor or the oesophagus is foreshortened; anterior 90 degrees, anterior 180 deg,
and posterior 270 deg fundoplications are various options available
- Complications of surgery
Perforation of the oesophagus most feared complication, may result in
mediastinitis if not promptly detected and repaired intraoperatively
Excessively tight wrap resulting in dysphagia
Excessively loose or short wrap reflux recurs (failure of treatment)
Slipped-Nissen occurs when the wrap slides down, the GE junction retracts
into the chest, and the stomach is partitioned; usually due to a foreshortened
oesophagus unrecognised in the first operation
Gas bloat syndrome patient experiences difficulty burping gas that is
swallowed

BARRETTS OESOPHAGUS
Features

- Intestinal metaplasia of the oesophageal epithelial lining (stratified squamous


epithelium converted to mucus-secreting columnar epithelium with goblet cells)
- Associated with long-term reflux an adaptation mechanism where intestinal
epithelium withstands exposure to acidic reflux better than oesophageal epithelium
- Diagnosed on endoscopy and histology:
The squamocolumnar junction (or Z line) is visible on endoscopy as gastric and
intestinal type epithelium is pink and granular in appearance, but stratified
squamous epithelium is smooth and pale
The gastro-oesophageal junction is defined as the point where the gastric folds
begin
If the squamocolumnar junction is above the gastro-oesophageal junction (i.e.
they do not align) and biopsy of the junction shows intestinal metaplasia, the
patient is diagnosed to have Barretts oesophagus
- Short segment Barretts is defined as the squamocolumnar junction being <3cm
above the gastro-oesophageal junction, while in long segment Barretts the distance
between the two junctions is >3cm.
- Long segment Barretts is associated with more severe reflux, as well as higher risk
of dysplasia and subsequent adenocarcinoma development than short segment
Barretts
- Risk of development of adenocarcinoma is about 10-15% in 10 years

Management

1. Treatment of underlying reflux


- Lifestyle changes, acid suppression, surgery etc
- Not shown to decrease risk of cancer still requires surveillance
2. Endoscopic surveillance
- Not certain regarding benefit for surveillance if patient has Barretts but no
dysplasia if 2 scopes in a year reveal no dysplasia, repeat OGD once every 3
years
- Main purpose of surveillance is to pick up dysplasia
- If patient has high grade dysplasia, it should be treated (see below), otherwise to
undergo intensive surveillance (q3mths for at least one year) to detect cancer
development
3. Treatment of high-grade dysplasia
- Endoscopic therapies to ablate the dysplastic tissue e.g. photodynamic therapy,
laser therapy, argon plasma coagulation will not remove all dysplastic cells
thus potential for malignancy still remains
- Oesophagectomy is the only definitive treatment to remove all dysplasia, but is
associated with high morbidity and mortality (worth it?)
- Possibility of endoscopic mucosal resection as a treatment modality (research
still undergoing)

20

ACHALASIA
FEATURES
- Abnormal peristalsis secondary to absence or destruction of Auerbachs (myenteric)
plexus and failure of the LES to relax; affects body and distal oesophagus
- Aetiology unknown
- Patients present with dysphagia, regurgitation, weight loss, retrosternal chest pain,
and recurrent pulmonary infections
- Barium swallow demonstrates birds beak narrowing of distal oesophagus with
proximal dilatation
- Manometric studies (required for diagnosis) show abnormally high pressures at the
LES, with incomplete LES relaxation on swallowing, and lack of progressive
peristalsis (often aperistaltic)
- 1-10% of patients develop SCC after 15-25 years of disease
TREATMENT
- Mainly palliative in nature
- Non surgical treatment:
Injection of botulinum toxin (problem is that it is not long lasting and only used
in patients not fit for surgery)
Pneumatic balloon dilatation (about 65% of patients improve, 40% response rate
at 5 years)
- Surgical treatment
Laparoscopic Heller cardiomyotomy (much like Ramstedt pyloromyotomy for
pyloric stenosis) good results with 85% symptom-free after 5 years; there is a
3% chance of developing reflux addition of fundoplication helps prevent this

21
UPPER BLEEDING GIT AND ITS CAUSES

APPROACH TO BLEEDING UPPER GIT


CAUSES
1. Peptic ulcer disease (bleeding peptic ulcer)
2. Gastro-oesophageal varices
3. Gastritis, gastric erosions
4. Mallory-Weiss tear
5. Gastric malignancy
6. Rare causes: AV malformation (Dieulafoy lesion), aortoenteric fistula
HISTORY (if patient is stable)
1. Nature of bleeding

Haematemesis
- Can be fresh red blood as in variceal bleeding, Mallory-Weiss tear, AV
malformation
- Coffee grounds vomitus is altered blood (due to gastric acid) and can come from
gastric ulcer, gastritis/erosions, or variceal blood that has entered the stomach
Malaena
- Altered blood; malaena indicates bleeding from the upper GIT i.e. above the
ligament of Treitz
- Different types of malaena:
(a) Fresh malaena jet black with sheen, tarry, non-particulate (almost liquid
in consistency)
(b) Stale malaena black-grey, dull, mixed with normal stool, occasionally
particulate
(c) Iron stool greenish hue on rubbing between gloved fingers, particulate.
- If gloved finger is stirred in a cup of water, malaena will dissolve completely
with no sedimentation and turn the water black, but iron stool will sedimentate
and turn the water green
Frank PR bleeding
- Very brisk upper GI bleed can present as frank PR bleeding as blood passes
down so fast it doesnt get altered
2. Amount of blood

- If patient is having haematemesis, ask how much blood Cup? Bowl?

3. Aetiological clues

Gastric ulcer/gastritis/erosions
- Any history of dyspepsia, gastric ulcer (any OGD done in the past showing these
problems? On any gastric medications?)
- Any drugs that may predispose NSAIDs, antiplatelets, steroids, anticoagulants,
TCM
Varices
- Any history of chronic liver disease
Mallory-Weiss tear
- Binge-drinking with subsequent severe retching and vomiting leading to
haemetemesis
Malignancy
- Recent constitutional symptoms e.g. LOA, LOW, malaise
- Early satiety
- Dyspepsia
4. Complications

- Symptoms of anaemia: postural giddiness, shortness of breath, lethargy,


decreased effort tolerance, palpitations, chest pain
- May even be having AMI if its an old patient with history of IHD
5. Comorbidities

- Elderly patient (>60) high risk


- Other comorbidities: liver disease, renal disease, IHD high risk
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
1. Vitals!

- Blood pressure, heart rate stable? Any postural hypotension? (Tachycardia is an


early sign of shock)
- Patients conscious level confused?
- Compare current vitals with vitals in ambulance, ED is there a worsening trend?
2. General inspection

- Pallor
- Cold clammy peripheries impending shock
- Stigmata of chronic liver disease
3. Abdomen

- Any tenderness (not very helpful)


4. Digital rectal examination

- Malaena or frank blood

IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT
1. Resuscitation

- Protect airway, supplemental oxygen, 2 large-bore IV cannula in antecubital


fossa
- Take blood for investigations: FBC, U/E/Cr, PT/PTT, LFT, GXM 4 pints
- ECG to detect any acute myocardial ischaemia/infarction
- 1 pint N/S over half to one hour if patient is in shock, followed by more fluids if
necessary (be wary in patients with renal failure, heart failure)
- Packed cells if Hb is less than 10, to keep Hb above 10g/dL
- May consider platelets if patient is on antiplatelet medication (qualitative defect
in platelets)
- FFP if patient is on anticoagulants or PT/PTT prolonged (+ vitamin K)
2. Adjuncts

- NG tube if patient is having haematemesis prevents aspiration, allows gastric


lavage prior to OGD (DO NOT insert if suspecting varices)
- Catheterisation monitor input/output balance especially in elderly patient or
when large amount of fluid resuscitation required, or anticipating surgery
- IV omeprazole 80mg bolus (increases stomach pH and stabilises clot formation)
- If suspecting varices IV somatostatin/octreotide, IV antibiotics, vitamin K
3. Close monitoring

- Monitor for:
Increase in heart rate
Decrease in BP
Decrease in urine output
Increasing confusion and lethargy

VARICEAL BLEEDING
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
A result of portal hypertension (i.e. portal venous pressure >20 cmH2O or >12 mmHg
normal should be 7-14 cmH2O or 5-10 mmHg)
WHEN TO SUSPECT VARICEAL SOURCE IN UBGIT
- Previous history of variceal bleed
- Chronic alcohol intake
- Jaundice or stigmata of chronic liver disease
MANAGEMENT OF VARICES can be divided into three categories:
1. Acute bleeding
2. Prophylaxis
3. Chronic management
I. ACUTE BLEEDING MANAGEMENT
1. Resuscitate

- Airway, breathing, circulation


- If patient appears well, look for early signs of shock tachycardia, postural
hypotension
- Look at hydration status
2. Assess mental state

- If patient has altered mental state (encephalopathy) need to protect airway


(may require intubation)
3. Vascular access, fluids/blood resuscitation, and blood investigations

4. Emergency oesophagogastroduodenoscopy

- Indications:
Shock (resuscitated)
Ongoing BGIT
Suspected variceal bleed
- Role of endoscopy
Identify source of bleeding, confirm diagnosis
Therapeutic interventions injection of ulcer, ligation/sclerotherapy for
varices

22

2 large-bore IV cannula in proximal veins (cubital, EJV, IJV)


Send bloods GXM, FBC, U/E/Cr
Infuse fluids
Under-resuscitate in variceal bleed (cf ulcer bleed) to keep Hb around 9, as
enthusiastic transfusion can increase portal pressure and cause more bleeding

4. Management of severe bleeding

- If patient is hypotensive and bleeding is still continuing may require use of


Sengstaken-Blakemore tube.
- Protect airway before inserting tube.
- Inflate gastric balloon and pull upwards against cardioesophageal junction
(balloon will press on perforator veins entering oesophagus from stomach, and
thus decrease oesophageal variceal bleeding); oesophageal balloon is not inflated
nowadays

23
5. IV somatostatin/octreotide

- Not given in ulcer bleed; mode of action is as a splanchnic vasoconstrictor which


decreases portal blood flow and hence portal pressures decreased variceal
bleeding
- Also acts indirectly to inhibit secretion of gut hormones that increase portal
blood flow
6. Acid suppression

- Increasing intragastric pH increases clot stability, aids haemostasis


- Agents available: omeprazole, esomeprazole, pantoprazole, etc.
7. Antibiotics

- Not given in ulcer bleed


- Studies have shown that cover with broad spectrum antibiotics (with Gram neg
cover) decreases infectious complications, possibly mortality, and also risk of
recurrent bleed
- Preferably started before endoscopy (procedures increase bacteraemia)

If bleeding is not remediable by endoscopic intervention:

- Insert Sengstaken-Blakemore tube (only temporary) and repeat endoscopy 10-12


hours later
- Radiologically guided insertion of transjugular intrahepatic porto-systemic shunt
(TIPSS)
- Shunt surgery
Portocaval shunts (joining portal vein to IVC) side-to-side, end-to-side
Mesocaval shunts (joining superior mesenteric vein to IVC)
Proximal splenorenal shunt (splenectomy with end-to-side anastomosis of portal
side of splenic vein to left renal vein)
Distal splenorenal shunt (Warren-Zeppa shunt splenic vein divided and splenic
side anastomosed end-to-side to left renal vein)
- Sugiura procedure (last resort): splenectomy, proximal gastric devascularisation,
selective vagotomy, pyloroplasty, oesophageal devascularisation, oesophageal
transection

8. Endoscopy

- Purpose: confirm diagnosis and institute management


- Needs to be done emergently (on that night of admission) as soon as patient is
stabilised since bleeding can be torrential and life-threatening
- Banding is the best modality for stopping oesophageal variceal bleeding
(sclerotherapy is associated with higher morbidity e.g. mucosal ulceration)
- Gastric varices are usually too large to be banded, sclerotherapy used instead
9. Observation

- Continue antibiotics and omeprazole


- Continue somatostatin up to the point where haemostasis is achieved or 5 days
(exact ideal duration not well studied)
- Anticipate complications:
(a) encephalopathy fleet and lactulose, treat hypokalaemia from vomiting
(b) aspiration protect airway; ?benefit of gastric decompression using NG tube
(c) risks of procedure OGD-related risks
10. Secondary prophylaxis

- Best option is combination of band ligation and non-selective beta-blockers e.g.


propranolol unless propranolol is contraindicated

II. PRIMARY PROPHYLAXIS OF VARICEAL BLEEDING


Use of non-selective beta-blocker e.g. propranolol can be used to prevent development
of varices in patients without varices, and can decrease the size of and prevent bleeding
from varices in patients who already have them. In patients with small varices with no
risk of bleeding, the use of propranolol is of questionable benefit repeat OGD to
monitor varices.
Predictors of variceal haemorrhage:

Site: varices at the gastro-oesophageal junction have the thinnest coat of supporting
tissue and are at highest risk of rupture and bleeding

Size: F1: Small straight varices


F2: Enlarged tortuous varices that occupy less than one-third of the lumen
F3: Large coil-shaped varices that occupy more than one-third of the lumen

Childs score patients with higher Childs score have higher risk

Red signs: Red wale marks (longitudinal red streaks)


Cherry red spots (flat discrete spots)
Haematocystic spots (raised discrete spots resemble blood blisters)
Diffuse erythema

Previous variceal haemorrhage:


70% of patients will have further variceal bleeds after an index bleed
30% rebleed within 6 weeks (risk highest in first 48 hours after first bleed); 30%
rebleed after 6 weeks

11. Management of possible precipitants

- NSAIDs; Hepatic vein thrombosis

III. CHRONIC MANAGEMENT


- Start patient on an ablation regimen (endoscopy with initial ligation/sclerotherapy
and subsequent endoscopic monitoring and repeated ligation/sclerotherapy as
required to completely ablate varices)
- If patient bleeds again failed ablation consider surgery (as above shunts, or
Sugiura)

- H. pylori causes a local inflammatory reaction and secretes enzymes that break down
the gastric mucosal barrier, and also enhances gastric acid secretion and decreases
bicarbonate production
- NSAIDs impair mucosal prostaglandin production (through non-selective COX
inhibition) prostaglandins are important for mucosal bicarbonate and mucin
production and inhibiting gastric acid secretion, as well as maintaining mucosal blood
flow
PRESENTATION

PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE

1. Incidentally detected on OGD


2. Symptoms of dyspepsia

EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Incidence about 100 per 100,000 per year
- 68% of patients are over 60 years of age
- Overall mortality is 7-10%, unchanged for last 2 decades mostly due to ulcer
bleeding especially in elderly with significant comorbidities
MAIN AETIOLOGICAL FACTORS
H. pylori

- 60% of population are positive for H. pylori by age 21


- About 10-20% of infected patients develop an ulcer
- Accounts for 90-95% of duodenal ulcers, and 50% of gastric ulcers
NSAIDs

- Accounts for most of the rest of ulcer disease not caused by H. pylori
- 30% of patients on NSAIDs will get an ulcer, of which one-fifth will have a clinically
significant ulcer i.e. symptomatic, bleeding
Other factors

- Cigarette smoking
- Alcohol
- Steroids and anticoagulants do not increase the risk of ulcer formation, but increase
the risk of bleeding in an existent ulcer
PATHOGENESIS
- An imbalance between mucosal protective mechanisms against acid, and aggressive
forces that damage the gastric mucosa
- Aggressive forces: gastric activity and pepsin activity
- Protective mechanisms: mucus secretion, bicarbonate secretion into mucus, robust
mucosal blood flow to remove protons, epithelial regenerative capacity,
prostaglandin secretion by mucosa to maintain blood flow

24

(a) Ulcer-like dyspepsia: pain in the upper abdomen is the predominant symptom
(b) Dysmotility-like dyspepsia: non-painful discomfort in the upper abdomen,
associated with upper abdominal fullness, early satiety, bloating, belching,
nausea
(c) Unspecified dyspepsia
- Pain is usually worse with food in a gastric ulcer, while it is relieved by food in a
duodenal ulcer
3. Bleed

- As above, presenting with haematemesis (coffee-grounds vomitus) or malaena


4. Perforation

- Patient presents with sudden generalised abdominal pain that is aggravated by


even the slightest movements
- Board-like rigidity, guarding will be present on examination (signs of peritonism)
- Erect CXR will show air under diaphragm
ENDOSCOPY (OGD)
- The most important and valuable investigation
- Roles of endoscopy:
(a) Diagnosis

Confirmation of ulcer disease


Location of ulcer
Biopsy to rule out malignancy (usually 6 bites)
Biopsy of antral tissue for CLO (Campylobacter-like organism) test for H.
pylori

25
(b) Prognostication of bleeding risk (in UBGIT)

Forrest classification (or endoscopic stigmata of recent haemorrhage ESRH)

SURGICAL MANAGEMENT
DUODENAL ULCER

Forrest grade
1a Spurting (arterial)
1b Non-spurting, ooze (venous)
2a Non-bleeding ulcer with visible vessel
2b Non-bleeding ulcer with adherent clot
2c Ulcer with haematin-covered base (flat spot)
3
Ulcer with clean base

Bleeding risk
90%
20%
40%
20%
10%
5%

(c) Endotherapy (in UBGIT)

Injection with adrenaline (1:10,000) or absolute alcohol


Thermal coagulation (heater probe)
Haemostatic clipping (endoclip)
Argon plasma coagulation

CONSERVATIVE MANAGEMENT
1. Gastroprotection

(a) Standard dose proton pump inhibitor


20mg OM
Promotes ulcer healing even with ongoing NSAID use
(b) Double dose famotidine
40mg BD
Inferior to omeprazole as famotidine only promotes ulcer healing if NSAIDs
are stopped; ulcers will not heal with ongoing NSAID therapy

Indications for surgery:

1. Persistent bleeding (e.g. erosion of a posterior duodenal ulcer into gastroduodenal


artery)
2. Perforation
3. Gastric outlet obstruction (patient presents with vomiting of undigested food not
long after meal, succussion splash, air-fluid levels on AXR; characteristic
electrolyte abn of hypokalaemic hypochloraemic metabolic alkalosis with
paradoxical aciduria)
4. Failure of medical management (ulcer does not heal)
Surgery:

1. Oversewing the bleeding vessel


2. Vagotomy with gastric drainage procedures
- Rationale for vagotomy is to eliminate direct cholinergic stimulation to gastric
secretion; parietal cells also become less responsive to histamine and gastrin, and
vagal stimulus for gastrin release is abolished
- Vagotomy can be truncal, selective, or highly selective
- Drainage procedures usually done with vagotomy as gastric emptying is
decreased with denervation gastrojejunostomy or pyloroplasty
3. Antrectomy with truncal vagotomy
4. Gastrectomy
5. Omental patch repair is sufficient for small perforated ulcer
Perforated ulcer: IV fluids, IV antibiotics, PPI, surgery (patch repair)

2. H. pylori eradication

First line triple therapy: omeprazole 20mg BD, amoxicillin 1g BD,


clarithromycin 500mg BD for 7 days
In penicillin-allergic patients, substitute amoxicillin with metronidazole 400mg
BD
Document eradication by endoscopy with CLO test, urea breath test or stool
serology testing
Treatment failure occurs in up to 20% - treat with quadruple therapy: colloidal
bismuth subcitrate 120mg QDS, tetracycline 500mg QDS, metronidazole 400mg
BD, omeprazole 20mg BD for 7 days
Re-scope in 6 weeks to document ulcer healing

If ulcer still present, biopsy ulcer again (exclude malignancy for gastric ulcer) and also
do antral biopsy for CLO test (to confirm eradication of H. pylori)

GASTRIC ULCER
Indications for surgery

1.
2.
3.
4.

Failure to heal after 3 months of conservative therapy


Dysplasia or carcinoma
Recurrence
Perforation, persistent bleeding

Surgery

1. Oversewing the bleeding vessel


2. Gastrectomy
3. If prepyloric ulcer, can treat similar to duodenal ulcer

GASTRIC CARCINOMA

5. H. pylori infection

- 3-6X increased risk of gastric cancer


EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Fourth most common cancer in males, sixth most common in females in Singapore
- Female to male ratio 2:1
- Incidence 10-18 per 100,000 per year
- Incidence increases steeply after 50 years old
RISK FACTORS
1. Environmental

Diet: preserved foods (nitrosamines), smoked foods, polycyclic hydrocarbons


Smoking
Alcohol
Occupational exposure: asbestos, heavy metals, rubber
Low socioeconomic status

2. Genetic

Blood type A
HNPCC Lynch syndrome II
P53 mutation
Germline mutation of e-cadherin
Family history of gastric cancer

PRECURSOR CONDITIONS
1. Partial gastrectomy for benign disease with Bilroth II reconstruction

- Usually occurs >15 years after surgery


- Due to chronic exposure of gastric mucosa to biliary, pancreatic and intestinal
secretions at the anastomotic zone
2. Gastric polyps

- Highest risk in inflammatory polyps: 75-90%


- 10-20% risk in adenomatous polyps especially in large polyps (>2cm) or those
with villous histology
- Also increased risk of adenocarcinoma elsewhere in the stomach
3. Chronic atrophic gastritis

- Hypertrophic gastritis (Menetriers disease) inflammatory disease of gastric


epithelium, up to 10% risk of malignant change
- Pernicious anaemia autoantibodies to parietal cells with achlorhydria, 2-10%
risk of gastric cancer
4. Peptic ulcer disease

- <1% risk of malignant change

26

HISTOLOGY
Adenocarcinomas

- Make up 90-95% of stomach tumours


- Lauren classification:
(a) Intestinal type (most common overall) occurs in high risk population, distal
third of the stomach, in older men; associated with erbB2 and erbB3 receptor
stimulation
(b) Diffuse type occurs in low risk population, proximal third and cardiooesophageal junction, in younger and female patients; more aggressive, present
later, worse prognosis; associated with K-sam oncogene
- Early gastric cancer
Confined to mucosa and submucosa
Good survival and prognosis regardless of size, lymph node status, histological
grade
Non-adenocarcinoma

- Make up less than 10% of stomach tumours


- Types: SCC, neuroendocrine tumour, leiomyosarcoma, GIST, primary gastric nonHodgkins lymphoma (MALT, linitis plastica)
MORPHOLOGY
Borrmanns classification:

Type I (3%):
Type II (18%):
Type III (16%):
Type IV (63%):

Nonulcerated, polypoid, growing intraluminally


Ulcerated, circumscribed with sharp margins
Ulcerated, margin not sharply circumscribed
Diffuse, infiltrating, may be ulcerated; may diffuse entire stomach
(linitis plastica)

LOCATION
- 30% in pyloric channel or antrum
- 20% in body
- 37% in cardia
- 12% in entire stomach

27
SPREAD
- Direct extension to neighbouring organs
- Lymphatic spread
(a) Regional nodes
(b) Supraclavicular nodes (Virchows node)
(c) Umbilical (Sister Josephs node)
- Haematogenous spread liver, lung, bone, brain
- Peritoneal seeding to omentum, parietal peritoneum, ovaries (Krukenbergs tumour),
or cul-de-sac (Blumers shelf)
PRESENTATION
Very non-specific symptoms and signs:
- Abdominal pain
60%
- Weight loss
50%
- Nausea/vomiting
40%
- Anaemia
40%
- Palpable mass
30%
- Haematemesis/malaena 25%
- Early satiety
17%
- Metastatic symptoms late (bony tenderness, neurological deficits, etc)
New onset dyspepsia at age>35 years old should cause concern
COMPLICATIONS
- Bleeding
- Gastric outlet obstruction vomiting (dehydration, hypokalaemic metabolic
alkalosis, aspiration)
- Perforation
- Malnutrition
INVESTIGATIONS
Diagnosis by OGD best for visualisation and biopsy (usually an ulcer with heaped-

up edges)
Supportive/staging investigations

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

FBC low Hb
U/E/Cr if vomiting, low potassium, low chloride, alkalosis
LFTs albumin as a marker of nutritional status (alb<35 is poor); liver mets
CXR lung mets
Endoscopic ultrasound gold standard for T staging and good for N staging

6. CT scan good for T and N staging


7. Staging laparoscopy prior to operation picks up small peritoneal metastases that
are occult on CT scanning (up to one-fifth of patients whose disease was thought to
be resectable) change in stage of disease
STAGING
Tis
T1
T2
T3
T4

Carcinoma in situ
Tumour limited to mucosa and submucosa
Tumour invades muscularis mucosa
Tumour penetrates serosa
Tumour invades adjacent structures

N0
N1
N2
N3

No regional LN
1-6 regional LN involved
7-15 regional LN involved
>15 regional LN involved

CURATIVE TREATMENT
SURGERY
Principles of surgery:

- Wide resection of the tumour to negative margins (at least 6cm margins)
- En-bloc excision of regional lymph nodes
- Choice between total gastrectomy and subtotal gastrectomy
Subtotal gastrectomy leaves a small portion of proximal stomach easier to
anastomose to jejunum than oesophagus since oesophagus does not have serosa
(higher risk of leak)
Subtotal gastrectomy is associated with less morbidity, better functional outcome
(some residual reservoir function preserved)
Total gastrectomy is the resection of choice for proximal tumours (fundus, cardia,
body) as well as diffuse-type tumours and cardio-oesophageal junction tumours
- Reconstruction
Bilroth I (end-to-end gastroduodenostomy) rarely done as it is difficult to
mobilise duodenum up to anastomose with residual stomach
Bilroth II/Polya (gastrojejunostomy) no protection against biliary reflux into
stomach
Roux-en-Y to prevent biliary reflux; but involves 2 anastomoses, higher
chance of leak
Oesophagojejunostomy (after total gastrectomy)
Complications of gastrectomy:
Early

1. Bleeding
2. Infection
3. Anastomotic leak

Late

1. Early satiety
2. Retained antrum syndrome
- Not enough antrum removed leads to increased acidity in residual stomach, with
formation of marginal ulcers on the jejunal side of the anastomosis
3. Intestinal hurry
- Inadequate reservoir function leads to poor digestion may have phytobezoar
formation
4. Dumping syndromes
- Early dumping syndrome: due to increased osmotic load in bowel occurring
half to one hour after meal, resulting in flushing, palpitations, dizziness, nausea;
treat by eating small frequent meals with low carbo and high protein/fat
- Late dumping syndrome: reactive hyperinsulinaemia with hypoglycaemia; treat
by eating more carbohydrates
5. Biliary/intestinal reflux into stomach
- Leads to symptoms of dyspepsia
6. Afferent limb syndrome
- Occurs in Bilroth II/Polya reconstruction
- Mechanical obstruction of the afferent jejunal loop due to kinking, anastomotic
narrowing, or adhesions postprandial epigastric pain with non-bilious
vomiting
- Can be decreased by doing Roux-en-Y surgery (but may still occur)
7. Nutritional deficiency
- Iron deficiency mixed picture
(a) Loss of intrinsic factor B12 deficiency
(b) Decreased conversion of iron from Fe3+ to Fe2+ by gastric acid decreased
iron absorption in terminal ileum
- Need to supplement with B12 injections and iron supplements
CHEMOTHERAPY/RADIOTHERAPY
Adjuvant therapy

5-fluorouracil with chemotherapy


5-fluorouracil with epirubicin for advanced disease
Neoadjuvant therapy

- 5-FU and cisplatin can be used to downstage unresectable, locally advanced disease
with a significant increase in resectability (61% 79%)
- For resectable disease: preoperative 5-FU, cisplatin, doxorubicin, methotrexate,
followed by intraperitoneal 5-FU improved resection rates, response rates, median
survival

28

PALLIATIVE THERAPY
- For palliation of symptoms such as pain, bleeding, obstruction
- Endoscopic laser ablation for obstruction
- Embolisation for bleeding
- Surgical options: subtotal gastrectomy (6-15% mortality), total gastrectomy (20-40%),
gastrojejunostomy for obstruction
- External beam radiotherapy for pain, low-level ongoing bleeding (not for heavy
bleeding as it takes weeks to cause fibrosis)
PROGNOSIS
- Stage I
90% 5-year survival
- Stage II
70%
- Stage III 40%
- Stage IV 0%

29
COLORECTAL DISEASES

COLORECTAL CARCINOMA
EPIDEMIOLOGY
Commonest cancer in Singapore men, number 2 cancer in Singapore women
Peak incidence at 60-70 years of age
PATHOLOGY
- Almost all tumours are adenocarcinomas
- 90% of tumours are sporadic
- 8% arise in association with hereditary non-polyposis colon carcinoma (HNPCC) and
1% in association with familial adenomatous polyposis (APC)
- 1% arise in association with long-standing ulcerative colitis (>10 years)
PATHOGENESIS
There are 2 pathways for cancer development in the colorectal mucosa:
1. APC pathway (adenoma-carcinoma sequence)

- Accounts for 80% of sporadic colorectal carcinomas


- Characterised by chromosomal instability
- Stepwise accumulation of mutations in a series of oncogenes and tumour
suppressor genes:
Loss of the APC suppressor gene on 5q21 (congenitally absent in patients
with familial adenomatous polyposis APC) is the earliest event in adenoma
formation
APC is required to break down beta-catenin; with the loss of APC, betacatenin accumulates and activates various genes in the nucleus (such as MYC
and cyclin D1) which promote cell proliferation
K-RAS (12p12) mutation follows the loss of APC an activating mutation
that causes the RAS to keep delivering mitotic signals and prevent apoptosis
Loss of tumour suppressor gene at 18q21
Loss of p53 late in carcinogenesis
- The molecular evolution of colon cancer through this pathway occurs through a
series of morphologically identifiable stages: localised epithelial proliferation
small adenoma large, more dysplastic adenoma carcinoma in-situ
invasive cancer

2. Defects in DNA mismatch repair

- Involved in 10-15% of sporadic cases


- Like the APC pathway, there is accumulation of mutations, but due to a different
mechanism, and without clearly identifiable morphologic correlates i.e. no
adenomas
- Due to mutations in one of the five DNA repair genes (MSH2, MSH6, MLH1,
PMS1, PMS2) of which MSH2 and MLH1 are the most commonly involved in
sporadic colorectal carcinomas
- Loss of DNA mismatch repair results in microsatellite instability which affects
coding or promoter regions of genes involved in cell growth such as the BAX
gene and the type II TGF- receptor
- Tumours that arise from this pathway have a better prognosis than tumours that
arise from the APC pathway
SITE:
- 25% in caecum and ascending colon
- 25% in transverse colon
- 25% in descending colon and proximal sigmoid
- 25% in distal sigmoid and rectum
- Most are left-sided though there is an increasing incidence of right-sided tumours
MORPHOLOGY
1. Polypoid more common in the right colon as there is more space to grow
2. Scirrhous annular apple-core lesions, more common in the left colon
3. Ulcerated
4. Nodular
SPREAD
1. Intramural along bowel wall
2. Direct extension into surrounding tissues e.g. small bowel, ovary
3. Intraluminal
4. Lymphatic
5. Haematogenous to liver, lungs
6. Transcoelomic

RISK FACTORS

HISTORY

1. Age >50 years

A) 5 things to ask about bowel habits FACCE


- Frequency - >3x/day=diarrhoea; <2x/week=constipation

2. Environmental factors

- Diet: high in red meat, preserved foods (nitrosamines), low in fibre, vitamins,
minerals
- NSAIDs may be protective against CRC
3. Genetic predisposition

(a) Polyposis syndromes FAP and its variants, Gardners and Turcots
syndromes are associated with near 100% risk of cancer formation; other
polyposis syndromes such as Peutz-Jeghers, Cronkhite-Canada have a small
increased malignant potential
(b) HNPCC more common than FAP, accounting for 8% of cancers
4. Ulcerative colitis

- Increased risk after 10 years of disease if the patient has pancolitis; after 15-20
years if the patient has disease limited to the left colon
5. Adenomatous polyps

- Increased risk if there is a personal history of large (>1cm )adenomatous polyps,


and polyps with tubulovillous or villous histology, particularly if multiple (3-6X
increased risk)
- Small (<1cm) tubular polyps do not have increased risk
6. Family history or personal history of colorectal carcinoma

- Metachronous colorectal cancers occur at a rate of 3-5% in the first five years
after resection of a primary CRC, while metachronous adenomas occur at a rate
of 25-40%
- Family history of one first-degree relative with CRC increases risk of CRC 1.7X,
and risk is further increased if there are 2 first-degree relatives with CRC, or if
the relative had CRC before the age of 55
- Family history of colonic adenoma appears to have the same significance as
family history of colonic carcinoma
Anyone with one first degree relative diagnosed with CRC younger than 45
years old, or two first or second degree relatives from the same side of the
family with CRC at any age, should be screened starting at age 45, or 10 years
earlier than the youngest cancer in the family

- Associated secretions
Blood
o Mixed in stool?
o Separate from stool?
Mucus
- Colour black, clay, brown
- Consistency pellet, normal, soft, watery
- Effort tenesmus

Stool Changes
- Bloody diarrhoea ddx:
IBD
Infective e.g. amoeba, TB, hookworm
Antibiotic Associated Colitis (C. difficile)
- Haematochezia ddx:
Diverticulitis
Angiodysplasia (AVM, common in old)
Massive upper GI
Hemorrhoids
-

Progressively worsening constipation requiring chronic laxatives


Spurious diarrhoea
Mucoid stools
Progressive intestinal obstruction symptoms
Tenesmus (rectal ca)

Other Symptoms
- Iron deficiency anaemia fatigue, decreased effort tolerance,
palpitations, postural giddiness, shortness of breath, chest pain
- Abdominal mass
- Metastatic symptoms bone pain
- Constitutional symptoms LOA, LOW, malaise
Note: Site of CA
- Ascending: anaemia, no obstructive symptoms usually
- Lower down: I/O, bleed, tenesmus

30

31
B) High-risk factors

Positive Family history


- 1 or more 1st deg relative with CC at age <40
- 2 or more 1st/2nd deg same side relative with CC at any age
- Personal or family history of breast, ovarian cancer
FAP history

INVESTIGATIONS
Aims
- Diagnose colorectal cancer
- Stage the cancer
- Investigate for complications of cancer
I. DIAGNOSIS

Amsterdam Criteria for Hereditary Non-Polyposis Colorectal Ca (HNPCC)


[3, 2, 2, 1]
- 3 or more family members from the same side with CRC,
- At least 2 of which must be first-degree relatives
- 2 successive generations
- 1 of the CC must occur prior to age 50
- FAP is excluded

(a) Colonoscopy first-line investigation


- Can visualise lesion and have an idea of which part of the colon it is in
- Can take biopsies of the lesion
- Enables detection of synchronous lesions synchronous polyps in 30%,

Family history alone considered high-risk; FAP and HNPCC considered very
high-risk

(b) Double-contrast barium enema (barium + air)


- Not adequate for diagnostic purposes, may miss small lesions
- Classically can see an apple core lesion with barium enema

C) Other risk factors


- Low fibre diet
- Obesity
- Red meat
- Ulcerative colitis
D) Complications
- Haemorrhage (usually occult) anaemia
- Obstruction (left sided lesion)
- Perforation
- Fistula colovesical fistula causing faecuria, pneumaturia, recurrent UTI
- Infection abscesses, peritonitis

PHYSICAL EXAM
1. Abdominal mass
2. Mass on DRE hard, non-tender, polypoid, irregular, contact bleeding
3. Complications, Metastases
- Cachexia
- Anaemia
- Jaundice, hepatomegaly
- Lungs
- Brain
- Bone tenderness
- Cervical lymphadenopathy Virchows node

synchronous cancer in 3-5%


- Enables therapeutic procedures e.g. polypectomy, stenting of obstructed colon

(c) Carcinoembryonic antigen level (CEA)


- A tumour marker for colorectal carcinoma >90% of tumours produce CEA
- Measured pre-operatively as a baseline level if the CEA is raised pre-op and

falls to within normal range post-op, it is likely tumour has been totally removed
- Follow-up after surgery with CEA levels to detect tumour recurrence
- Causes of false positive raised CEA: smoking, pregnancy, bronchitis, cholangitis

and cancers of the stomach, lung, breast, pancreas, cervix, bladder and kidney
II. STAGING
(a) CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis
- Local T staging
- Staging of regional and no-regional lymph note involvement
- Metastases to the liver
(b) Endoscopic ultrasound, or transrectal ultrasound for rectal tumour
- Very good for T staging to determine depth of involvement by tumour
- Can also assess local lymph node status
(c) CXR + CT scan of the chest
(d) MRI of the tumour
- Superior to CT for delineating fat planes in T staging especially in rectal cancer
(e) Bone scan if appropriate

III. COMPLICATIONS
(a) FBC for low Hb, together with iron studies
(b) Urea, electrolytes and creatinine in patient with obstruction may be vomiting,
may have third space losses (intraluminal) with fluid and electrolyte abnormatlities;
creatinine may be elevated due to pre-renal failure
(c) Liver function tests for derangements caused by metastasis (though these
changes will only occur late) raised bilirubin, ALP
(d) If patient presented with symptoms of intestinal obstruction erect and supine
AXR can help in diagnosis and location of obstruction
(e) Erect CXR in perforated tumour to detect air under diaphragm
DUKES STAGING
Stg

Description

5yr surv

Tumor confined to bowel wall with no extension into extrarectal/


extracolic tissue, no LN mets

75%

Invades past muscularis propria into extrarectal/ extracolic tissue,


no LN

55%

LN mets present
C1: only nearby nodes involved (paracolic LNs)
C2: continuous string of LN involved up to proximal resection
(LN at base of mesentery)

C1:40%
C2:20%

Distant mets/ extensive local mets such that surgically incurable

poor

TREATMENT
SURGERY
Pre-operative measures

- Bowel prep
Modification of diet 3 days low residue diet, NBM day before operation)
Bowel clearance with polyethylene glycol
- Prophylactic antibiotics
ampi/ genta/ metronidazole at induction of anesthesia

Principles of surgery for colonic carcinomas

- En-bloc resection of tumour with adequate margins


For colonic tumours, a margin of 5 cm proximally and distally is adequate

32

While segmental resection (excision of only the segment of colon containing the
tumour) is sufficient for primary tumour removal, a wider resection is often
required to achieve sufficient lymphadenectomy
Adequate clearance of the draining lymphatics involves excision of the vascular
arcades supplying the segment of involved colon back to their origin (from the
SMA or IMA) as lymphatics follow the arteries generally

- Obstructed left sided carcinoma


No difference shown for doing a staged procedure (i.e. tumour removed with
proximal end of colon brought out as a colostomy) as compared to creating a
primary anastomosis
On-table bowel decompression is equivalent to irrigation for clearance of faecal
material
Segmental colectomy for the tumour with intraoperative decompression is
comparable to subtotal/total colectomy without decompression with regard to
bowel function and rates of complications
- Site of surgery for colonic carcinoma

33
Tumour site

Surgery

Structures involved

- Caecum
- Ascending colon

Right
hemicolectomy

- Hepatic flexure
- Transverse colon
near the hepatic
flexure
- Mid-transverse
colon
- Transverse colon
near splenic
flexure

Extended right
hemicolectomy

- Descending colon

Left
hemicolectomy

- Sigmoid colon

Sigmoid
colectomy

- Excision of caecum and ascending colon


- Division of ileocolic and right colic arteries, and
the right branch of the middle colic artery
- Excision of caecum, ascending colon, and
proximal transverse colon
- Division of ileocolic and right colic arteries, and
the middle colic artery at its origin
- Excision of transverse colon
- Division of middle colic artery
- Excision of distal transverse colon and proximal
descending colon
- Division of supplying vessels left branch of
middle colic artery, left colic artery
- Excision of descending colon
- Division of left colic and inferior mesenteric
arteries
- Excision of sigmoid colon
- Division of inferior mesenteric artery and/or
sigmoid branches

Transverse
colectomy
Left segmental
colectomy

Principles of surgery for rectal carcinomas

- En-bloc resection with adequate margins


For rectal tumours a margin of 5 cm proximally and 2 cm distally is adequate (as
it has been found that lymphatic spread of rectal tumours is predominantly in the
proximal direction)
Radial margins are also important as there is a zone of downward spread within
the mesorectum (peritoneal investment of the upper rectum) for upper rectal
tumours, mesorectal excision of 5 cm distal to the distal margin of the tumour is
adequate (see Mesorectal excision below)
- Sphincter-sparing versus loss of sphincter
The anal sphincter can be spared if the distal margin is >2cm above the level of
the sphincter complex, usually taken to be at the level of the dentate line (which
is 5cm above the anal verge) i.e. distal margin of the tumour must be >7cm from
the anal verge
Sphincter-sparing surgery involves a low anterior resection
If the tumour is so low that it cannot be resected without removing the sphincter
complex, then an abdominoperineal resection is performed where the entire anus
and sphincter complex is dissected, with the creation of an end colostomy

- Reconstruction
Formation of a straight coloanal anastomosis in anterior resections is associated
with poor function due to the lack of reservoir function
Creation of a colonic J-pouch using the proximal end of colon (the end of the
colon is folded back on itself to form a J, and the two limbs opened and stitched
together to form a pouch, the apex of the J being anastomosed to the anus) is
associated with improved post-operative function
Coloplasty is another alternative that is equivalent to colonic J-pouch (the distal
colon is cut longitudinally but sewn transversely, widening the diameter at that
segment to form a small pouch), done when there is difficulty creating the
colonic J-pouch
- Mesorectal excision
Proximal rectal tumours 5cm distal margin of mesorectal excision
Mid-rectal tumours wide mesorectal excision of at least 4cm distal to the
tumour
Lower rectum tumours total mesorectal excision required (complete excision
of the intact visceral mesorectal tissue to the level of the levators)
- Extended resections
For locally advanced, adherent tumours (T4), multivisceral resection of organs
involved (pelvic exenteration) is associated with improved local control and
overall survival compared with standard resection, though high morbidity of 2550% is associated
Consider neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy prior to surgery to downstage disease
- Stoma creation
A defunctioning loop ileostomy (or loop colostomy) is usually created during an
anterior resection as the manipulation of the colon deep within the pelvic cavity
causes increased risk of an anastomotic leak
A defunctioning stoma does not protect against anastomotic leak, but mitigates
against disastrous complications should a leak occur
- Neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy
Neoadjuvant therapy with radiotherapy in combination with 5-fluorouracil can
downstage tumour significantly ability to preserve sphincter, ability to resect
previously unresectable tumour, etc

Surgery for metastases

- Surgical treatment according to stage


Stage of disease

Treatment

T1

Involvement of submucosa, but no


penetration through muscularis propria

Local excision (AR or APR)

T2

Invasion into, but not penetration


through, muscularis propria

a) Local excision + adjuvant


Chemo/RT OR
b) radical resection

T3

Penetration through muscularis propria


into subserosa (if present), or pericolic
fat, but not into peritoneal cavity or
other organs

Neoadjuvant chemo / RT before


radical resection

T4

Invasion of other organs or


involvement of free peritoneal cavity

- Isolated liver metastases (synchronous or metachronous) may be resected with


survival benefit; neoadjuvant chemotherapy can be given to downstage the
metastases if they are initially resectable
- Lung metastases usually indicate systemic dissemination of disease, but in the rare
setting that there is an isolated lung secondary, resection can provide survival benefit
Surgery for recurrence

- Loco-regional recurrence, if detected early with adequate resection, can confer


survival benefit
RADIOTHERAPY
- Role as neoadjuvant therapy in rectal cancer to downstage tumour
- Post-operative adjuvant therapy in stage II or III rectal cancer
CHEMOTHERAPY

Operative complications
Immediate (<24h)

Damage to other organs e.g. ureters

Early (<30 days)

Wound infection
Bleeding
Abscess
Anastomosis breakdown/leak
Early stoma complications

Late (>30 days)

Diarrhoea
Impotence (damage of pelvic nerves)
Adhesions (I/O)
Anastomotic stricture
Late stoma complications

Surgery for palliation

- Resection of primary for palliation of symptoms such as bleeding, perforation,


obstruction or pain
- Resection of asymptomatic primary is controversial, but may confer survival benefit
in a select group of patients where metastatic tumour burden is restricted to one side
and liver involvement is not extensive

34

Adjuvant therapy

- Colon cancer: 5-FU + folinic acid (leucovorin) for 6 months, or 5-FU + levamisole
for 12 months in Dukes C cancer (node positive); not recommended in Dukes B or
less
- Rectal cancer: post-operative adjuvant therapy in combination with radiotherapy in
stage II or III disease (5-FU based regimen used)
Palliative therapy

- 5-FU in combination with folinic acid is first-line therapy


- Alternatives for first-line therapy: Raltitrexed when 5-FU is not tolerated;
capecitabine or UFT (uracil combined with tegafur) plus folinic acid
FOLLOW UP
- Follow-up visits 3-monthly for the first 2 years, then 6-monthly for the next three
years, and subsequently yearly, measure CEA at each visit
- Yearly colonoscopy
- CXR and liver ultrasound to detect metastases (recommended frequency not known)

35
STOMA PRINCIPLES

Stoma Complications

Nursing intervention

Early

- Stoma nurse to counsel, discuss best site for stoma placement


Stoma siting

- Siting of a stoma over the rectus sheath decreases the risk of prolapse, but care must
also be taken not to site it too near a midline surgical incision due to fears of wound
contamination and infection
- Should be sited away from skin creases or bony prominences such that stoma wafer
can be attached flush with the skin (otherwise there are gaps between skin and wafer
leakage of fluid)
- Sited away from old surgical scars (hernia risk)
- Sited where the bag will be easily accessible and visible to the patient i.e. not under a
large fold of abdominal fat
- Intra-operatively, the bowel that forms the stoma must not be overstretched tension
causes decreased vascularity of the stoma and may cause stoma necrosis
Types of stomas
Permanent (end colostomy)

- When no distal bowel remaining


Low rectal/ anal tumor requiring abdomino-perineal resection
Panproctocolectomy without ileal pouch anal anastomosis e.g. FAP
Usually sited on the left side with a single opening
Temporary

- Decompression relief of large bowel obstruction causing proximal dilatation


- Defunctioning to protect a distal bowel anastomosis
Previously contaminated bowel
Technical considerations e.g. after low anterior resection, where risk of
anastomotic leakage is high
Usually loop ileostomies or colostomies with 2 openings (ileostomies usually on
the right side, colostomies in the epigastric/hypochondriac [transverse colostomy]
or left side)
- To rest an inflamed distal portion e.g. acute Crohns
Note: Colonic stoma is usually flushed with skin, while ileal stoma protrudes 3cm (a
spout, as ileal contents are corrosive, to prevent contact with skin)

- Necrosis of terminal bowel (stoma appears dusky; double check by passing a


proctoscope into the stoma to look at colour of mucosa) refashion stoma
- Obstruction e.g. fecal impaction explore with finger, enema
- Leakage between skin and appliance causing skin erosion resite
Late

Prolapse of bowel refashion


Parastomal hernia refashion
Stenosis refashion
Retraction refashion
Psychological problems

ASSOCIATED CONDITIONS
I. Familial adenomatous polyposis (FAP)
-

1 in 10,000, autosomal dominant inheritance


Germline mutation of APC gene on 5q21
>100 adenomatous polyps all over colon; polyps take 5-6 yrs to turn malignant
50% patients will have polyps by 16yrs; 90% will have colorectal CA by 45yrs

- Other sites for polyps: stomach, duodenum


- Extraintestinal manifestations
Epidermoid cysts
Lipoma
Osteoma of skull, mandible
Dental abnormalities
Congenital hypertrophy of retinal pigment epithelium (CHRPE)
Desmoid tumours (intraabdominal tumours, treated with chemo, RT or hormonal

Rx. Not treated by surgery)


Follicular or papillary thyroid cancer
Periampullary CA requires 5 yearly OGD for surveillance of CA.

- Diagnosis
Colonoscopy showing >100 polyps
Genetic testing
- Surveillance
Yearly colonoscopy for at-risk family members from 12y onwards
Genetic testing of at-risk family members
Affected members should undergo prophylactic proctocolectomy with ileal

pouch anal anastomosis (IPAA involves folding loops of ileum back on

themselves and stitching or stapling them together to form a reservoir pouch


which is them anastomosed to the anus) at ~ 20 YO
Subtotal colectomy is an option if the rectum is relatively spared of polyps

PATHOGENESIS
1. Increased intraluminal pressure

- Associated with lack of dietary fibre, constipation


2. Degenerative changes in colonic wall

Hereditary Non-Polyposis Colorectal CA (HNPCC)


- Divided into Lynch syndrome I or Lynch syndrome II based on clinical features
- Tumours usually proximal to splenic flexure (~70% proximal to splenic flexure)
- Tumours tend to arise from polyps which are commonly flat, with villous histology
- Resultant tumour is often poorly differentiated
- Lynch syndrome type II is differentiated from Lynch syndrome I as it is associated

with increased risk of cancer elsewhere, most commonly endometrial cancer, and
also gastric, ovarian, small bowel, hepatobiliary, and renal pelvis/ureter cancers
- Diagnosis is based on the Amsterdam criteria see above
- Surveillance 1-3yrly colonoscopy starting at 20 years old
Ulcerative colitis
- Screening yearly colonoscopy starting after 10 years of UC

DIVERTICULAR DISEASE
PATHOLOGY acquired herniation of colonic mucosa through muscular wall, with a
covering of colonic serosa
TERMS
- Diverticulosis coli presence of acquired pseudodiverticula
- Diverticular disease symptomatic diverticulosis coli
- Diverticulitis inflammation of diverticula
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Increases with age
- 10-30% of diverticulosis coli are symptomatic
- Risk factors dietary fibre & genetics
- Site majority are in the sigmoid colon (dec. diameter, inc. pressure)

36

- Usually at point of entry of terminal arterial branches where serosa is weakest


- Associated with weakening of collagen structure with age
PRESENTATIONS
1. Acute diverticulitis

LLQ pain
Tender palpable mass
Low grade fever
N/V
Constipation / diarrhoea
WBC

2. Chronic diverticulitis

- Recurrent LIF pain


- Irregular bowel habit
- Passage of mucus PR
3. Complicated diverticulitis

a.
b.
c.
d.
e.

Perforation
Paracolic abscess / inflammatory mass 2o to localized perforation
Bowel obstruction 2o to structure or adherence to a diverticular mass
LGIT haemorrhage ulcerated vessel @ neck of diverticulum
Fistula formation (commonest: colovesical fistula) 2o to pericolic abscess
discharging, operation or drainage of pericolic abscess. May present with
urinary symptoms. Others colo-cutaneous, colo-uterine, colo-enteric, colovaginal

STAGING
- Hinchey classification of acute diverticulitis need for surgery is reflected by
degree of infective complications
Stage 1

Pericolonic /
Mesenteric abscess

Stage 2

Pelvic / retroperitoneal
abscess
Purulent peritonitis
Faecal peritonitis

Stage 3
Stage 4

- ABx, NBM, IV fluids


- Consider 1 stage surgery after acute episode
resection of affected bowel segment with primary
anastomosis
- Percutaneous drainage
- Elective 1 stage surgery
- 2 stage operation Hartmanns procedure (partial
colectomy + diverting end colostomy & rectal
stump formation) + secondary re-anastomosis 3
months later

37
Presentation

Clinical features

Investigations

Differentials

Management

Acute
Diverticulitis

- LIF pain colicky, progressing to


constant, relieved by defecation
- LIF tenderness
- Palpable LIF mass
- Nausea
- Pyrexia
- Increase pulse rate

FBC leucocytosis
ESR
AXR ileus, air-fluid level w/in an abscess
Barium enema
CT or U/S: thickened bowel wall, pericolic fat
inflammation, extraluminal gas & contrast, abscess,
free fluid & gas
- Laparoscopy if diagnosis is in doubt
- CT scan w triple contrast is gold std for diagnosis
Contrast: IV for vascular lesions, oral for small
bowels, enema for large bowels
Features diverticula, mesenteric fat infiltration,
concentric bowel thickening, pelvic abscess

Conservative
- Bed rest
- NBM, IV fluid
- Broad-spectrum antibiotics
augmentin or metronidazole or
ciprofloxacin
- Antispasmodics

Acute salpingitis
Acute appendicitis
GE
Irritable bowel syndrome

After acute phase has settled


- Ba enema &/or Colonoscopy
confirm dx & exclude CA colon

Chronic
Diverticulitis

- Recurrent LIF pain


- Irregular bowel habits constipation
& bouts of diarrhoea
- Passage of mucus PR

- Rigid sigmoidoscopy oedematous mucosa &


rigidity of rectosigmoid junction
- Flexible sigmoidoscopy diverticular orifices
- Barium enema saw-tooth appearance,
diverticula, strictures
- Colonoscopy exclude differentials (i.e. Ca colon)

- CA colon may coexist. Hard


to differentiate therefore,
ALWAYS exclude CA colon
e.g. histology after bowel
resection
- Ischaemic colitis
- Radiation colitis
- Colonic endometriosis

Conservative see above

Generalised
peritonitis /
perforation

- Acute onset abdominal pain severe


& continuous
- Abdominal guarding & rigidity
- Vomiting
- Tachycardia
- Pyrexia

- FBC TW, Hb (dehydration)


- U/E/Cr dehydration & ARF
- CXR free gas under diaphragm

- Other causes of peritonitis


perforated PUD, appendicitis
etc

Mgmt as for acute abdomen


- Resuscitate
- Surgical
Peritoneal toilet
Resection of affected segment
End sigmoid colostomy
(Hartmanns procedure)

Pericolic
abscess

- FBC TW
- CT differentiate between inflammatory phlegmon
& pericolic abscess

Persistent
inflammatory
mass

- LIF pain, tenderness & palpable mass


- Fever
- Malaise

Small bowel
I/O

May follow acute diverticulitis


LIF tenderness & guarding
LIF mass may be detected on DRE
Swinging fever

Surgical
Indications:
- Severe / recurrent attacks of
diverticulitis
- Possible CA colon
- Segmental resection of affected
colon + anastomosis

- CT/US guided percutaneous


aspiration
- Surgery evacuation of pus
resection of affected segment

- Usually temporary, due to


attachment of enteric loop against
area of acute diverticulitis
- Surgery if does not resolve

Presentation

Clinical features

Investigations

Differentials

Management

Large bowel
I/O

- PHx of recurrent acute diverticulitis


or irregular bowel habit
- Colicky abdominal pain, constipation
& abdo distension

- AXR dilated bowels proximal to stenosis


- Water soluble contrast enema

- CA colon

- NBM, Drip & suck


- Surgery Resection primary
anastomosis

Hemorrhage

- Usually in the elderly who have


higher density of sigmoid diverticula
- Massive bleed usually right-sided

- Invx as for LGIT bleed resus, invesigations +


colonoscopy & angiography to locate site of bleed
- on-table enteroscopy if required
- tagged RBC scan (not as sensitive compared to
angiogram)

- Resuscitate & correct


coagulopathy
- Surgery resection or radiologic
embolisation of site of bleeding
done while doing angiography.
Hence, angiogram is the preferred
invx as it is of diagnostic AND
therapeutic value

Vesicocolic
fistula

- PHx of chronic diverticulitis & UTI


- Hx of dysuria, freq, haematuria,
pneumaturia, faecaluria

Indications for emergency operation

1.
2.
3.
4.

Indications for elective operation

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

- Other causes of fistula CA


colon, CA bladder, Crohns
disease, post-irradiation
necrosis

- Surgery Resection of affected


colon + anastomosis + closure of
bladder fistula opening

Sepsis
Perforation
Diverticulitis not responding to conservative management
Emergency bleed
a. Haemodynamically unstable
b. Need > 4 units of PCT
c. Previous bleed
5. Obstruction need to rule out cancer at the same time
Stricture
Fistula
Recurrent attacks occurs in 30% of patients after 1st episode. a/w higher mortality & complication rates
Young patientss <40YO high recurrence rates
Immunocompromised patients (e.g. renal transplant) may not show S/S of acute attack or complications

Advice to patients:
- 70% of patients will not have recurrence after first attack
- Advise high fibre diet & to drink lots of fluid

38

UFEME pus, faecal debris, intestinal organisms


Cystoscopy cystitis
Sigmoidoscopy usually normal
KUB air in bladder
Barium enema diseased diverticular bowel
segment

Anorectal bleed
Angiodysplasia
Ischaemic colitis
UGIT bleed
Colorectal CA
IBD
Other colitis
Coagulopathy

39
SURGICAL LIVER PROBLEMS

ANATOMY OF THE LIVER


- The liver is divided into two lobes, right and left
- The anatomical division of the liver lobes is demarcated by the falciform ligament
- The functional division (more practical in surgery) is demarcated by the plane of the
gallbladder and inferior vena cava (also by the plane in which the middle hepatic
vein runs)

- Segment I is the caudate lobe


- Segments II to VIII are named clockwise, while facing the patient, starting from
the upper right corner (i.e. the upper left segment of liver) see picture
- Segment IV can be further divided into IVa and IVb, where IVa is the superior
subsegment and IVb is the inferior subsegment
- The liver has two blood supplies portal vein (formed from the joining of the splenic
vein and superior mesenteric vein) and hepatic artery (a branch of the coeliac trunk)
- Drainage is via the three hepatic veins into the inferior vena cava

CAUSES FOR A LIVER NODULE ON IMAGING


Benign

Cyst
Haemangioma

Single
Multiple familial (polycystic) or non-familial
Small
Big

Adenoma
Fibronodular
hyperplasia
Malignant

Secondary
Primary

Colorectal, stomach, pancreas, breast, urogenital tract,


lung
Hepatocellular carcinoma (or hepatoblastoma in
children)
Cholangiocarcinoma (only 10% intrahepatic)
presents like HCC except no background of cirrhosis

HEPATOCELLULAR CARCINOMA
- The liver can be further divided into 8 functional segments (Couinaud segments) that
each have their own vascular inflow, outflow, and biliary drainage, independent of
the other segments
- The segments are divided by one transverse plane and three sagittal planes as shown
in the picture
- The transverse plane is at the level of the main branches of the portal vein, and
divides the liver into an upper half and a lower half
- The sagittal planes are formed by the three main hepatic veins (right, middle and left)

EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Incidence in Singapore is 18 per 100,000 per year in males, and 4.6 per 100,000 in
females
- Third most cancer among males, overall fourth most common cancer
- More common in men, with a ratio of 3:1
- Peak age of onset: 30-40 years old
- Primary cancers of the liver are mainly hepatocellular carcinomas (85%), with a
small proportion of intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma (6%)

AETIOLOGY AND RISK FACTORS


- Hepatitis B infection (high HBV DNA load, HBeAg positivity increase the risk)
- Hepatitis C infection
- Cirrhosis (of which cirrhosis resulting from hep B, hep C and haemochromatosis are
associated with the highest risk)
- Aflatoxin ingestion

6. Other manifestations

PATHOLOGY
- Pathogenesis involves a chronic inflammatory process or ongoing hepatocellular
damage with high cellular regeneration, which leads to increased rates of genetic
mutation in the cells and accumulation of these mutations leading to carcinoma
formation
- Two histological subtypes:
Nonfibrolamellar associated with hep B and cirrhosis
Fibrolamellar associated with younger patients, more common in females, no
association with hep B or cirrhosis, 70% resectable, good prognosis
- Metastasises to lymph nodes, bones, lungs and adrenals

INVESTIGATIONS

PRESENTATION
1. Asymptomatic

- During screening (ultrasound) for chronic hepatitis B carrier


- Investigations for liver cirrhosis
- Incidentally found on imaging of the abdomen
2. Local symptoms

- Upper abdominal pain


- Hepatomegaly found on examination
- Obstructive jaundice due to invasion of intrahepatic biliary tree, compression of
a major duct
3. Liver decompensation (on top of underlying cirrhosis)

Worsening liver function


Ascites
Variceal bleeding
Encephalopathy

4. Tumour rupture

- Abdominal pain (peritonitis)


- Shock
5. Metastases

- Bone pain
- Dyspnoea

40

- Budd-Chiari syndrome (occlusion of portal vein, resulting in portal hypertension)


- Pyrexia (central tumour necrosis)
- Paraneoplastic syndromes hypoglycaemia (high metabolic demands of tumour),
erythrocytosis (tumour produces erythropoietin), hypercalcaemia, watery
diarrhoea, etc.

DIAGNOSIS
Biopsy is usually not performed due to risk of tumour seeding (1-2% risk) along the
needle track diagnosis is based on clinical, biochemical and radiological tests
WHO criteria for HCC:

(a) Risk factors for HCC e.g. hep B/C carrier


(b) Characteristic CT findings (of a hypervascular lesion)
(c) Raised AFP (>400)
1. Alpha-foetoprotein (AFP)

- Elevated in 80% of hepatocellular carcinoma


2. Triphasic CT scan is the gold standard investigation

- Triphasic CT involves scanning the liver at three different times after


intravenous contrast:
(a) Arterial phase aorta lights up as contrast fills arteries; IVC and portal
vein are dark
(b) Portal venous phase contrast enters portal system so portal vein is as
bright as the aorta
(c) Delayed phase contrast drains out, so none of the vessels in the liver are
lighted up
- Characteristic feature of HCC is enhancement in the arterial phase (as HCCs
have a rich arterial supply derived from the hepatic arterial system) with rapid
contrast washout in the portal venous phase (hypodense)
- In a patient with hepatitis B/C and raised AFP, a liver lesion that is not a
haemangioma on imaging should be considered HCC until proven otherwise
- CT can also look for nodal involvement, and metastases to the adrenals
3. Dynamic MRI scan of the liver

- Adjunct investigation done when CT findings are equivocal


- Images liver in greater detail, can be used to exclude benign conditions

41
4. Hepatic angiogram with lipiodol and post-lipiodol CT scan

- Lipiodol will be retained in HCC even after many days as the HCC does not
contain Kupffer cells to ingest lipiodol
- Hepatic angiogram may reveal abnormal blood vessels within the HCC
- CT scan of the liver weeks after lipiodol ingestion will pick up the areas of
tumour (where the pre-lipiodol CT may not have demonstrated the tumour
clearly)
5. If indicated, investigations to look for GI primary

- CEA, CA 19-9, endoscopy


STAGING (looking for metastases)
1. Lung chest X-ray, CT thorax
2. Adrenals CT abdomen
3. Bone bone scan if clinically indicated
TREATMENT
SURGERY
- The only curative treatment for HCC is surgical removal of the tumour
- Only about 10-20% of patients with HCC will have disease amenable to surgery
- 2 surgical possibilities:
(a) Resection of tumour (partial hepatectomy)
(b) Liver transplantation
Factors affecting resectability:

1. Stage of disease
- Metastatic disease is not suitable for resection
- Multicentric disease affecting both lobes is a contraindication to hepatectomy
2. General fitness for operation
3. Liver function pre-operatively
- Cirrhotic patients have higher risk of post-operative mortality (4-14%) compared
to non-cirrhotic patients (0-4%) due to complications such as liver failure,
bleeding and infection
- If patient has cirrhosis, assess the Childs status Childs C and most of Childs
B will not be fit for operation; only Childs A and good Childs B
- Use of indocyanin green (ICG) the percentage of ICG remaining in the liver
after 15 minutes indicates the level of liver function. If >15% remains after 15
minutes, the patient cannot tolerate major liver resection (>3 segments removed)

4. Residual liver function post-operatively


- Dependent on tumour size and how much of the liver it takes up, because tumour
is non-functional
- A large tumour taking up most of the liver segments being resected translates to
smaller amount of functional liver tissue being resected, while a small tumour
means that more functional tissue is removed with the same resection margins
5. Degree of portal hypertension
- Resection of the liver results in worsened portal hypertension since the effective
portal venous capillary bed has decreased increased resistance to flow
6. Location of tumour
- Has to be located in a suitable location for resection
Hepatectomy

- Problem in patients with cirrhosis is that there is already a field-change effect in


the liver, thus a new tumour can still develop in the remnant liver
- Requires a fine balance between adequate resection margins and preservation of
sufficient functional liver to prevent liver failure
- Good immediate and short-term results, but not long term (<30% 5-year survival)
due to occurrence of new primaries in the cirrhotic liver
Transplantation

- Milan criteria for transplantation (>75% 5-year survival if followed)


(a) Single tumour 5cm or smaller, or 3 or less tumours none larger than 3cm
(b) No evidence of gross vascular invasion
(c) No regional nodal or distant metastasis
- Problems with availability of donor organ the disease might have progressed past
being suitable for transplant by the time donor organ is available
Possibility of bridging therapy such as radiofrequency ablation to shrink
disease and prevent progression until donor liver is available
- In hepatitis B carriers, there is a risk for reinfection of the donor liver (high risk
factors are HBeAg positivity, high HBV DNA levels) can be aggressively treated
with anti-viral drugs 2 months before transplant and anti-HBV immunoglobulin longterm after transplant
PALLIATIVE THERAPY
Loco-regional ablation

(a) Radiofrequency ablation best results for locoregional strategies


(b) Percutaneous ethanol injection
(c) Cryotherapy

TRIPHASIC CT
- Hypodense on arterial phase (as metastases are usually hypovascular compared to
hypervascular HCC)
- Increasing contrast uptake on portal venous and delayed phases

Intra-arterial therapy

(a) Transarterial chemoembolisation


(b) Transarterial embolisation
(c) Radioactive isotopes Yttrium-90
Systemic therapy limited results

SCREENING FOR CHRONIC HEPATITIS CARRIERS


- Combination of six-monthly to yearly ultrasound with AFP levels
- Ultrasound alone is not very sensitive or specific as it is operator dependent and may
miss certain areas of the liver where imaging is difficult, but it is not associated with
radiation exposure
- AFP is also not a perfect screening test as 20% of HCC will not have raised AFP
- Thus the combination of ultrasound and AFP can increase the sensitivity and
specificity of screening
- Frequency of screening is controversial, but should be increased in patients at
increased risk HbeAg positivity, high HBV DNA levels
- Important to also screen family for chronic hepatitis B carrier status especially if
there is a family history! e.g. mother had hep B/HCC, sibling has hep B, etc

LIVER METASTASES
- Still more common than primary liver tumour for malignancy occurring in the liver
- Primaries: Colorectal, gastric, pancreatic, urogenital, breast, lung
PRESENTATION DEPENDS ON SITE OF METASTASIS
Mets to liver parenchyma

Mets to porta hepatis LN

Hx

- Incidentally found on follow up


(for cancer)
- Hard mass
- Heaviness
- Pain from rupture

- Symptoms of obstructive jaundice


Yellow sclera
Tea-coloured urine
Pale stools

P/E

- Hard, irregular nodular hepatomeg


- Jaundice is a late sign

- Jaundice early, progressive


- Hepatomegaly may not be present

- Both obstructive and transaminitis


picture

- Obstructive picture in early stages

Invx

42

ROLE OF SURGERY
- Promising results with colorectal and neuroendocrine metastases if isolated
resectable metastatic disease 5-yr survival >50%
- Increasing role in urogenital, breast mets
- Poor results for stomach, oesophageal mets
- Palliation for symptoms in neuroendocrine metastases

LIVER HAEMANGIOMA
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Prevalence 0.4-20%
- Female to male ratio 3:1
PATHOGENESIS
- Vascular malformation that enlarges by ectasia, congenital in origin
PRESENTATION
1. Usually small and asymptomatic, found incidentally
2. Mass effects compressing on surrounding organs
3. Pain from liver capsule stretch
4. Rupture (<1%)
5. Kassabach-Merritt syndrome for large haemangiomas consumptive coagulopathy,
thrombocytopaenia
6. Heart failure from large arteriovenous shunt
DIAGNOSIS
- Radiological
Characteristic features on triphasic CT slow enhancement of the rims on arterial
and portal venous phase, brightest in the delayed phase
- DO NOT BIOPSY
TREATMENT
- Only for symptomatic or complicated lesions
- Possible role for prophylactic surgery in large, lateral, inferior lesions since there is
higher risk for rupture

43
SIMPLE LIVER CYSTS

HEPATIC ABSCESS

EPIDEMIOLOGY
- 50% of cysts are single
- Prevalence 1-3%
- 9:1 female predominance for symptomatic cysts

2 types depending on aetiology: pyogenic or amoebic


PYOGENIC ABSCESS
- More common than amoebic abscess locally

PATHOGENESIS
- Congenital malformation when an aberrant bile duct loses communication with the
rest of the biliary tree and becomes progressively dilated (fluid within the cyst is not
bilious)
- No solid component and not septated (mixed cysts with septations are suggestive of
malignancy)
- [Cysts that communicate with the biliary system are called choledochal cysts]
PRESENTATION WITH COMPLICATIONS
- Bleeding
- Rupture
- Mass effect
- Torsion
- Compression of inferior vena cava
- Fistulation into duodenum
- Cholestasis due to compression of CBD
- Portal hypertension
- Carcinoma (rare)
TREATMENT (IF SYMPTOMATIC)
- Aspiration
- Ethanol sclerotherapy (painful)
- Fenestration (open or laparoscopic)
- Excision/resection

- Causative organisms: Klebsiella pneumoniae, Enterococcus, Enterobacter, E. coli,


Staph aureus
- Routes of infection:

(a) Ascending infection from biliary system (ascending cholangitis)


(b) Intra-abdominal source through portal vein acute appendicitis, diverticulitis,
inflammatory bowel disease, pancreatitis, pelvic abscess
(c) Contiguous spread from gallbladder empyema
(d) Haematogenous spread in sepsis e.g. infective endocarditis
(e) External inoculation iatrogenic, traumatic
- Presentation: Spiking fever with chills, rigors. 50% of patients have jaundice, and
one-third have hepatomegaly
- Investigations:

FBC, U/E/Cr
Blood cultures
Melioidosis serology
Tumour markers: AFP, CA 19-9, CEA (may resemble tumour on imaging)
Stool ova, cysts and parasites
Ultrasound
CT scan to exclude liver tumour (KIV endoscopy to rule out GI malignancy)
If any aspiration done, aspirates for histology, stains, cultures

- Imaging: Irregular lesion with central area of necrosis, air-fluid levels, may be
multiloculated. Rim-enhancing appearance on triphasic CT scan.
- Treatment

1. Antibiotics
Empirical antibiotics Ampicillin/Gentamicin/Metronidazole
Change to definitive antibiotics when blood c/s results return
Total duration of 6 weeks first 2 weeks intravenous, next 4 weeks oral

2. Drainage
Drainage if >3cm open drainage or percutaneous aspiration
Percutaneous aspiration

Open drainage

- Minimally invasive, performed under


radiologic guidance
- Can be done under LA
- Longer stay for patient as drainage
tube stays in patient for a longer time
- May require multiple attempts if
unable to completely drain pus
- Contraindications:
Ascites (pus can leak into
peritoneal cavity)
Uncorrected coagulopathy
Proximity to vital structures

Invasive procedure, done under GA


Shorter hospital stay
Single procedure
Not dependent on location
Indications
Concomitant pathology requiring
surgery
Multiple abscesses or
multiloculated abscess
Immunocompromised patient
Failed percutaneous drainage (tube
blocked, or pt not getting better)
Ascites
Ruptured abscess

AMOEBIC ABSCESS
- Causative organism: Entamoeba histolytica (infects the gut, forming ulcers in the
colon, then spreads to the liver through the portal vein)
- Transmission is faecal-oral
- Presentation

Usually single abscess


No sepsis, jaundice
Hepatomegaly often present
Complications: rupture into pleural/peritoneal spaces

- Treatment:
Metronidazole
Aspiration if amoebic serology inconclusive; pregnancy (metronidazole
contraindicated); suspicion of secondary infection; severe symptoms from
distension or fever; impending rupture

44

45
PANCREATIC DISEASES

ACUTE PANCREATITIS
DEFINITION
An acute inflammatory process of the pancreas with variable involvement of regional
tissues or remote organ systems
EPIDEMIOLOGY
Incidence is difficult to measure accurately as many patients with mild pancreatitis may
not be diagnosed. Patients with acute pancreatitis make up 7-10% of those presenting
with abdominal pain.
CAUSES (I GET SMASHED)
1. Idiopathic
2. Gallstones
3. Ethanol
4. Trauma
5. Steroids
6. Mumps and other infections (VZV also)
7. Autoimmune SLE, PAN
8. Scorpion toxin
9. Hypercalcaemia, hypertriglyceridaemia, hypothermia
10. ERCP
11. Drugs (SAND: Sulphonamides, azathioprine, NSAIDs, diuretics)
12. Rare causes: Cystic fibrosis, cancer of the head of the pancreas, severe blunt trauma,
pancreas divisum
Gallstones and alcohol are the most common causes (>90% of acute pancreatitis)
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- The final common pathway of pancreatitis involves inappropriate activation of
proenzymes stored within zymogen granules in the pancreatic cell trypsin is
implicated in this mechanism as it activates most of the proenzymes secreted by the
pancreas when they are secreted into the duodenum
- The activated lytic enzymes destroy the pancreatic acinar cells resulting in release of
potent cytokines that attract neutrophils and macrophages, which themselves secrete
pro-inflammatory cytokines
- The cytokine cascade amplifies the local inflammatory response and also results in
a systemic inflammatory response (resulting in systemic complications of acute
pancreatitis such as ARDS and multiorgan dysfunction)

- Gallstones are thought to cause acute pancreatitis due to obstruction of the


pancreatic duct causing interstitial oedema which impairs blood flow to the
pancreatic cells ischaemic cellular injury predisposition to enzyme activation
- The mechanisms in which alcohol cause pancreatitis are not known, though it is
believed alcohol itself results in injury to pancreatic cells through generation of free
radicals during its metabolism, and may sensitise the pancreas to injury by other
agents
ATLANTA CLASSIFICATION (FOR SEVERITY)
1. Mild acute pancreatitis

- Interstitial oedema
- Minimal organ dysfunction
- Uneventful recovery
2. Severe acute pancreatitis (any 1 of the following)

- Pancreatic or peripancreatic necrosis


- Associated with organ failure
- May be associated with local complications
PRESENTATION
- Symptoms (generally non-specific):
Abdominal pain (most consistent, in >90% of patients) constant epigastric
pain, classically radiating to the back (in 50%), maximal intensity within several
hours of onset; usually occurs after a heavy meal; alleviated by sitting up, worse
on movement
Nausea and vomiting
Anorexia
- Signs (also non-specific)
Epigastric tenderness (less than one third have signs of peritonism)
Tachycardia, low grade fever
Abdominal distension with diminished or absent bowel sounds (paralytic ileus)
Ecchymoses: flank (Grey-Turners sign) or umbilical (Cullens) formed by
blood-stained peritoneal fluid tracking to the flank or umbilicus; suggest severe
haemorrhagic pancreatitis associated with profound fluid loss (third-spacing)

MANAGEMENT STRATEGY

3. Urinary diastase

- Similar function to serum lipase, used when serum amylase is equivocally raised
or normal, as urinary diastase will be elevated for a longer time after onset of
symptoms

Diagnosis

4. X-rays of the chest, abdomen

Severity stratification
Assess for aetiology

Supportive
treatment

Monitor for
complications

Treat aetiology
(reverse / control)

Manage
complications

Prevent future
recurrence

INVESTIGATIONS

1. Serum amylase

- Serum amylase is raised within 12 hours of onset of acute pancreatitis, usually


more than 1000 or 3 times normal
- High sensitivity and moderate specificity (specificity increased when cut-off
taken at 3 times normal upper limit)
- Returns to normal level 48 to 72 hours after onset not useful in late diagnosis
- Other causes of elevated serum amylase:

Non-GI
sources

5. Ultrasound

- Preferred over CT scan


- Good for visualising biliary tree and picking up gallstones
- Pancreas may be diffusely enlarged and hypoechoeic often difficult to
visualise due to overlying bowel gas
6. CT scan

DIAGNOSTIC

GI sources

- Erect CXR may show pleural effusion, elevated hemidiaphragm, pulmonary


infiltrates; in severe cases, there will be signs of ARDS complete whiteout
- Abdominal X-ray may show the sentinel loop sign (dilated proximal jejunal
loop near the pancreas) or colon cut-off sign (distended colon from ascending
to mid-transverse with no air distally) these occur in more severe disease and
are due to functional spasm of the bowel around the pancreas resulting from
inflammation

Ischaemic bowel (can cause elevated amylase in the thousands)


Cholecystitis, cholangitis
Peptic ulcer disease
Kidney stone
Ectopic pregnancy
Intestinal obstruction, perforation
Salivary gland injury or inflammation
Macroamylasaemia
Impaired clearance due to chronic renal failure

- Not the first investigation of choice unless considering pathologies other than
pancreatitis, since CT may worsen pancreatitis
- Value of CT is at a later point in the disease time course to look for
complications such as fluid collections; IV contrast needs to be given to detect
necrosis
PROGNOSTIC / SUPPORTIVE / LOOKING FOR AETIOLOGY
1. FBC (TW for Ranson, Glasgow; haematocrit for Ranson)
2. U/E/Cr (urea and glucose for Ranson and Glasgow)
3. LFTs (AST for Ranson and Glasgow; albumin for Glasgow; obstructive picture in
gallstone pancreatitis)
4. Lactate dehydrogenase (for Ranson and Glasgow)
5. ABG (PaO2 for Ranson and Glasgow; base excess for Ranson)
6. Ca/Mg/PO4 with albumin (hypercalcaemia aetiology)
7. Fasting lipids (hyperlipidaemia aetiology)

2. Serum lipase

- Rises within 8 hours of onset of symptoms and returns to normal after 7-10 days
- Thus more useful in late diagnosis of acute pancreatitis

46

8. ECG (rule out AMI as a cause of epigstric pain)

47
SEVERITY STRATIFICATION

III. Glasgow/Imrie score

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.

I. Danger signs in the first few hours

Encephalopathy
Hypoxaemia
Tachycardia >130/min
Hypotension <90mmHg
Haematocrit >50
Oliguria <50mls/hr
Azotemia
Presence of Gray Turners/Cullens sign

>3 criteria severe

IV. C-reactive peptide

Present at admission

Within 48 hours of admission

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

>55 yrs
>16x109/dL
>11.2mmol/L
>600U/L
>120U/L

Fall in Hct
>10%
Rise in urea
>0.9mmol/L
Calcium
<2mmol/L
PaO2
<60mmHg
Base excess
>4mmol/L
Neg fluid balance >6L

- Ransons criteria prognosticates mortality according to score


- Any patient with a score of 3 and above is considered to have severe pancreatitis
- Mortality: <3
3-4
5-6
>6

>55yrs
>15x109/dL
>10mmol/L
>600U/L
>100/L
>16mmol/L
<2mmol/L
<60mmHg
<32g/L

- Preferred over Ransons scoring in certain centres

II. Ransons criteria

Age
White cell count
Fasting bld gluc
LDH
AST

Age
White cell count
Glucose
LDH
AST
Urea
Calcium
PaO2
Albumin

0.9%
15%
50%
90%

- Shortfalls of Ransons:
Was originally validated in patients in whom the aetiology was mostly alcohol,
thus questionable to apply it in pancreatitis secondary to other conditions, such
as gallstones
A revised Ransons score was created for gallstone pancreatitis, but it is difficult
to tell aetiology in acute setting
Cumbersome to wait for 48 hours, and difficult to assess for negative fluid
balance

- As a single prognostic marker


- If CRP is >210mg/dL at 48 hours, the pancreatitis is more likely to be severe
- No relevance beyond three days of onset as other confounding factors come into the
picture
- Combination of Glasgow score and CRP improves overall prognostic value
V. Balthazars CT severity index

- Grades severity of disease according to CT findings


- Not very useful as CT is not usually done in the first week in local context, and
disease is still evolving (CT findings lag behind) in the early stages
COURSE OF DISEASE
- 75% of patients have a mild course of disease, and will recover without much
treatment unless comorbidities cause deterioration
- 20-25% have more severe outcome one-third of these patients will ultimately die
- Overall mortality rate <10%
- Death is bimodally distributed:
(a) Early
Within first week of disease
Occurs due to severe organ failure, SIRS
Very little can be done in terms of treatment
(b) Late
Most common cause is infection with resultant sepsis
Multi-organ failure can be the course of death

SUPPORTIVE TREATMENT
1. Monitoring

- In general ward for patients with mild pancreatitis


- Patients with severe pancreatitis will require HD/ICU monitoring
2. Nil by mouth (bowel rest) and intravenous fluid replacement

- May include gastric decompression if there is persistent vomiting, significant


gastroparesis, or intestinal obstruction (ileus)
- Acid suppression does not change course of disease, but protects against stress
ulcer formation
- Fast patients for at least 48 hours until more stable
- May start feeding early with fluids in mild pancreatitis unless symptoms do not
permit (e.g. vomiting, pain)
- Prolonged NBM results in poorer recovery due to nutritional debilitation think
about NJ feeding, or open jejunostomy creation early in patients with severe
pancreatitis; if not tolerable, then consider TPN
3. Analgesia

- Do not give NSAIDs as they can worsen pancreatitis, and cause renal failure
(since there is already decreased renal perfusion in acute pancreatitis)
- Use opioid analgesics other than morphine (morphine causes increased tone of
sphincter of Oddi)

7. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP)

- No benefit in mild biliary pancreatitis


- Indications:
Severe pancreatitis
Evidence of ductal stones
Cholangitis
No response to treatment within 48 hours
- ERCP should be done within first 48-72 hours for maximum benefit
MONITORING FOR COMPLICATIONS AND TREATING
Local complications:

- Acute fluid collections


Due to increased vascular permeability; 70-80% resolve spontaneously
- Pancreatic necrosis
Areas of no contrast uptake on CT with intravenous contrast
- Pseudocyst
Persistent fluid collection walled off by fibrosis and not an epithelium-lined
surface (can only be called a pseudocyst after 4 weeks)
- Abscess
Infection of fluid collection (not necrosis)
- Infected necrosis

4. Treatment of fluid and electrolyte abnormalities such as hypocalcaemia


5. Antibiotics

- Either prophylactic or therapeutic


- Not shown to have any benefit in patients with mild pancreatitis unless
patient is having cholangitis secondary to a biliary obstruction that also caused
the pancreatitis
- Prophylactic in severe acute pancreatitis to prevent infection of necrosis
(infection will occur in 40-70% of patients with necrosis and increases the
mortality rate from 12 to 33%)
- Therapeutic in cholangitis, pancreatic infection
- 3 main regimens to choose from:
(a) Third-generation cephalosporin e.g. ceftriaxone, with metronidazole
(b) Fluoroquinolone e.g. ciprofloxacin, with metronidazole
(c) Carbapenem on its own (e.g. imipenem rarely used due to inability to
escalate therapy in situation of resistance)
- Use for 14-28 days
6. Support for organ failure

48

Surgery for local complications

- CT-guided aspiration of pancreatic necrosis


Can help differentiate between sterile and infected necrosis
Consider surgery if patient doing poorly
- Necrosectomy for infected necrosis
Some kind of lavage and drainage procedure is done after necrosectomy to
decrease infective load
- Pseudocyst
Operate if larger than 6cm and persisting for more than 6 weeks as the chance
of spontaneous resolution is low and risk of complications (infection,
haemorrhage, rupture) is high
Surgery can be open, laparoscopic, percutaneous (radiologically guided) or
endoscopic
Endoscopic internal drainage via a cystogastrostomy, cystoduodenostomy or
cystojejunostomy

49
MANAGEMENT OF AETIOLOGY & PREVENTION OF RECURRENCE
Cholecystectomy for biliary pancreatitis

18-21% of patients with biliary pancreatitis will have another episode


Among these, 25-65% will develop the 2nd episode within 30 days of the initial one
Cholecystectomy can be done in the same admission for pts with mild pancreatitis
In patients with severe pancreatitis, there is reluctance to do the surgery early, as the
patient may develop complications that require surgical intervention better to do all
surgery in the same operation instead of opening the patient twice

PRESENTATION
May be asymptomatic, picked up on imaging for some other purpose
Pancreatic head or periampullary

Pancreatic body/tail

- Obstructive jaundice (painless


obstructive jaundice with palpable
GB) + cholangitis
- Duodenal obstruction
- Bleeding upper GIT (haematemesis
and/or malaena)
- Malaise, weight loss, anorexia, nausea

Late presentation
- Coeliac and mesenteric plexus
invasion dull constant pain in the
epigastrium radiating to the back
- Malaise, weight loss, anorexia, nausea
- Exocrine insufficiency with duct
obstruction steatorrhoea,
malabsorption
- Metastatic symptoms: ascites, bone
pain, CNS symptoms, dyspnoea
- Paraneoplastic syndromes migratory
thrombophlebitis in 6%

PANCREATIC CANCER
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Incidence about 3-5 per 100,000 per year in each gender
- Eighth cause of cancer death in Singapore
- 1.7:1 male to female ratio
- Very poor prognosis median survival for unresectable disease is 6 months (80% of
patients have unresectable disease at presentation); overall 5-year survival <3%
ASSOCIATIONS
- Cigarette smoking (most clearly established 2-5X increased risk)
- Industrial carcinogens benzidine, betanaphthylamine
- Lower socioeconomic class
- Diabetes mellitus
- Chronic pancreatitis
- Genetic factors (mutations in K-ras gene, p16 gene)
- Familial cancer syndromes e.g. Peutz-Jeghers
PATHOLOGY
- Most common histology is ductal adenocarcinoma (90% of tumours)
- Anatomic distribution: 75% in the head, 20% in the body, 5% in the tail
- Distinct category of tumours collectively called periampullary tumour:
Malignant cells arise from one of a few cells:
(a) Duodenal epithelium (best outcome out of all three)
(b) Biliary ductular epithelium
(c) Ampullary ductular epithelium
The periampullary tumours have better tumour biology than pancreatic adenoca
Prognosis is also better as they present earlier with obstructive jaundice

IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT
- Treat any life-threatening complications such as cholangitis, pancreatitis, bleeding
INVESTIGATIONS
DIAGNOSTIC
1. CA 19-9

- Not a screening test for pancreatic cancer as it can be false positive


- Can act as a prognostic marker: high CA 19-9 levels usually associated with
unresectable disease with poorer prognosis
- Can be used as a marker for tumour recurrence during post-op follow-up
2. CT scan

- Better sensitivity (85-90%) and equal specificity (90-95%) in diagnosing


pancreatic cancer
- Features: Mass lesion within pancreas, bile and pancreatic duct dilatation in head
of pancreas tumours (double duct sign)
- Any evidence of extra-pancreatic spread: Involvement of regional lymph nodes,
liver metastases, ascites
3. MRI pancreas with MRCP MRI pancreas is not superior to CT scan; MRCP is

useful in delineating biliary system anatomy especially if the system is not


obstructed and there are no therapeutic indications for ERCP (since there are
considerable risks with ERCP)

4. ERCP with stenting to relieve obstruction (in cholangitis)


5. Endoscopic ultrasound + FNA biopsy

- Can be used to stage tumour and nodal involvement


- FNA with EUS guidance is preferred to transcutaneous biopsy as there is less
risk of tumour seeding

- Complications of Whipples operation


Mortality rate is 2-7%, with a morbidity rate of up to 20-30% (mostly mild
complications)

(a)
(b)
(c)
(d)
(e)
(f)
(g)

STAGING
1. CT/MRI of the abdomen T, N stage; metastasis to the liver
2. Endoscopic ultrasound T, N stage
3. Lungs CXR + CT thorax
4. Bones bone scan when suspicion is high
5. Staging laparoscopy for peritoneal metastases, just before definitive operation
for a resectable tumour (since CT/MRI may miss small peritoneal deposits) if no
peritoneal disease found, continue with surgery, otherwise, close up and abort
surgery
TREATMENT
SURGERY
Curative resection

- Improves chances of survival


- However, recurrence rates after surgery are high 5 year survival only 10 to 30%
- Only about 15-20% of patients will have resectable disease at presentation usually
in periampullary or head of pancreas tumours; tumours of the body and tail present
too late to be resectable
- Resectable disease:
No metastases (lung, liver, bone, peritoneum)
Patent superior mesenteric vein and portal vein
Definable tissue plane between tumour and superior mesenteric artery as well as
coeliac axis
- Whipples operation
Pancreaticoduodenectomy for head of pancreas or periampullary tumour
Usually preceded by a staging laparoscopy to confirm absence of peritoneal
metastases
Removal of the head of the pancreas, duodenum, proximal 15cm of jejunum,
common bile duct, gallbladder, and distal part of the stomach
Common hepatic duct and pancreas are then anastomosed to the jejunum, 4560cm proximal to the gastrojejunostomy

50

Intraoperative/early complications

Injury to other organs liver, kidney, bowel


Bleeding
Infection sepsis
Pancreatitis
Pancreatic anastomotic leak (5-20%)
Biliary anastomotic breakdown
Fistulation, pseudocyst formation may occur due to anastomotic leaks

Late

(a) Long-term exocrine insufficiency resulting in malabsorption and


steatorrhoea
(b) Gastric stasis with pylorus-preserving Whipples
(c) Diarrhoea resulting from autonomic nerve injury during lymph node
dissection
(d) Endocrine insufficiency DM
Palliative surgery

Surgical bypass of obstruction


- Triple bypass involving anastomosis between
(a) Stomach and jejunum (gastrojejunostomy)
(b) Biliary system and jejunum (choledocho-/hepatico-/cholecysto-jejunostomy)
(c) Jejunum and jejunum, to prevent reflux of food into biliary tree essentially a
Roux-en-Y loop (jejunojejunostomy)
NON-SURGICAL PALLIATIVE MEASURES
1. Endoscopic stenting
- Stenting of obstructed biliary duct
- Stenting of obstructed duodenum
2. Coeliac plexus block for pain
3. Palliative chemotherapy/radiotherapy/chemoradiotherapy

- Not shown to provide good outcomes

51
DISEASES OF THE BILIARY SYSTEM

APPROACH TO OBSTRUCTIVE JAUNDICE


CAUSES
Intraluminal

Benign
- Gallstones
- Parasitic infections (recurrent pyogenic cholangitis)

Mural

Benign
- Post-instrumentation strictures (ERCP, operation)
- Strictures from other causes (gallstones, chronic pancreatitis)
- Primary sclerosing cholangitis
- Choledochal cyst
Malignant
- Cholangiocarcinoma (distal)

Extramural

Benign
- Mirizzi syndrome
Malignant
- Head of pancreas cancer
- Periampullary cancer
- Metastases to the porta hepatis

2. Aetiology benign or malignant

- Recurrent spikes of similar jaundice that resolve on their own with time suggest
benign obstruction e.g. stones, strictures
- A young patient with painful jaundice usually benign cause
- Previous history of gallstone disease or biliary colic symptoms
- Previous history of surgery to the biliary tract or ERCP
- Malignancy is suggested if the patient is old, jaundice is of new onset and
progressively worsening, and there is no associated pain (i.e. painless
progressive jaundice)
- Constitutional symptoms: loss of appetite, loss of weight, malaise
- Metastatic symptoms: bone pain, neck lump, dyspnoea, etc
- Pain is a late symptom of pancreatic cancer and tends to be constant and
relentless compared to biliary colic which subsides after a few hours
3. Complications

- Symptoms of cholangitis: fever, chills, rigors with RHC pain and jaundice
- Fat malabsorption: steatorrhoea, fat-soluble vitamin deficiency (A, D, E, K)
especially coagulopathy (very unlikely in acute setting)
- Liver decompensation: encephalopathy
- Pruritus as a result of bile salt retention
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
1. Vitals: Is patient haemodynamically stable? Any fever?

HISTORY

2. General inspection: Jaundice. Pallor? Any abdominal distension, leg swelling?

1. Confirm obstructive jaundice

3. Peripheries: Stigmata of chronic liver disease? Scratch marks? Conjunctival pallor?

- Confirm jaundice patients sclera are yellow


- Establish obstructive jaundice tea-coloured urine, pale stools
- Exclude pre-hepatic and hepatic jaundice (more importantly hepatic jaundice
since it can also cause tea-coloured urine)
Symptoms suggestive of viral hepatitis: prodrome of fever, malaise,
arthralgia, myalgia, nausea/vomiting, etc.
Risk factors for viral hepatitis: travel history, ingestion of seafood, family
history of hepatitis (esp mother, siblings), blood transfusions, drug
abuse/needle sharing, needlestick injuries, sexual contact
Alcohol intake
Drug history: any TCM intake recently, any new medications taken
History of chronic liver disease

4. Abdomen

- Any scars of abdominal surgery?


- Generalised distension? (ascites could be due to malnutrition, peritoneal
malignancy, or obstruction of portal vein by cancer)
- Hepatomegaly? (Could be due to metastatic disease, or primary liver pathology)
- Enlarged gallbladder? (Recall Courvoisiers law if the gallbladder is palpable
in a person with painless obstructive jaundice, the cause is unlikely to be stones)
- Splenomegaly? (Portal hypertension think prehepatic, hepatic, posthepatic)
5. DRE: Pale stools?
6. Cervical and supraclavicular lymph nodes
7. Bony tenderness
8. Respiratory examination

INVESTIGATIONS (guided by clinical suspicion after Hx and P/E)

STONE COMPOSITION AND PATHOPHYSIOLOGY

Bloods

Cholesterol stones

1. FBC any infection, anaemia


2. U/E/Cr
3. LFT bilirubin raised, more direct bilirubin than indirect in obstructive jaundice;
ALP and GGT should be raised more than AST and ALT in an obstructive picture
4. PT/PTT any prolonged PTT from vitamin K malabsorption, liver dysfunction
5. Tumour markers CA 19-9, CEA (cholangioca and pancreatic ca)

Imaging

- Ultrasound versus CT
Both useful in demonstrating dilated biliary system and site of obstruction as
well as the cause of obstruction
Ultrasound is sufficient if malignancy is unlikely, but CT is preferred if there is a
suspicion of malignancy as it can define the tumour better and also have a
staging function at the same time to determine involvement of nodes and other
organs
MANAGEMENT
The patient is managed as for the causative aetiology (see relevant sections)

GALLSTONE DISEASE
DEFINITION
Gallstone is a generic term for any kind of stone (cholesterol, pigment) in any part of
the biliary system (gallbladder, cystic duct, hepatic duct, common bile duct, etc)
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Exact incidence in Singapore not known
- In the West: overall 10-15%; 20% in women and 10% in men
- Consistent 2:1 female to male ratio
- Typical picture (the Fs): Fat, female, forty, fertile, flatulent
NORMAL PHYSIOLOGY OF BILE
- Normal bile contains bile salts (primary and secondary), phospholipids, cholesterol,
protein, and bilirubin
- Bile salts and phospholipids are amphiphatic and help to solubilise cholesterol

52

More common in older patients (peak at 40-50 years)


Cholesterol stones are hard and faceted
Cholesterol stones results from disruption in the solubility equilibrium of bile
Risk factors for cholesterol stones formation:
1. Increased cholesterol secretion in bile
Obesity
Hyperlipidaemia
Increased oestrogens: female, pregnancy, exogenous administration
2. Decreased emptying of the gallbladder
Gallbladder malignancy is an important cause to exclude
Truncal vagotomy
Spinal cord injury

Pigment stones

More common in younger patients


Pigment stones are soft stones and crumble easily
Can be divided into black pigment stones and brown pigment stones
Black pigment stones are composed of mostly calcium salts and bilirubin
predisposing factors include increased secretion of bilirubin into bile (e.g. chronic
haemolysis, chronic liver disease, TPN), decreased bilirubin solubilisers, and
gallbladder stasis
- Brown stones are composed of calcium salts, bilirubin, and more cholesterol than
black pigment stones; they form in the biliary ducts due to infection with bacterial
degradation of biliary lipids, the degradation products of which then precipitate
Biliary sludge

Microlithiasis suspended in bile; a milieu that predisposes to stone formation


Can be visualised on the ultrasound scan as layering in the biliary tree
Sludge is a pre-stone condition, but not all sludge becomes stones
20% of biliary sludge will disappear, 60% recur, and 10% form stones

CLINICAL COURSE
Asymptomatic

- 80-95% of patients will have asymptomatic gallstones


- Risk of symptom occurrence is 1 to 2% per year, of which the greatest risk is
within the first 5 years of diagnosis 10% at 5 yrs, 15% at 10 yrs, 18% at 15-20 yrs

53
- Of those who develop symptoms, 7-10% will have moderate symptoms, and 3-5%
severe; the rest will have minor symptoms
- Thus the majority of patients do not require removal of the stones or the
gallbladder expectant management

INVESTIGATIONS FOR GALLSTONE DISEASE

- Role of surgery in the asymptomatic patient:


(a) Predisposing cause for gallbladder stasis that should be surgically treated e.g.
gallbladder mass suspicious of malignancy, or in patients with high risk of
malignancy (gallbladder polyp, porcelain gallbladder) prophylactic surgery
(b) Immunocompromised patient where presentation of gallstone disease is not
like the normal patient
(c) Patients with chronic haemolytic disease (e.g. sickle cell anaemia, thalassaemia)
as high as 50-60% will develop symptomatic disease in their lifetime

2. Ultrasound of the hepatobiliary system

Symptomatic sequlae

1. Biliary colic
- Typically epigastric or right hypochondriac pain
- Radiation to the inferior angle of the right scapula, or tip of right shoulder
- Waxing-waning in character but rarely have any pain-free intervals between
waves of pain (unlike ureteric colic where pain will resolve completely between
waves)
- Often triggered by meals binge-eating, fried oily foods, dehydration
- Lasts for minutes to hours, often resolves spontaneously
- Associated with nausea and vomiting (patient gets better after vomiting),
bloating, abdominal distension
- Biliary colic is a herald symptom that indicates risk of further sequelae
2. Acute cholecystitis (see below)
3. Empyema of the gallbladder (see below)
4. Mucocoele of the gallbladder or hydrops (see below)
5. Choledocholithiasis with obstructive jaundice (see below)
6. Cholangitis and septic sequelae (see below)
7. Acute pancreatitis (see above)
8. Mirizzi syndrome with obstructive jaundice (see below)
9. Fistulation and passage into gut resulting in gallstone ileus subacute IO

1. Plain abdominal X-ray

- Pickup rate for gallstones is less than 10% since most stones are radiolucent

- Investigation of choice for gallstones


- Even more sensitive than CT scan for stones since CT may miss small stones due
to the spacing of the cuts taken
- Features of stone on ultrasound: strong echogeneic rim around the stone, with
posterior acoustic shadowing
- Bile should appear as black patch in gallbladder; if not homogeneous sludge
3. CT scan

- Usually not done to diagnose stones (as mentioned above)


- Usually done in symptomatic patient where it is uncertain what is the cause of
symptoms looking for other possible causes as well
4. Magnetic resonance cholangiopancreatography (MRCP)

- MRCP is not the same as MRI liver/pancreas only selected cuts taken in order
to reconstruct the biliary tree, so the resolution is not as good as MRI
- Comparable to ERCP, and also minimally invasive preferred to ERCP if
patient does not require any therapeutic intervention that ERCP provides
5. Endoscopic retrograde cholangiopancreatography (ERCP)

- The largest value of ERCP lies in its therapeutic potential


Stone removal (using balloon catheter, or Dormia basket)
Sphincterotomy (in order to relieve obstruction or facilitate removal of stone)
Stenting
- High level of complications
Pancreatitis in 2-3%
Cholangitis 1-2%, haemorrhage 2-3%
Perforation into bile duct, duodenum 0.5-1%
Overall risk of complications is 10-15%
- Before doing ERCP, need to assess the benefits and risks, and select patients
carefully

6. Percutaneous transhepatic cholangiography (PTC) /biliary drainage


(PTBD)

- PTC involves a tube being inserted into the liver under radiologic guidance into
one of the biliary ducts (must be dilated duct)
- Rarely done now; main indications: 1) high obstruction not well visualised in
ERCP; 2) therapeutic purpose of drainage for an obstructed system that cannot
be drained from below
- Mostly for therapeutic rather than diagnostic purposes
- Complications: bleeding; leakage of bile when tube is removed
7. HIDA scan

- No longer used commonly, except in biliary atresia


5 criteria for a normal cholangiopancreatogram
(a) Normal intrahepatic ducts
(b) No filling defects
(c) Smooth common bile duct
(d) No stricture/narrowing of the common bile duct
(e) Good and free flow of contrast into duodenum
TREATMENT
Asymptomatic

- No surgery required unless patient has indications for surgery (see above)
- Expectant management and close follow-up
- Counsel patient about symptoms biliary colic, acute cholecystitis, obstructive
jaundice, etc
Symptomatic

- Cholecystectomy is the only way to treat gallbladder stones that are symptomatic
- Can be open or laparoscopic laparoscopic is preferred as it is associated with
shorter hospital stay, less pain, less complications post-operatively
- Risks of laparoscopic cholecystectomy
Conversion to open operation up to 5% (due to abnormal anatomy; difficult or
complicated dissection; iatrogenic injury); conversion rate is higher if there is
ongoing infection e.g. cholecystitis up to 1 in 3 to 1 in 4
Injury to bowel
Injury to biliary structures e.g. CBD
Spilled bile peritonitis, sepsis
Haemorrhage

54

Infection
- Non- surgical means of stone treatment
Chemodissolution
Liver diet
Shockwave lithotripsy more morbidiy cf renal lithotripsy as less fluid around
to dampen waves; good results only for cholesterol stones
All not shown to work for long-term

ACUTE CHOLECYSTITIS
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Gallstone gets stuck in the cystic duct causing obstruction of biliary flow
- Gallbladder becomes distended and inflamed
PRESENTATION
- Constant, severe RHC pain (less commonly epigastric)
- Radiates to the inferior angle of the scapula
- Associated with fever, nausea, vomiting
- RHC tenderness with guarding found on clinical examination; Murphys sign positive
- Gallbladder may be palpable omentum wrapping around GB; worst case scenario is
empyema
- LFTs usually normal; no jaundice
ULTRASOUND FEATURES OF ACUTE CHOLECYSTITIS
- Presence of gallstones in biliary system
- Contracted gallbladder (from chronic gallstone disease)
- Pericholecystic fluid (oedema of gallbladder wall)
- Sonographic Murphys positive
- (Fat stranding around gallbladder not seen on ultrasound but on CT)
MANAGEMENT
- Resuscitate the patient
- Septic workup
- Bowel rest and intravenous fluids
- Analgesia
- Empirical intravenous antibiotics IV ceftriaxone and metronidazole

55
- Definitive treatment laparoscopic cholecystectomy
Timing of cholecystectomy

- Patient is usually toxic, requiring urgent surgery

- Dependent on several factors:


Severity of illness
Response to resuscitation and antibiotic therapy
Logistical considerations (availability of OT, surgeon etc)

3. Gangrene and perforation

- Possibilities available:
i. Emergency (immediate; in very sick patients who are not doing well/not
responding to treatment)
ii. Early (within few days of onset)
iii. Delayed/interval (after 6-8 weeks)

4. Cholecystenteric fistula

Early

Delayed

Advantages
- Everything done in one admission
- Easier to operate as the gallbladder is
oedematous

Advantages
- Lower risks
- Better laparoscopic success

Disadvantages
- Ongoing inflammation higher risk
of bleeding
- Higher risk of injuring some other
structure due to difficulty in
visualisation
- Higher conversion rate to open chole
- Increased risks of post-op infection

Disadvantages
- Fibrosis difficulty mobilising
gallbladder
- Need for another admission
- Chance of recurrence during the time

- Localised perforation abscess that is confined by the omentum


- Free perforation generalised peritonitis and sepsis, requiring emergency
laparotomy
- Most commonly occurs in duodenum, then colon, and stomach; after repeated
attacks of cholecystitis
- Usually asymptomatic
- On AXR, aerobilia is seen in 40% of cases
- Symptomatic fistulas should be treated with cholecystectomy and fistula closure
5. Gallstone ileus

- Stones causing cholecystenteric fistula pass into the enteric lumen causing
intermittent bouts of small bowel obstruction
- Accounts for 1-2% of IO overall
- Most common site of obstruction is terminal ileum
- Small stones (<2-3cm) usually pass spontaneously without problems
- Mortality is 10-15%, mostly in elderly patients in whom gallstone ileus is more
common
- Small bowel enterotomy proximal to the point of obstruction is usually required
to remove the stone
- Immediate cholecystectomy not warranted as <4% of patients will have further
symptoms

Early surgery has been found to be more beneficial than delayed surgery
Cholecystostomy

ACALCULOUS CHOLECYSTITIS

- In moribund patients who are not fit for surgery


- Can be done under LA, or more commonly under radiologic guidance (percutaneous)
- Drains the gallbladder and alleviates the inflammation better outcomes

- Occurs in very ill patients with prolonged stay in ICU prolonged fasting, poor
nutrition, labile blood pressure, sepsis

COMPLICATIONS OF ACUTE CHOLECYSTITIS

- Poor nutrition leads to biliary stasis, while dehydration and hypotension leads to
formation of viscous bile and gallbladder ischaemia bile may get infected
cholecystitis

1. Hydrops

- Treatment involves emergent cholecystectomy

- Cystic duct obstruction leads to a tense gallbladder filled with mucus


- May lead to gallbladder wall necrosis if pressure exceeds capillary bld pressure
2. Empyema

- Gallbladder is filled with pus due to bacterial infection of the stagnant bile
(cystic duct being obstructed by a stone)

- Previous Bilroth II (unsuitable anatomy for ERCP)

CHOLEDOCHOLITHIASIS

CHOLANGITIS

PRESENTATION
- Obstructive jaundice tea-coloured urine, pale stools
- Biliary colic
- If infection sets in cholangitis (see below)

PRESENTATION
- Classically Charcots triad: RHC pain, fever, jaundice (only 50-70% of patients
have the classic triad)
- Reynolds pentad: Charcots triad plus mental obtundation and shock
- A surgical emergency!

BLOODS
- FBC (check TW for any rise suggestive of infection)
- Amylase (CBD stone may cause pancreatitis)
- LFTs (raised bilirubin direct; ALP raised more than transaminases)
ULTRASOUND
- Gallstones in gallbladder
- Gallstone in CBD
- Dilated CBD (normally <8-9mm)
>10mm is abnormal
In older patients, post-cholecystectomy, or patients on long-term opiates, the
CBD may be larger, up to 11-12mm in size
MANAGEMENT
- If unsure of presence of stone less invasive investigation such as MRCP, EUS
- If likelihood of CBD stone is high ERCP with stone removal
ERCP successful
ERCP failed

Plan for lap cholecystectomy


If patient is well and can tolerate another ERCP, try again
(+ stent in between to drain bile)
Operative removal Open CBD exploration
Lap CBD exploration

- If no facilities to do ERCP: open or laparoscopic cholecystectomy with CBD


exploration
When to do operative removal of stones (i.e. not suitable for ERCP)

Stone >25mm
Intrahepatic stone
Large number of stones
Impacted stone
Dual pathology
Tortuous duct

56

PATHOLOGY
- Usually results from obstruction to the biliary system with infection of stagnant bile
- Most common cause is choledocholithiasis (60%); also consider benign strictures and
malignancy (pancreatic, biliary)
- Common causative organisms are gram negative bacteria and anaerobes Klebsiella,
E. coli, Enterobacter, Enterococcus
MANAGEMENT
1. Resuscitation

Anticipate rapid deterioration


Obtain good intravenous access and fluid resuscitate as appropriate
Take bloods for investigations cultures especially
Close monitoring of vitals in HD/ICU
Catheterise and watch urine output
CVP line insertion if patient has shock unresponsive to fluid resuscitation

2. Antibiotics

- IV ceftriaxone and metronidazole; imipenem if the patient is in shock


3. Biliary decompression and definitive treatment

- Biliary decompression and definitive treatment can be combined or separate


- Investigate for cause of obstruction ultrasound or CT (depending on what
facilities are available; ultrasound is preferred if suspecting stones)
- Decompression commonly performed using ERCP
Decompression is the primary objective stenting or external drainage
(nasobiliary drain)
If cause of obstruction can be treated in the same setting (e.g. stones to be
removed) then treat the cause also
Success rate 90%
- Definitive treatment dependent on:
Medical condition of patient
Success of biliary decompression

57
Logistical considerations
- Choices for definitive treatment:
(a) Open cholecystectomy with CBD exploration
(b) Laparoscopic cholecystectomy
(c) Laparoscopic cholecystectomy with CBD exploration
CBD EXPLORATION
- Cholangiogram or choledochoscopy is performed

Cholangiogram involves injection of dye can image higher ducts


Choledochoscopy involves using a scope to visualise the large biliary ducts
cannot image higher ducts, thus not as sensitive, but can be used to remove
stones visualised in the duct
Choice of imaging depends on site of obstruction and the cause

- Removal of stones

Manual removal with stone-grasping forceps


Flushing out stones
Dredging stones out using balloon catheter or Dormia basket
Lithotripsy

- Consider biliary bypass if there are multiple stones, the CBD is more than 2cm in
diameter, or there are strictures (since the CBD has been chronically dilated, quite
unlikely that it will function normally even after removal of the obstruction)

MIRIZZIS SYNDROME
PATHOLOGY
- Gallstone in the Hartmanns pouch compressing the common hepatic resulting in
obstructive jaundice
- Compression effect is not just physical (the stone) but also contributed by the
surrounding inflammation
- One of the caveats to Courvoisiers law
GRADING
- Grade I: No fistula; extrinsic compression on CHD
- Grade II: Fistulation into common bile duct with the fistula <1/3 diameter of the
CHD
- Grade III: Fistula 1/3 to 2/3 diameter of CHD
- Grade IV: Fistula >2/3 diameter of CHD

- Consider use of biliary stent or T-tube after removal of stone(s)

If there is a lot of instrumentation of the biliary system during the operation, one
should anticipate swelling and oedema of the biliary system resulting in postoperative obstruction and buildup of bile higher risk of biliary leakage
(a) Stent removed later by endoscopy
(b) T-tube
A T-shaped tube with its horizontal limb placed in the CBD and the vertical
limb leading out to drain bile
Functions as a pressure release valve as most of the bile will flow through
the horizontal limb of the tube into the distal part of the CBD; only when
there is obstruction to flow will bile be diverted out through the vertical limb
Allows for post-op cholangiogram to check for remaining stones (at POD 910) before removal free flow of contrast into duodenum, no residual stones,
and no free leak of contrast into peritoneum
If all normal release anchoring stitch and exert gentle traction on the tube;
the tube should slip out easily, if not, call for help
If stones are present leave tube in for 4-6 weeks to form a fibrous tract
allows for instrumentation of tract with a scope to remove the stones

CHOLANGIOCARCINOMA
SITE
- Intrahepatic/peripheral 10%
- Distal 25%
- Perihilar 65% (Altemeier-Klatskin tumour)
Bismuth classification
i. Type I: below confluence of hepatic ducts
ii. Type II: tumour reaching confluence
iii. Type IIIA/B: involving common hepatic duct and either right or left hepatic duct
iv. Type IV: multicentric or involving confluence and both hepatic ducts
ASSOCIATIONS
- Related to chronic cholestasis:
Primary sclerosing cholangitis / Ulcerative colitis
Hepatolithiasis
Parasitic infection Clonorchis sinensis, Opisthorchis viverrini
Carolis disease (multifocal segmental dilatation of large intrahepatic bile ducts)
- Bile duct adenoma
- Choledochal cyst

- Thorotrast exposure
PRESENTATION
- Painless jaundice (painful if there is cholangitis)
- Acholic stools
- Pruritus
- Advanced signs and symptoms:
Abdominal pain
Fatigue, malaise
Weight loss
Hepatomegaly
DIAGNOSIS
- CA 19-9 >100l/ml (good sensitivity of 89%, specificity 86%)
- Contrast CT
- PTC (2 functions: 1) roadmapping for surgery; 2) drainage of obstructed system if
ERCP cannot drain)
CURATIVE TREATMENT
- Surgery is the only chance of long-term cure
- Only 25% of tumours are resectable
- Contraindications to surgery
Bilateral or multifocal intrahepatic disease
Invasion of portal vein trunk or hepatic artery
Bilateral involvement of hepatic arterial or portal venous branches
Unilateral hepatic vascular invasion with contralateral ductal spread
Distant metastases
PROGNOSIS FOR RESECTABLE DISEASE (5-year survival)
- Intrahepatic: 35-45%
- Distal 35-45%
- Perihilar 10-30% (worse prognosis due to early lymphatic spread)
PALLIATION
- Endoscopic/percutaneous transhepatic biliary stenting
- Bilateral drainage for hilar cholangiocarcinoma
- If after opening up and finding that tumour is not resectable, can perform surgical
bypass

58

RECURRENT PYOGENIC CHOLANGITIS


BACKGROUND
Cholangiohepatitis, or recurrent pyogenic cholangitis (RPC), is characterized by:
- Recurrent bacterial cholangitis
- Intrahepatic pigment stones
- Intrahepatic biliary obstruction.
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
Helminthic infxn (eg Ascaris lumbricoides, Clonorchis sinensis) epithelial damage
predispose to seeding of coliforms into biliary system stone formation
recurrent cholangitis
HISTORY:
- A history of recurrent attacks of cholangitis typical hx:
1-2 episodes of fevers, jaundice, and RUQ abdominal pain per year
Hx of prev biliary surgery, endoscopic procedures, or percutaneous biliary
drainage procedures.
- Complications of pyogenic cholangitis
cirrhosis with portal hypertension
cholangiocarcinoma
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
No specific physical findings are evident in RPC. Dx based on history.
DIFFERENTIALS
Primary Sclerosing Cholangitis
INVESTIGATIONS
For diagnosis
For Complications
Bloods

- FBC
- LFT with ALP>ALT, AST
- Prothrombin time: N/ (if prolonged cholestasis causes fat malabsorption and
vitamin K deficiency)
Impt to exclude correct with parenteral Vit K before invasive procedures

59
- Blood C/S: bacteremia results help guide antibiotic choice.
- Ova and parasites: RPC freq a/w Clonorchis infxn look for it and treat when present.
Radiology

- U/S HBS
segmental biliary dilatation
hepatolithiasis
liver abscesses
helps determine choice of supplemental axial imaging techniques.
- ERCP or PTC imaging modality of choice for delineating the biliary tree.
- CT scan
centrally dilated bile ducts with peripheral tapering
bile duct stones
pyogenic liver abscesses.
TREATMENT PRINCIPLES:
- Treat current infection
- Biliary drainage
- Management of other complications e.g. dehydration etc
Surgical

- Usual surgical approach includes:


Initial biliary decompression ERCP sphincterotomy / stent placement
Definitive biliary drainage procedure e.g. Roux-en-Y choledochojejunostomy
PROGNOSIS
- Death occurs in approximately 15-20% of patients over 5-6 years.

DISEASES OF THE BREAST

ANATOMY
- The breast is a modified sweat gland that lies in the subcutaneous tissue of the
anterior chest wall between the superficial and deep layers of the superficial fascia
- The base of each breast extends from the lateral border of the sternum to the midaxillary line, from the second to the sixth rib
- The axillary tail pierces the deep fascia and enters the axilla
- Each mammary gland consists of 15-20 lobules that are drained by lactiferous ducts
that open separately on the nipple
- Fibrous septa (Coopers ligaments) interdigitate the mammary parenchyma and
extend from the posterior capsule of the breast to the superficial layer of fascia within
the dermis, and provide structural support to the breast (involvement of these
ligaments by malignancy causes dimpling of the overlying skin)

Level II: posterior to pectoralis minor


Level III: medial to pectoralis minor, extending up to apex of axilla
2. Internal mammary nodes
Account for about 20% of drainage from the ipsilateral breast upper and
lower inner quadrants
About 4 nodes per side, with one node in each of the first three interspaces
and one in the fifth or sixth interspace
3. Interpectoral (Rotters nodes) between pec major and pec minor muscles

PRESENTATION OF BREAST DISEASE


1. Breast lump (painful vs painless)
2. Pain with no lump (cyclical vs non-cyclical)
3. Nipple changes or discharge

APPROACH TO BREAST LUMP


DIFFERENTIALS
Painless lump

Painful lump

1.
2.
3.
4.

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

Carcinoma
Cyst
Fibroadenoma
Area of fibroadenosis (nodularity)

Area of fibroadenosis
Cyst
Abscess (usually in lactating women)
Galactocoele (lactating women)
Periductal mastitis
Fat necrosis
Carcinoma (rare; 10% present with pain)

HISTORY
1. History of lump

- Lymphatic drainage:
1. Axillary nodes 75% of ipsilateral breast drains to the axillary nodes
1. 40-50 nodes in total, in 5 groups: Anterior, posterior, medial, lateral,
apical
2. Drain secondarily into supraclavicular and jugular nodes
3. Anatomic division into levels I, II and III by the pectoralis minor
muscle:
Level I: lateral to pectoralis minor

60

Site of the lump? Single or multiple?


When was it first noticed? Why was it noticed (pain, self-examination, etc)?
Duration since first noticed
Painful or painless?
Overlying skin changes noted: erythema, warmth, dimpling, swelling? Any
general asymmetry of the breasts noticed?
Any increase in size from first noticed to now?
Any changes in the nipple e.g. retraction
Nipple discharge? If present, what is the colour and consistency?
Any other lumps elsewhere other breast? Axilla? Neck?

61
2. Oestrogen exposure history and other risk factors for cancer

Age of menarche (early menarche <12 years old increased risk)


Whether married, and if married, how many children (nulliparity)
Age at which first child was born (>30 years old)
Whether patient breastfed her children, and if so, for how long after birth
Is patient currently postmenopausal? If so, how old was she when she became
menopausal? (>55 years old)
Use of hormonal replacement therapy and/or oral contraceptive pills
Family history of breast cancer or ovarian cancer (BRCA gene) especially if
cancer occurs in first degree relative below the age of 40, or in bilateral breasts
Previous breast cancer that has been treated
Previous biopsy of the breast showing atypical ductal hyperplasia or LCIS
Exposure to ionising radiation
Alcohol intake, especially before age of 30

3. Systemic review

- Loss of appetite, loss of weight


- Fever (infective cause)
- Bone pain (metastasis)
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
Preliminaries

Introduce yourself to the patient, ask for permission to examine the breast
Always have a chaperone to accompany you if you are male
Expose patient adequately from the waist up with exposure of axillae
Good lighting
Position the patient at 45 degrees or sitting position if a bed is not available

Inspection

- Start off with patients hands relaxed at her sides look for any asymmetry in the
breast contours, any obvious skin changes (peau dorange, erythema, puckering)
- Look for any scars of previous operation, or procedure e.g. punch biopsy
- Then ask patient to raise her arms (to accentuate any tethering to the skin which
shows up as dimpling)
- Ask the patient to push her hands against her hips to contract the pectoralis major
muscles this may reveal a previously unnoticeable lump
- Look for nipple changes (7 Ds):
Discolouration Depression (retraction)
Destruction
Discharge
Deviation
(Duplication unlikely)
Displacement

Palpation

- Patient should be lying down at 45 degrees to the horizontal with her hand tucked
behind her head this splays the breast out so it can be palpated properly
- Start with the normal side first!
- Ask for any pain before starting to palpate
- Use one hand to retract and stabilise the breast and palpate with the other
- Palpate in a systematic manner e.g. quadrant by quadrant from centre outwards
- Be thorough and examine the entire breast including the axillary tail
- When the lump is located, check with the patient whether this is the same lump she
detected on her own
- Characterise the lump:
Site (which quadrant)
Tender or non-tender
Warmth of overlying skin
Size
Shape
Surface (smooth or nodular/irregular)
Consistency (soft, firm, or hard)
Fluctuance
Margins (regular and smooth, or irregular and ill-defined)
Fixation to the skin try to pick up the skin above the lump
Fixation to underlying muscle ask patient to press her hands against her hips to
contract the pectoralis major muscle, then try to move the lump in 2
perpendicular directions, then ask patient to relax and try to move the lump again
- Dont be happy just finding one lump, still examine carefully for other lumps
(multiple lumps are unlikely to be malignant, usually fibroadenoma or fibroadenosis)
- If the patient complains of nipple discharge and none is visible, ask patient if she can
show you the discharge by expressing it herself (NEVER squeeze the nipple
yourself!); if patient cannot do it, then ask the chaperone to help
Axillary lymph nodes

- Palpate the normal side first


- Rest the patients right forearm on your right forearm and use your left hand to
palpate the right axilla (vice versa for the left side)
- Palpate gently, slowly, and systematically, covering the major groups of nodes:
anterior, posterior, medial, lateral, and apical
- If any lymph nodes are found to be enlarged, note the number of lymph nodes, their
site, size, tenderness, consistency (firm, hard, matted), mobility

To complete the examination

Examine the cervical lymph nodes especially the supraclavicular nodes


Examine the lungs for any pleural effusion
Percuss the spine for bony tenderness
Examine the abdomen looking for hepatomegaly

- Stellate lesion is a localised distortion of the breast parenchyma without


perceptible mass lesion high chance of it being malignant
- Causes: Invasive cancer, radial scar (a benign lesion), fat necrosis,
abscess, etc
(d) Architectural disortion
- Look at the axilla on the MLO view for any enlarged lymph nodes

FINDINGS FOR THE COMMON BREAST LUMPS


Type of lump
Cyst
Nodularity

Age

Pain

Surface

Consistency

Mobility

30-55
20-55

Occ
Occ

Smooth
Indistinct

Not fixed
Not fixed

Fibroadenoma
Cancer

15-25
35+

No
No

Smooth, bosselated
Irregular

Soft to hard
Mixed,
fluctuant
Rubbery
Stony hard

Very mobile
May be tethered or
fixed

INVESTIGATIONS
The evaluation of a breast lump is via the TRIPLE ASSESSMENT (i) Clinical
examination; (ii) Imaging; and (iii) Histology.
Imaging

1. Mammography
- Most sensitive of the proven breast imaging modalities
- Usually performed in older women (>40 years old) as the breast tissue in
younger women is denser, more difficult to pick up abnormalities on
mammogram
- Normally, 2 views are done: craniocaudal (CC) and mediolateral oblique (MLO)
- Additional specialised views: magnification and coned compression; done on
request to help magnify areas of abnormality or help visualise breast better
- Abnormal features:
(a) Neo-density or asymmetric density
(b) Microcalcifications
- Calcifications <0.5mm in size (if >0.5mm macrocalcifications)
- Sole feature of 33% of cancers detected on mammography
- Causes: DCIS, invasive cancer, fibrocystic disease, papilloma
- Features of malignancy: pleomorphic microcals, heterogeneous
appearance, closely grouped or arranged in a linear pattern (ductal
distribution), underlying density
- Benign microcals are punctate, and may have a tea-cup appearance
(c) Spiculated mass or stellate lesion
- 95% of spiculated masses on mammography are due to malignancy

62

- BI-RADS (Breast Imaging Reporting and Data System) classification


Category 0: Need additional imaging evaluation
Category 1: Negative (nothing to comment on, 0.05% risk still present)
Category 2: Benign
Category 3: Probably benign, short-term follow-up suggested (<0.2% risk)
Category 4: Suspicious, biopsy should be considered (25-74% risk)
Category 5: Highly suggestive of malignancy (75-99% risk)
Category 6: Known malignancy
2. Ultrasound
- Usually used as the first investigation in young patients (<35 years old) or
pregnant, lactating patients
- Can be used to guide interventional procedures such as biopsy, localisation of a
lump preoperatively, drainage of abscess, aspiration of cyst
- Evaluates consistency (solid vs cystic), margins
- Localisation of lesion seen in only one mammographic projection
- Evaluation of a palpable mass with a negative mammogram
- Evaluation of mass in mammographically-difficult areas e.g. chest wall, axilla
- Pitalls: Operator dependent, non-standardised techniques, poor resolution,
partially blind to microcalcifications
- Features of malignancy:
Markedly hypoechoeic + thick echogenic halo
Irregular edges
Hypoechoeic shadowing
Taller than it is wide (fir-tree appearance)
High central vascularity
3. MRI of the breast
- Rarely used due to high cost, but provides good soft tissue definition
- Indications:
Positive axillary lymph node but mammogram and ultrasound negative
Suspicion of multifocal or bilateral malignancy (esp ILC which has a high
incidence of multifocality/bilaterality)
Assessment of response to neoadjuvant chemotherapy
When planning for breast conservation surgery
Screening in high-risk patient?

63
Histology

- Options available:
(a) Fine needle aspiration cytology
(b) Core biopsy (Trucut)
(c) Incisional biopsy
(d) Excisional biopsy
- Mostly a choice between FNAC and core biopsy
FNAC is less invasive, less painful, smaller wound, does not require any local
anaesthetic, but only cells are obtained with no histology cannot differentiate
between in-situ cancer and invasive cancer, requires skilled cytopathologist
Core biopsy is more invasive, requires local anaesthetic, will result in a larger
wound, more painful, risk of complications higher (because biopsy needle is a
spring-loaded firing mechanism, improper angling may result in puncture of the
lung or heart), but can obtain tissue specimen, can stain for ER/PR status better
diagnostic value
- Can be guided by clinical palpation (if there is a palpable mass) or radiologic
guidance if the mass is small or there is no palpable mass more accurate but still
not 100%
Ultrasound guidance
Stereotactic guidance (stereotactic mammotome)
MANAGEMENT
- If triple assessment suggests benign disease (i.e. all three aspects suggest benign
nature of lump), follow patient up with physical examination for a year (q3-6mths) to
make sure the lump is stable or regresses
- If all three aspects of triple assessment suggest malignancy further staging and
treatment
- If one or two out of three aspects suggest malignancy further workup, may require
excisional biopsy

APPROACH TO NIPPLE DISCHARGE


CAUSES
Colour of discharge

Cause

Red or pink (blood + serum)

Ductal papilloma
Ductal carcinoma
Ductal papilloma
Duct ectasia (= periductal mastitis)
Cyst
Ductal carcinoma
Duct ectasia
Mastitis/abscess
Galactorrhoea/lactation

Clear yellow (serous)

Green, brown, black (cell debris)


Purulent, foul-smelling
Thin, white fluid (milk)
HISTORY:
1. Is the discharge true?

- Exclude other conditions that can cause discharge but not from the nipple e.g.
eczema, Pagets, etc
2. Is the discharge significant?

- Spontaneous discharge or discharge only on pressing (spontaneous is sig)


- Intermittent or persistent (persistent is sig)
- Relation to breastfeeding (significant if >1yr after stopping breastfeeding)
3. Is the discharge worrisome?

Unilateral or bilateral (unilateral more worrisome)


Discharge from multiple ducts or single duct (single duct more worrisome)
Nature of discharge (bloody more worrisome)
Age of the patient (more worrisome in older patient >60)

4. Is it troubling the patient?

PHYSICAL EXAMINATION (as described above)


INVESTIGATION
1. Discharge for cytology to detect malignant cells
2. Mammography/ultrasound of both breasts to detect any underlying malignancy
3. Histology of lesion if found on imaging
4. Ductography
MANAGEMENT
- If malignancy found, manage malignancy
- Microdochectomy for intraductal papilloma
- Antibiotics for mastitis/abscess + incision and drainage for abscess
- Conservative management for most other pathologies unless discharge persists and is
troubling patient microdochectomy of offending duct

BREAST CANCER

Lobular

EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Most common cancer in females in Singapore
- Age-standardised incidence 55 per 100,000 in 2002; incidence is half that of the West
- Bimodal age distribution, one peak at 45-55 years and another in older women (>75)
- Gender ratio is about 100-150:1
RISK FACTORS
1. Age (increases with increasing age with two peaks as mentioned)
2. Family history (breast or ovarian cancer, especially if first degree relative, young
onset <40 years old, bilateral cancer in relative affected)
3. Genetic predisposition (BRCA1 on 17q, Li-Fraumeni syndrome involving p53
mutation)
4. Previous breast cancer
5. Alcohol consumption
6. Oral contraceptive usage
7. Hormonal replacement therapy
8. Previous biopsy showing atypical ductal hyperplasia or lobular carcinoma in-situ
9. High oestrogen exposure (early menarche <12y/o, nulliparity, late childbearing with
first child at >30y/o, late menopause >55y/o)
10. Ionising radiation to breast
PATHOLOGY
- WHO classification divides breast cancers into epithelial and non-epithelial tumours.
- Non-epithelial tumours arise from supporting stroma (e.g. angiosarcoma, malignant
phyllodes tumour, primary sarcomas) and are very uncommon
- Epithelial tumours arise from cells lining the ducts or lobules, and can be further
divided into invasive and non-invasive based on invasion of the basement membrane
Ductal

64

Non-invasive

Invasive

DCIS

IDC

- Malignant cells arise from terminal


duct lobular unit, cause distortion
of lobules, but do not invade BM
- Non-palpable, detected on mammo
as microcals
- 35% multicentric, occult invasive
ca in 10-20%
- Progress to ca within 10 yrs, ~30%
risk; considered pre-malignant
- Good prognosis if treated

- 70-80% of invasive breast cancer


- Includes all cancers that cannot be
subclassified into a specialised type
no special type
- Poorer prognosis than a carcinoma
of specialised type
- Two-thirds express ER/PR, onethird overexpress C-erbB2

Others

LCIS

ILC

- Malignant cells arise from terminal


duct lobular unit (like DCIS) but do
not distort lobular architecture
- Usually does not form palpable
mass and not detected by mammo,
incidentally detected
- 60-80% multicentric and bilateral
- Not premalignant, but a marker for
increased risk of invasive disease in
both breasts (7-10x increased risk)
- If ca develops, will be IDC usually,
occurs >15 years after diagnosis

- 5-10% of invasive cancers


- 10-20% multicentric and/or bilat
- Cells morphologically similar to
cells of LCIS: monomorphic, bland
round nuclei
- Cells invade individually into
stroma (due to loss of E-cadherin, a
cell-adhesion molecule)
- Similar prognosis to IDC

Specialised types
- Medullary, colloid (mucinous),
tubular, papillary
- Better prognosis than IDC

Inflammatory carcinoma
- Presents as erythematous. enlarged,
swollen breast w/o palpable mass
- Histologically not specialised
- Diffuse
invasion
of
breast
parenchyma by ca cells blocking
numerous dermal lymphatic spaces
swelling
- No histo features of inflammation
- Very poor prognosis, rapidly fatal

PRESENTATION
- Most patients present with self-detected lump in the breast (more than one-third of
patients), other presentations include painful lumpiness, pain alone, discharge, nipple
retraction
- In patients presenting late, there may be overlying skin changes e.g. peau dorange,
tethering (means mass is still mobile but overlying skin will be indented when
moving the lump), fixation (means the mass is not mobile), even fungation
- May have symptoms of metastatic spread e.g. bone pain (metastases from breast
cancer spread to lung, liver, lymph nodes, bone, brain)
- Increasing number of patients with abnormalities detected on mammographic
screening but with no palpable lump
DIAGNOSIS BY TRIPLE ASSESSMENT (see above)

65
STAGING

Survival

Stage I:
Stage II:
Stage III:
Stage IV:

- Investigations:

(i) Chest X-ray (for lung metastases)


(ii) CT chest
(iii) CT abdomen
(iv) Bone scan
M stage
M1: distant mets

(70% in 10 years)
(40-50%)
(20-30%)
(<2%)

THERAPEUTIC OPTIONS

T stage
Tis: Carcinoma in-situ, Pagets
with no tumour

N stage
N1: Mobile ipsilat axillary nodes
N2: Fixed/matted ipsilat axillary nodes

(a) Locoregional control:

T1: <2cm
T1a 0.1 to 0.5 cm
T1b 0.5 to 1.0 cm
T1c 1.0 to 2.0 cm

N3: N3a Ipsilat infraclav nodes


N3b Ipsilat int mammary nodes
N3c Ipsilat supraclav nodes

(b) Systemic control:

Chemotherapy
Hormonal therapy
Targeted therapy

T3: >5cm
T4: T4a Chest wall involvmt
T4b Skin involvmt
T4c Both 4a and 4b
T4d Inflammatory ca

Stage 0
Tis

Options can be divided into aims of control:


Surgery
Radiotherapy

T2: 2 to 5 cm

Stage I

Stage II

T1N0

T2N0, T3N0
T0N1, T1N1, T2N1

Surgery

Stage III

Stage IV

T3 N1
T0N2, T1N2, T2N2, T3N2
Any T, N3
T4, any N
M1

Aaaaa Stage Xb (e.g. IIb, IIIb)


PROGNOSIS
Prognostic factors:

Stage of disease tumour size, lymph node involvement [Major prognostic factor]
Histological grade of tumour
Lymphovascular invasion
Age (younger patient higher chance of recurrence, progress of disease)
C-erbB2/Her-2 positivity indicates more aggressive tumour worse
ER/PR positivity is good more of a predictive factor because it predicts
response to treatment with tamoxifen; also means tumour is less undifferentiated
7. p53 mutation
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

90%
60%
30%
10%

1. Wide excision (breast-conserving surgery)


- Removal of tumour with clear margins, while achieving good cosmetic result
- Criteria:
Tumour <5cm in size, no skin or chest wall involvement (i.e. T2 or less)
Only one tumour, not multiple (unless in the same quadrant)
No metastatic disease
Appropriate tumour size-to-breast ratio (to achieve good cosmetic result)
Patient must agree to post-operative radiotherapy
- Overall survival at 25 years for WEAC comparable to SMAC
- Slightly higher local recurrence rates for WEAC (1% per year, 4% in 5 years)
- Higher risk in younger patients as cancer tends to be more aggressive
2. Simple mastectomy
- Removal of breast tissue, nipple-areolar complex, and overlying skin
- Lower rates of local recurrence
3. Axillary clearance
- Performed for all invasive carcinoma (WEAC or SMAC)
- Not required for DCIS (because theoretically cancer cells are confined to the
breast)
- Complications: numbness/pain along inner aspect of arm, shoulder stiffness,
lymphoedema

- Sentinel lymph node biopsy is a new modality of treatment


Principle: the sentinel lymph node, being the first lymph node draining the
breast, is representative of the rest of the axilla; if the SLN is negative for
tumour cells, then the rest of the axillary nodes should be negative as well
Use of blue dye (isosulphan blue, methylene blue) or radioactive isotope (Tc99 sulphur colloid or colloidal albumin) injected in the area of the breast just
before surgery concentrates in the first lymph node (sentinel node) that
drains the breast
During the op, look for the SLN by colour, or using a Geiger-Muller counter
to detect the node with highest radioactivity
Send node for frozen section
If negative, do not clear axilla; if positive, perform axillary clearance
False negative rate 8% (quite good)
No difference in axillary recurrence between full axillary clearance versus
only sentinel node biopsy
SLN biopsy is now standard of care in many hospitals in SG
4. Palliative surgery
- Palliative mastectomy for symptoms (bleeding, fungating, infected tumour)
- Surgery at other sites: Fixation of pathological fractures, decompression of
spinal cord compression, surgical excision of brain metastases
5. Breast reconstruction
- Safe, can be done during breast surgery or at a later time
- No delay in subsequent treatment and no increase in rates of relapse
- Options:
(i) Prosthesis
(ii) Muscle flap from rectus abdominis or latissimus dorsi
Complications of surgery
Early Haemorrhage (POD1)
Wound Infection (POD3)
Seroma formation (accumulation of serum) in 50%
Flap ischemia
Late
Cosmetic deformity
Complications of Axillary Clearance:
- Lymphoedema RT is contraindicated with AC as it worsens oedema
- Cellulitis even in minor trauma, due to lymphoedema. Need to clean even
minor wounds with antiseptic solution + prophylactic ABx vs staphstrep
- Shoulder stiffness require physiotherapy
- Intercostobrachial nerve transection numbness over inner aspect of arm.

66

Radiotherapy

1. Adjuvant
- Usually done after breast-conserving surgery
- Regimen consists of 25 to 30 cycles in total, 1 cycle per day from Monday to
Friday over five to six weeks
2. Palliative
Chemotherapy

1. Neoadjuvant
- Given in locally advanced cancer to shrink the tumour before surgical resection
- 20% of tumours achieve complete clinical response (cCR) i.e. tumour is no
longer palpable
- Of these tumours, a further 20% will achieve complete pathological response
(cPR) i.e. no more tumour cells
- Need to place a clip into the tumour before starting neoadjuvant therapy to guide
surgery in case the tumour disappears
2. Adjuvant
- Given in all locally advanced cancers after resection, and in some early breast
cancers depending on stage (see below)
- Premenopausal patients tend to have better response to chemotherapy than
hormonal therapy (and vice versa for postmenopausal patients)
- Main active agents are the anthracyclines (e.g. doxorubicin, epirubicin) and the
taxanes (e.g. paclitaxel, docetaxel)
- Common regimens: AC (anthracycline, cyclophosphamide), FAC (5-FU,
anthracycline, cyclophosphamide), CMF (cyclophos, methotrexate, 5-FU)
3.

Palliative
- Anthracyclines and taxanes are the mainstay
- Helps to reduce load of disease to alleviate symptoms, increase survival

Hormonal therapy

- Used in adjuvant setting


- For hormone receptor-positive disease
- Preferred for postmenopausal women as response to hormonal therapy is better than
to chemotherapy
- Mostly used as adjuvant therapy but can also be used as palliative treatment
Classes
(a) Selective oestrogen receptor modulators (SERMs)
- Tamoxifen 50% reduction in recurrence, 25% reduction in mortality
- Side effects: menopausal symptoms (hot flushes, etc), endometrial cancer (0.1%
per year), deep vein thrombosis

67
(b) Aromatase inhibitors
- Lanastrazole, letrozole, exemestase
- Inhibit peripheral conversion of testosterone and androstenedione to oestradiol
- Only suitable for post-menopausal patients as use of these agents will cause
overactivity of the HPA axis in premenopausal women
- Side effects: musculoskeletal pain, osteoporosis
Targeted therapy

- Main agent is Herceptin (trastuzumab) which targets Her-2-neu a.k.a. C-erbB2


receptor (a type of epidermal growth factor receptor [EGFR] that is overexpressed in
18-20% of cancers)
- Used in C-erbB2 positive tumours, early or late stage
- Side effects of Herceptin: cardiomyopathy, pulmonary toxicity, infusion reactions,
febrile neutropaenia
- Other agents include Avastin (or bevacizumab, targets vascular endothelial growth
factor [VEGF] receptor, used in advanced cancer); Lapatinib (targets Her-1 and Her2, used in advanced cancers)
TREATMENT BY TUMOUR STAGE
Tumour can be divided into in-situ cancer, early breast cancer, locally advanced breast
cancer, or advanced breast cancer.
1. DCIS

- Wide excision without axillary clearance


- Usually no adjuvant therapy
- Some patients given hormonal therapy to reduce recurrence at surgical site;
tamoxifen reduces overall breast cancer risk by 50% (in contralateral breast as
well) strictly not adjuvant therapy

3. Locally advanced breast cancer

- T3 or T4 (tumour >5cm or skin/chest wall involvement), N2 or N3 (fixed lymph


node involvement or supraclavicular node involvement)
- Surgical resection dependent on size of tumour and resectability (if tumour is too
large, the skin defect will be very large inoperable)
- Systemic therapy:
Neoadjuvant therapy to downstage inoperable tumour (in addition, it helps by
predicting the tumour response to chemotherapy before resection)
Adjuvant therapy after resection chemotherapy or hormonal (as above)
4. Advanced breast cancer

- Distant metastases
- Minimal locoregional therapy except for palliative purposes
- Systemic therapy is the mainstay of treatment chemotherapy or hormonal
therapy
FOLLOW-UP
- 3-monthly for first 2 years
- 6-monthly for the next 3 years (i.e. third to fifth years)
- Yearly for another 5 years (to tenth year)
- At each visit ask about symptoms and do clinical examination
- Repeat mammo of same breast 1yr postop; then 2-yrly bilateral mammo subsequently
BREAST SCREENING

2. Early breast cancer

- T2 or less (<5cm), N1 or less (no nodes or non-fixed nodes)


- Locoregional therapy: SMAC, or WEAC with postop radiotherapy
- Adjuvant therapy
Purpose of adjuvant therapy is to destroy systemic micrometastases
Likelihood of patient having micromets is deduced from T and N stage (major
prognostic factors):
Chemo
T >20mm, N stage >1

Adjuvant therapy usually involves chemotherapy if tolerable and/or hormonal


therapy if ER/PR positive
In general: In premenopausal pt chemotherapy + hormonal
In postmenopausal pt hormonal + chemotherapy

Intermediate
11mm < T < 20mm, N=0
Look at histological grade
(minor prognostic factor); if
high grade chemo

No chemo
T <10mm, N=0

Normal risk,
asymptomatic

40-49 YO
50-64 YO
>65 YO

Increased risk

Start screening 5 yrs before


onset of breast dz in
youngest family member

HRT therapy

40-49 YO
50-65 YO

Annual mammogram
Biannual mammogram (by invitation)
Optional 2 yrly mammogram

Monthly BSE
6 mthly CBE & U/S breast
Annual mammography

Annual mammogram
Biannual mammogram up to 5 yrs after cessation of
HRT

PAGETS DISEASE OF THE NIPPLE


- Presents as erythema and eczematous change of the nipple (not the areola) with
crusting exudates, may develop into erosions and ulcerations
- Often associated with intraductal carcinoma (DCIS) or invasive carcinoma just
beneath the nipple
- Malignant cells invade across the epithelial-epidermal junction and enter the
epidermis of the nipple, breaking the normal epidermal barrier thus allowing fluid to
be extruded onto the nipple
- Examination and investigations should be targeted towards detecting an underlying
tumour may find a palpable mass and/or mammographic abnormalities
- Punch biopsy of the nipple may be required
- Prognosis of the underlying cancer is not altered by the presence of Pagets disease of
the nipple
- Treatment should be planned according to the underlying cancer if found
- If no palpable mass or mammographic abnormality is detected, wide excision is an
adequate treatment

68

69
APPROACH TO NECK MASSES

MASSES BY LOCATION
Midline

NECK MASSES
ANATOMY
- The neck is composed of two triangles on each side anterior and posterior
triangles
- The anterior triangle is bounded by the lower border of the mandible superiorly, the
midline anteriorly, and the anterior border of the sternocleidomastoid posteriorly
- The posterior triangle is bounded by the posterior border of the sternocleidomastoid
anteriorly, the anterior border of the trapezius posteriorly, and the clavicle inferiorly

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

Submental lymph node


Thyroglossal cyst
Thyroid nodule in the isthmus
Sublingual dermoid cyst
Plunging ranula (retention cyst of the sublingual)
Rarely, hyoid pathology e.g. bursa

Anterior triangle

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.

Lymph node along anterior border of sternocleidomastoid (levels II, III, IV)
Thyroid nodule
Submandibular gland mass (see later section on Salivary gland swellings)
Branchial cyst + fistula
Chemodectoma (carotid body tumour)
Carotid aneurysm
Pharyngeal pouch
Laryngocoele (rare; an air-filled, compressible structure seen in glass-blowers)

Posterior triangle

1.
2.
3.
4.

Lymph node level V and supraclavicular lymph node groups


Cystic hygroma
Cervical rib
Brachial plexus neuroma/schwannoma

CAUSES OF MIDLINE MASS


Approach:

- Does it move with swallowing divides the thyroglossal cyst and thyroid nodule
from the other causes
- If it moves with swallowing, does it move with tongue protrusion thyroglossal cyst
moves with protrusion but a thyroid nodule does not

Masses in the neck region can be subdivided according to the triangle they occur in
as there are pathologies peculiar to each triangle
Locations: (i) Midline
(ii) Anterior triangle
(iii) Posterior triangle
In general, enlarged lymph nodes are the most common cause of a lump in the neck,
regardless of location (see section on Lymph node enlargement)

Thyroglossal cyst

Epidemiology:
Equal in males and females. Occurs mostly in children and adolescents but up to onethird occur in patients older than 20 years.
Pathology:
A cystic expansion of the remnant thyroglossal tract (the embryological origin of the
thyroid gland which descends from the foramen caecum on the tongue).

Features:
Smooth, rounded, cystic lump. 75% are in the midline while 25% are slightly to the left
or right. Usually asymptomatic but may become infected with sinus formation and
seropurulent discharge (occurs with incision or rupture of cyst)
Histology:
Cyst with columnar or squamous epithelial lining which may be ciliated. The cyst may
also contain thyroid and lymphoid tissue. If malignancy occurs (carcinoma of the
thyroglossal duct), it is usually a papillary carcinoma (~90%).
Treatment:
Sistrunk procedure resection of the cyst and mid-portion of the hyoid bone in
continuity and resection of a core of tissue from the hyoid upwards towards the foramen
caecum.

Plunging ranula

Pathology:
A pseudocyst associated with the sublingual glands and submandibular ducts. Ranulas
can be congenital or acquired after oral trauma. A large ranula can present as a neck
mass if it extends through the mylohyoid musculature of the floor of the mouth termed
a plunging ranula.
Treatment:
- Complete resection if possible, often in continuity with the associated sublingual
gland (but often difficult due to close association with the lingual nerve and
submandibular duct).
- If complete resection not possible, marsupialisation and suturing of the pseudocyst
wall to the oral mucosa may be effective.

Dermoid cyst

CAUSES OF ANTERIOR TRIANGLE MASS

Pathology:
Can be congenital or acquired.
(i) Congenital developmental inclusion of epidermis along lines of fusion of skin
dermatomes (seen in younger patients, present since birth). Locations include:
o medial and lateral ends of the eyebrows (internal and external angular dermoid
cysts)
o midline of the nose (nasal dermoid cysts)
o midline of the neck and trunk
(ii) Acquired due to forced inclusion of skin into subcutaneous tissue following an
injury, usually on fingers. Seen in older patients, no previous history of mass,
history of trauma to area (may have associated scar).

Branchial cyst and/or fistula

Histology:
Cyst lined by epidermis, with evidence of adnexal structures such as hair follicles,
sebaceous glands and sweat glands.
Features:
Small non-tender mobile subcutaneous lump, may be fluctuant, skin-coloured or bluish.
Management
- Imaging investigations (e.g. XR, U/S, CT) are important especially for cysts on the
skull as they can communicate with cerebrospinal fluid.
- Complete surgical excision of the cyst.

70

Epidemiology:
Affects both sexes equally, usually in young adults in their 20s.
Pathology:
A branchial cyst is thought to develop because of failure of fusion of the embryonic
second and third branchial arches. It is lined by squamous epithelium.
Features:
- Occurs anterior to the upper or middle third of the sternocleidomastoid muscle.
- Smooth firm swelling that is ovoid in shape, with its long axis running downwards
and forwards.
- May be fluctuant, usually not transilluminable (due to desquamated epithelial cell
contents).
- Look for fistula in this area a branchial fistula will run between tonsillar fossa and
the anterior neck, passing between the external and internal carotid arteries.
- Fine needle aspiration of the cyst will yield opalescent fluid with cholesterol crystals
under microscopy.
- May be complicated by recurrent infections purulent discharge, fixation to
surrounding structures.
Management:
- If fistula present, perform fistulogram to delineate course.
- Surgical excision of the cyst where possible. If fistula/sinus present, inject Bonneys
blue dye into tract prior to surgery to allow accurate surgical excision.
- Treatment of infection with antibiotics.
- Complications: cyst recurrence; chronic discharging sinus.

71
Chemodectoma

Pathology:
A chemodectoma is a tumour of the paraganglion cells (paraganglionoma) of the carotid
body located at the bifurcation of the common carotid artery (into the internal and
external carotids). They are usually benign, but locally invasive; the risk of malignancy
is 10%, with metastasis to local lymph nodes (no histopathological features for
malignancy, thus malignant nature can only be diagnosed by presence of metastasis).
Features:
- Solid, firm mass at the level of the hyoid bone (where the bifurcation is) be gentle
during palpation as pressure on the carotid body can cause vasovagal syncope.
- Mass is pulsatile but not expansile, due to transmitted pulsation from carotids.
- Due to close association with carotid arteries, lump can be moved side to side but not
up and down.
- May be bilateral.
- If suspecting aneurysm, listen for bruit, look for signs of Horners syndrome,
examine the rest of the peripheral vascular system.
Differentials and investigation:
- Main differential is carotid artery aneurysm; aneurysm can occur at any level but
carotid body tumour occurs at the level of the hyoid bone.
- DO NOT PERFORM FNA
- CT and/or MRI can be used to delineate tumour anatomy in relation to surrounding
structures; CT reveals homogenous mass with intense enhancement following IV
contrast administration.
- Angiography is the gold standard investigation shows a hypervascular mass
displacing the bifurcation. May also show vessel compromise by tumour invasion,
and undetected synchronous tumours.
Treatment:
- Surgical excision with pre-operative embolisation (reduces bleeding and
complications, and facilitates resection); any enlarged ipsilateral lymph nodes are
also removed due to the small possibility of malignancy
- Radiotherapy is an effective alternative for patients who are unfit for surgery or
whose tumours are too large.
Pharyngeal pouch (also called Zenkers diverticulum)

Pathology:
A herniation of the pharyngeal mucosa (pulsion diverticulum) through its muscular coat
at the weakest point Killians dehiscence between the cricopharyngeus muscle and
the lower inferior constrictor muscles.

Features
- Occurs in older patients
- A cystic swelling low down in the anterior triangle, usually on the left
- Squelching sound on deep palpation
- Patient complains of halitosis, regurgitation of undigested food with coughing and
dysphagia in the neck, hoarseness, weight loss
- Complications: chest infection (due to aspiration); diverticular neoplasm (<1%)
Diagnosis by barium swallow
Treatment
- Leave it alone if small and asymptomatic
- Minimally invasive treatment: endoscopic cricothyroid myotomy
- Surgical approaches (several available)
o Diverticulectomy + cricothyroidotomy (diverticulectomy associated with risk of
mediastinitis, dangerous)
o Diverticulopexy (done in high risk patients, involves suspending the lumen of
the pouch in the caudal direction so that food and secretions cannot enter the
pouch; as the diverticulum is still present, the risk for malignancy still remains)
CAUSES OF POSTERIOR TRIANGLE MASS
Cystic hygroma

Pathology:
A cystic hygroma is a congenital cystic lymphatic malformation found in the posterior
triangle of the neck, probably formed during coalescence of primitive lymph elements.
It consists of thin-walled, single or multiple interconnecting or separate cysts which
insinuate themselves widely into the tissues at the root of the neck.
Features:
- 50-65% present at birth, but occasionally may present later in childhood or adulthood
- Lobulated cystic swelling that is soft, fluctuant, and compressible (usually into
another part of the cyst), located in the posterior triangle at the root of the neck
- Classically brilliantly transilluminable
- A large cyst may extend deeply into the retropharyngeal space
Complications:
- Cystic hygroma seen on prenatal ultrasound in the first trimester suggests
chromosomal abnormality (50% of foetuses, usually trisomy 21) or other structural
abnormalities (33% of foetuses with no chromosomal abnormality, usually congenital
heart anomalies)
- May obstruct delivery
- Compressive problems after delivery respiratory, swallowing

Management:
- Radiological investigations e.g. CXR, CT to delineate extent of cyst
- Non-surgical treatment aspiration and injection of sclerosant (usually unsuccessful)
- Surgical excision partial (to alleviate symptoms) or complete

CERVICAL LYMPHADENOPATHY
ANATOMY:

Cervical rib

Features:
- Usually more symptoms than signs as it causes thoracic outlet syndrome
- A hard mass in the posterior triangle at the root of the neck
- Symptoms/signs:
o Arterial: pallor, gangrene or necrosis of the tips of the fingers
o Venous: oedema, cyanosis
o Neurological: complaints of radicular symptoms (pain, paraesthesia), wasting of
the small muscles of the hand
- Adsons test can be done ask patient to extend neck and rotate it towards side of
symptoms radial pulse will be diminished, occasionally with reproduction of
radicular symptoms in the limb
- Diagnosis by CXR
Neuroma/Schwannoma

Features:
- Slow growing tumour arising from peripheral neural structures of the neck e.g.
brachial plexus, cervical plexus, vagus nerve, phrenic nerve, etc.
- Fusiform, is mobile in plane perpendicular to axis of nerve but not parallel
- Usually benign
- May be Tinnels positive tap on the mass for any paraesthesia occurring in
distribution of the nerve
- DO NOT PERFORM FNA excruciatingly painful

72

Levels
There are six levels of lymph nodes in the neck, and different structures drain to
different groups of nodes:
Level Ia submental
Ib submandibular
II long internal jugular vein from skull base to bifurcation of carotids
(includes jugulodigastric nodes)
III along internal jugular vein from carotid bifurcation to omohyoid
IV along internal jugular vein from omohyoid to clavicle
Va Posterior triangle
Vb Supraclavicular
VI Tracheo-oesophageal groove (not palpable)
VII Superior mediastinum

73
Drainage:
- Oral cavity and oropharynx levels I III
- Thyroid and larynx levels II VI
- Nasopharynx II V (usually upper neck level II and high level V)
CAUSES:
Can be divided into three main groups: infective, inflammatory, and neoplastic
Infective
Viral
Epstein-Barr virus, cytomegalovirus (infectious mononucleosis); HIV
Bacteria
Streptococcus, Staphylococcus, Klebsiella (from intraoral pathology
e.g. dental abscess, tonsillitis)
Tuberculosis
Parasitic
Toxoplasma
Fungi
Actinomycosis
Neoplastic
Head and neck primary
Metastatic
Nasopharyngeal carcinoma
Oral cavity, oropharynx, larynx, hypopharynx,
thyroid, etc.
Other primary sites (4Bs)
Bowel (stomach, colon), breast, bronchus (lung),
balls (testicular)
Primary - lymphoma
Inflammatory SLE
Kikuchis (necrotising lymphadenitis occurring in young females,
presenting as painful cervical lymphadenopathy)
Sarcoidosis
HISTORY
- The lump itself onset, duration, rate of growth, any pain, associated symptoms,
lumps elsewhere
- Constitutional symptoms
o Fever, malaise, arthralgia, myalgia (viral prodrome);
o Night sweats, low-grade fever (TB, B symptoms of lymphoma);
o Loss of appetite, loss of weight (chronic infection, malignancy)
- Local symptoms intra-oral diseases e.g. tooth decay, oral/tongue ulcer, tonsillitis
- Past medical history cancer, TB (contact? Diagnosed? treated or untreated?)
- Social history: travel and contact history, sexual history for HIV

PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
Inspection

- Location
- Any overlying skin changes e.g. erythema, discharging sinus (multiple lymph node
enlargement with discharging sinuses can be TB or actinomycosis; sulphur granules
seen in actinomycosis)
Palpate from behind, one side at a time start at submental, then submandibular,

preauricular, postauricular, along anterior border of sternocleidomastoid,


supraclavicular, posterior triangle, lastly occipital. Use pulps of the fingers in a gentle
rolling movement.
- Tenderness to palpation
- Consistency hard, matted nodes are more suspicious for malignancy
- Fixation to overlying skin or underlying structures
To complete the examination:

- Complete examination of the face and scalp for any primary site of infection or
neoplasia
- Formal ear, nose, throat examination especially looking at the post-nasal space for
nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC being the most common cancer causing enlarged
cervical lymph nodes)
- Examination of the thyroid gland
- Examination of lymphoreticular system other lymph node groups, liver, spleen
- Full respiratory and abdominal examination especially if supraclavicular lymph node
found
- Breast examination in female patient
INVESTIGATIONS:
- Fine needle aspiration provides most definitive results (though there is still the
possibility of false positive and false negative results)
- Radiological investigation e.g. ultrasound, CT to assess nature of lump, extent,
other enlarged nodes that are not clinically palpable, and can be used to visualise
primary tumour if present
MANAGEMENT:
- According to FNAC results
- Malignant work up for primary if present (e.g. squamous cell carcinoma look for
oral cavity, skin, ENT, lung malignancy; adenocarcinoma look for breast, GI tract
malignancy) and treat as appropriate
- Infective/Inflammatory treat underlying condition

SALIVARY GLAND SWELLINGS

- Histology: predominantly serous acini, many ducts (other glands have few ducts)

ANATOMY:

Submandibular gland

Parotid gland

- Surrounded by tough fibrous capsule the parotid sheath (thus mumps is painful as
the gland swells within a tight envelope)
- Sandwiched between the posterior border of the ramus of the mandible and the
mastoid process
- Important structures that pass through the gland in order from lateral to medial:
(i) Facial nerve and its branches
(ii) Retromandibular vein (formed as the maxillary veins drain into the superficial
temporal vein)
(iii) External carotid artery (branching into its two terminal branches, the
superficial temporal and maxillary arteries)
- Nerve supply:
(i) Parasympathetic secretomotor supply from auriculotemporal nerve carrying
postganglionic fibres from the otic ganglion (preganglionic fibres from inferior
salivary nucleus);
(ii) Somatic sensory supply of the gland from auriculotemporal nerve; sensory
supply of the capsule from the great auricular nerve.
- Parotid duct (of Stensen) runs 5cm across the masseter (surface marking: along the
line joining the intertragic notch to the midpoint of the philtrum), drains into the
mouth opposite to the upper second molar tooth

74

- Consists of a large superficial part and a small deep part that are continuous with one
another around the free posterior border of the mylohyoid
- The deep part of the gland is closely associated with the lingual nerve (with the
attached submandibular ganglion) above it, and the hypoglossal nerve and
submandibular duct below it surgery may injure these nerves
- Nerve supply: parasympathetic secretomotor supply from lingual nerve carrying
postganglionic fibres from the submandibular ganglion (preganglionic fibres in
superior salivary nucleus)
- Submandibular duct (of Wharton) arises from the superficial part of the gland, runs
forwards deep to mylohyoid and drains into the oral cavity at the sublingual papilla
just adjacent to the frenulum
- Histology: mixed serous and mucous acini, few ducts
Sublingual gland

- A small almond-shaped gland sitting just under the mucosa of the floor of the oral
cavity
- Each gland has 15 or so ducts, half of which drain into the submandibular duct, the
rest draining directly into the oral cavity
- Nerve supply is similar to the submandibular gland
- Histology: almost solely mucous acini, few ducts

75
HISTORY
- About the lump: onset, duration, progress, associated symptoms e.g. pain
- If pain is present, is it precipitated by food ingestion? (suggestive of sialolithiasis)
- Symptoms of infection e.g. fever, malaise; if considering mumps, ask about testicular
pain and swelling (orchitis), abdominal pain (pancreatitis)
- Any noticed asymmetry of the face incomplete closure of the eye on one side,
drooping corner of the mouth, drooling
- Does the patient have symptoms of xerostomia (e.g. cannot eat a piece of biscuit or
bread without water), xerophthalmia
- History of connective tissue disease e.g. rheumatoid arthritis, SLE

- Palpate the gland openings for stones.


- Bimanual palpation of the submandibular gland
- Facial nerve examination

PHYSICAL EXAMINATION

CAUSES OF SWELLING OF THE PAROTID

Inspect

- Put yourself at the level of the patients face and look from front for any asymmetry
with an obvious mass on one side parotid mass is located between the angle of the
jaw and the ear, and lifts the earlobe if large; submandibular mass is located just
under the mandible
- Look for scars parotidectomy scar runs anteriorly to the ear, below the earlobe and
around posteriorly before looping forward again under the jaw
- Look for fistula/sinus
- Look at the patients face for asymmetry (facial nerve palsy)

Suspicious features of malignancy:

Hyperaemic hot skin over lump


Pain
Fixation to underlying structures or skin
Hard consistency
Irregular surface or ill-defined border
Facial nerve involvement

Parenchymal
swelling

Stones
Infection/
Inflammation

Autoimmune
Infiltration
Systemic
disease*

Palpate from behind

- Ask patient about any pain before starting to palpate


- Palpate the obviously enlarged gland, and always remember to also palpate the
contralateral gland for any swelling
- Check for warmth of overlying skin, tenderness, consistency, surface, margins
- Fixation to underlying structures for parotid, ask patient to clench the teeth to
contract the masseter, then try to move the gland
- Fixation to overlying skin
- Palpate for cervical lymphadenopathy
Other tests

- Examination of the duct openings:


o Using a torch and a tongue depressor, examine opposite the second upper molar
tooth for the opening of the parotid duct, and under the tongue for the opening of
the submandibular duct.
o Look for red inflamed duct opening, discharge (purulent), or any visible stone.
o For the parotid duct, can palpate the duct along the masseter for stone, and look
for discharge inside the mouth while palpating.

Neoplasia

Nonparenchymal
swelling

Benign e.g. pleomorphic adenoma, Warthins


Malignant tumours
Lymphoma and leukaemia*
Sialolithasis
Mumps*
Acute sialadenitis
Chronic recurrent sialadenitis
HIV
Sjogrens syndrome*
Sarcoidosis*
Alcoholic liver disease
Diabetes mellitus
Pancreatitis
Acromegaly
Malnutrition

Lymph node
Facial neuroma
Temporal artery aneurysm
Skin and soft tissue swellings e.g. sebaceous cyst, lipoma
* are conditions in which parotid swelling is bilateral

SIALOLITHIASIS
Epidemiology

- Stones of the salivary gland that may be impacted within the gland itself or in the
duct.
- Usually occurs in males more than females, and between the ages of 30 and 60.
- 80% of salivary stones occur in the submandibular gland (due to its higher mucus and
calcium content with a long duct, and slow flow of the saliva against gravity); 10%
occur in the parotid, 7% sublingual.
- Most submandibular gland stones occur in the duct, while 50% of parotid stones
occur in the gland itself.
- 80-95% of submandibular stones are radio-opaque and can be seen on an X-ray of the
floor of the mouth, and 60% of parotid stones are radio-opaque.
Presentation

- Complete obstruction
Acute pain and swelling of the gland involved at meal times, rapid onset within
minutes of starting to eat, resolves about an hour after the meal.
- Partial obstruction
Occasional symptomatic episodes interspersed by asymptomatic periods of days to
weeks, chronically enlarged mass in the submandibular region
- Can result in sialadenitis, and even abscess formation worsening of symptoms of
pain and redness; systemic symptoms such as fever, chills; purulent discharge from
duct opening
- Stone may be palpable along the duct or at the opening of the duct

- Surgical removal
o Transoral removal of stones for submandibular duct stones (50% can be removed
thus), less for parotid duct stones
o If stones cannot be removed via transoral surgery or is intraglandular, partial
gland resection can be performed
- Other options: Lithotripsy, wire basket removal, sialoendoscopy
SALIVARY GLAND TUMOURS
Epidemiology:

- 80% occur in the parotid, of which 80% are benign (80% of the benign tumours are
pleomorphic adenomas)
- 10% occur in the submandibular, of which 60% are benign (95% pleomorphic
adenoma)
- 15% occur in minor salivary glands, of which 50% are benign (all benign tumours are
pleomorphic adenomas)
- 0.3% occur in sublingual glands, of which all are malignant
Pathology
Epithelial

Adenomas (benign)
Pleomorphic adenoma
Warthins tumour

Investigations

- Noncontrast CT scan can pick up almost all stones when fine cuts are requested
- Plain X-rays can pick up radio-opaque stones
- Sialogram (rarely done today as it is invasive and technically demanding, and CT is
better. Contraindicated in acute sialadenitis and contrast allergy.)
Management

- General measures:
o Good hydration, soft diet, good oral hygiene
o Massage of the gland, milking the duct, application of moist hot towel
o Analgesia NSAIDs such as ibuprofen
o Antibiotics if patient has sialadenitis usually antibiotics to cover Staph and
Strept e.g. Augmentin
o Refer specialist treatment if symptoms persist for several days, or sialadenitis
persists despite antibiotic therapy

76

Carcinomas (malignant)
Adenoid cystic ca
Pleomorphic adenoca
Mucoepidermoid ca
Acinic cell ca
Adenoca
Squamous cell ca
Undifferentiated

Non-epithelial

Haemangioma
Lymphangioma
Neurofibroma
Neurilemmoma
Lipoma
Sarcoma
Malignant lymphoma

Pleomorphic adenoma

Epidemiology:
- Most common benign tumour
- 85% occur in the parotid gland
- Equal sex ratio, occurs in younger patients less than 50 years old
Histology:
Very heterogeneous appearance, containing epithelial cells surrounded by loose stroma
with islands of chondromyxoid (mesenchymal components), and interspersed islands of
myoepithelial cells. The tumour appears to be encapsulated, but histology shows
multiple sites of capsular penetration by tumour cells.

77
Features:
- Slow-growing, painless swelling occurring in the lower pole of the parotid
- Irregular and lobulated surface, texture of cartilage (slightly harder than Warthins)
- Does not invade or metastasise
- Chance of malignant transformation if left for 10-15 years (1-6% risk)
- If not completely excised, can recur (recurrence rate of 2%)
Diagnosis by clinical, FNAC, + MRI
Treatment surgical excision
- Parotid: Superficial parotidectomy for superficial tumour; if tumour is deep or large,
total parotidectomy with preservation of the facial nerve
- Submandibular: Total gland excision together with adjacent connective tissue,
sparing lingual and hypoglossal nerves
Warthins tumour

Epidemiology:
- Only occurs in the parotid gland (10% of parotid tumours)
- More common in males than females (4:1)
- Occurs in older patients (>50 years)
- Related to cigarette smoking
Histology:
Also called papillary cystadenoma lymphomatosum or just adenolymphoma. Consists
of cleftlike or cystic spaces lined by two-tiered epithelium, containing mucin,
surrounded by a stroma of well-developed lymphoid tissue with germinal centres.
Features:
- Slowly enlarging, soft to firm cystic fluctuant swelling in parotid tail
- Invariably benign with no risk of malignant change
Diagnosis by clinical, FNA + MRI
Treatment
- Can be left alone if absolutely certain that the entire mass is composed of only
Warthins tumour cells, since there is no malignant potential
- Superficial parotidectomy if causing trouble to patient

Mucoepidermoid ca is the most common malignant tumour in the parotid, while


adenoid cystic ca is the most common in the submandibular, sublingual and minor
salivary glands
Malignant pleomorphic adenoma
- Usually occurs in pre-existing pleomorphic adenoma, rarely de novo
- Worst prognosis of any salivary gland tumour
- 30-70% recurrence and metastasis rate
Treatment of salivary gland cancers
Parotid:
- Total parotidectomy with sacrifice of facial nerve if tumour has infiltrated it (may be
grafted with great auricular nerve)
- Radical neck dissection if neck nodes positive
- Postoperative radiotherapy
Submandibular:
- Radical excision of gland with lymphatic clearance of submandibular triangle
- Radical neck dissection if neck nodes positive
- Postoperative radiotherapy
COMPLICATIONS OF PAROTIDECTOMY
Immediate (within 24 hrs)

1. Intraoperative facial nerve transection lower motor neurone palsy (in surgery to
the submandibular gland, damage to the hypoglossal and/or lingual nerves can
occur intraoperatively)
2. Reactionary haemorrhage
Early (1 to 30 days)

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.

Wound infection
Skin flap necrosis
Temporary facial weakness (neuropraxia of facial nerve)
Salivary fistula
Division of great auricular nerve loss of sensation over pinna
Trismus (inability to open mouth due to spasm of masseter)

Late (more than 30 days)


Malignant tumours

Most common malignancies are mucoepidermoid (34%) and adenoid cystic carcinomas
(22%) equal sex ratio, can occur in any salivary gland, in older patients (usually >60
yrs)

1. Wound dimple, cosmetic problems


2. Hyperaesthesia of local skin
3. Freys syndrome increased sweating and redness of facial skin when eating, due
to reinnervation of divided sympathetic nerves to the facial skin by fibres of the
secretomotor branch of the auriculotemporal nerve

THE THYROID GLAND

About RISK FACTORS

APPROACH TO THYROID PROBLEMS 2 MAIN TYPES


1. Problem with configuration/anatomy

(i)
(ii)
(iii)

Solitary thyroid nodule (most common in exam)


Multinodular goitre
Diffuse enlargement

2. Problem with function (usually hyperfunctioning)

(i)
(ii)
(iii)
(iv)

Graves disease
Toxic adenoma
Toxic multinodular goitre
Hashimotos disease

HISTORY-TAKING
Onset (gradual or sudden), duration
Size (Diffuse or one side predominant? Any sudden increase in size? malignant
growth; ddx includes haemorrhage into necrotic nodule or cyst, subacute thyroiditis)
Any pain bleeding into cyst can result in sudden increase in size and pain; rarely
pain can occur in anaplastic carcinoma and thyroiditis
Compressive symptoms: difficulty swallowing, difficulty breathing, hoarseness of
voice (benign pathologies almost never compress the recurrent laryngeal nerve)
Cosmetic effects

About THYROID FUNCTION


Hyperthyroid
Weight loss despite increased appetite
Heat intolerance
Increased sweating
Proximal myopathy (Graves)
Diarrhoea, frequent bowel movement
Tachycardia, atrial fibrillation
Oligomenorrhoea, amenorrhoea
Nervousness; easily irritable; emotional
lability; insomnia
Fine tremor

78

Medications given e.g. propylthiouracil, carbimazole, propranolol for how long,


efficacy, side effects
Radioactive iodine treatment what was the result? Is the patient receiving
replacement?
Surgery what kind of surgery, any complications?
Follow-up what investigations done?

PHYSICAL EXAMINATION

About the LUMP

History of autoimmune disease e.g. type I DM, SLE, RA, pernicious anaemia
(associations with Graves and Hashimotos)
History of cancer elsewhere metastatic disease to thyroid; lymphoma; papillary
cancer is associated with familial polyposis syndromes ask about GI polyps/ca
History of thyroid disease long-standing MNG can progress to lymphoma
Occupational history any exposure to radiation (papillary cancer risk)
Family history of thyroid cancer ~20% of medullary cancers are familial (MEN2,
AD inheritance), ~5% of papillary cancers

About previous TREATMENT for any thyroid disease

AIMS OF ASSESSMENT IN THYROID NODULE/ENLARGEMENT:


- Exclude cancer!
- Address issues of thyroid function
- Look for any complications e.g. compression (of airway, oesophagus, rarely nerve)
- Cosmesis is patient bothered by lump?

Hypothyroid
Decreased appetite, weight gain, lethargy
Cold intolerance
Dry skin, loss of outer third of eyebrows
Muscle fatigue
Constipation
Bradycardia
Menorrhagia
Slow thought, speech and action;
depression; dementia
Carpal tunnel syndrome symptoms

A. THYROID GLAND

GREET PATIENT, ASK FOR PERMISSION to examine (and listen to the voice is it hoarse?)
POSITION PATIENT on a chair with space behind the chair for you to stand.
INSPECT FROM THE FRONT
1. Any swelling? Where is it?
2. Any scars (thyroidectomy scar may be difficult to spot as it is often hidden in a
skin crease)? Sinuses?
3. Any skin changes over the mass?
4. Check if mass moves on swallowing by asking patient to take a sip of water
Please take a sip of water and hold it in your mouth, do not swallow until I tell you
to.
5. Check if mass moves on protruding the tongue Please open your jaw slightly.
Now, without moving your jaw, please stick your tongue out and back in again.
NB. A thyroid swelling moves only on swallowing; a thyroglossal cyst will move
on both swallowing and protrusion of the tongue.
6. Check for plethora of face, distended neck veins may be due to compressive
nature of mass (but rarely seen).

79
PALPATE FROM BEHIND one side at a time, the opposite hand stabilises the gland.
Ask for pain before palpating!
1. Characteristics of lump: site (anterior triangle), size (discrete nodule or
multinodular enlargement or diffuse enlargement?), consistency (soft, cystic, hard,
multinodular?), mobility (fixed to skin? Fixed to underlying structures?), tenderness.
2. Check swallowing while palpating to confirm mass moves on swallowing.
3. Check tongue protrusion.
4. Palpate lymph nodes
PALPATE TRACHEA from in front for tracheal deviation.
PERCUSS any retrosternal extension?
AUSCULTATE bruit in Graves
OFFER to do Pembertons sign to check for thoracic inlet obstruction; check thyroid
status; ask patient about compressive symptoms.

PROBLEMS WITH GLAND CONFIGURATION

PART I: RELEVANT ANATOMY


Structure:

2 lateral lobes joined by an isthmus that lies in front of the 2nd, 3rd and 4th tracheal rings.
Strap muscles of the neck lie superficial to the thyroid gland.
Nerves and vessels:

Superior thyroid artery (from external carotid)


Inferior thyroid artery (from thyrocervical trunk, a branch of the first part of the
subclavian artery).

External laryngeal nerve supplies the cricothyroid muscle which controls pitch of
voice; runs close to superior thyroid artery.
Recurrently laryngeal nerve supplies all the other intrinsic muscles of the larynx
(except for cricothyroid) and runs close to the branches of the inferior thyroid. The
nerve runs behind the pretracheal fascia and so will not be damaged if the fascia is
not breached during operation. Important to visualise nerve and avoid damaging it!

B. THYROID STATUS

HANDS (get patient to stretch arms out in front of him, palms down)
1. Feel palms warm sweaty palms
2. Nails thyroid acropachy, onycholysis (both seen in Graves)
3. Feel pulse tachycardia, atrial fibrillation (AF more in toxic MNG than Graves)
4. Fine postural tremor accentuate by placing a sheet of paper on the hands
5. Palms up palmar erythema

Embryonic origin:

FACE
1. Expression staring, unblinking (hyperthyroid); lethargic, apathetic (hypothyroid)
2. Complexion dry, peaches-and-cream complexion, loss of outer third of
eyebrows (hypothyroid)
3. Eyes
- Lid retraction (can see sclera between upper limbus of iris and upper eyelid)
- Exophthalmos (sclera between lower limbus and lower eyelid)
- Chemosis (oedema and erythema of conjunctiva)
- Ophthalmoplegia (restriction of eye movements; ask about diplopia!)
- Lid lag (eyelid lags behind eye when patient follows your finger downwards)
- Proptosis (look from above patients head eye visible over supraorbital ridge)

the tracheo-oesophageal groove and are not palpable.

NEUROMUSCULAR
1. Proximal myopathy (Graves)
2. Reflexes slow to relax in hypothyroidism
3. Legs for pretibial non-pitting oedema (Graves or hypothyroid)

Thyroglossal tract from foramen caecum of the tongue (in the midline, at the junction
between anterior two-thirds and posterior one-third of the tongue) descends close to the
hyoid bone expansion of the caudal end of the tract forms the thyroid gland.
Parathyroid glands: 2 superior and 2 inferior glands that lie behind the lateral lobes.
Level VI lymph nodes first nodes that a thyroid malignancy spreads to; they lie in

PART II: APPROACH TO THE SOLITARY THYROID NODULE


Prevalence:

About 4-8% of population in US have palpable thyroid nodules; prevalence in


Singapore not known.
History and physical examination as above
Differential diagnoses:

1.
2.
3.
4.

Cancer (only 10-20% of nodules is malignant, but need to exclude!)


Follicular adenoma
Cyst (simple, colloid, or haemorrhagic)
Dominant nodule of a multinodular goitre

Clinical features suspicious of malignancy:

1. Male gender (thyroid nodules less common in male but more likely to be malignant)
2. Age <15yrs or >60yrs (majority of nodules occurs in 3rd to 6th decades likely
benign)
3. History of head and neck radiation or thyroiditis
4. Family history of thyroid cancer (or MEN2, Gardners syndrome, FAP)
5. Rapidly enlarging nodule
6. Hard, single nodule and/or nodules fixed to surrounding structures
7. Hoarseness (i.e. recurrent laryngeal nerve invasion)
8. Cervical lymphadenopathy
9. Other symptoms of invasion e.g. haemoptysis, stridor, dysphagia
Investigations:

1. FINE NEEDLE ASPIRATION CYTOLOGY


- The most important investigation modality!
- 90-95% sensitivity and specificity
- 4 possible results:
(i) Benign (thyroiditis, dominant nodule of MNG)
(ii) Malignant (papillary, medullary, anaplastic, mets)
(iii) Suspicious (follicular, Hurthle cell change in follicular lesion)
(iv) Inadequate repeat FNAC
- Can be both therapeutic and diagnostic for cyst chocolate-brown fluid
aspirated; feel lump after aspiration to check for resolution
- Cannot differentiate follicular adenoma from follicular carcinoma as the mark of
malignant disease is capsular invasion can only tell from a histological
specimen of the nodule
- Procedure: inject local anaesthetic in area, insert 20-22G needle and apply
suction while fanning needle in region of nodule, release suction before pulling
out needle, expel contents onto slide, then fix
- Best to have experienced cytologist on hand to view slides and re-do FNAC if
the sample is inadequate
2. ULTRASOUND OF THYROID
- Advantages:
(i) Objective measurement of nodule
(ii) Detection of subclinical nodule/screening of value in papillary
carcinoma since multicentric disease occurs in 15%
(iii) Detection of lymph node enlargement (especially level VI nodes)
(iv) Can define consistency of nodule solid, cystic, or complex

80

- Suspicious sonographic features:


(i) Microcalcifications (in psammoma bodies papillary cancer)
(ii) Indistinct margins
(iii) Sonolucent halo around lesion
(iv) Hypoechoeic or anechoeic lesion carcinoma is almost never
hyperechoeic
(v) Increased intranodular vascularity
- Ultrasound still does not provide as good diagnostic value as FNAC
3. THYROID FUNCTION TEST
- Easy to perform, establish baseline, detect any abnormal function
- No real diagnostic value
4. RADIO-ISOTOPE SCAN
- Hot nodule: only 1% malignant; but cold nodule: 10-20% malignant
- But not very useful diagnostically
5. BASELINE TUMOUR MARKERS (IF SUSPECTED OR CONFIRMED MALIGNANCY)
- For differentiated thyroid cancer: thyroglobulin
- For medullary thyroid cancer: calcitonin, carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA)
6. CT SCAN OR MRI
- Not routine in thyroid nodular study
- Uses:
(i) Evaluating invasion of surrounding structures
(ii) Retrosternal extension
(iii) Lymph node involvement
- Care to be taken with CT as contrast contains iodine and will affect post-op
radioactive iodine body scan once given
- MRI has same functions as CT but higher cost
7. ENT EXAMINATION OF VOCAL CORDS
- In the rare occasion that there is pre-existing vocal cord palsy on one side take
extra care not to injure opposite recurrent laryngeal nerve as that can cause
bilateral vocal cord palsy
Management of benign nodule:

Soft, small, round nodule with benign FNAC results, non-functional, not causing
any symptoms can follow-up and monitor any increase in size
A lump >4cm has a greater risk for malignancy

81
PART III: THYROID CANCERS
Differentiated thyroid carcinoma
Papillary carcinoma
Follicular carcinoma

Medullary carcinoma

Anaplastic carcinoma

Lymphoma

Proportion

75%

10%

7%

3%

5%

Age

25-40 years

40-50 years

>50 years for sporadic type; 20-30 years for familial

60-70 years

>50 years

F:M ratio

3:1

3:1

1:1

3:2

2:1

Risk factors

- Radiation exposure
- Polyposis syndromes (FAP,
Gardners, etc)
- Positive family history in 5%

- Follicular adenoma is NOT a risk


factor
- Iodine deficiency may be
associated

- Significant family history in the familial type


MEN2 (AD, complete penetrance, associated with
parathyroid adenoma and phaeochromocytoma see
notes below)

- Longstanding goitre
- History of previous
differentiated thyroid ca
(30% of anaplastic ca)

- History of lymphoma or
MALT elsewhere
- Hashimotos thyroiditis
(60X increased risk)

Pathological
features

- Characteristic Orphan Annie


nuclei, nuclear pseudoinclusions
- Papillary architecture with
psammoma bodies
- Tall cell variant (nuclear features
of papillary ca within follicular
lesion) behaves like papillary ca,
has worse prognosis

- Follicular structures similar to


normal thyroid
- Diagnosis of cancer made on
evidence of capsular or vascular
invasion by tumour cells (vs
follicular adenoma)
- Hurthle cell variant worse
prognosis

- Arise from parafollicular C cells (which produce


calcitonin)
- Distinctive deposits of acellular amyloid material
altered calcitonin collections
- Multicentric C-cell hyperplasia may be seen in
familial cases

- Small blue round cells


that are highly
anaplastic may
resemble lymphoma

- FNAC may suggest


lymphoma but definitive
diagnosis requires trucut
or excision biopsy
- Almost always nonHodgkins of B-cell
type

Clinical
features

- Solitary
- Haematologic spread to bone,
lung, liver, brain
- LN involvement in 10% (rare)

- Sporadic cases usually solitary, worse prognosis


- Familial cases all multicentric, better prognosis
- Aggressive growth; spread via local, lymphatic,
haematological routes
- 95% produce calcitonin, 80% produce CEA
- Unilat LN involved in 60-80%, contralat LN in 40%
- Always exclude MEN2 serum calcium, 24hr
urinary catecholamines

- Large bulky mass


involving neck
structures locally
advanced
- Aggressive growth
- Multiple metastases
probably present at
presentation

- Usually presents as
rapidly enlarging goitre
with compressive
symptoms
- 60-80% aggressive and
30% more indolent

Surgical resection
- Hemithyroidectomy for selected low-risk patients (see below)
- Total thyroidectomy for the majority
- LN clearance: tracheo-oesophageal nodes cleared, and neck dissection if
neck nodes are positive
- For suspicious lesion hemithyroidectomy with histology, KIV TT

Surgical resection
- Aggressive resection total thyroidectomy with
level VI node clearance
- Sampling of cervical and mediastinal nodes and
modified dissection where positive

Palliative therapy for


compressive effects
- Chemotherapy to shrink
tumour
- Surgical debulking
- Tracheostomy

Chemotherapy and/or
radiotherapy depending
on type of lymphoma

Adjuvant therapy
- Radioactive iodine at ablative levels to ablate remnant thyroid and any
cancer tissue (only for total thyroidectomy)
- External radiotherapy (only shown to have good results in pts with locally
advanced follicular ca)

Follow-up
- Thyroxine replacement (not for TSH suppression but
to maintain euthyroid state)
- Serum calcitonin and CEA six mths after surgery (if
normal, considered cured 5% 5yr recurrence)
- High calcitonin screen for residual or metastatic
disease, treat surgically, with RT or chemo as
appropriate

Median survival <6mths

Dependent on histo, stage,


treatment, etc.

Slow-growing tumour
Spread by lymphatics
30-50% multicentric
LN involvement in 80% of disease
at diagnosis (level VI first)

- Very good prognosis


- Poor prognostic factors (AMES): Age>40, presence of metastases, extrathyroid invasion, size>4cm (more details on risk stratification below)
Treatment

TSH suppression give L-thyroxine to suppress TSH levels to <0.005U/L


Follow-up
- Check TSH levels
- Thyroglobulin as a tumour marker of recurrence
- Radioactive iodine scan to detect recurrence, followed by ablation
5yr survival

95% in low-risk pts, 88% in intermediate-risk pts, 50% in high-risk pts


Slightly worse for follicular ca

No good adjuvant therapy

60-70%

Differentiated thyroid cancer

Disadvantages of TT:

- Papillary and follicular cancers are considered differentiated thyroid cancer (as
opposed to anaplastic undifferentiated thyroid cancer)
- Prognosis is excellent

- Risk of bilateral recurrent laryngeal nerve injury and permanent hypoparathyroidism


- Very low incidence of cancer recurrence in residual thyroid microfoci probably not
clinically significant
- Limited thyroidectomy may spare patient from having to be on lifelong thyroid
hormone replacement
Thus, risk stratification helps to guide the extent of surgical resection in differentiated
thyroid cancer according to the patients disease.

RISK STRATIFICATION:
- Risk factors can be divided into patient factors and disease factors
- Patient factors: Age >45 years old is high risk; Gender male is high risk
- Tumour factors:
Size nodule >4cm has higher risk
Histology tall cell variant of papillary ca and Hurthle cell variant of follicular ca
are considered unfavourable
Extrathyroidal extension into surrounding structures worse
Lymph node or distant metastases worse
- Various score systems have been formulated to stratify risk:
AMES Age, Metastases, Extent, Size
AGES Age, Grade (Histological), Extent, Size) rarely used as histological
grading is not commonly performed
MACIS Metastasis, Age, Completeness of resection, Invasion, Size
- Patients can be divided into three groups:
(i) Low risk low risk patient and low risk disease (i.e. no high risk features)
(ii) Intermediate risk low risk patient with high risk disease, or high risk patient
with low risk disease
(iii) High risk high risk patient and high risk disease
- Risk helps to guide treatment low risk patients can undergo hemithyroidectomy
without ablative radioiodine therapy post-op, while high risk patients undergo total
thyroidectomy with post-op ablative RAI treatment; treatment in intermediate risk
patients is tailored to the disease, but usually is similar to that in high risk patients
- 5 year survival is also prognosticated by the risk: low risk patients have a survival
of 95-98%, intermediate risk patients 88%, and high risk patients 50%
TOTAL THYROIDECTOMY VERSUS HEMITHYROIDECTOMY
Advantages of TT:

- Evidence for microfoci of disease and multicentricity of cancer removal of the


entire thyroid decreases risk of recurrence
- Ability to use adjuvant radioiodine to ablate any residual cancer tissue after surgery
- Ability to use radioiodine to detect recurrent disease (normal thyroid picks up iodine
better than cancer cells, thus the presence of the thyroid gland will decrease the
ability of RAI to pick up recurrent cancer) and as treatment for recurrence
- Ability to use serum thyroglobulin as a cancer marker for recurrence

82

Lymph node clearance

- Tracheo-oesophageal groove (level VI) node clearance usually done


- Radical neck dissection or modified radical neck if:
(i) Tracheo-oesophageal groove nodes histologically positive for cancer
(ii) Clinically positive nodes in the neck palpable or enlarged on ultrasound
Radical neck dissection

- The removal, en-bloc, of the entire ipsilateral lymphatic structures of the neck, from
the mandible superiorly to the clavicle inferiorly, from the infrahyoid muscles
medially to the anterior border of the trapezius laterally
- Classic radical neck dissection (Criles) internal jugular vein, sternocleidomastoid muscle, and accessory nerve are resected. Structures not resected: carotid
arteries, vagus nerve, hypoglossal nerve, brachial plexus, phrenic nerve
- Modified radical neck
(i) Type I: one of the three structures not removed, usually accessory nerve
(ii) Type II: two of the structures not removed accessory and IJV
(iii) Type III: all of the three structures not removed
(iv) Extended radical neck dissection: resection of lymph nodes and/or structures
not included in the classic neck dissection
- Complications of radical neck dissection:
(i) Injury to nerves vagus (vocal cord paralysis), cervical sympathetic chain
(Horners), mandibular branch of facial (lower lip weakness)
(ii) Haematoma bring back to OT to find source of bleeding and stop it
(iii) Salivary fistula (usually when pt has received RT to the neck, and if the upper
GI tract was opened during the surgery) infection can result
(iv) Wound infection risk factors: previous irradiation, if upper aerodigestive tract
is opened during surgery with salivary contamination, salivary fistula
(v) Carotid blowout risk factors: infection, irradiation resus, apply constant
pressure all the way to the OT!
(vi) Poor healing usually in irradiated skin; weakest point is the junction of the
trifurcate incision

83
Multiple endocrine neoplasia

PART IV: SURGERY IN BENIGN THYROID DISEASE

A group of inherited diseases resulting in proliferative lesions (hyperplasia, adenomas,


carcinomas) of multiple endocrine organs.

Indications for surgery:

FEATURES:
- Tumours occur at younger age than sporadic cancers
- Multiple endocrine organs involved, either synchronously or metachronously
- Multifocal tumours in each organ involved
- Tumour usually preceded by asymptomatic stage of endocrine hyperplasia
- More aggressive and higher chance of recurrence compared to sporadic type of
tumours in the same organs
MEN 1
- Autosomal dominant inheritance
- Gene involved is the tumour suppressor gene MEN1 located on chromosome 11q13
where mutations cause loss of function of the gene
- Three Ps:
Parathyroid (95%) hyperparathyroidism from hyperplasia of parathyroid glands
Pancreas (>40%) aggressive metastatic tumours (e.g. gastrinoma, insulinoma),
leading cause of death in MEN 1 patients
Pituitary (>30%) most commonly prolactin-secreting macroadenoma; some have
growth hormone-secreting tumours
MEN 2
- Autosomal dominant inheritance
- Gene involved is RET protooncogene at 10q11.2 where activating mutations occur
- Two distinct groups of disorders:
1. MEN 2a (Sipple syndrome)

Medullary carcinoma of the thyroid (almost all)


Phaeochromocytoma (50%, of which less than 10% are malignant)
Parathyroid hyperplasia and hyperparathyroidism (30%)
2. MEN 2b (William syndrome)

Thyroid and adrenal involvement like MEN 2a, but no hyperparathyroidism


Neurocutaneous manifestations: ganglioneuromas on oral mucosa, lips eyelids
Other features: Marfanoid habitus, SCFE, delayed puberty

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Cannot be treated medically - failed medical therapy or unsuitable for medical tx


Cancer
Compression on neighbouring structures
Cosmesis
Compliance/cost problems with long-term medical therapy (but patient may still
require long-term therapy after op if he/she becomes hypothyroid or is still
hyperthyroid)
6. Child-bearing (not a very strong indication since medical therapy can still be given,
but not RAI)
Types of surgery available:

1. Hemithyroidectomy removal of one lobe of the gland, including the isthmus and
the pyramidal lobe; usually for suspicious thyroid nodules
2. Total thyroidectomy entire gland removed completely; usually done in MNG
3. Subtotal thyroidectomy
- Conventional subtotal thyroidectomy leave a thumb-sized amount (about 4-6g)
of remaining thyroid tissue on both sides
- Harley-Dunhill subtotal thyroidectomy leave a thumb-sized amount only on
one side with removal of the rest of the gland
Total versus subtotal thyroidectomy (for hyperfunctioning thyroid disease)

- Result of total thyroidectomy is always hypothyroidism, thus the patient will require
life-long thyroid replacement and follow-up problems with compliance, cost,
inconvenience
- Results of subtotal thyroidectomy (at 5 years):
o 60-70% euthyroid (do not require medication but still have to be followed up
closely)
o 16-20% hypothyroid (usually becomes evident within 1 year of surgery)
o 8-10% hyperthyroid (percentage increases proportionately with time failure of
surgical therapy)
Difficulty in managing post-operatively and in the long term as patients need
close monitoring (better off to just replace everyone after TT?), but weigh this
against the benefits of not requiring any medication (for which there is a good chance)

Complications of thyroid surgery: (Mostly Hs, one I and one T)

IMMEDIATE (<24HRS)
1. Haemorrhage with haematoma formation
- Haematoma forms in the paratracheal region, mostly below the strap muscles
can result in compression of airway if not released (patient can die!)
- Cut the subcuticular stitches and also the stitches holding the strap muscles
opposed to let the blood drain out
2. Hoarseness or airway compromise from recurrent laryngeal nerve injury
- Risk of nerve injury is <1%
- Unilateral nerve injury for hemithyroidectomy, bilateral nerve injury for total or
subtotal thyroidectomy
- If bilateral nerve palsy resulting in compromised airway, will require
tracheostomy
3. Hyperthyroidism
- Resection of gland can release large amounts of stored thyroid hormone into
bloodstream
- May result in thyroid storm (see Management of thyroid storm)
4. Tracheomalacia
- Floppiness of trachea resulting from chronic compression e.g. by large goitre
- Requires intubation to secure airway
INTERMEDIATE (1 DAY TO 1 MTH)
1. Infection
2. Hypoparathyroidism leading to hypocalcaemia
- Risk of permanent hypoparathyroidism is 1-4% (only in total or subtotal
thyroidectomies); 10-20% of patients may have temporary hypocalcaemia
- Important to check the serum calcium levels post-operatively POD 1,3,5
- Ask patient for any symptoms and look for signs of hypocalcaemia
paraesthesia around the mouth, difficulty breathing, carpopedal spasm,
Chvosteks sign (spasm of the facial muscles on tapping the facial nerve),
Trousseaus sign (carpopedal spasm on inflating blood pressure cuff over arm)
- Dangerous as it can cause laryngeal spasm and airway compromise
- Check serum calcium together with albumin to get corrected calcium!
Measured serum calcium + 0.02 (40 Albumin)
- Replacement: 5mmol/6h if symptoms mild, 10ml of 10% calcium gluconate over
30 minutes if severe
- Hypocalcaemia may also occur due to hungry bone syndrome after
thyroidectomy in long-standing thyrotoxicosis

84

LATE (MORE THAN 30 DAYS)


1. Hypothyroidism
2. Hyperthyroidism (failed treatment)
3. Permanent hypoparathyroidism
4. Hypertrophic scarring or keloid formation ask patient if he/she has keloids

85
PERIPHERAL ARTERIAL DISEASE

ANATOMY OF THE LOWER LIMB ARTERIES

- The anterior tibial crosses into the anterior compartment of the leg and supplies the
muscles there, and then continues as the dorsalis pedis in the foot (surface landmark:
one third of the way down a line joining the midpoint of the two malleoli to the
cleft between the first and second toes)
- The posterior tibial supplies the posterior compartment of the leg and passes posterior
to the medial malleolus (surface landmark: one third of the way down a line joining
the medial malleolus to the heel) before dividing into medial and lateral plantar
arteries to supply the sole of the foot
- Refer to diagram important to know the arrangement of the anterior tibial, posterior
tibial and peroneal vessels at the trifurcation as you may be asked to read an
angiogram of these vessels.
- From lateral to medial: Anterior tibial, Peroneal, Posterior tibial

FORMS OF PERIPHERAL ARTERIAL DISEASE


Peripheral arterial disease

Acute

Chronic

Critical

- External iliac artery continues as the femoral artery after crossing the inguinal
ligament (surface landmark: the mid-inguinal point i.e. midway between the pubic
symphysis and the anterior superior iliac spine)
- The femoral artery then divides into the superficial femoral and the profunda femoris
(or deep femoral) arteries about 4cm below the inguinal ligament
- The profunda femoris supplies the compartments of the thigh via two main branches,
the medial and lateral circumflex femoral arteries
- The superficial femoral runs distally and passes through the adductor hiatus to reach
the popliteal fossa, where it changes its name to become the popliteal artery
- The popliteal artery divides into the anterior tibial artery and the posterior tibial
(also called tibioperoneal trunk by some), and the posterior tibial will give off the
peroneal artery

Asymptomatic

Non-critical.

Claudicants.

ACUTE LIMB ISCHAEMIA


Acute limb ischemia is defined as a sudden decrease in limb perfusion that causes a
potential threat to limb viability (manifested by ischemic rest pain, ischemic ulcers,
and/or gangrene) in patients who present within two weeks of the acute event (if >2
weeks, it is considered chronic ischaemia).
The decrease in perfusion is usually due to sudden occlusion of a feeding arterial vessel,
and this may be in a setting of already narrowed vessel lumen (acute on chronic
ischaemia) or in a normal lumen.

CAUSES:
1. Arterial embolism

- Most common cause of acute limb ischaemia (60-80% of the time)


- The most likely source of embolus is the heart (80%), of which 70% is due to
atrial fibrillation, 20% to AMI with left ventricular mural thrombus, and a small
proportion to prosthetic heart valves
- Non-cardiac emboli arise from other arteries where there are atherosclerotic
plaques or an aneurysm (the embolic material may be thrombus or part of a
plaque, but atheroemboli are less likely to cause complete arterial occlusion)
- Most common sites where emboli lodge:
Bifurcation of the femoral artery (most common site)
Trifurcation of the popliteal artery (next most common site in the lower limb)
Aortic bifurcation
External and internal iliacs
Arm (about 20% of emboli)
- Emboli usually cause lower limb ischaemia mostly
- After emboli obstructs the vessel, thrombus can propagate distally (due to stasis
of blood) and proximally (due to turbulence of incoming blood hitting embolus)
by derangements in the Virchows triad
2. Acute thrombosis

- Thrombosis of a previously stenotic but patent artery (atherosclerotic vessel)


- Less common cause of acute limb ischaemia
- When thrombotic occlusion of a vessel does occur, the resulting ischaemia is
usually less severe than in an embolic occlusion, because collaterals have had
time to form around the chronically stenosed vessel
- Other less common causes of acute thrombosis include the arteritides (usually
affecting medium-sized arteries), ergotism, and hypercoagulable states (notably
antiphospholipid syndrome).
3. Arterial trauma

- Increasing incidence of acute arterial occlusion due to endovascular diagnostic


or interventional procedures
- Trauma can cause development of an arteriovenous fistula that shunts blood
away from the limb
- Fracture or dislocations can stretch an artery and cause an intimal tear while the
media and adventitia layers are intact (because they contain elastin and can
stretch) a thrombus forms at the site of the tear where underlying
thrombogenic collagen is exposed
- Compartment syndrome can result from trauma as well

86

4. Dissecting aortic aneurysm

- As the blood dissects between the intima and media of the aorta, it can cause
occlusion of the aortic branches at their origins
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
In order of sensitivity to ischaemia, the tissues affected are nerves (most sensitive),
muscle, skin, and bone (least sensitive); thus early signs of ischaemia involve pain and
numbness, and muscle paralysis as well as skin changes occur later. The lower limb can
survive about 6 to 8 hours in an ischaemic state before injury becomes irreversible.
PRESENTATION
The classic 6 Ps of acute limb ischaemia: Pain, Paraesthesia, Pallor, Pulselessness,
Paralysis, Perishingly cold
Pain

- Develops acutely
- Starts off in a distal part of the extremity and then progresses proximally, increasing
in severity with time
- Further progress leads to decrease in pain as the nerves die off from ischaemia
- Important to ask for any previous claudication pain (10% of claudicants can develop
acute ischaemia due to thrombosis of the stenosed vessel)
Paraesthesia

- Starts off with paraesthesia (develops relatively early in the course of ischaemia) and
develops to complete loss of sensation
Pallor

- Assess skin colour, temperature, and capillary refill


- The limb may still be slightly pink though pale, but in severe ischaemia it can be
marble-white (especially in embolus where there are no collaterals)
- Other colours:
Mottling/Marbling (patches of blue on white): deoxygenation of stagnated blood;
surrounding areas of pallor are due to vasoconstriction
Duskiness: due to deoxygenation of stagnated blood; if there is fixed staining (i.e.
does not blanch on pressure) then the limb is non-viable
Black: gangrene
- The disclouration usually affects a large part of the distal limb e.g. the toes, foot;
rarely does it only affect one toe (more in chronic ischaemia)
- The site of arterial occlusion is usually one joint above the line of demarcation
between normal and ischaemic tissue

87
Pulselessness

- If able to feel one good pulse (PT or DP), quite unlikely that the limb is ischaemic,
but still possible
- If unable to feel, assess with a handheld Doppler the arterial and venous flow in the
limb there can still be flow without a palpable pulse
- Also feel the pulses on the other limbs gives a clue as to whether the cause is
embolic or thrombotic (see below)
Paralysis

- Total paralysis occurs late and usually indicates that the limb is non-viable
- Can assess viability of muscle by making a cut viable muscle will be shiny and
twitches in response to flicking, while dead muscle will be dull and will not twitch
- Dangerous to save dead muscle as reperfusion can cause circulation of toxic
metabolites in the muscle
CLASSIFICATION OF SEVERITY (SVS/ISCVS)
Three categories: viable, threatened and non-viable
(i) Viable: No immediate threat of tissue loss
(ii) Threatened: Salvageable if revascularised promptly
(iii) Non-viable: Limb cannot be salvaged and has to be amputated, no emergency to
operate. Patient may require revascularisation to allow lower amputation or help
the amputation to heal
Pain
Capillary refill
Motor deficit
Sensory deficit
Arterial Doppler
Venous Doppler
Treatment

Viable
Mild
Intact
None
None
Audible
Audible
Urgent work-up

Threatened
Severe
Delayed
Partial
Partial
Inaudible
Audible
Emergency surgery

Non-viable
Variable
Absent (fixed stain)
Complete
Complete
Inaudible
Inaudible
Amputation

DIFFERENTIATING BETWEEN EMBOLIC AND THROMBOTIC CAUSE


Identifiable source
Claudication hx
Physical findings

Angiography

Embolic
Present AF, recent AMI
Negative
Contralat pulses present
White limb (no blood)
Minimal atherosclerosis,
sharp cut-off, few collaterals

Thrombotic
Less common
Positive
Contralat pulses diminished
Dusky limb (collaterals still
supplying limb)
Diffuse atherosclerosis,
irregular cut-off, welldeveloped collaterals

EARLY ANTICOAGULATION
- Important to start anticoagulation with heparin if the suspicion of acute limb
ischaemia is high
- Give IV heparin bolus 3000-5000 units
- Follow with IV heparin infusion at 1000 units/hour
- Ideal PTT is 2 to 2.5 times normal
INVESTIGATIONS
- Pre-operative investigations
- FBC, U/E/Cr, PT/PTT, GXM
- CXR and ECG if patient is older than 40 yrs old
- If suspecting an AMI with mural thrombus, do cardiac enzymes
- Angiogram can be done in patients with viable limb, but in patients with threatened
limb there is no time for angiogram may do on-table angiography
[Angiography is useful in confirming an occlusion, the cause thrombotic or
embolic and also pinpointing the level of occlusion and the anatomy]
DEFINITIVE TREATMENT OPTIONS
Surgical

Endovascular

- Thrombolysis
- Angioplasty
- Stenting

Embolectomy
Endarterectomy
Bypass grafting
Fasciotomy
Primary amputation

In general, embolectomy is done for embolic occlusion, while thrombolysis is done for
thrombotic occlusion.
Embolectomy

- Can be done under LA but still require anaesthetist to monitor patient as he may be
quite sick (e.g. AMI), and hyperkalaemia with cardiac arrhythmia can occur after
reperfusion
- Involves clamping of the involved artery and making an arterotomy
- A Fogarty balloon catheter is inserted into the artery until distal to the clot, then the
balloon is inflated to trawl the clot out of the artery
- Check for forward-bleeding and back-bleeding of the vessel (i.e. free spontaneous
flow from proximal and distal ends of the artery when unclamped)
- Flush with heparinised saline
- Check foot warm foot with good pulse indicates reperfusion

- Important to monitor ECG for any arrhythmias!


- Closure of arterotomy with meticulous haemostasis as patient is on heparin
- Post-op: patient monitored in high-dependency; look out for reperfusion injury
The reperfused muscles become oedematous, increasing pressure in the
compartments of the leg, like compartment syndrome
Patient complains of calf pain
Unable to dorsiflex ankle as the anterior compartment is affected first
Requires three compartment fasciotomy to release pressure
- Need to convert to full warfarin anticoagulation, uptitrating dose until INR 2-2.5
before stopping heparin (patient at risk of further embolic events)
- Discharge patient to anticoagulation clinic for follow-up with warfarin advice
Thrombolysis

- Angiogram done before thrombolysis to locate occlusion


- Thrombolysis catheter inserted into the clot, and the thrombolytic agent is infused
- Patient will be in high-dependency with thrombolytic infusion for 6 hours (~10004000 units per minute)
- After 6 hours, redo angiogram to check for residual clot; if some clot remains, adjust
catheter into the clot and infuse for 6 more hours
- After complete lysis of the clot, can do angioplasty
- Takes much longer than embolectomy
- Thrombolysis may be preferred for embolism in a diseased artery, since it may be
difficult to trawl out the clot in a diffusely stenosed vessel the clot may get caught
on a proximal stenosed segment
Results:

- Embolectomy has a 20% mortality, almost full success rate


- Thrombolysis has a 10% mortality, only 35% successful

CHRONIC LIMB ISCHAEMIA


Chronic limb ischaemia can be divided into critical and non-critical limb ischaemia,
and non-critical ischaemia further subdivided into that which causes symptoms (usually
claudication) and that which is asymptomatic.
Most common cause is atherosclerosis with gradually developing diffuse stenosis of
the peripheral arteries resulting in diminished blood supply to the lower limb
(imbalance between supply and demand). Multiple collaterals form to bypass the
obstructed vessels as a compensatory mechanism

CRITICAL LIMB ISCHAEMIA


Critical limb ischaemia is defined as decrease in limb perfusion that causes a
potential threat to limb viability (manifested by ischemic rest pain, ischemic ulcers,
and/or gangrene) in patients who present more than two weeks after the acute event
(the converse of the definition of acute limb ischaemia).
FEATURES:
1. Rest pain requiring regular opioid analgesia (e.g. codeine) lasting >2 weeks
AND/OR
2. Gangrene or ulcers over the toes or feet
AND
3. Objective indication of poor vascular supply to the lower limbs
(a) Ankle brachial pressure index <0.5
(b) Toe pressure <30 mmHg
I. Rest pain

- Severe pain in the distal portion of the lower limb (usually toes, foot but may
involve more proximal areas if disease is severe) occurring at rest
- Pain is aggravated or precipitated by lifting the limb, relieved by dependency of
the limb many patients sleep with the leg hanging over the side of the bed to
relieve the pain
- So severe as to disturb sleep at night
- Not easily controllable with analgesia requires opioids to control pain
II. Ischaemic ulcers

- Usually arise from minor traumatic wounds with poor healing


- Often painful
- Most often occur on the tips of the toes, bunion area, over the metatarsal heads
(ball of the foot), lateral malleolus (as opposed to venous ulcers that occur over
the medial malleolus)

88

89
- Usually deep, dry, punctate (unlike venous ulcers that tend to be superficial, moist,
diffuse)
- May become infected resulting in cellulitis, even abscess formation, and spread to
involve the underlying bone and joints osteomyelitis, septic arthritis
III. Gangrene

- Cyanotic, anaesthetic tissue associated with or progressing to necrosis


- Occurs when arterial blood supply falls below that which is necessary to meet
minimal metabolic requirements
- Either dry or wet:
DRY hard, dry texture. Often has a clear demarcation between viable and
necrotic tissue. Occurs in patients with atherosclerotic disease. Safe and can be
allowed to autoamputate after demarcation with precautions against infection.
WET moist, swollen, frequently blistered. Often occurs in diabetics with
decreased sensation and unrecognised trauma. An emergency requiring surgical
debridement or amputation.

NON-CRITICAL LIMB ISCHAEMIA WITH CLAUDICATION


Intermittent claudication is defined as a reproducible discomfort of a defined group
of muscles that is induced by exercise and relieved with rest. Usually described as the
patient as a cramping, aching pain in the muscle group on exertion such as walking, and
alleviated on stopping (patient does not have to sit down for pain to go away) shop
window to shop window.
- Usually affects the superficial femoral near to the adductor hiatus, or the popliteal
artery calf pain
- Foot claudication results from involvement of the tibial and peroneal arteries, but
rarely do patients with claudication due to atherosclerosis get foot pain alone (more
common in Buergers)
- Thigh claudication results in common femoral artery or aortoiliac disease
- LeRiches syndrome arises from occlusion of the aortoiliacs, and is composed of a
classical tetrad of buttock claudication, impotence in men, absent femoral pulses (and
distal pulses), and occasionally presence of aortoiliac bruits.
- Important to determine the claudication distance within a short period of time
the distance is usually fairly constant, but can shorten as the disease progresses
CAUSES OF VASCULAR CLAUDICATION
- Most commonly atherosclerotic disease
- Other less common causes: ergot toxicity, Takayasus arteritis, Buergers disease
(thromboangiitis obliterans), vasospasm

NEUROGENIC CLAUDICATION
- Vascular intermittent claudication needs to be differentiated from neurogenic
claudication which can also present as pain in the lower limb on exertion
- The characteristic of neurogenic claudication is park bench to park bench where
the patient has to sit down and flex the spine to relieve the pain (pain results from
compression of the cord and spinal nerves in spinal stenosis; extension of the spine
further narrows the spinal canal while flexion widens it)
- Claudication distance of neurogenic claudication is more variable
- Pulses will be absent/diminished in vascular but not in neurogenic claudication
TAKING A HISTORY OF CHRONIC LIMB ISCHAEMIA
1. Claudication

Which part of the lower limb does the pain occur in


Nature of the pain
Radiation
Severity
Aggravating factors exertion
Relieving factors rest (just standing is sufficient)
Associated symptoms e.g. impotence in LeRiches
When did pain first start
Progress since first noticed until currently (worsening pain, increasing areas of
lower limb affected, pain on less exertion, development of rest pain)
- Current claudication distance
- How has symptoms affected lifestyle e.g. impaired mobility
2. Any rest pain

Site, nature, severity


Aggravating factors raising the limb
Relieving factors putting limb in a dependent position
Able to relieve with normal analgesics? Or require opioid analgesia?
How long has rest pain lasted for requiring opioid analgesia (if more than 2
weeks, considered a feature of critical limb ischaemia)

3. Any ulcer or gangrene in the lower limb?

- Ask about onset of ulcer/gangrene


- Progress (stable, or increasing in size, getting worse)
- If ulcer, any preceding trauma? Ill-fitting shoes? Altered sensation in the foot?
Does patient take care to protect foot? Pain? Redness/swelling/warmth in
surrounding skin? Purulent/foul-smelling discharge from the ulcer?

- If gangrene, is it wet or dry? Redness/swelling/warmth in surrounding skin? Any


feeling in the toe involved? Any sensory changes in the other normal toes, foot,
limb?
- Any systemic signs of infection fever, chills, rigors, malaise
4. Risk factors (Arteropath)

Diabetes mellitus take a full diabetic history including other complications


Hyperlipidaemia
Heart disease
Stroke
Smoking
Family history

5. Drug history

- Aspirin intake
- Any allergies to contrast (for angiography)
- Ergots
6. Social history

- Premorbid function and current function


- Social support and home condition (need to climb stairs?)
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
Examine the patients lower limbs in a warm room, with the patient exposed optimally
(from the thighs to the feet, wearing underwear). Patient is supine with the bed flat.
Look

1. Colour of the lower limb


- White (pallor); pink (normal); blue/dusky (cyanosed); mottled
2. Trophic changes
- Loss of hair
- Dry, shiny skin
- Nail changes
- Wasting
3. Presence of any diabetic dermopathy
4. Presence of ulcer
- Look carefully at the entire lower limb, including the heels (ask patient to flex at
the knee so you can look at the heel) and between the toes
- Site of the ulcer
Venous ulcers form at the medial malleolus
Arterial ulcers are more distal, usually between the toes, and at pressure
points such as the lateral malleolus;

90

Neuropathic ulcers form at areas such as the ball of the foot and the heel
Size, shape
Edges (punched out arterial; sloping venous)
Base
Depth of the ulcer (can see underlying tendon? Down to bone?)
Appearance of the base Necrotic? Granulating (beefy-red)? Sloughy?
Any discharge pus, blood?
Surrounding skin
Erythema (cellulitis) there may be an underlying abscess (confirm on
palpation)
Blistering, purplish colour (possibility of necrotising fasciitis)

5. Presence of gangrene
- Wet (infected) or dry (not infected)
- Extent of gangrene (level of demarcation)
6. (If the patient has diabetes, may see deformities Charcots joint)
Feel

1. Warmth of the skin


- Use the dorsum of the fingers of both hands to simultaneously run up the
patients feet to the shins and thighs bilaterally
- Compare the temperature on both sides (note if one side is cooler)
- If one limb feels cool, feel for the level where the skin becomes warm
2. Capillary refill
- Press hard on a toe for a few seconds, then release
- Normal capillary refill should be 2 seconds or less
- If a toe is blue, check for blanchability (fixed staining = dead toe)
3. Palpating the ulcer if present
- Any surrounding tenderness (infection)
- Bogginess of surrounding tissue (may have abscess formation)
- See if any discharge from the ulcer when palpating
4. Pulses
- Feel the distal pulses and work your way proximally
- Posterior tibial pulse: one-third of the way down a line joining the medial
malleolus to the heel
- Dorsalis pedis pulse: one third of the way down a line joining the midpoint of
the two malleoli to the cleft between the first and second toes
- Popliteal pulse: Ask patient to bend the knee ~60-90 degrees, then palpate
deeply in the popliteal fossa with the fingers of one hand pressing the fingers of
the other [If the pulse is very well felt, suspect a popliteal aneurysm]

91
- Femoral pulse: Midpoint of the line joining the pubic symphysis to the anterior
superior iliac spine (mid-inguinal point), just below the inguinal ligament
- Grading of pulses: 2+ is normal; 1+ is diminished (but may be normal for
popliteal); negative if not felt label on a stick-figure diagram
Move

1. Buergers test
- Do one side at a time
- Holding the heel of the foot, with the patients lower limb straightened, slowly
lift the entire lower limb, looking at the colour of the toes
- Stop when the toes become pale (white)
- Estimate the angle the lower limb makes with the horizontal this is the
Buergers angle
Normal lower limb can be raised to 90 degrees without turning white; if the
Buergers angle is less than 20 degrees, this indicates severe ischaemia
- There may be venous guttering of the lower limb at this angle as well
- If the patient is lying near the side of the bed, tell the patient that youre going to
put his leg over the edge of the bed before gently abducting the hip and then
letting the leg drop over the edge of the bed
- Look at the leg for reactive hyperaemia (the leg turns purple-red)
Complete the exam

Examine the rest of the pulses


Offer to auscultate over the femoral and popliteal arteries for bruits
Examine the abdomen for any abdominal aortic aneurysm
Measure the ankle-brachial pressure index (ABPI)

INVESTIGATIONS
1. Ankle-brachial pressure index

- How the ankle-brachial pressure index is done


Brachial pressure is measured with a blood pressure cuff around the arm and
a Doppler probe at the brachial artery cuff is inflated until the arterial
signal is obliterated, then slowly deflated until the signal just starts being
detected, at which the pressure is recorded
Ankle pressures are measured in a similar manner, with the cuff around the
calf and the Doppler at the dorsalis pedis and posterior tibial arteries one
reading for each artery
The ankle pressure to be used for each leg is the higher of the two taken

This ankle pressure is then divided by the brachial pressure (the higher of the
two brachial pressures for both upper limbs) to get the ankle-brachial
pressure index

- Interpreting the values


Normal ABPI is greater than 0.9 (can be more than 1.0 as ankle pressures
tend to be higher than brachial; if >1.3, suggests non-compressible calcified
vessel)
ABPI between 0.5 to 0.9 occlusion, often associated with claudication
ABPI <0.5: Critical ischaemia
- Accuracy of the index
ABPI below 0.9 has 95% sensitivity and 100% specificity for detecting
angiogram-positive peripheral arterial disease and is associated with >50%
stenosis in one or more major vessels
- Exercise treadmill testing
Measure ABPI before and after patient exercises on a treadmill
If the ABPI falls by >0.2 claudication
2. Duplex ultrasound

- Non-invasive test, good alternative to angiogram


- Duplex (means two modalities) = 2D ultrasound (like the normal kind) plus
Doppler ultrasound (measures flow and waveforms)
- Normal arterial flow waveform should be triphasic; biphasic and monophasic
waves are abnormal
- Can define anatomy of occlusions and also look for relatively good arteries
distally for landing zone of bypass graft
3. Angiogram (arteriogram)

- Invasive and associated with risks of bleeding from arterial puncture,


dissection/damage to artery with worsening ischaemia
- Usually only done if planning intervention e.g. angioplasty, stenting
- Preparing for angiogram:
Take informed consent from patient
Ask about contrast allergy, asthma, renal disease, metformin
Investigations: FBC (platelets impt), PT/PTT, creatinine
- Angiogram with digital subtraction the images of the underlying bone are
removed so as to better visualise the arteries (if the bones are visible, then it is a
normal angiogram, without digital subtraction)

ASSESSMENT OF SEVERITY
The three Ls of peripheral arterial disease:

Life does disease threaten life (e.g. sepsis; other complications of atherosclerosis
e.g. stroke, AMI;) or will intervention cause risks
(ii) Limb will patient lose the limb
(iii) Lifestyle is the lifestyle of the patient severely handicapped, does it require
intervention
(i)

Fontaine system

Stage I: Asymptomatic
Stage IIa: Mild claudication
Stage IIb: Moderate to severe claudication
Stage III: Ischaemic rest pain
Stage IV: Ulceration or gangrene
TREATMENT OF CLAUDICATION
Conservative

- Smoking cessation
- Exercise training
Exercise at least half to one hour every day
Walk until pain comes, rest 2-3 minutes, walk again
Keep a walk diary recording daily claudication distance in paces
Will stimulate collateral formation symptoms get better
- Podiatrist to teach foot care
- Assessment of cardiovascular risk factors and treatment to optimise control
cardiologist
- Teach patient about symptoms of critical ischaemia, to return to ED if such
symptoms arise
- Antiplatelets e.g. aspirin
- ?Use of Vasteral (methoxyphylline)
- Monitor regularly with measurement of ABPI

Intervention (endovascular or surgical)

- At least 6 months of conservative treatment first


- Monitor claudication distance and ABPI intervene if deteriorating despite
conservative management
- If parameters improve but then plateau, discuss with patient about whether he can
accept the level of symptoms, and the risks of intervention weigh risks against
benefits
- Usually do angioplasty rather than bypass as it is less invasive, though may not be as
effective in treating the symptoms

92

1. Angioplasty
Stenting usually not done for lower limbs except in aortoiliacs (since stent
needs to be placed in a vessel which is relatively fixed and wont be
kinked/bent by movement)
Angioplasty only effective for focal stenotic lesions and better for large
vessels
Problem with angioplasty is that it is not long-lasting restenosis can occur
New method: subintimal angioplasty if lumen is so occluded that guide
wire cannot pass through, the guidewire is threaded into the subintimal space
to create a dissection around the occluded segment, and this space is then
angioplastied to create a channel parallel to the actual lumen for blood to
flow through
2. Bypass grafting
Consider bypass when lesions cannot be treated by angioplasty i.e. lesion
extends for long distance through the vessel and/or no lumen for guide wire
to pass through (complete occlusion)
Needs a good landing zone for graft distally if vessel is diffusely
diseased, difficult to perform bypass
TREATMENT OF CRITICAL LIMB ISCHAEMIA
Need to revascularise see interventions above
AMPUTATION
Indications (3 Ds)

1. Dead
Necrotic tissue
2. Dangerous
Gangrene, ascending sepsis
3. Damn nuisance
Non-functional limb; bad smell; pain; constant need to dress wound
- Level of amputation depends on vascularity of the limb and the indication (e.g. if
infected, need to amputate above level of infection)
- As far as possible try to preserve function of the lower limb
- May require revascularisation interventions before amputation to ensure good healing,
or to enable lower amputation
- Do not simply amputate without ensuring good vascular supply to the surgical site,
otherwise the wound will not heal

93
ABDOMINAL AORTIC ANEURYSM
EPIDEMIOLOGY
More common in men than in women (4:1 ratio)
Predominantly in older patients (>60 years old)
Other risk factors: smoking, hypertension, strong family history (Marfan, Ehler-Danlos)
PATHOLOGY
- An aneurysm is a localised abnormal dilatation of a blood vessel wall or the heart
- True aneurysms are bound by all layers of the blood vessel wall, while a false
aneurysm is a breach in the blood vessel wall leading to an extravascular haematoma
that freely communicates with the intravascular space
- Atherosclerosis is the most common aetiological factor plaque formation results in
destruction of the tunica media (and the elastin fibres in it) arterial wall thinning
and loss of elastic recoil dilatation
- Other causes: cystic medial degeneration (in Marfan), trauma, infection (mycotic)
- Location: usually infrarenal (95% of cases), may extend to involve common iliac
arteries, rarely beyond
- Size: 3 to 15 cm (normal aorta is 2cm in diameter)
- Shape: Usually fusiform long dilated segment (versus saccular which is spherical)
- Often contains mural thrombus due to turbulence and stasis
RISK OF RUPTURE
- Small aneurysms <5cm have a 2-3% chance of rupture per year, while aneurysm
larger than 5.5 cm will have a 10% risk of rupture per year
- 75% of aneurysms 7cm or larger will rupture in 5 years
PRESENTATION
- Most commonly asymptomatic, found incidentally during imaging
- Most feared presentation is that of rupture patient complains of intense abdominal
pain radiating to the back, becomes rapidly hypotensive and goes into shock
- Thromboembolism distally gangrene of feet (trash feet)
- Local compression on neighbouring structures e.g. ureter
- Obstruction of branches from aorta e.g. iliac, renal, mesenteric, vertebral

PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
- Ensure vitals stable
- Visible pulsation over abdomen
- Pulsations and mass in epigastric region felt on deep palpation
- Mass is expansile when fingers of both hands are placed at the edges on either side
of the mass, the fingers are pushed upwards and outwards
- Auscultate for bruit over the mass
- Check the other arteries femoral, popliteal for any aneurysm, and listen for bruits
- Look at the lower limbs for any gangrene, infection, etc
INVESTIGATIONS
Mostly imaging to delineate aneurysm CT Scan
MANAGEMENT
Dependent upon clinical context is patient asymptomatic, symptomatic but not yet
ruptured, or ruptured?
Ruptured AAA

- Very high mortality nearly 100% if frank rupture (will not get to ED in time)
- Most of the patients who reach the ED (about 50% reach ED alive) have a leaking
AAA with a tamponade effect by the retroperitoneal structures
- High suspicion in unstable hypotensive patient complaining of severe sharp pain
radiating to the back; may feel a pulsatile mass in the abdomen
1. Stabilise patient resuscitation with fluid and blood products
2. Call for vascular surgeon
3. Do not intubate as neuromuscular blocking agents will reduce tamponade effect,
worsening haemorrhage
4. Bring to operating theatre for open repair surgeons main task is to quickly
isolate the aorta and clamp it proximally (can be clamped for about 30 minutes
without significant visceral ischaemia)
5. After clamping the aorta, the AAA is incised, the surrounding haematoma and
mural thrombus within the AAA are cleared out
6. Synthetic graft (Dacron polytetrafluoroethylene) is placed within the aorta and
the vessel wall closed up over the graft i.e. the graft forms the lumen of the aorta
7. Most common complication postoperatively is renal insufficiency can be
reduced by giving frusemide or mannitol pre-operatively before anaesthesia
induction
- Mortality rate of repair operation in this setting is about 50%

Non-ruptured AAA

- Time available for investigation of size of AAA and related anatomy


- Indications for surgery:
(a) Aneurysm > 5.5 cm in largest diameter
(b) Increase in diameter of more than 1cm per year
(c) Symptomatic aneurysm back pain, tenderness on palpation, distal embolism,
ruptured/leaking aneurysm
- Patients fitness for surgery needs to be properly assessed because it is a major
operation need to optimise cardiovascular function
- Operation is the same except that it is done under elective setting
- Mortality is <5% in the elective setting, serious morbidity ~10%
Endovascular stenting

- An alternative to open repair which is less invasive, can be done under GA


- Mortality ~1%, but serious morbidity rate is similar to open repair: 10%
- Involves deployment of a non-porous stent within the aneurysm to form the lumen of
the aorta requires adequate neck proximally and good landing site distally
- Not as good results as open surgery; need to do an angiogram every 6 months to
check position of the stent (ensure that stent has not migrated)
COMPLICATIONS OF SURGERY
Intraoperative/early

1. Acute myocardial infarction most patients already have atherosclerotic disease of


coronary vessels and are at risk of AMI (responsible for 50-60% of mortality)
2. Stroke (due to hypotension or embolism)
3. Renal insufficiency
4. Colon ischaemia occurs in 2-6%
5. Trash foot embolism of thrombus from the aneurysm
6. Infection of graft
7. Spinal cord ischaemia (quite uncommon)
Late

1. Aortoenteric fisula frank PR bleeding, torrential


2. Late infection of prosthetic graft material
3. Sexual dysfunction

94

95
PERIPHERAL VENOUS DISEASE

ANATOMY OF THE VENOUS SYSTEM OF THE LOWER LIMB

- Course of the great saphenous vein:

Arises from the medial end of the dorsal venous arch of the foot
Passes anterior to the medial malleolus
Runs up the leg posteriorly to pass behind the medial surface of the knee
Then runs anteriorly and laterally up the thigh
Pierces the cribriform fascia at the saphenofemoral junction to drain into the
femoral vein

- Course of the small saphenous vein:

Arises from the lateral end of the dorsal venous arch of the foot
Passes posterior to the lateral malleolus
Runs up the midline of the calf
Pierces the deep fascia over the popliteal fossa to drain into the popliteal vein

- The superficial system and the deep system communicate through communicating
veins that contain valves which allow only one-way flow of blood from the superficial
vein into the deep vein
- Locations of the communicating veins:

Saphenofemoral junction (great saphenous drains into femoral vein): located 2.5
cm below and lateral to the pubic tubercle
Hunterian perforator: mid-thigh
Dodds perforator: distal thigh
Boyds perforator: knee
Calf perforators: at 5, 10, and 15 cm above the medial malleolus

- Physiology of venous drainage:

- The venous drainage of the lower limb is divided into a deep venous system and a
superficial venous system separated by the deep fascia of the lower limb
- The deep venous system is composed of veins corresponding to the arterial supply e.g.
anterior and posterior tibial veins, popliteal vein, femoral vein
- The superficial venous system is composed of two major veins, the great saphenous
vein and the small saphenous vein

Main mechanism is the calf muscle pump


Contraction of the calf muscles compresses large venous sinuses in the muscles,
squeezing the blood into the popliteal vein and back to the heart
The deep veins have many valves to prevent backflow, so blood only flows
towards the heart
During calf muscle relaxation, the intramuscular veins open and suck blood in
from the superficial system through the communicating veins, thus draining the
superficial veins

CHRONIC VENOUS INSUFFICIENCY


Chronic venous insufficiency develops when there is venous hypertension, which can
result from:
1. Obstruction to venous flow e.g. tumour compression in the pelvis, pregnancy,
deep vein thrombosis
2. Dysfunction of venous valves e.g. varicose veins
3. Failure of the venous pump dependent on adequate muscle contraction
(stroke, muscular weakness can cause failure) as well as competent venous valves
MANIFESTATIONS OF CHRONIC VENOUS INSUFFICIENCY:
1. Venous dilatations

(a) Telangiectasias (spider veins or venous stars intradermal veins)


(b) Reticular veins (slightly larger intermediate veins)
(c) Varicosities (visible, dilated tortuous superficial veins; formed by main
tributaries of the saphenous veins because these do not have a strong coat of
smooth muscle in their walls, unlike the saphenous veins; they are more
superficial and not bound down to the deep fascia)
(d) Corona phlebectactica (a network of small dilated venules beneath the lateral
and/or medial malleolus with severe venous hypertension)

4. Venous ulcer formation

- Typical location is over the medial malleolus


- Shallow, flat ulcer with sloping edges; base may be sloughy or granulating,
usually quite moist-looking
- Surrounding skin will show signs of CVI
- In long-standing ulcer SCC can develop (Marjolins ulcer) If ulcer enlarges,
becomes painful and malodorous, edge becomes thickened or raised, if inguinal
lymph nodes are enlarged
These manifestations can be asymptomatic or associated with symptoms of leg fullness,
aching discomfort, heaviness, nocturnal leg cramps, or bursting pain upon standing.
CEAP CLASSIFICATION OF CHRONIC VENOUS INSUFFICIENCY

2. Oedema pitting: The hallmark of CVI; present in all but the earliest stages

Unilateral oedema worsened by dependency (worse at the end of the day) and better
with recumbency
3. Skin changes

(a) Hyperpigmentation of the skin over medial lower third of the leg (gaiter
area) due to extravasation with haemosiderin deposits
(b) Atrophie blanche hypopigmented scars of healed venous ulcers (avascular
and fibrotic skin)
(c) Venous stasis eczema pruritic, weeping, scaling, with erosions and crusting
(d) Lipodermatosclerosis a fibrosing panniculitis of the subcutaneous tissue that
results in a firm area of tender, indurated, hyperpigmented skin that is fixed to
subcutaneous tissue.
Results from severe venous hypertension
Starts in the gaiter area and extends circumferentially to surround the leg
If severe can result in an inverted champagne bottle appearance of the
leg with brawny oedema above and below the area of lipodermatosclerosis
(e) Cellulitis

96

VARICOSE VEINS
Varicose veins are dilated, tortuous veins. They can be divided into primary varicose
veins, where the cause is unknown (may be related to posture and components and
structure of the vein wall), and secondary varicose veins, which result from proximal
venous obstruction, destruction of the valves by thrombosis or an increase in flow and
pressure caused by an arteriovenous fistula.

97
PATHOPHYSIOLOGY
- Inherent weakness in the vein wall, leading to dilation and separation of valve cusps
so they become incompetent
- This may be aggravated by obstruction to venous return (as above)
RISK FACTORS
- Age
- Parity
- Occupation requiring long periods of standing
- Weight
- Posture crossing legs all the time
- Increased abdominal pressure constipation, chronic cough, etc
- Pelvic tumour or other lesion compressing on the deep veins
HISTORY
Usually varicose veins do not cause symptoms and problems unless they are related to
chronic venous insufficiency
EXAMINATION:
Examine patient standing with adequate exposure of the lower limbs
Inspection (look all around the limb!)

1. Presence of signs of chronic venous insufficiency (as above)


- Oedema
- Skin changes
- Venous ulcers from pressure necrosis from insude
2. Look at course of great saphenous vein and short saphenous vein for varicosities
3. Look at the inguinal region for any saphena varix
Palpate

1. Feel any dilated varicosities


2. Palpate along the course of the saphenous veins and their tributaries to feel any
varicosities present (may be more palpable than visible especially in fat legs)
3. Palpate the inguinal region for a saphena varix (compressible lump that refills
when released)
4. Do the cough test to feel for reflux at the saphenofemoral junction (2.5 cm below
and lateral to the pubic tubercle)
5. Percussion (tap test) place two hands some distance apart. First percuss the
distal veins to feel the wave of blood flowing orthogradely normal. Then percuss
the proximal veins if the distal hand can feel the wave of blood flowing
retrogradely then there is valvular incompetence (not a very valuable test)

Special tests

TOURNIQUET TEST
- Lie the patient down and empty the varicosities
- Tie a tourniquet just below the SFJ
- Ask the patient to stand up
- Look for filling up of the varicosities above and below the tourniquet
- If the veins dilate above but not below the tourniquet, this indicates that the
perforators below the level of the tourniquet are not incompetent and that the SFJ is
incompetent confirm this by releasing the tourniquet and watching the veins dilate
- If the veins below the tourniquet are dilated when the patient stands up, then the
incompetent perforator is below the level of the tourniquet
- Repeat the test, placing the tourniquet at different sites:
(i)
Mid thigh (just below the Hunterian perforator
(ii)
Below the knee
(iii)
Mid-calf
- The incompetent perforator is located between just above the level where the
tourniquet prevents dilation of the veins in the limb on standing
[The alternative is the triple tourniquet test, where three tourniquets are tied with the
patient lying down and then released from the bottom up to locate the site of
insufficiency]
TRENDELENBURG TEST
- The SFJ is occluded (landmark is 2.5 cm below and lateral to the pubic tubercle) with
the patient lying down
- Get the patient to stand while holding the SFJ occluded
- If varicosities do not fill up, the SFJ is the site of incompetence; if they fill up, there
are other sites of incompetence (the SFJ may or may not be incompetent)
PERTHES TEST
- Tie a tourniquet around the calf or thigh and ask patient repeatedly stand on tiptoe
and then relax
- In a person with normal deep venous drainage and competent venous valves in the
communicating veins the superficial veins should drain into the deep veins
- If the patients varicosities remain enlarged then he or she has obstructed deep
venous drainage or incompetent valves in the communicating veins
Completing the examination

- Auscultate over the varicosities for any bruit (indicate arteriovenous malformation)
- Examine the abdomen for any mass that may be causing the varicosities

Use of a handheld Doppler probe to detect incompetence

VENOUS ULCERS

- Doppler probe is placed in the popliteal fossa between the two heads of the
gastrocnemius over small saphenous vein
- Squeeze the calf to empty the veins should hear a whoosh as blood flows through
the small saphenous vein
- When the calf is relaxed there should not be any sound a second whoosh indicates
reflux of blood i.e. there is valvular incompetence

CAUSE ANY CAUSE OF CHRONIC VENOUS INSUFFICIENCY


1. Obstruction to venous flow thrombosis
2. Incompetent valves varicose veins, deep vein reflux (post-DVT)
3. Muscle pump failure stroke, neuromuscular disease

INVESTIGATIONS
Venous duplex ultrasound

- Indications:
Recurrent varicose veins
History of superficial thromobophlebitis
History of DVT
Venous eczema
Haemosiderin staining
Lipodermatosclerosis
Venous ulceration
- Can delineate deep and superficial venous systems and locate sites of incompetence
- Exclude presence of deep vein thrombosis stripping is contraindicated
MANAGEMENT
Conservative

1. Lifestyle changes
- Decrease amount of time spent standing
- If due to job, change job or ask for change to position that involves less standing
and walking
2. Graduated compression stockings
3. Medications e.g. Daflon
Surgical

Indications:
1. Cosmesis large unsightly varicosities
2. Symptoms pain, discomfort
3. Complications signs of chronic venous insufficiency, venous ulceration
Available modalities:
1. Most commonly done: High tie with great saphenous vein stripping, and stab
avulsion of varicosities
2. Ultrasound-guided foam sclerotherapy
3. Endovenous laser therapy (burns vein from within)

98

INVESTIGATIONS
1. Exclude infection of the ulcer and other complications
- FBC for raised total white count
- Swabs of the ulcer for Gram stain and cultures
- X-ray of the area to exclude underlying gas, bone involvement
2. Venous duplex to map out venous system
3. Check for peripheral arterial disease by doing ABPI
4. Biopsy if cannot exclude malignant transformation (Marjolins ulcer)
MANAGEMENT:
Conservative

1. 4 layer compression stockings (change once per week)


(a) Non-adherent wound dressing over ulcer (e.g. Menolin) followed by wool
bandage
(b) Crepe bandage
(c) Blue-line bandage (Elset)
(d) Adhesive bandage (Coban)
2. Analgesia
3. Antibiotics if infected
4. Warn patient to avoid trauma to affected area
5. Encourage rest and elevate leg
6. Once healed, compression stockings should be fitted and continued for life
Surgical

- If ulcer fails to heal


- First, exclude malignancy or other causes of ulcer (biopsy)
- Split skin graft can be considered with excision of dead skin and graft attached to
healthy granulation tissue
- Venous surgery for the underlying pathology

99
UROLOGICAL DISEASES

HISTORY
Post-renal Causes

APPROACH TO HAEMATURIA
DEFINITION:
- >3 RBC / hpf.
- DDx: haemoglobinuria, myoglobinuria, pseudohaematuria (menstruating women),
medications causing discoloration of urine (eg rifampicin, phenytoin)
CAUSES
Drugs
PreRenal

Renal

Analgesics (NSAIDs)
Anticoagulants
Cytotoxic/immunosuppressive agents (eg cyclophosphamide)
OCP
Penicillin
Quinine
Warfarin

2. Painful vs painless haematuria


Painful
- Tumour
- Hydronephrosis
- Renal cysts
- Ureteric stone / clot
- Pyelonephritis
- UTI
- Bladder outflow obstruction (e.g.
BPH, strictures)

Painless
- Malignancy RCC, TCC, Prostate
- Drugs
- GN
- Bleeding diathesis
- ITP / HSP
- Infections malaria, schistosomiasis
- Exercise

Systemic

Bleeding diathesis
Sickle cell disease

Metabolic

Hypercalciuria
Hyperuricosuriia

3. Frequency + dysuria + haematuria


- DDx: nephrolithiasis (colicky), malignancy, UTI (women & children), bladder
outflow obstruction (men e.g. BPH)

Vascular

AV malformations
Renal artery disease thromboembolism, dissecting aneurysms,
malignant hypertension
Renal vein thrombosis

4. Other urological symptoms


- Storage problem frequency, urgency, nocturia, incontinence
- Voiding problem strangury, hesitancy, dribbling, incomplete emptying etc
- Others polyuria, oliguria, urethral discharge

Vasculitis

HSP
PAN
Wegener granulomatosis

Pre-renal & Renal Causes

Glomerular

Tubulointerstitial
dz

Postrenal

1. Which part of urine stream is blood stained?


- Beginning urethra distal to UG diaphragm
- End bladder neck or prostate
- Throughout upper urinary tract or upper bladder

Post-strep GN
Post-infectious GN
IgA nephropathy
Lupus nephritis
Other GNs

Polycystic kidney disease


Nephrolithiasis
Malignancy RCC, metastatic
Pyelonephritis
Renal cysts

Infxns of ureter, bladder, prostate, urethra eg schistosomiasis, TB etc


Cancers of ureter, bladder (TCC), prostate, urethra
Nephrolithiasis

5. Associated fever pyelonephritis, malaria


6. Screen for pre-renal causes
LOW / bone pain / sickness
Rash, arthritis, arthralgia,
myalgia, fever, oedema
Sore throat, skin infxns, URTI
Ongoing URTI or GE
Iatrogenic
Travel history
PMHx
Family history

Malignancies, TB, systemic illnesses


Autoimmune causes, vasculitis
Post-strep / post-infective GN
IgA nephropathy
Drug causes, radiotherapy
Schistosomiasis, malaria
Renal disease, HPT, diabetic nephropathy,
bleeding diathesis, sickle cell dz
PKD, sickle cell disease, renal dzes (eg
Alport syndrome ask for deafness), hypt,
urolithiasis

Other necessary history

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Infection - Fever, travel and contact history


Sorethroat - Post-strep/infective GN, IgA nephropathy
Autoimmune - Fever, rash, joint pain, oedema
Malignancy - LOW, bone pain, neuro deficits, SOB, liver function
PMHx - Renal dz,
- systemic dz (DM HPT Bleeding sickle cell)
6. Drug history / Hx of radiation
7. Family history PKD, renal dz, Sickle cell, HPT
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
1. Check patients vitals- stable?
2. Conjunctival pallor
3. Abdomen renal mass, palpable bladder/bladder mass
4. Scrotum varicocoele on the left (may have RCC of the left kidney with extension
of tumour into renal vein, blocking the testicular vein where it drains into the left
renal vein)
5. Digital rectal examination prostate enlargement (BPH versus cancer)
INVESTIGATIONS
1. Urine dipstick

- Causes of false-positive for blood: haemoglobinuria, beetroot, drugs (rifampicin),


metabolic (alkaptonuria, porphyria)
2. UFEME

- Confirm presence of red blood cells


- Casts nephritis
- Elevated WBC (pyuria is >5 WBC per hpf), organisms infection
3. Urine cytology for malignant cells
4. Urine phase contrast

- RBCs isomorphic or dysmorphic? Dysmorphic RBCs suggest a tubular source,


while isomorphic RBCs suggest post-renal source (ureter, bladder, etc)
5. Urine culture and sensitivity
6. Full blood count

- How low is the Hb?


- Elevated TW infection
7. Urea, electrolytes and creatinine

- Any renal impairment and electrolyte abn (renal or pre-renal dz more likely)

100

8. Plain KUB

- Stones, size of kidney


9. Ultrasound of the kidneys

- Renal size
- Presence of any hydronephrosis
- Renal stones
10. Intravenous urogram (IVU) see below for more details

- Distortion of renal outline and pelvic calyces by RCC, may have specks of
calcification
- Stones (filling defect, proximal dilatation, decreased distal passage of contrast) +
hydroureter and/or hydronephrosis
- Filling defect in bladder due to TCC
- Increased residual volume in bladder after micturition due to BPH
11. Cystoscopy

- Detection of bladder tumour (IVU may not pick up small tumours <1cm)
- Biopsy can be taken at the same time
KUB FILM
- Margins: Superiorly needs to be above the upper pole of the right kidney (T12),
inferiorly needs to show the pubic symphysis
INTRAVENOUS UROGRAM
- Intravenous contrast used to delineate anatomy of the kidneys and urinary system
- Various phases:
(i)
Control film plain KUB
(ii)
Nephrogram phase (taken 1 minute after contrast given) contrast fills
kidney parenchyma so the kidneys become more visible, can measure size
(iii)
Pyelogram phase (3-5 minutes) contrast fills calyces and pelvis, can
detect dilated calyces/pelvis (hydronephrosis), any filling defects
(iv)
Release film (abdominal binder which was placed to slow the flow of
contrast into the bladder is released) shows ureters, any hydroureter,
filling defects; bladder any filling defects, abnormal appearance of the
bladder (fir-tree appearance in neurogenic bladder)
(v)
Post-micturition any residual urine in bladder after voiding
- Contraindicated in:
(a) Contrast allergy
(b) Renal impairment (Cr >200)
(c) Patients on metformin (can cause lactic acidosis; patients need to stop
metformin 2 days before and after study)
(d) Patients with asthma (given steroids for 3 days before study)

101
RENAL CELL CARCINOMA
INVESTIGATIONS
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- 3% of adult malignancy
- Most frequent occurring solid lesion within kidney
- 2:1 male predominance
- Peak incidence 60-70 years
PATHOLOGY
- Most common primary renal tumour (80-85% of all tumours of the kidney)
- Arise from the renal tubular epithelium
- Three cell types: clear cell carcinoma (70-80%), papillary renal cell carcinoma (1015%), and chromophobe renal cell carcinoma (5%)
- Other renal tumours: TCC of renal pelvis, Wilms tumour, lymphoma
RISK FACTORS
- Smoking
- Exposure to cadmium
- Family history
von-Hippel Lindau syndrome due to mutation of the VHL gene on chromosome
3p25 (associated with CNS haemangioblastomas (usually cerebellar), bilateral
multicentric retinal angiomas, phaeochromocytomas, etc) clear cell
carcinomas
Hereditary papillary RCC (HPRCC) due to mutation of the MET proto-oncogene
on chromosome 7q31 multifocal bilateral papillary carcinomas
- Acquired polycystic kidney disease (secondary to chronic dialysis)
PRESENTATION
- Initially asymptomatic (may be detected incidentally)
- Painless gross haematuria is the most common presenting symptom >50% of cases
- When tumour has grown large enough, dull flank pain and palpable mass may result
Classical triad of RCC: flank pain, painless haematuria, palpable renal mass
(indicates late stage disease)
- May have fever a/w night sweats, LOA, LOW, malaise
- Polycythaemia occurs in 1-5% (due to increased erythropoietin)
- For left renal tumour, extension of tumour into left renal vein can cause a left
varicocoele as the left testicular vein becomes occluded
- Extension into IVC can cause lower limb oedema, ascites, liver dysfunction,
pulmonary embolism
- Symptoms of metastases lungs, liver, bones, brain, lymph nodes
- Paraneoplastic syndromes are uncommon Cushings, hypercalcaemia, hypertension

DIAGNOSTIC
1. Imaging CT and/or ultrasound

- Presumptive diagnosis is made on imaging a renal parenchymal mass with


thickened irregular walls and enhancement after contrast injection suggests
malignancy
2. Pathological diagnosis

- Needle biopsy usually not done for resectable lesions due to fears of tumour
seeding
- In these resectable lesions, a partial or total nephrectomy is often performed, and
provides the tissue diagnosis post-operatively
- In tumours with metastatic disease on presentation, biopsy of the metastatic site
may be easier
STAGING
1. CT scan of the abdomen

Perinephric invasion, adjacent organ invasion


Extension into renal vein, IVC
Lymph node enlargement
Liver metastases

2. CT scan of the chest

- For lung metastases


3. Bone scan

- Only done if patient complains of bone pain and/or alkaline phosphatase is raised
4. MRI of abdomen and heart

- Superior to CT for evaluation of IVC and right atrium involvement


T1

Tumour <7cm, limited to the kidney


T1a: tumour <4cm
T1b: tumour >4cm but <7cm

T2

Tumour >7cm, limited to the kidney

T3

Tumour extends into major veins or invades adrenal gland or perinephric


tissues, but not beyond Gerotas fascia

T4

Tumour invades beyond Gerotas fascia

TREATMENT

BLADDER TRANSITIONAL CELL CARCINOMA

RESECTABLE TUMOURS

EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Ninth most common cancer in Singaporean males
- Increasing incidence with age (80% diagnosed in patient >60 years old)
- 4:1 male predominance

Surgery

- Laparoscopic versus open methods


- Retroperitoneal versus transperitoneal approach
1. Partial nephrectomy
- Done in T1a disease spares part of the kidney that is not involved nephronsaving
2. Total nephrectomy
- Done in T1b disease entire kidney removed
3. Radical nephrectomy
- Done in T2 disease entire kidney together with Gerotas fascia
- In T3 disease, aim for radical nephrectomy and removal of structures affected e.g.
adrenal gland
Adjuvant chemotherapy
Surveillance after resection to detect relapse early
Patients who cannot undergo resection

- Most small tumours grow slowly and do not become symptomatic or metastasise
reasonable to manage conservatively with periodic re-evaluation
- Alternatives: radiofrequency ablation, cryotherapy of lesions

PATHOLOGY
- TCC is the most common tumour of the bladder (>90%)
- Thought to arise due to exposure to carcinogenic substances in the urine field
change effect, thus urothelial tumours often occur multifocally
- Other types of bladder tumours: adenocarcinoma (1%, arises from remnant of the
urachus in the dome of the bladder), SCC (<5%, due to chronic irritation e.g. long
term indwelling catheter or untreated bladder stone)
RISK FACTORS
- Industrial chemicals naphthylamine, aniline-containing dyes, etc
- Cigarette smoking
- Occupational (hairdressers exposure to hair dyes)
- Analgesic abuse (phenacetin)
- Chronic cystitis
- Schistosomiasis
- Radiation (pelvic)
- Chemotherapy (cyclophosphamide)

ADVANCED TUMOURS
Immunotherapy

- High dose interleukin-2 associated with good results in patients whose tumours
respond to treatment, as treatment can induce long-term remissions without relapse.
However, associated with high toxicity and often not tolerable
- Cytoreductive nephrectomy performed prior to starting immunotherapy can improve
survival
Molecular targeted therapy

- Sorafenib an inhibitor of tyrosine kinase blocks intracellular domain of the


vascular endothelial growth factor (VEGF) receptor
- Bevacizumab monoclonal antibody against VEGF
Prognosis
Stage I (T1N0):
Stage II (T2N0):
Stage III (T3N0/N1):
Metastatic disease:

102

>90% 5 year survival


75-90%
60-70%
<10%

PRESENTATION
- Haematuria is the most common presenting symptom (90%) typically gross,
painless, intermittent, occurring throughout the stream
- LUTS irritative symptoms (frequency, dysuria, urgency) suggestive of carcinoma
in-situ, while obstructive symptoms (decreased stream, intermittent voiding, feeling
of incomplete voiding, strangury) indicate a tumour at the bladder neck or prostatic
urethra
- Pain in locally advanced or metastatic tumour flank pain due to urinary
obstruction, suprapubic pain due to local invasion, bone pain due to metastasis
- Constitutional symptoms LOW, LOA, fatigue
DIAGNOSIS
1. Urine cytology for malignant cells
2. Cystoscopy with cell brushings and biopsy
3. IVU or CT urogram to detect synchronous lesions (3% chance of proximal tumour)

103
o

STAGING
1. CT abdo/pelvis for T, N and M staging
2. Transurethral resection of bladder tumour (TURBT) with histopathology
Ta
Tis
T1
T2a
T2b
T3a
T3b
T4a
T4b

Superficial, does not involve lamina propria


Carcinoma in-situ: flat tumour
Superficial, involves lamina propria (up to muscularis propria)
Superficial involvement of muscularis propria up to inner half of muscle
Deep involvement of muscularis propria up to outer half of muscle
Microscopic extension outside bladder (from TURBT specimen)
Macroscopic extension outside bladder
Invasion of prostate, vagina, uterus
Invasion of lateral pelvic walls, abdominal wall

Generally can be divided into 2 main groups:


(a) Superficial tumour (70-80% of patients) Ta, Tis, T1
(b) Muscle-invasive tumour (20-30%) >T2
MANAGEMENT DEPENDENT ON STAGE
SUPERFICIAL TUMOUR
- Primary treatment is TURBT of the tumour
- Intravesical therapy indicated in patients with high risk of tumour recurrence or
tumour progression (high grade, multiple primary sites, multiple recurrences, tumour
size >3cm, primary or coexisting carcinoma in-situ, prostatic urethral involvement)
BCG 1 instillation per week for 6 weeks
Mitomycin C single instillation within 24hrs of TURBT, or weekly/monthly
treatments for up to 2 years
- Follow-up:
3-monthly cystoscopy for 1 year
6-monthly cystoscopy for next 4 years
Yearly cystoscopy thereafter
IVU every 2 years

Urine cytology with every cystoscopy

MUSCLE-INVASIVE
- Radical cystectomy
Radical cystoprostatectomy with pelvic lymphadenectomy in male
Anterior exenteration with pelvic lymphadenectomy in female
Ways of diverting urine output
o Cutaneous ureterostomy (use ureters to create stoma, but easily stenosed due
to small calibre; not continent)

o
o

Ileal conduit (a segment of ileum with ureters attached, as a stoma; not


continent)
Neobladder construction using ileum (only if urethra not removed; continent,
better quality of life)
Stoma with pouch construction under abdominal wall (not continent)

- Radiotherapy (not as good as surgery)

UROLITHIASIS
STONE COMPOSITION
- Calcium oxalate or calcium phosphate stones 75%
- Magnesium ammonium phosphate (struvite) stones 15%
- Uric acid and cystine stones 10%
PATHOLOGY
- Can occur at any level in the urinary tract, but most commonly in the kidney
- Most important cause of stone formation is increased urine concentration of the
stones constituents, such that they exceed their solubility precipitate as stones
- E.g. hypercalciuria with or without hypercalcaemia, hyperuricuria
- Urinary tract infections can also cause stone formation struvite stones form in
Proteus vulgaris infections as this organism splits urea into ammonium, generating
alkaline urine
- Bacteria can also form nidi for the formation of any kind of stone
PRESENTATION DEPENDS ON SITE
Renal stones

- Most often asymptomatic unless the stone gets lodged in the pelviureteric junction
causing hydronephrosis and subsequent infection pyonephrosis
- Vague flank pain may occur
Ureteric stones

Even small stones can cause severe symptoms as the ureter is narrow
Classically ureteric colic pain severe, intermittent loin-to-groin pain
Haematuria gross or microscopic
Irritative symptoms frequency, urgency
Can cause upper urinary tract infection fever, pain

Bladder stones

May be asymptomatic
Can cause irritative urinary symptoms frequency, urgency
Haematuria
If infection is present dysuria, fever, etc

PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
- In ureteric colic, symptoms are often out of proportion to signs no guarding,
rebound, etc
- If the patient has pyelonephritis, renal punch may be positive
- Otherwise unremarkable examination

High fluid intake


Low salt intake
Restriction of red meat, dairy produce, refined sugars
Increase citrus fruit intake

SURGICAL INTERVENTION
INVESTIGATIONS

Indications:

1. Urine tests dipstick, UFEME, urine culture/sensitivity

- Haematuria
- Pyuria, micro-organisms (UTI)
2. KUB

- May be able to see radio-opaque stone (90% of renal stones are radio-opaque)
- Look at kidney size, any renal stones
- Trace path of ureter along tips of transverse processes, across sacroiliac joint,
and medially into bladder, looking for ureteric stones
- Look for bladder stones
3. Intravenous urogram

- Can also help to visualise a stone


- Can show dilated urinary system secondary to stone obstruction hydroureter
and/or hydronephrosis
4. Ultrasound of kidney or bladder

- Features of stone: echogeneic rim, posterior acoustic shadowing


5. MAG-3 renogram

- If pyelonephritis present due to stone obstruction, it is valuable to measure the


renal function using the MAG-3 renogram
- The renogram gives the differential function of each kidney in normal
individuals the function should be approximately 50% on each side (out of 100%
for both kidneys combined)
- If one kidney has less than 15% of total renal function, it is not worth salvaging
the kidney
TREATMENT
CONSERVATIVE
Stones smaller than 5mm can be treated conservatively as 60% will be passed out; only
treat if they do not pass out after 4 to 6 weeks, and/or cause symptoms
- Treatment of any urinary tract infection
- If underlying disease present that causes increased urinary concentration of stone
components e.g. hypercalcaemia treat disease if possible

104

Constant pain
Does not pass after one month
Too large to pass spontaneously
Obstructs urine flow
Causes urinary tract infection
Damages renal tissue or causes significant bleeding
Increase in size

Types of treatment available:

1. Percutaneous nephrolithotomy (PCNL)


- Done for renal stones that are too large for ESWL to disintegrate
- Contraindicated in uncorrected bleeding diathesis, patients unfit for GA
2. Extracorporeal shock wave lithotripsy (ESWL)
- Calcium oxalate, uric acid and struvite stones fragment easily, but calcium
phosphate and cystine do not
- Used for stones below 10mm in size
- Used for renal stones and upper ureter stones not so good for lower system due
to difficulty in access
- Contraindicated in pregnancy, untreated UTI, untreated bleeding diathesis, distal
obstruction that cannot be bypassed with a stent
3. Ureteroscopy with lithotripsy (usually laser lithotripsy, can also be done by
pneumatic drill, electrohydraulic means)
- For stones along the ureter
4. Cystolitholapaxy for bladder stone
5. Open surgery (pyelolithotomy or ureterolithotomy) rarely done; only if failed
other management strategies, altered anatomy, performing open surgery for another
reason anyway, non-functioning kidney
Adjuncts:

- Double-J stent (or DJ stent) inserted to stent the urinary system when worried that
stone fragments after ESWL may cause obstruction e.g. when ESWL used for
treatment of a large stone; or if system is obstructed to begin with, may want to stent
to ensure good drainage after surgery

105
Summary of treatment modalities

Location
Renal

Size
< 5mm
5-10mm
10-20mm
> 20mm

Treatment
Conservative management unless symptomatic/persistent
ESWL
Either ESWL or PCNL
PCNL

Upper ureter

< 5mm
5-10mm
> 10mm

Conservative management unless symptomatic/persistent


ESWL
URS with lithotripsy

Middle ureter/
Distal ureter

< 5mm
> 5mm

Conservative management unless symptomatic/persistent


URS with lithotripsy

Bladder

< 30mm
> 30mm

Cystolitholapaxy
Open cystolithotomy (also if there are multiple stones)

HISTORY
Symptoms of ARU:

- Inability to pass urine


- Suprapubic distension with pain (unlike chronic retention of urine which is painless)
Precipitating factors:

- Symptoms of urinary tract infection: dysuria, frequency, urgency, nocturia,


haematuria
- Constipation
- Drugs e.g. cough mixture, antihistamines
- Immobility
History suggestive of aetiology:

APPROACH TO ACUTE RETENTION OF URINE

- Previous history of obstructive symptoms e.g. poor stream, hesitancy, terminal


dribbling etc BPH
- Previous history of ureteric colic pain or stones
- Previous urethral instrumentation or STD stricture
- Gross painless haematuria recently TCC, bladder stone
- Lower limb weakness/paralysis, bowel incontinence, back trauma, history of spinal
disease e.g. PID, spinal stenosis neurogenic bladder
- Constitutional symptoms: LOW, LOA, malaise (any tumour in general)

CAUSES

Complications:

Mechanical

Extraluminal

Intramural

Intraluminal

Nonmechanical

Cord disease/
injury
Neuropathy
Drugs
Others

Prostate enlargement (benign/malignant)


Faecal impaction
Pelvic tumour
Pregnancy
UV prolapse
Tumour of the bladder neck (TCC)
Urethritis (UTI)
Urethral stricture from STD, prev instrumentation
Stones
Blood clot (clot retention in haematuria)
Foreign body
Cord compression
Multiple sclerosis
Tabes dorsalis
Diabetic autonomic neuropathy
Anticholinergics (cough medicine), antihistamines,
anti-depressants, alcohol
Prolonged immobility
Post-anaesthesia
Pain

- Infection symptoms of UTI


- Stone disease (if in the bladder, usually asymptomatic)
- Renal failure (more likely in chronic retention) vomiting, lethargy, drowsiness
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
- General condition sallow appearance, scratch marks, pedal oedema, etc (uraemia)
- Abdomen
Palpable bladder tender
Other pelvic masses fibroid, gravid uterus, ovarian cyst
Faecal loading
Bilateral enlarged kidneys (hydronephrosis)
- Digital rectal examination
Any saddle anaesthesia
Anal tone
Prostate enlargement firm and smooth? Or hard, craggy, irregular, rectal
mucosa not mobile?
Stool impaction
- Neurological examination
LMN paralysis of the lower limbs?
Any sensory level present?

IMMEDIATE MANAGEMENT CATHETERISATION

- Try urethral catheterisation first (impt: urethral catheterisation contraindicated if


patient has signs suggestive of urethral injury blood at urethral meatus, high-riding
prostate more relevant in the trauma setting)
If urethral catheterization cannot pass into bladder, there are two possibilities: 1)
enlarged prostate; and 2) urethral stricture
For enlarged prostate, try again with a thicker catheter (stiffer, easier to pass
through)
For stricture (when you feel the catheter is stuck quite proximally along the
penile urethra, it is more likely to be a stricture), try a smaller gauge catheter
Do not push too hard may cause false passage creation if the obstruction is due
to a stricture

- If urethral catheterisation fails, perform suprapubic catheterisation


Requires distended bladder which pushes the surrounding bowel loops away so
that risk of bowel injury is lower
Local anaesthetic injected 2 fingerbreadths above pubic symphysis
Small incision made in the skin and fascia, and trocar inserted
When a gush of urine is seen, the suprapubic catheter is inserted and secured

Due to tubular damage from obstruction of drainage of the pelvicalyceal


system, resulting in transient impairment of concentrating function
Can result in hypotension and electrolyte abnormalities (hyponatraemia,
hypokalaemia, hypovolaemia)
Requires close monitoring of urine output and fluid/electrolyte status with
appropriate replacement and resuscitation

(b) Haemorrhage ex-vacuo


Bladder mucosal disruption with sudden emptying of greatly distended
bladder
Usually self-limiting
3. Trial-off catheter

- Take off catheter and watch patients output, as well as perform bladder scan to
measure bladder volume
- When patient passes urine, can perform uroflow to investigate severity of outlet
obstruction, and also do bladder scan post-micturition to check residual volume
- If patient cannot pass urine and bladder volume >400ml re-catheterise

BENIGN PROSTATIC HYPERPLASIA (BPH)


INVESTIGATIONS (FOR CAUSES)
1. Full blood count for raised TW (infection)
2. Urea, electrolytes and creatinine for raised creatinine (renal impairment secondary
to obstructive nephropathy)
3. Urine dipstick, UFEME and culture/sensitivity for infection
4. PSA keeping in mind causes of raised PSA (cancer, BPH [usually <40], prostatitis,
instrumentation >11days)
5. KUB for stones, faecal loading
6. Ultrasound of the bladder for stones, tumour, intravesical protrusion of prostate
TREATMENT
1. Treat reversible causes

- Stop drugs that may have precipitated ARU


- Relieve constipation with fleet enema, lactulose, senna etc
- Treat any urinary tract infection if present
2. Anticipate complications

(a) Post-obstructive diuresis


Urine output >200ml/hr for 2 hours or more

106

EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Very common problem in men
- Frequency rises with age after the age of 30, reaching 90% in men older than 80
PATHOLOGY
- Results from proliferation of both the epithelial and stromal components of the
prostate with resultant enlargement of the gland
- Commonly occurs in the central zone of the prostate
- Major stimulus for hyperplasia appears to be dihydrotestosterone (produced from
testosterone by the enzyme 5-alpha reductase)
- Age-related increases in oestrogen levels may also contribute to BPH by increasing
the expression of dihydrotestosterone receptors on prostatic parenchymal cells
PRESENTATION
- Main result of BPH is obstruction of the prostatic urethra resulting in lower urinary
tract symptoms (LUTS) which can be divided into irritative and obstructive
symptoms obstructive symptoms predominate

107
Obstructive
Hesitancy
Straining to pass urine
Weak stream
Prolonged micturition
Terminal dribbling
Feeling of incomplete voiding
Double voiding (pis-en-deux)

Irritative
Frequency
Urgency
Nocturia
Dysuria
Urge incontinence

- May progress to the point of acute urinary retention admitted to hospital


- In the chronic setting, the patient may have chronic urinary retention with high postvoid residual volume in the bladder asymptomatic, may have overflow
incontinence
- Obstruction leads to hypertrophy of the detrusor muscle and trabeculation of the
bladder mucosa as the bladder tries to empty against increased resistance
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
- Palpable tender bladder in ARU (non-tender in chronic retention)
- Digital rectal examination: smooth enlarged prostate, rubbery, non-tender
INVESTIGATIONS
- Creatinine level (renal impairment due to chronic obstruction)
- Urinary investigations for infection (stasis predisposes to UTI)
- KUB for bladder stone
- Ultrasound of kidney and bladder hydronephrosis, post-void residual volume
>100ml, bladder stone
- Uroflow to confirm obstruction to urinary outflow (normal peak flow rate should be
more than 15ml/sec)
PROBLEMS
- Acute/chronic urinary retention
- Gross haematuria
- Bladder stones
- Recurrent UTI
- Renal impairment secondary to outflow obstruction
- Co-existence of prostate cancer
MANAGEMENT
- Divided into watchful waiting, medical management, and surgical management
- Objectives of treatment: Rapid and sustained relief of symptoms, prevent long-term
complications, improve patients quality of life

I. Watchful waiting

- Suitable for patients with minimal symptoms, no complications and normal invx
- Monitor patients symptoms and clinical course annually
II. Medical treatment

1. Alpha blockers
- Prazosin, Terazosin, Doxazosin, Alfuzosin
- Treatment of symptoms of BPH by acting on the alpha-1 adrenergic receptors
that are abundant in the bladder neck, prostate and urethra
- Result in decreased outflow resistance and decreased bladder instability
- Side effects include postural hypotension, dizziness
2. 5-alpha reductase inhibitors
- Finasteride, Dutasteride
- Treats the disease (not just the symptoms) by inhibiting the conversion of
testosterone to dihydrotestosterone by 5-alpha reductase reduced prostate size
- Proven to decrease need for surgery and acute retention rates
- Only effective after 6 months, and in prostates >40g
- Most common side-effect is sexual dysfunction
III. Surgery Transurethral resection of prostate (TURP)

Indications:
- Refractory urinary retention
- Recurrent urinary tract infection
- Obstructive uropathy
- Bladder calculi
- Recurrent gross haematuria
Complications of surgery (TURP)
Early
1. Bleeding
2. TUR syndrome
- Hyponatraemia due to constant irrigation during TURP (glycine used for
irrigation cannot use N/S, as ionic solutions make diathermy non-functional)
- Irrigation fluid is hypotonic, thus water enters open vasculature during surgery
- Risk increases with prolonged operation and increased pressure of irrigation,
thus op is kept to shorter than one hour, and irrigation pressures <60mmHg
- Symptoms: Nausea, vomiting, confusion, hypertension, visual disturbances
- Patient usually given spinal anaesthesia during TURP so the surgeon can assess
the patients mental status during the operation
3. Perforation of the urethra or bladder dome
Late
1. Retrograde ejaculation

PROSTATIC CANCER
EPIDEMIOLOGY
- Prostate Cancer is the 6th commonest cancer among men in Singapore.
- 5th common cancer in Singapore
- Peak incidence between 65 and 75 years of age
PATHOLOGY
- Adenocarcinoma
- Arise in the outer parts of the prostate 70-80% of the time and are thus palpable on
digital rectal examination
RISK FACTORS
- Hormonal growth of tumour can be inhibited by orchidectomy or administration of
oestrogens
- Genetic racial variations in onset and prevalence, family history
- Environmental industrial chemical exposure, diet containing high animal fat

STAGING
1. Clinical examination (palpable tumour T2)
2. TRUS biopsy for staging purpose
3. CT scan of the abdomen and pelvis to assess extent of tumour invasion and nodal
status (regional, non-regional)
4. Bone scan for metastasis
TREATMENT
LOCALISED DISEASE
1. Radical prostatectomy

- Open, laparoscopic or robot-assisted


- Open retropubic or perineal approaches
2. Radiotherapy

- External beam radiotherapy (EBRT)


- Brachytherapy
LOCALLY ADVANCED DISEASE

PRESENTATION
- Often asymptomatic, may be incidentally picked up on digital rectal examination or
due to elevated prostate-specific antigen (PSA) level
- Can cause local symptoms such as obstruction of the prostatic urethra (uncommon as
most cancers arise in peripheral zones) LUTS, bladder outlet obstruction
- Metastatic symptoms bone pain
PHYSICAL EXAMINATION
- Digital rectal examination: Asymmetric area of induration, or frank hard irregular
nodule
- Percuss spine for any bone pain
DIAGNOSIS
1. PSA level

- >10ng/ml: biopsy recommended as >50% of patients will have prostate cancer


- 4-10ng/ml: biopsy advised, though only 20% will have prostate cancer
- <4ng/ml: majority will have negative biopsies, and yet there is a significant
proportion of men with prostate cancer with PSA <4ng/ml biopsy if the rate
of rise of PSA is >0.75ng/ml per year
2. Transrectal ultrasound (TRUS) with biopsy

- Histology of prostate carcinoma is graded by the Gleason score looking at


glandular architecture at low magnification

108

1. Radiotherapy with androgen ablation

- Castration
Surgical
Medical LHRH agonist
- Anti-androgen
Non-steroidal e.g. Flutamide
Steroidal cyproterone acetate
- Combined androgen blockade
- Oestrogen therapy (diethylstilbestrol)
METASTATIC DISEASE
1. Androgen ablation

HORMONAL REFRACTORY PROSTATIC CANCER


- 2 consecutive PSA rises no less than 2 wks apart and/or documented dz progression
based on clinical/radiological findings in pts with castrate levels of testosterone
- Management:
1. Secondary hormonal manipulation
Glucocorticoids prednisone, dexamethasone, hydrocortisone
Progesterone megestrol acetate
Adrenal suppressives ketoconazole, aminoglutethimide
2. Chemotherapy
Docetaxel + Prednisone (gold standard)
Mitoxantrone + Prednisone

109
APPROACH TO SCROTAL SWELLINGS
ANSWER 4 QUESTIONS:
1. Can you get above the swelling?
2. Can you identify the testis and the epididymis?
3. Is the swelling transilluminable?
4. Is the swelling tender?
Cannot
get
above
swelling

Can get
above
swelling

Cough impulse
Reducible
Testis palpable
Opaque

Hernia

No cough impulse
Not reducible
Testis not palpable
Transilluminable

Infantile hydrocoele

Testis not definable


from epididymis

Opaque

Non tender

Chronic haematocoele
Gumma
Tumour

Tender

Torsion
Epididymo-orchitis
Acute haematocoele

Transilluminable
Testis definable
from epididymis

Opaque

Hydrocoele

Non-tender
swelling of testis

Tumour

Non-tender
swelling of
epididymis

TB epididymis

Tender

Epididymoorchitis

Transilluminable

Cyst of epididymis

SURGICAL INSTRUMENTS

- Used when small to moderate amounts of drainage are expected or when a passive

DRAINS

- active drainage systems have a clear graduated scale by which you can see the

FUNCTIONS OF DRAINS
Drains are inserted to:
- Evacuate collections of pus, blood or other fluids (e.g. lymph)
- Drain potential collections

- Tubing of the low-pressure active drainage system is placed through a separate

drainage system won't provide adequate drainage

Rationale:
- Drainage of fluid removes further fluid collections
- May allow the early detection of anastomotic leaks or haemorrhage
- Leave a tract for potential collections to drain following removal
COMPLICATIONS:
1. Infection
2. Bleeding
3. Tissue damage- by mechanical pressure or suction
4. Drain failure- blocked/slipped/kinked
5. Incisional hernia- occurs when drain inserted through incision wound site- create a
separate incision site for drain!
TYPES OF DRAINS
- Drains classified as:
Open or closed
Active or passive
- Active drains require suction. Passive drains rely on gravity.
- Drains are often made from inert silastic material
- They induce minimal tissue reaction
- Red rubber drains induce an intense tissue reaction allowing a tract to form
- In some situations this may be useful (e.g. biliary t-tube)
Open drains
- Corrugated drain, Yeates drain, Penrose drain
- Drain fluid collects in gauze pad or stoma bag
- Easier to drain infected collections
Closed drains
- Consist of tubes draining into a bag or bottle
- They include chest and abdominal drains
- The risk of infection is reduced
Active drains
- Jackson-Pratt Drain, Redivac Drain, T-tube
- Have expandable chambers to create low-pressure suction

110

type and amount of drainage and determine when to empty the drainage chamber
puncture wound or the tube may exit the edge of the surgical wound
- If the tubing isn't sutured in place, it could become dislodged when you change

dressings or reposition the patient, so be careful. If a portion of the tube is pulled


outside his skin, an air leak will cause the collection chamber to rapidly fill with
air and the system won't drain properly.
Passive drains
- Passive drains have no suction, rely on gravity
- Function by the differential pressure between body cavities and the exterior
- Used when a moderate to large amount of drainage is expected

CARE AND PREVENTION OF COMPLICATIONS OF TUBES:


- Prevent Infection- maintain meticulous skin care and aseptic technique around the
insertion site
- Prevent blockage of the drain- do not allow bottles to fill up
- Prevent slippage by securing drain carefully to skin; refix as required
- Never hold a drainage collection device higher than the tube insertion site to prevent
the drainage from flowing backward into the patient
- Note amount of drainage daily
REMOVAL OF DRAINS
A drain is removed as soon as it is no longer required. The following are general
guidelines:
1. Drains put in to cover perioperative bleeding and haematoma formation, can come
out after 24 48 hours.
2. Where a drain has been put in to drain an infected site e.g. abscess, remove it when
the fever settles or when there is evidence of complete drainage.

111
CENTRAL VENOUS PRESSURE LINE INSERTION
INDICATIONS
1. Vascular access
2. Total parenteral nutrition
3. Infusion of irritant drugs
4. Measurement of central venous pressure
5. Cardiac catheterization
6. Pulmonary artery catheterization
7. Transvenous cardiac pacing.
CONTRAINDICATIONS:
1. Do not insert into an infected area.
2. Avoid infraclavicular approach to subclavian vein if patient has apical emphysema
or bullae.
3. Avoid internal jugular vein if carotid aneurysm present on the same side.
4. Bleeding diatheses
5. Septicaemia
6. Hypercoagulable states
ROUTES FOR CENTRAL VENOUS CANNULATION INCLUDE:
1. Internal jugular vein
2. Subclavian vein
3. Femoral vein
4. External jugular vein
CANNULATION OF THE INTERNAL JUGULAR VEIN
The internal jugular vein (IJV) is accessible, so cannulation of this vein is associated
with a lower complication rate than with other approaches. Hence, it is the vessel of
choice for central venous cannulation.
Anatomy of the IJV

The vein originates at the jugular foramen and runs down the neck, to terminate
behind the sternoclavicular joint, where it joins the subclavian vein. It lies alongside
the carotid artery and vagus nerve within the carotid sheath. The vein is initially
posterior to, then lateral and then anterolateral to the carotid artery during its descent
in the neck. The vein lies most superficially in the upper part of the neck.
Relations of the IJV

Anterior: Internal carotid artery and vagus nerve.


Posterior: C1, sympathetic chain, dome of the pleura. On the left side, the IJV lies
anterior to the thoracic duct.
Medial: Carotid arteries, cranial nerves IX-XII

Technique of IJV cannulation

Place the patient in a supine position, at least 15 degrees head-down to distend the neck
veins and to reduce the risk of air embolism. Turn the head away from the venepuncture
site. Cleanse the skin and drape the area. Sterile gloves and a gown should be worn to
avoid catheter-related sepsis.
Procedure

1. Use local anaesthetic to numb the venepuncture site.


2. Introduce the large calibre needle, attached to an empty 10 ml syringe.
3. Surface mark the internal jugular vein at the centre of the triangle formed by the
two lower heads of the sternocleidomastoid muscle and the clavicle. Palpate the
carotid artery and ensure that the needle enters the skin lateral to the artery.
4. Direct the needle caudally, parallel to the sagittal plane, aiming towards the
ipsilateral nipple.
5. While needle is advanced, maintain gentle aspiration.
6. When vein is entered, flush of blood appears in the syringe. Now, cannulate the
vein via the Seldinger technique as described below.
7. Remove syringe, holding needle firmly in place. Occlude needle to prevent air
embolism or bleeding.
8. Advance guide wire, J-shaped end first, into the vessel through the needle.
9. Hold guide wire in place and remove needle. Maintain a firm grip on the guide wire
at all times.
10. Use a dilator to enlarge the hole in the vein. Remove the dilator.
11. Thread tip of catheter into the vein through the guidewire. Grasp the catheter near
the skin and advance it into the vein with a slight twisting motion.
12. Advance catheter into final indwelling position. Hold catheter and REMOVE
GUIDEWIRE.
13. Check lumen placement by aspirating through all the pigtails and flushing with
saline next.
14. Suture the catheter to the skin to keep it in place.
15. Apply dressing according to hospital protocol.
16. The catheter tip should lie in the superior vena cava above the pericardial reflection.
Perform check chest X-ray to confirm position and exclude pneumothorax.
Complications

1. Pneumothorax/haemothorax
2. Air embolism - ensure head-down position.
3. Arrhythmias This happens if cathether irritates the heart. Avoid passing
guidewire too far, observe rhythm on cardiac monitor during insertion.

4. Carotid artery puncture/cannulation - palpate artery and ensure needle is lateral to it,
or use ultrasound-guided placement, transduce needle before dilating and passing
central line into vessel, or remove syringe from needle and ensure blood is venous.
5. Chylothorax- Avoid cannulating the vein on the left side as the thoracic duct lies
there.
6. Catheter-related sepsis

NASOGASTRIC TUBE
INDICATIONS
1.

a) bleeding from the upper gastrointestinal tract, haematemesis


b) pentagastrin studies (rarely done now)
2.

The subclavian vein (SVC) may be preferred for central venous access if
1. Patient has a cervical spine injury
2. Line is for long-term use e.g. dialysis, feeding. This site may be more comfortable
for the patient.
Anatomy of the SCV

Technique

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Place the patient in a supine position, head-down.


Turn the head to the contralateral side (if C-spine injury excluded).
Adopt full asepsis.
Introduce a needle attached to a 10 ml syringe.
Surface mark the subclavian vein 1 cm below the junction of the middle and medial
thirds of the clavicle. Direct the needle medially, slightly cephalad, and posteriorly
behind the clavicle toward the suprasternal notch.
6. Slowly advance the needle while gently withdrawing the plunger.
7. When a free flow of blood appears, follow the Seldinger approach, as detailed
previously.
8. The catheter tip should lie in the superior vena cava above the pericardial reflection.
Perform check chest X-ray to confirm position and exclude pneumothorax.
Complications

As listed for internal jugular venous cannulation. The risk of pneumothorax is far
greater with this technique. Damage to the subclavian artery may occur; direct pressure
cannot be applied to prevent bleeding.
Ensure that a chest X-ray is ordered, to identify the position of the line and to exclude
pneumothorax.

112

Decompresssion

a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
f)
g)

CANNULATION OF THE SUBCLAVIAN VEIN

The SCV is the continuation of the axillary vein and originates at the lateral border of
the first rib. The SCV passes over the first rib anterior to the subclavian artery, to join
with the internal jugular vein at the medial end of the clavicle. The external jugular
vein joins the SCV at the midpoint of the clavicle.

Diagnostic

3.

intestinal obstruction
pyloric stenosis
haematemesis, particularly in patients at risk of hepatic encephalopathy
therapeutic and prophylactic decompression after major abdominal surgery
prevention of further soilage after gastric perforation
prevention of anastomotic rupture after gastric surgery
prevention of obstruction of the operative field by air in the stomach

Nutrition

a) patients with dysphagia


b) comatose or weak patients
4.

Lavage

a) poisoning
b) gastrointestinal bleeding
CONTRAINDICATIONS
1. Base of skull fracture
2. Oesophageal tear
3. Severe facial injury
The cuffed endotracheal and tracheostomy tubes should be deflated prior to nasogastric
tube insertion.
PRE-PROCEDURE
1. Gather equipment.
2. Don non-sterile gloves.
3. Explain the procedure to the patient and show equipment.
4. If possible, sit patient upright for optimal neck/stomach alignment with the head
forward. Otherwise, prop the patient up at 45 degrees.
5. Deflate the endotracheal tube or tracheostomy cuff
6. Determine the size of the nasogastric tube required (usually 14 16FG). If
aspirating, use as large a tube as possible to reduce the risk of blocking during use
or the formation of a false passage during introduction; if feeding, a smaller tube
may be used (eg. 8FG) because it is more comfortable in the long term.

113
PROCEDURE
1. Estimate the length of the tube to be inserted: from the bridge of the nose to the
tragus of the ear to the point halfway between the xiphisternum and the navel. Mark
the Mark measured length with a marker or note the distance.
2. Examine nostrils for deformity/obstructions (eg. choanal stenosis) to determine best
side for insertion. Select the largest nostril for inserting the tube.
3. Lubricate tube with water. The nose may be lubricated with lignocaine gel.
4. Introduce the tube through the nostril, passing the tube along the floor of the nose.
Resistance may be felt as tip reaches the nasopharynx, which is the most
uncomfortable part of the procedure. In the operation theatre, when the patient is
under general anaesthesia, the McGills forceps may be used to guide the tube down.
5. Instruct the patient to swallow (you may offer ice chips/water if not contraindicated)
and advance the tube as the patient swallows. Swallowing of small sips of water
may enhance passage of tube into esophagus. If patient is uncooperative, bend his
head to elicit a swallowing reflex.
6. Continue to advance the tube down the oesophagus. There should not be resistance.
If resistance is met, rotate the tube slowly with downward advancement towards the
closer ear. Do not force the tube down against resistance as this may form a false
passage.
7. Withdraw the tube immediately if changes occur in the patient's respiratory status,
if the tube coils in the mouth, or if the patient begins to cough or turns pretty
colours.
8. Advance the tube until mark is reached (approximately 40cm). Stop.
9. Check for correct placement by attaching a syringe to the free end of the tube and
aspirating a sample of gastric contents to test with litmus, auscultating the
epigastrium while injecting air through the tube, or obtaining an x-ray to verify
placement before instilling any feedings/medications or if you have concerns about
the placement of the tube.
10. Secure the tube with adhesive tape.
11. Re-inflate the endotracheal tube or tracheostomy cuff if necessary.
12. If for suction, remove the syringe from the free end of the tube; connect to suction;
set machine on type of suction and pressure as prescribed.
13. Document the reason for the tube insertion, type & size of tube, the nature and
amount of aspirate, the type of suction and pressure setting if for suction, the nature
and amount of drainage, and the effectiveness of the intervention.

PROBLEMS AND COMPLICATIONS


1. Technical

a)
b)
c)
d)
e)

insertion into the trachea, resulting in choking.


coiling and reentry into the oesophagus (rare).
trauma to the nose and the pharynx.
dislodgement
perforation of the pharynx and oesophagus.

2. Lung complications

a) decreased ventilation
b) aspiration pneumonia
3. Loss of fluids and electrolytes, especially sodium, potassium, chloride
and hydrogen ions.
4. Dry mouth and parotitis due to fluid loss and mouth breathing.
5. Gastrointestinal

a)
b)
c)
d)
e)

gastric erosions
pressure necrosis of the pharynx, oesophagus or the external nares.
traumatic haemorrhage of varices.
gastroesophageal reflux due to functional incompetence of the lower
oesophageal sphincter.
erosions of the oesophagus leading to strictures.

TRACHEOSTOMY
INDICATIONS FOR TRACHEOSTOMY
1. Maintenance of airway patency.
2. Protection of the airway from aspiration.
3. Application of positive pressure to the airway.
4. Facilitation of secretion clearance.
5. Delivery of high oxygen concentrations.
RELATIVE CONTRAINDICATIONS
1. Evidence of infection in the soft tissues of the neck at the prospective surgical site.
2. Medically uncorrectable bleeding diatheses.
3. Gross distortion of the neck anatomy due to hematoma, tumour, thyromegaly, high
innominate artery or scarring from previous neck surgery.
4. Documented or clinically suspected tracheomalacia.
5. Need for positive end-expiratory pressure (PEEP) of more than 15 cm of water.
6. Patient obesity with short neck that obscures neck landmarks.
7. Patient age younger than 15 years.
TYPES OF TRACHEOTOMY
1. Temporary: Portex (cuffed).
2. Permanent: Consist of inner and outer tubes made of stainless steel.
Tracheostomy is more useful in the elective setting compared to endotracheal intubation
because:
1. Better tolerated.
2. Avoids risk of laryngeal stenosis
3. Avoids risk of endotracheal obstruction.
PROCEDURE
1. Position the patient. Place rolled towel under the patients neck to hyperextend the
neck for better exposure.
2. Clean and drape. Clean the skin of the neck from the chin to the suprasternal notch
and laterally to the base of the neck and clavicles. Drape field.
3. Identify anatomical landmarks (thyroid cartilage, cricoid cartilage).
4. Administer local anaethesia.
5. Incise skin. In the emergency setting, make a vertical incision 3cm from cricoid
cartilage downwards. In the elective setting, make a tranverse incision 4cm wide,
3cm above the suprasternal notch.
6. Dissect through the subcutaneous layers and platysma.
7. Identify the communicating branch of the anterior jugular vein, clamp and ligate the
artery (ignore this in an emergency).

114

8. Visualise the thyroid isthmus and retract isthmus.


9. Retract cricoid cartilage upwards wth cricoid hook.
10. Incise the trachea between the 2nd and 3rd tracheal rings, making an inverted U-flap
incision.
11. Insert tracheal dilator through the tracheostoma and remove the cricoid hooks.
12. Suction of blood and secretions in the lumen.
13. Insert the tracheostomy tube.
14. Remove the obturator and insert the inner cannula.
15. Dress wound and secure to the neck using sutures and adhesive tape.
COMPLICATIONS
During Procedure

1. Bleeding if damage to the innominate or inferior thyroid artery.


2. Damage to surrounding structures, eg esophagus, recurrent laryngeal nerve,
brachiocephalic vein.
3. Pneumothorax.
4. Pneumomediastinum.
Immediate post-op

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.

Surgical emphysema.
Obstruction, eg clot, mucus.
Bleeding.
Dislodgment.
Subcutaneous emphysema.

Late post-op

1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.

Infection .
Obstruction, eg dislodgment of tube, crust formation from secretions.
Tracheo-esophageal fistula.
Tracheal stenosis.
Wound breakdown.
Scarring.
Tracheomalacia.

POST-OP CARE
1. Position patient in a propped up position.
2. Prevent obstruction by suction, saline irrigation, mucolytic agents (mucomyst,
guaifenesin) and humidified air.
3. Change Portex tube every 3rd day and remove the inner tube for cleaning everyday.
4. Unlock the metal tube every night so that the patient can cough it out if it becomes
obstructed.

115
SENGSTAKEN-BLAKEMORE TUBE (OR MINNESOTA TUBE)

URINARY CATHETERISATION

INDICATIONS
Oesophageal varices

INDICATIONS FOR SHORT-TERM CATHETERISATION


1. Relief of acute retention of urine, e.g. benign prostatic hypertrophy, bladder
outflow obstruction.
2. Bladder washout, e.g. blood clots causing acute retention of urine.
3. Cystourethrogram.
4. Administration of intra-vesical drugs.
5. As an adjunctive measure pre/post-operatively
a) Pre-operatively:
(i) to drain the bladder so as to improve access to the pelvis in urologic or
pelvic surgery.
(ii) to allow accurate measurement of urine output in major surgery.
b) Post-operatively:
(i) to relieve acute urinary retention because post op pain results in failure
of the sphincter to relax.
6. Urinary output monitoring, e.g. in patient with hypovolaemic shock or the
critically ill.

CONTRAINDICATIONS
1. Base of skull fracture
2. Oesophageal tear
3. Severe facial injury
PROCEDURE
1. Measure the length of the tube. Test balloons. Test patency of the tube.
2. Sit the patient upright or at 45 degrees.
3. Apply local anaesthesia (lignocaine nasal spray).
4. Lubricate and insert the tube through the nose, asking the patient to swallow or
drink water to aid in smoother passage of the tube through the pharynx and
oesophagus.
5. Inflate the gastric balloon slowly with 100-150ml saline.
6. Check that the tube is in the stomach by:
(i) aspirating fluid and testing it with litmus,
(ii) auscultating the epigastrium while injecting air, or
(iii) doing an X-ray.
7. Traction.
8. Inflate the oesophageal balloon to 35 45mmHg: use the Y-connector piece with
one arm to the BP set and the other to the syringe to pump in air.
9. Aspirate fluid from the oesophagus through the Ryles tube, or if using the
Minnesota tube, use the additional lumen provided (with the additional lumen for
aspirating fluid in the oesophagus, the Minnesota tube decreases the likelihood of
aspiration pneumonia occurring).
10. Check the oesophageal balloon pressure hourly and release 5mins hourly.
11. Release oeophageal balloon after 24hrs.
12. Release gastric balloon after 48hrs.
13. The tube should not be used for more than 72hrs.
COMPLICATIONS
1. Aspiration pneumonia
2. Respiratory obstruction
3. Oesophageal ulceration and rupture
4. Rebleeding
5. Gastric varices not controlled

INDICATIONS FOR LONG-TERM INDWELLING CATHETERIZATION


1. Refractory bladder outlet obstruction.
2. Chronic retention of urine, eg. neurogenic bladder.
3. Incontinence, e.g. in palliative care of terminally ill or patients preference.
CONTRAINDICATIONS
1. Presence of urethral injury, as manifested by:
a) blood from the meatus,
b) scrotal haematoma,
c) pelvic fracture, or
d) high-riding prostate, elicited from a genital and digital rectal examination.
(alternative: suprapubic drainage)
2. Urinary tract infection, as an indwelling catheter causes difficulty in treatment.
PROCEDURE
1. Gather equipment.
2. Explain procedure to the patient. Maximize patients privacy. Have a chaperone if
performing the procedure on a member of the opposite sex.
3. Assist patient into supine position with legs spread and feet together.
4. Open the catheterization kit and catheter.

5.
6.
7.
8.

Prepare sterile field. Don the sterile gloves from the kit.
Test the balloon at the tip of the catheter.
Generously coat the distal portion (2 - 5cm) of the catheter with lubricant.
Using the non-dominant hand to come in contact with the patient and the dominant
hand to use items from the kit (recall that once your hand comes in contact with the
patient, it is no longer sterile and cannot be used to obtain items from the kit),
cleanse the peri-urethral mucosa with antiseptic-drenched swabs held by forceps.
Cleanse anterior to posterior, inner to outer, one swipe per swab, discard swab away
from sterile field.
a) Male: Hold the penis and retract the foreskin. Swab the penis and surrounding
area, making sure to cleanse beneath the foreskin.
b) Female: Retract the labia majora. Swab the perineum.
9. Apply sterile drape.
10. Installation of local anaesthesia.
a) Male:
(i) Smear lignocaine gel around the meatus and apply the gel gently into
urethra.
(ii) Massage gel carefully down the urethra to sphincter, squeezing the
meatus shut
(iii) Wait for for 5 minutes (alternatively, with less anaesthetic effect, smear
gel over the catheter tip).
b) Female:
(i) Apply lignocaine gel to urethra or catheter tip.
11. In the male, lift the penis to a position perpendicular to patient's body and apply
light upward traction (with non-dominant hand); in the female, expose the external
urethral orifice.
12. Gently insert tip of catheter into the meatus using forceps until 1 to 2 inches beyond
where urine is noted to drain into kidney dish. If no urine appears although the
catheter seems to be in the right place, flush with sterile saline as the lumen may be
blocked with gel. If this is still unsuccessful, withdraw and reinsert.
13. Inflate balloon, using correct amount of sterile saline (usually 20 30mls but check
actual balloon size). This process should be painless. If patient feels pain, deflate
balloon immediately and reposition catheter.
14. Gently pull catheter until inflation balloon is snug against bladder neck.
15. Connect catheter to drainage system.
16. Secure catheter to abdomen or thigh, without tension on tubing.
17. Place drainage bag below level of bladder.
18. Evaluate catheter function and amount, color, odour and quality of urine.

116

19. Remove gloves. Dispose equipment appropriately. Wash hands.


20. Document size of catheter inserted, amount of water in balloon, patient's response
to procedure and assessment of urine.
COMPLICATIONS
1. Infection, which may lead to stone formation.
2. Stricture formation due either to faulty technique or an irritant material used in the
catheter.
3. Creation of a false passage due to wrong technique of insertion.
4. Occasionally, irritation of the bladder may cause severe bladder spasms.

CHEST TUBE
Chest tubes are inserted to drain blood, fluid, or air and allow full expansion of the
lungs. The tube is placed between the ribs and into the space pleural space.
The area where the tube will be inserted is anesthetized locally. The patient may also be
sedated. The chest tube is inserted through an incision between the ribs into the chest
and is connected to a bottle or canister that contains sterile water (underwater seal).
Suction is attached to the system to encourage drainage. A suture and adhesive tape is
used to keep the tube in place.
The chest tube usually remains in place until the X-rays show that all the blood, fluid, or
air has drained from the chest and the lung has fully re-expanded. When the chest tube
is no longer needed, it can be easily removed, usually without the need for medications
to sedate or numb the patient. Antibiotics may be used to prevent or treat infection.
INDICATIONS
1. Pneumothorax.
2. Hemothorax.
3. Drainage of pleural effusion.
4. Chylothorax
5. Drainage of empyema/lung abcesses
6. Prophylactic placement of chest tubes in a patient with suspected chest trauma
before transport to specialized trauma center
CONTRAINDICATIONS
1. Infection over insertion site
2. Uncontrolled bleeding diathesis/coagulopathy

117
MATERIALS
1. Iodine & alcohol swabs for skin prep
2. Sterile drapes & gloves
3. Scalpel blade & handle
4. Clamp
5. Silk suture
6. Needle holder
7. Petrolatum-impregnated gauze
8. Sterile gauze
9. Tape
10. Suction apparatus (Pleuravac)/underwater seal apparatus
11. Chest tube (size 32 to 40 Fr, depending on clinical setting)
12. 1% lignocaine with epinephrine, 10 cc syringe, 25- & 22-g needles
PRE-PROCEDURE PATIENT EDUCATION
1. Obtain informed consent
2. Inform the patient of the possibility of major complications and their treatment
3. Explain the major steps of the procedure, and necessity for repeated chest
radiographs
PROCEDURE
1. Determine the site of insertion. Locate the triangle of safety; bounded by the lateral
border of the pectoris major, 5th or 6th intercostal space, imaginary vertical line
between the anterior and mid axillary lines.
2. Surgically prepare and drape the chest at the predetermined site of the tube insertion.
3. Locally anaesthetized the skin and rib periosteum.
4. Make a 2-3cm transverse incision at the predetermined site and bluntly dissect
through the subcutaneous tissues, just over the top of the rib.
5. Puncture the parietal pleura with the tip of a clamp and put a gloved finger into the
incision to avoid injury to other organs and to clear any adhesions, clots, etc.
6. Clamp the proximal end of the chest tube and advance the tube into the pleural
space to the desired length.
7. Look for fogging of the chest tube with expiration or listen to air movement.
8. Connect the end of the chest tube to an underwater seal apparatus.
9. Suture the tube in place.
10. Apply a dressing and tape the tube to the chest.
11. Do a chest X ray
12. Obtain arterial blood gas values and/or institute pulse oximetry monitoring as
necessary.

COMPLICATIONS
1. Laceration or puncture of the intrathoracic and/or abdominal organs, all of which
can be prevented by using the finger technique before inserting the chest tube.
2. Introduction of pleural infection.
3. Damage to the intercostals nerve, artery or vein.
4. Incorrect intrathoracic or extrathoracic tube position.
5. Chest tube kinking, clogging or dislodging from the chest wall or disconnection
from the underwater seal apparatus.
6. Persistent pneumothorax
7. Subcutaneous emphysema, usually at tube site.
8. Recurrence of pneumothorax upon removal of the chest tube.
9. Lungs fail to expand due to plugged bronchus; bronchoscopy required.
10. Anaphylactic or allergic reaction to surgical preparation or anaesthesia.
Recovery from the chest tube insertion and removal is usually complete, with only a
small scar. The patient will stay in the hospital until the chest tube is removed. While
the chest tube is in place, the nursing staff will carefully check for possible air leaks,
breathing difficulties, and need for additional oxygen. Frequent deep breathing and
coughing is necessary to help re-expand the lung, assist with drainage, and prevent
normal fluids from collecting in the lungs.

You might also like