Diseases of The Stomach:-Objectives
Diseases of The Stomach:-Objectives
Objectives
1. Normal gastric physiology.
2. Why a normal person does n't autolyze his stomach?
3. Types of gastritis
4. A medical student had a history of epigastric pain one day before the
exam, what are the causes?
Gastric emptying:-
a. When food enters the proximal stomach, a vagally mediated
inhibition of fundic tone (receptive relaxation) permits storage
of food with out arises in intra gastric pressure.
b. Liquid dispersed through out the stomach in rapid fashion and
then emptied primarily by low level tonic contraction.
c. Solids:-after an initial period in the proximal stomach (30
min), solid are re distributed to the antrum, where they are
mixed by segmental contraction. These contractions occur up
to three times per min. and originate in a pacemaker situated in
the mid body along the great curvature.
d. The pyloric valve allows particles less than one mm to pass
through by wave contraction, while non digestive particles
pass by inter digestive migrating motor complex. This
contraction occur every 90-120 min in fasting.
Gastric secretion:-
From body and fundus of the stomach: -
1. Parietal cells --- HCL
2. Chief cells -pepsinogen.
Essentials of diagnosis:-
1. Most commonly seen in alcoholic in west and in NSAIDS in
east.
2. Often asymptomatic, may cause epigastric pain, nausea and
vomiting.
3. May cause hematemesis, usually not significant.
Clinical considerations:-
The most common cause is NSAIDS ingestion and alcohol intake; stress
due to medical and serious surgical causes is another cause (stress gastritis).
Uncommon causes as radiation and caustic ingestion.
Endoscopic finding:-
Including sub epithelial hemorrhage, petechae, erosion, they very in
size and number may be focal or diffuse.
Symptoms and signs:-
Usually asymptomatic, may present with anorexia epigastric pain, nausea
and vomiting, there is a poor correlation between severity of endoscopic
findings .it may present commonly with upper GIT bleeding rarely give
hemodynamic instability.
Pathology:
Differential diagnosis:-
1. stress gastritis:-
Developed with in 18 hours in the majority of critically ill pt.
clinically important bleeding occurs in 2-3% rarely associated with
high mortality. Major risk factors including: - trauma, burn,
hypotension, sepsis, CNS injury, coagulopathy mechanical
respiration, hepatic and renal failure and multi organ failure.
Pharmacological prophylactic:-
Sucralfate or H2 receptor antagonist sucralfate suspension one gram
orally 4-6 hours
Cimetidine 900-1200, ranitidine 150mg by continuous iv infusion
over 24 hours.
Ph must be more than 4 that checked after four hours in critically ill pt
from N|G.
Treatment:-
- Continuous infusions of sucralfate +cimetidine.
- Endoscoptic therapy may be of benefit.
NSAIDS gastritis:-
Treatment:-
Symptoms may improve with discontinuation of the agent, reduction of the
dose to the lowest effective dose or administration with meals.
Endoscope indicated in persistent symptoms despite conservative measures
or pt at high risk for NSAID induced ulcer. The pt may need:-
Sucralfate one gram four times daily.
Cimetidine 400 mg twice daily
Ranitidine 150 mg twice daily.
Famotidine 20 mg twice daily
Proton pump inhibitor (PPI).
ALCOHOLIC GASTRITIS:
The pt may need therapy, with sucralfate or H2receptor antagonist for 4-6
weeks
Treatment;-
No specific therapy exists.
Antral gastritis:-
It is usually caused by H.pylori infection and leads to chronic infection.
The effect of H.pylori in the antrum may leads to:
1. peptic ulcer
2. H .pylori infection.