Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
DIARRHEAL DISEASE MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES Suboptimal absorption of different nutrients, electrolytes &/or water as a result of disturbance in intraluminal digestion, absorption, terminal (brush border) digestion &/or transepithelial transport. Digestion of food occurs mostly in stomach & small intestine, while absorption occurs mostly in duodenum & jejunum Malabsorption may be caused by a variety of diseases Small intestinal biopsy is an important diagnostic tool: may show characteristic findings, normal or nonspecific changes c/o weight loss, anorexia, abdominal distension, muscle wasting and passage of abnormally bulky, frothy, greasy, yellow or gray stools (steatorrhea) CONSEQUENCES OF MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES Anemia: iron, pyridoxine, folate or vit. B12 deficiency Bleeding: vitamin K deficiency Osteopenia & tetany: Ca, Mg, vitamin D deficiency Amenorrhea, impotence, infertitlity: generalized malnutrition Hyperparathyroidism: Ca & vitamin D deficiency Purpura & petechiae: vitamin D deficiency Edema: protein deficiency Dermatitis & hyperkeratosis: vit A, Zn, eFA, niacin Mucositis: vitamin deficiencies Peripheral neuropathy: vit A & B12 deficiency CLASSIFICATION OF MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES Defective intraluminal digestion: pancreatic insufficiency; Z-E syndrome; defective bile secretion due to biliary obstruction, hepatic or ileal dysfunction; bacterial overgrowth Mucosal cell abnormalities: lactose intolerence, bacterial overgrowth, abetalipoproteinemia Reduced small intestine surface: Celiac sprue, Crohn’s ,short –gut syndrome Lymphatic obstruction: lymphoma, tuberculosis Infection: enteritis, tropical sprue, Whipple’s disease Iatrogenic: surgeries, drug induced MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES PANCREATIC INSUFFICIENCY Major cause of defective intraluminal digestion Due to: – Chronic pancreatitis – Cystic fibrosis Osmotic diarrhea, steatorrhea MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES BACTERIAL OVERGROWTH Pathologic colonization of jejunal lumen by an abnormally large population of both anaerobic and aerobic organisms qualitatively similar to those present in the colon Impairs intraluminal digestion & can damage mucosal epithelium in proximal small intestine Occurs in patients with: – Intestinal luminal stasis: strictures, fistula, blind loops or pouches – Post-operative states associated with inadequate gastric acidity – Immunologic deficiencies – Mucosal disease of small intestine MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES LACTOSE INTOLERANCE Deficiency of lactase is mostly acquired Lactose cannot be broken down to glucose & galactose; unabsorbed lactose exerts an osmotic pull leading to watery diarrhea & malabsorption Familial inborn error of metabolism: presents at birth with initiation of milk feeding with explosive watery frothy stools & abdominal distension In adults, occurs with bacterial and viral gastroenteritis & other GIT disorders Dx: intestinal biopsy is normal; breath hydrogen testing by gas chromatography MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES CELIAC SPRUE aka: Gluten-sensitive enteropathy Sensitivity to gluten, the component of wheat & related grains (oat, barley & rye) that contain water insoluble gliadin peptides Pathology: when exposed to gluten , the proximal small intestinal mucosa accumulates large numbers of B cells & plasma cells, resulting in epithelial damage & total flattening of villi Patients: 1:2000-3000 in white Europeans; familial & viral links Presentation range from infancy to midadulthood; diarrhea and malnutrition Rx: Gluten-free diet Px: Increased risk of developing malignancies MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES TROPICAL SPRUE Celiac-like disease occurring almost exclusively in the tropics An infectious etiology is implicated. No definite microorganism has been identified. c/o malabsorption symptoms following an acute diarrheal infection Pathology: minimal to severe diffuse enteritis with villous flattening Rx: Broad-spectrum antibiotics MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES WHIPPLE’S DISEASE Rare systemic infection, mainly in intestine, CNS & joints Pathology: small intestinal mucosa is full of macrophages in lamina propria, with minimal inflammation Macrophages contain Tropheryma whipelii (Gram + actinomycete). Patients: males 30-50 yrs; lymphadenopathy, polyarthritis, CNS symptoms Rx: antibiotics MALABSORPTION SYNDROMES ABETALIPOPROTEINEMIA Rare autosomal recessive inborn error of metabolism, with inability to synthesize apoproteins required for export of lipoproteins from mucosal cells Free fatty acids & monoglycerides enter absorptive cells and are normally re-esterified but cannot be synthesized into chylomicrons Pathology: mucosal cells have vacuolated lipid inclusions Severe hypolipidemia (decreased chylomicron, VLDL, LDL) c/o: diarrhea, steatorrhea, failure to thrive Peripheral blood picture: RBCs show characteristic burr cells (acanthocytosis) PROTOZOAL ENTEROCOLITIS Giardia lamblia World’s most prevalent pathogenic gut protozoan Asymptomatic carrier state is common Trophozoites live in duodenum & give rise to infective cysts that are shed into the stools Spread by fecal contaminated water Parasite attaches to small intestinal mucosa but does not invade Pathology: intestinal villi may be normal or blunted with a mixed inflammatory cell infiltrate in lamina propria Malabsorptive diarrhea VASCULAR DISORDERS OF INTESTINES ISCHEMIC BOWEL DISEASE aka: mesenteric ischemia Involves small &/or large intestines depending on particular vessel(s) involved (celiac, superior & inferior mesenteric arteries) Usually elderly patients; may be acute or insidious Causes: – Arterial thrombosis: severe atherosclerosis, ... – Arterial embolism: cardiac vegetations, ... – Venous thrombosis: hypercoagulable states – Nonocclusive ischemia: heart failure, shock, .. – Miscellaneous: radiation, volvulus, herniation, ... TYPES OF ISCHEMIC BOWEL DISEASE Ischemic bowel disease is divided according to the severity of injury: – 1) Mucosal infarction & 2) Mural infarction (hemorrhagic gastroenteropathy): usually due to hypoperfusion, damaging only the inner layers of the GIT; multifocal or continuous lesions; hemorrhage, edema & ulceration; intact serosa – 3) Transmural intestinal infarction: dark red hemorrhagic bowel segment of variable length; ischemia starts in mucosa and extends outwards, with edema, hemorrhage, necrosis, mucosal sloughing followed by gangrene & perforation CLINICAL FEATURES OF ISCHEMIC BOWEL DISEASE Transmural lesions: sudden abdominal pain, bloody diarrhea, shock, … Mural & mucosal: abdominal distension, GI bleeding, gradual pain or discomfort Dx: high index of suspicion in the appropriate setting Px: mortality rate with transmural infarction is nearly 90%, largely due to delay in diagnosis; mural & mucosal infarction may not be fatal if causes of hypoperfusion are corrected VASCULAR DISORDERS OF INTESTINES ANGIODYSPLASIA A misnomer; not a pre-malignant lesion Tortuous dilations of submucosal & mucosal blood vessels, mostly in cecum & rt. colon, elderly patients Blood vessels may rupture & bleed; account for 20% of significant lower GIT bleeding Difficult to diagnose: -ve Barium enema radiology; normal gross appearance. Visible by endoscopy & angiography. Isolated lesions or part of systemic disorder, e,g. Osler-Weber-Rendu syndrome & CREST syndrome VASCULAR DISORDERS OF INTESTINES HEMORRHOIDS aka: piles Dilated varices of anal and perianal submucosal venous plexuses Patients: common in adults >50 yrs; setting of persistently elevated venous pressure within the hemorrhoidal plexus Predisposing factors: – Chronic constipation – Pregnancy – Portal hypertension Pathology: thin-walled dilated blood vessels covered by anal mucosa HEMORRHOIDS CLINICAL FEATURES OF HEMORRHOIDS Types of hemorrhoids: – 1) Internal: above the dentate line – 2) External: below the dentate line Clinical features: – Usually asymptomatic – Protrusion & itching – Ulceration & bleeding – Thrombosis & pain – Prolapse: internal hemorrhoids trapped by anal sphincter, with sudden pain, edema, enlargement or strangulation Rx: depends on severity; medical & surgical PATHOLOGY OF SMALL & LARGE INTESTINE IDIOPATHIC INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE Crohn’s disease & ulcerative colitis: chronic relapsing disorders of unknown cause, which are characterized by extensive bowel inflammation, tissue injury & mucosal destruction Intermittent bloody diarrhea; pain; malabsorption Etiology: – Genetic predisposition ,IBD 1 on chromosome 16 ,HLA-DR – Abnormal mucosal structure , – Infectious – Abnormal host immunoreactivity ; IL-2,IL-10,TNF,IL-R INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE ULCERATIVE COLITIS & CROHN’S DISEASE Ulcerative colitis and Crohn’s disease have common features: – Chronic recurrent inflammation – No definit cause is identified – May have extra-intestinal manifestations Integration of clinical, radiological and pathological findings are essential for diagnosis of UC or CD. Histologic feature may be identical, particularly with small biopsies In 10-30% of cases, distinction between the two diseases cannot be made (indeterminate cases) INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE CROHN’S DISEASE aka: terminal ileitis, regional enteritis Systemic disease with predominant GI involvement – Any level of GIT may be involved – Associated immune extra-intestinal manifestations (iritis, uveitis, polyarthritis, erythema nodosum, hepatic pericholangitis, sclerosing cholangitis..) Patients: any age, peaks 2-3rd & 6-7th decades; F>M Insidious or sudden onset of symptoms which may remit spontaneously or with therapy, usually followed by relapses Marked weight loss & malabsorption Complications: fistulas,abdominal abscesses & peritonitis, stricture and obstruction, bleeding Cancer: Increased risk, but significantly less than UC INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE ULCERATIVE COLITIS Ulcero-inflammatory disease of colon, limited to mucosa & submucosa, except in severe cases Starts in rectum & extends proximally in a continuous fashion Systemic disease, may be associated with polyarthritis, ankylosing spondylitis (HLA-B27+), uveitis, liver (pericholangitis & PSC) & skin involvement Patients: any age; peak 20-25 yrs. Chronic relapsing & remitting disease; bloody stools Complications: severe diarrhea & electrolyte disturbances, massive hemorrhage, toxic megacolon, rupture Cancer: depends on duration & extent of disease INFLAMMATORY BOWEL DISEASE CROHN’S DISEASE ULCERATIVE COLITIS Incidence: 1-3/100,000 Whites, Jews Small intestine 40%; small & large intestine 30%; large intestine 30% Skip lesions Granulomas 40-60% Deep linear ulcers Cobble stone appearance Strictures: early Fissures, sinuses & fistulas Incidence: 4-6/100,000 Whites Rectum/rectosigmoid 80% extending proximally; pan-colitis 10% Continuous involvement No granulomas Superficial ulcers Pseudopolyps Strictures: late/rare No MICROSCOPIC FEATURES OF CROHN’S DISEASE ULCERATIVE COLITIS Inflammation, ulceration & chronic mucosal changes Deep ulcers with transmural involvement Wall thickening Granulomas +/Marked lymphoid reaction Marked serositis Fistulas or sinuses Moderate-marked fibrosis Inflammation, ulceration & chronic mucosal changes Ulcers with mostly mucosal involvement Wall is usually thin No granulomas Mild lymphoid reaction No or mild serositis No fistulas or sinuses Mild fibrosis