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Published byAdrian Strickland Modified over 9 years ago
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PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE BERNARD M. Jaffe, MD Professor of Surgery Emeritus
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PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE 8% Annual Incidence in the Population 500,000 New Cases/Year 4,000,000 Recurrences/Year 130,000 Operations/Year 9,000 Deaths/Year
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PEPTIC ULCER DISEASE Elective Admissions Declining, for Complications Unchanging Gastric Ulcer More Common in Elderly Admissions for Bleeding GU Increasing Decreasing Incidence in Males, Increasing in Females ? Due to Changes in Smoking Patterns
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CAUSES OF PUD H. Pylori Infection NSAID’s Acid Hypersecretion Zollinger- Ellison Syndrome Acid Plays a Role in All Four
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GASTRIC CELLS Acid-FundusParietal Cells Gastrin- AntrumG Cells Pepsinogen-DiffuseChief Cells Histamine-DiffuseEnterochromaffin- Like Cells Somatostatin-DiffuseD Cells
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H. Pylori INFECTION 90% Duodenal, 75% Gastric Ulcers Nearly 100% Have Antral Gastritis Eradication Prevents Recurrence Strong Association with MALT Lymphoma Microaerophilic, Urease Producing Can Live in Gastric Epithelium
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GASTROINTESTINAL INJURY Production of Toxic Products Ammonia, Cytokines, Mucinases, Phospholipases, Platelet Activating Factor Induction in Local Mucosal Immune Responses Increases Gastrin → Increasing Acid Secretion
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H. Pylori INFECTION World-Wide Pandemic Usually Acquired in Childhood Inverse Relationship Between Infection Rates and Socio Economic Status Transmission Mouth-to-Mouth Higher Rate in Developing Countries- Sanitation is a Real Issue
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NSAID’S Second Most Common Cause of PUD Increased Use in Women >50 Years Old Risk of Ulcers/Bleeding Parallels Drug Use 10% of Patients Taking NSAID’s Develop Acute Ulcer 2-4% Develop GI Complications/Year
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ACID- INCREASED Nocturnal Acid 70%Daytime Acid 50% Duodenal Acid Load Maximal Acid 65%40% Gastrin Sensitivity Basal Gastrin 35%35% Gastric Emptying 30% Parietal Cells 30%
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GASTRIC ULCERS Type I- Lesser Curvature Near Incisura 60% Low Levels of Acid Type II- Combination Type I Plus DU 15% Excess Acid Secretion
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GASTRIC ULCERS (2) Type III- Pre-Pyloric 20% Behave Like DU’s Excess Acid Secretion Type IV- High on Lesser Curvature <10% Low Acid Secretion <5% Greater Curvature
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GASTRIC ULCER Rare Before Age 40, Common 55-65 Years Caused By NSAID’s Acid, Pepsin Abnormalities Co-Existing DU Delayed Gastric Emptying Duodenal-Gastric Reflux Gastritis H. Pylori Infection
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DU PREDISPOSITION Chronic Alcohol Intake Smoking Long-Term Steroid Use Infection
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SYMPTOMS Mid-Epigastric Pain Relieved By Pain Spring > Fall Relapses with Stress Constant Pain- Deeper Penetration Back Pain- Penetration Into Pancreas
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COMPLICATIONS Perforation Bleeding Obstruction Chronicity
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PERFORATION Sudden Abdominal Pain, Fever Tachycardia, Ileus, Dehydration Exquisite Abdominal Tenderness, Rebound, Rigidity Free Air Under the Diaphragm, Can Verify by Gastrograffin Swallow Surgical Emergency
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PERFORATION Treat with Gramm Patch Omental Closure Simultaneous Definitive Procedure IF PUD with NO Symptoms Failure to Respond to Medical Therapy Best Definitive Procedure for Perforation- Parietal Cell Vagotomy Non-Operative Therapy Reserved for Late Presentation with No Acute Abdomen
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BLEEDING Most Common Cause of PUD Death Bleeding Accounts for 25% of All Upper GI Bleeds Can Present with Melena, Hematemesis, or Bright Red Rectal Bleeding Gastroduodenal Artery Lies Posterior to Duodenal Bulb- “Visible Vessel”
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OBSTRUCTION Chronic Scarring Can Occlude Pylorus Acute Inflammation Also Causes Obstruction Anorexia, Nausea, Vomiting Hypochloremic, Hypokalemic Metabolic Alkalosis, Dehydration, Malnutrition Stomach Becomes Massivel Dilated and Loses Muscular Tone
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GASTRIC ULCER Must Distinguish Benign From Malignant Causes Same Complications as DU 8-20% Need Operation for Complications Bleeding Occurs in 35-40% Perforation is Most Life-Threatening Obstruction Occurs in Types I and II
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ZOLLINGER-ELLISON SYNDROME Triad- Gastric Acid Hypersecretion, Severe PUD, Non-β Islet Cell Tumors Gastrinomas in Head of Pancreas, Duodenum 50% Multiple, 65% Malignant, 25% Associated with MEN Syndrome Abdominal Pain, Diarrhea, Steatorrhea Elevated Basal, Stimulated Gastrin Levels Treatment Focuses on Tumor Resection
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ELEVATED GASTRIN LEVELS Z-E Syndrome Antral G Cell Hyperplasia Retained Gastric Antrum Hypercalcemia Gastric Outlet Obstruction Anti-Secretory Drugs
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ELEVATED GASTRIN LEVELS Previous Ulcer Operation Atrophic Gastritis Pernicious Anemia Chronic Renal Failure H. Pylori Infection
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PEPTIC ULCER DIAGNOSIS EGD, Barium Swallow H. Pylori Testing Serology- ELISA 90% Sensitive Urea Breath Test- Uses 14 C Specificity, Sensitivity >95% Rapid Urease- Endoscopic Biopsy, Tissue Placed in Urea, >90% Sensitive Histology, Biopsy of Antrum- Best Test Culture is Slow, Expensive
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MEDICAL MANAGEMENT Avoid Smoking, Caffeine, Alcohol, NSAID’s Antacids- Large Frequent Doses Needed H 2 Receptor Antagonists- 70-80% Healing in 4 Weeks, 80-90% in 8 Weeks Proton Pump Inhibitors- Most Complete Acid Inhibition- Healing 85% in 4 Weeks, 90% in 8 Weeks Sucralfate- Aluminum Salt of Sulfated Sucrose- Protective Coating
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OPERATIVE MANAGEMENT Subtotal Gastrectomy- Highest Complication Rate Vagotomy and Antrectomy- Most Efficacious Vagotomy and Pyloroplasty- Major Indication is Bleeding Gastritis Parietal Cell Vagotomy- Most Physiologic
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