mesenteric ischaemia: a review

21
Mesenteric Ischaemia Presented by Lyndon Woytuck, BSc

Upload: lyndon-woytuck

Post on 19-Mar-2017

24 views

Category:

Health & Medicine


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Mesenteric Ischaemia

Presented by Lyndon Woytuck, BSc

Page 2: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

What is the most common cause of mesenteric ischaemia?A. Acute thrombosisB. Acute embolismC. Chronic atherosclerotic occlusionD. Venous thrombosis

Page 3: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Causes of Impaired Mesenteric Circulation• Atherosclerosis• Arterial embolus• Arterial dissection• Thrombosis• Vasculitis• Mesenteric venous thrombosis• Poor cardiac output leading to low mesenteric flow• Inflammatory or other conditions affecting mesenteric

vessels (e.g., pancreatitis, perforated ulcer, tumor)

Page 4: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

The pathophysiology of acute mesenteric ischemia includes all except:

A. Initial Vasospasm.B. Intestinal bacterial translocation.C. Systemic inflammatory response.D. Vasoconstriction.E. Intestinal infarction.

Page 5: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Acute Presentation• “pain out of proportion to examination”• Epigastric bruit• Tenderness on palpation• Hematochezia• Changes in mental status• History of multiple vascular/thromboembolic risk

factors

Page 6: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

What is different about mesenteric ischaemia compared to other acute ischaemia?A. More common.B. Less lethal.C. More common in females.D. Easier to diagnose.E. All of the above.

Page 7: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Chronic Presentation• Abdominal pain, postprandial pain• “food fear”• Nausea or vomiting (or both)• Early satiety• Diarrhea or constipation (or both)• Weight loss• History of systemic vascular disease

Page 8: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

What is the serum marker that suggests severe acute mesenteric ischemia?

A. Albumin.B. Transferrin.C. Lactate.D. CRP.E. Transthyretin.

Page 9: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Labs• Metabolic or Lactic Acidosis• Left shift and increased absolute WBC indicate full

thickness bowl involvement• albumin, transthyretin, transferrin, CRP to assess

malnutrition

Page 10: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Investigations• Duplex ultrasonography (S/S 85-90%)• CTA (S/S 95-100%) 1-3mm thin slices with contrast• MRA (avoids radiation & contrast, but less precise)• Endoscopy for other diagnoses• Catheter angiography can confirm before open

surgery

Page 11: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Computed Tomographic Angiography (CTA) in a Patient with Acute Mesenteric Ischemia Caused by an Embolism in the Superior Mesenteric Artery.

Page 12: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Initial Management• Fluid resuscitation with isotonic crystalloids, blood

products if needed• Heparin therapy• Broad spectrum antibiotics• NPO in acute ischaemia

Page 13: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Treatment of Acute Ischaemia• Endovascular• Open surgery• Thrombolysis in combination• Largest study N=70• endovascular success in 87%• in-hospital mortality lower among endovascular

procedures than open surgery (36% vs. 50%)• But patients presenting in profound visceral ischemia

may be assigned open

Page 14: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review
Page 15: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Treatment of Chronic Ischaemia• Endovascular• Angioplasty alone has poor patency and is associated

with poor long-term symptom relief• Stenting

• Open• improved rates of symptom relief at 5 years and of

primary patency (92%) and lower rates of reintervention

• Hybrid• Consider patient’s state of health, life expectancy

Page 16: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review
Page 17: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Venous Ischaemia• Heparin Long term anticoagulation• Usually enough, but further compromise in 5%

• Transhepatic / percutaneous mechanical thrombectomy• Thrombolysis• Open intraarterial thrombolysis• Laparotomy

Page 18: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review
Page 19: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Non-occlusive Ischaemia• Address hemodynamic instability• Anticoagulation• Vasodilation• Catheter-directed infusion of vasodilatory and

antispasmodic agents (papaverine hydrochloride)

Page 20: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review
Page 21: Mesenteric ischaemia: a review

Follow-up• Smoking-cessation• blood-pressure control• statin therapy• Lifelong aspirin• endovascular repair – clopidogrel 1-3months• Anticoagulation - AF, venous thrombosis, or

thrombophilia• TPN or nutritional interventions• Duplex US at 6m, 1y, then annually