upper gastrointestinal disease bradley j. phillips, md burn-trauma-icu adults & pediatrics

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Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

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Page 1: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

Upper Gastrointestinal Disease

Bradley J. Phillips, MD

Burn-Trauma-ICU

Adults & Pediatrics

Page 2: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

• A 46 year old businessman is brought to the Emergency Room with the sudden onset of severe generalized abdominal pain occurring one hour previously.

Page 3: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

• List your tentative differential diagnosis and how you would proceed to arrive at the correct diagnosis.

Page 4: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

• A 46 year old businessman is brought to the Emergence Room with the sudden onset of severe generalized abdominal pain occurring one hour previously.

• Vital signs are: BP 100/60, P 120, RR 28.

Page 5: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

• List your tentative differential diagnosis and how you would proceed to arrive at the correct diagnosis.

Page 6: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

• A 46 year old businessman is brought to the Emergence Room with the sudden onset of severe generalized abdominal pain occurring one hour previously.

• Vital signs are: BP 100/60, P 120, RR 28.

• He is pale and sweaty with a rigid tender abdomen and no bowel sounds.

Page 7: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

• List your tentative differential diagnosis and how you would proceed to arrive at the correct diagnosis.

Page 8: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

• Discuss your initial resuscitative treatment of this patient.

• What are you trying to accomplish, and how can you measure the effectiveness of your efforts?

Page 9: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

Page 10: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

• Assuming that X-ray shows free air and initial resuscitation has been successful, what further treatment would you recommend?

• Are there alternatives?

• Describe them.

Page 11: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

• Definitions or Semantics? Fuzzy Thinking?– Treat conservatively– Treat Medically– Treat Surgically– Treat radically– Treat Operatively– Treat Non-operatively

Page 12: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

• What are common and uncommon causes of free air in the abdomen?

Page 13: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 1

• Assuming that free air was not present, what other “surgical” and “non-surgical” conditions could cause this clinical picture?

Page 14: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2• A 75 year old patient presents with a ten-day

history of vomiting almost everything that he has eaten or drunk.

Page 15: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2• A 75 year old patient presents with a ten-day

history of vomiting almost everything that he has eaten or drunk.

• He appears weak, dehydrated and moderately ill.

Page 16: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2• A 75 year old patient presents with a ten-day

history of vomiting almost everything that he has eaten or drunk.

• He appears weak, dehydrated and moderately ill.

• The abdomen is soft and scaphoid with normal bowel sounds and no palpable masses.

Page 17: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2• A 75 year old patient presents with a ten-day

history of vomiting almost everything that he has eaten or drunk.

• He appears weak, dehydrated and moderately ill.

• The abdomen is soft and scaphoid with normal bowel sounds and no palpable masses.

• Rectal exam is negative with no stool in the ampulla.

Page 18: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2 (cont.)

• An upper GI series shows a dilated stomach with only a trickle of barium passing through a deformed duodenal bulb.

Page 19: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2 (cont.)

• An upper GI series shows a dilated stomach with only a trickle of barium passing through a deformed duodenal bulb.

• Labs show:– Hct 56%, WBC 7500

Page 20: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2 (cont.)

• An upper GI series shows a dilated stomach with only a trickle of barium passing through a deformed duodenal bulb.

• Labs show:– Hct 56%, WBC 7500– Na 130, K 2.0, Cl 79, HCO3 35

Page 21: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2 (cont.)

• An upper GI series shows a dilated stomach with only a trickle of barium passing through a deformed duodenal bulb.

• Labs show:– Hct 56%, WBC 7500– Na 130, K 2.0, Cl 79, HCO3 35– ABG: 7.50, 44, 98

Page 22: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2 (cont.)

• An upper GI series shows a dilated stomach with only a trickle of barium passing through a deformed duodenal bulb.

• Labs show:– Hct 56%, WBC 7500– Na 130, K 2.0, Cl 79, HCO3 35– ABG: 7.50, 44, 98– BUN: 42

Page 23: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2• What is your tentative diagnosis?

Page 24: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2

Page 25: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2• What is your tentative diagnosis?

• Explain the abnormal lab data.– Hct 56%– Na 130, K 2.0 Cl 79, HCO3 35– 7.50, 44, 98– BUN 42

Page 26: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2• What is your tentative diagnosis?

• Explain the abnormal lab data.– Hct 56%– Na 130, K 2.0 Cl 79, HCO3 35– 7.50, 44, 98– BUN 42

• Discuss your initial treatment.

Page 27: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 2• What is your tentative diagnosis?

• Explain the abnormal lab data.– Hct 56%– Na 130, K 2.0 Cl 79, HCO3 35– 7.50, 44, 98– BUN 42

• Discuss your initial treatment.

• Discuss the definitive treatment of this condition.

Page 28: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 3

• A 70 year old woman presents to your office with a history of weight loss, ...

Page 29: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 3

• A 70 year old woman presents to your office with a history of weight loss, decreased appetite, and epigastric discomfort.

Page 30: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 3

• A 70 year old woman presents to your office with a history of weight loss, decreased appetite, and epigastric discomfort. Examination reveals her to be thin but not cachectic and the stools to be positive for occult blood.

Page 31: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 3

• A 70 year old woman presents to your office with a history of weight loss, decreased appetite, and epigastric discomfort. Examination reveals her to be thin but not cachectic and the stools to be positive for occult blood. An upper GI series reveals a gastric cancer on the greater curvature.

Page 32: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 3

Page 33: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 3

• What further workup is indicated for this patient?

Page 34: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 3

• What further workup is indicated for this patient?

• How do pathophysiology and symptoms of gastric ulcer differ from those of a duodenal ulcer?

Page 35: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 3

• What further workup is indicated for this patient?

• How do pathophysiology and symptoms of gastric ulcer differ from those of a duodenal ulcer?

• What is the relative risk of malignancy from a duodenal versus a gastric ulceration?

Page 36: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 3

• Does the exact location of the gastric ulcer have any significance?

Page 37: Upper Gastrointestinal Disease Bradley J. Phillips, MD Burn-Trauma-ICU Adults & Pediatrics

CASE 3

• Does the exact location of the gastric ulcer have any significance?

• What are the possible histologic types of gastric malignancy, and how do they differ in terms of epidemiology, risk factors, diagnosis, treatment and prognosis?