Surgical Procedures/General Surgery

From Wikibooks, open books for an open world
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Amateur brain surgery.

PORTAL HYPERTENSION[edit | edit source]

Definition:[edit | edit source]

  • Increase in portal vein pressure above the normal level of 5 to 10 mmHG.
  • When the resting portal venous pressure is above 10 mmHg.
  • Most commonly due to obstruction:
    • Somewhere in the portal vein or its tributaries (Prehepatic).
    • In the portal venules and sinusoides in the liver (Hepatic).
    • In the Hepatic veins draining into the inferior vena cava (Post Hepatic).
  • Increased blood pressure in portal veins cause oesophageal varices.
  • Commonly Liver diseases and thrombosis in the vein causes portal hypertension and due to it occurs massive recurrent hematemesis and melaena.

Causes:[edit | edit source]

Most common:

Prehepatic:[edit | edit source]

  • Congenital absence or abnormality of the portal vein.
  • Thrombosis of the portal vein.
  • Obstruction of the Portal vein.

IntraHepatic[edit | edit source]

  • Cirrhosis.
  • Schistosomiasis.

PostHepatic[edit | edit source]

  • Constrictive pericarditis.
  • Tricuspid valvular incompetence.

Other detail causes:[edit | edit source]

  • Extrahepatic obstruction of portal vein and its tributaries
    • Congenital absence or abnormality of portal vein
    • Portal vein thrombosis *
      • Idiopathic
      • Umbilical and portal sepsis
      • Malignancy
      • Pancreatitis
      • Hypercoagulable states
    • Splenic vein thrombosis
  • Hepatic venous outflow obstruction (Postsinusoidal)
    • Suprahepatic
      • Budd-Chiari syndrome *
      • Constrictive pericarditis
      • Right heart failure
      • Smaller hepatic veins and venules
    • Veno-occlusive disease *
    • Sclerosing hyaline necrosis
  • Hepatic causes
    • Presinusoidal
      • Schistosomiasis *
      • Idiopathic portal hypertension
      • Primary biliray cirrhosis
      • Sarcoid
      • Myeloproliferative disease
      • Fibropolycystic disease
    • Sinusoidal
      • Cirrhosis *
      • Chronic active hepatitis *
      • Alcoholic hepatitis and Fatty liver *
  • Increased hepatic blood flow (rare causes)
    • Tropical splenomegaly syndrome
    • Hematological and other conditions with massive splenomegaly
    • Hepato-portal arteriovenous fistula

Pathogenesis:[edit | edit source]

  • The portal venous system lacks valves and hence resistance at any level between the right side of heart and splanchnic vessels results in retrograde transmission elevated pressure.
  • Increased resistance can occur at 3 levels
  • Presinusoidal[edit | edit source]

    • anatomically outside the liver but at a functional level proximal to the hepatic sinusoids
  • Sinusoidal[edit | edit source]

    • Occurring within the liver parenchyma, e.g. Cirrhosis
  • Postsinusoidal[edit | edit source]

    • Occurring outside the liver at the level of the hepatic veins

NB!
Cirrhosis is the most common cause of portal hypertension.
Portal vein obstruction the 2nd most common cause.
Presinusoidal portal obstruction accounts for nearly 20% of all cases and they are nearly always young and often a child.
 

Clinical features:[edit | edit source]

Some Commonest features:

ABCDE[edit | edit source]

  • A: Ascites.
  • B: Bleeding (hematemesis, piles).
  • C: Caput medusae.
  • D: Diminished liver.
  • E: Enlarged spleen.

Major clinical manifestations include

  • Bleeding from gastroesophageal varices
  • Splenomegaly with hypersplenism
  • Ascites
  • Acute and chronic hepatic encephalopathy

All these features are related, at least in part, to the development of portal-systemic collateral channels.

Investigations:[edit | edit source]

Blood examination:[edit | edit source]

Anemia.[edit | edit source]
  • Usually MicroCytic Hypochromic.
  • (Almost inevitable in Portal Hypertension)
Leukopenia and Thrombocytopenia:[edit | edit source]
  • Due to splenomegaly and hypersplenism of hypertension
Coagulation defect:[edit | edit source]
  • Due to thrombocytopenia and impaired synthesis of coagulation factors by damaged liver (Factor V, VII and X).
Liver function test:[edit | edit source]
  • LFT tests may be entirely normal in the presence of established cirrhosis.

Endoscopy:[edit | edit source]

  • Upper gastrointestinal endoscopy is the mostly reliable technique.
  • It shows the oesophageal varix and bleeding point.
    • Oesophageal varix are seen as dilated longitudinal zigzag running.
  • Excludes peptic ulcer as a source of bleeding in a patient with documented varices

Radiology:[edit | edit source]

  • Upper gastrointestinal Barium:
    • It can demonstrate oesophageal varices as filling defect in lower end of the oesophagus.
    • Not very accurate in the diagnosis of gastric varices but can detect Peptic ulcers disease.
    • Can be used when endoscopy is not available.

Liver Angiography:[edit | edit source]

Two main advantages:[edit | edit source]
  • Measurement of Portal pressure.
  • Visualization of abnormal venous anatomy in case of portal hypertension.

NB! Anemia, Leukopenia and Thrombocytopenia may also occur due to bone marrow depression occurred in Alcoholic cirrhotic

Diagnosis:[edit | edit source]

  • H/o liver disease and other clinical features of portal hypertension – in maximum number of cases
  • Rarely – portal venous pressure is measured by
    • Percutaneous transhepatic skinny needle catheterization
    • Transjugular cannulation of hepatic vein
    • Both free and wedged hepatic venous pressure should be measured
    • WHVP will be raised in Sinusoidal and Postsinusoidal portal hypertension while it will be normal in Presinusoidal Postal hypertension
    • Rarely – Mesenteric and hepatic angiography may be necessary


Management[edit | edit source]

  1. Resuscitation.
  2. Diagnosis.
  3. Specific treatment.
  4. Treatment of Complications.


Resuscitation of the patient.[edit | edit source]

Same as Upper G.I tract bleeding.

  • NB!
    • In Coagulation abnormalities: Fresh frozen plasma and platelets.
      • Avoid Saline.
  • Regular Vitals recording with Input/Output charting.
  • Careful with giving sedation in hepatic cases:
    • e.g. Valium I.V
    • e.g.Librium in Alcohol withdrawals.
  • Purgatives and enema.
    • Reducing Ammonia before Encephalopathy - good choice.
  • Gastric acid secretion should be decreased.
    • e.g. Cimetidine.
  • If Ascites:
    • Strict low-salt diet.
    • Spirolactone.
    • Paracentasis.

Diagnosis:[edit | edit source]

  • Endoscopy is the main diagnostic tool.
    • Before endoscopy Lavage through Ewaled tube is good if too much bleeding.
    • Peptic Ulcer bleeding should be excluded.
      • NB!
        • Bleeding due to gastritis in patients with portal hypertension should be managed as variceal bleeding.

Specific Treatment:[edit | edit source]

Vasopressin (Pitressin):[edit | edit source]

Controls variceal bleeding by splanchnic vasoconstriction.

  • In acute bleeding:
    • 20 units in 100ml of 5% Dextrose I.V over 20 minutes.
    • Followed by a continuous infusion of 0.4 unit/minute.
Side effects:[edit | edit source]
  • Cramping pain Abdomen.
  • Myocardial Ischemia.
  • Raynaud's syndrome.

Non-Selective Beta-Blockers:[edit | edit source]

  • e.g. Propranolol.
    • Prevents recurrent bleeding.
  • NB!
    • Non-Selective Beta-Blockers should not be used in decompensated liver disease, and if variceal bleeding occurs during treatment, the failure to mount a sympathetic nervous system response to blood volume loss may precipitate rapid circulatory collapse.

Endoscopic Variceal Sclerosis:[edit | edit source]

Revolution in variceal hemorrhage by decreasing mortality rate.

In acute bleeding:[edit | edit source]
    • Intravariceal injection is preferred.
      • e.g. 2.5% sodium morrhuate followed by ethanolamine oleate.

NB!

Complication:[edit | edit source]
  • Retrosternal Chest pain due to phlebitis.
  • Local microperforation. Major perforation is rare.
  • Pulmonary effusion with fever.

Balloon temponade:[edit | edit source]

Temporary method to control bleeding.

  • Should be used for Short time as possible.
  • NB!
  • Oesophageal balloon should be inflated to 45mmHG if the gastric balloon does not control bleeding.
  • In good risk patient: Avoiding it will be a good choice and urgent shunt operation will be a good choice.
Complications:[edit | edit source]
  • Aspiration is common.
  • Can produce more bleeding by sustained pressure on ulceration of gastric and oesophageal mucosa.
  • Oesophageal rupture is rare but if occurs it is FATAL.
  • Transhepatic Visceral Embolisation:
    • It is a temporary step in poor risk patients who continues to bleed following Pitressin therapy, sclerotherapy and tamponade.
    • It Occludes the feeding vessels.
    • It Causes thrombosis within oesophageal varices.

Treatment of complication:[edit | edit source]

  • Shock:
    • Barbiturates.
    • Fresh blood transfusion.
  • Clotting problem:
    • Vitamin K.
    • Fresh blood transfusion.

Encephalopathy:[edit | edit source]

  • Continuous gastric lavage.
  • Magnesium sulphate and neomycin (500mg STAT then 2 hourly) through Sangstaken tube.
  • High bowel wash.

Liver failure:[edit | edit source]

  • Plenty of Carbohydrate Per OS.
  • Low Fat diet.

Ascites:[edit | edit source]

  • Strict Low salt diet
  • Diuretics.