First line treatment involves conservative management. Surgical treatment is the other option and should only be considered if conservative management has failed after continuous treatment for 6-8 weeks.
For conservative management the treatment goal is to relax the internal anal sphincter, initiate and maintain atraumatic passage of stool, and relieve pain. This can be achieved by:
• Local injection of botulinum toxin may also be useful to healing as a second line treatment before referral for a surgical opinion.
The gold standard surgical operation is lateral internal sphincterotomy
Secondary fissures can be due to:
EXTRA
• Presentation:
- Severe tearing pain with the passage of faeces and sphincter spasm which persists for an hour or longer
Acute fissures – appear as a fresh laceration
Chronic fissures – have raised edges exposing the internal anal sphincter muscle fibres beneath, also often accompanied by an external skin tag (sentinel pile) and a hypertrophied anal papilla (benign growths of connective tissue that are covered by squamous cells) at the proximal end
o DDx: Haemorrhoid, anal fistula, solitary rectal ulcer
I’d start of with a primary survey. If the pt is haemodynamically stable I would continue.
Patient’s >50 years old are at increased risk of Colorectal Ca, and in a patient presenting with PR bleeding it should be suspected and investigated.
I would start off by taking a detailed history focussing on the bleeding history, change in bowel habits, associated symptoms and the constituional signs for cancer. I’d also ask about PMHx, FHx, lifestyle and SHx for risk factors and differential diagnoses.
I would start of examination with a general exam by checking vitals, looking for signs of shock, signs of chronic bleeding (anemia- pallor, koilonychia, SOB) and signs of malignancy (cachexi or lymphadenopathy).
I’d then move on to an abdominal examination and rectal examination where I would examine the abdomen for mass and tenderness and other abnormalities and inspect the anus for anal fissure, skin tags, sentinel pile, haemorrhoids, fistulas, palpable masses and blood on the withdrawn gloved finger.
Investigations would include:
- FBC (anemia), UEC (hypokalemia), LFTs (mets), Coag studies, CRP
OR referral to colonoscopy as it is gold standard- can visualise and biopsy and remove polyps.
A history focusing on the symptoms of anemia, blood loss and risk factors, medical conditions and previous surgeries (in particularly GI), diet, medications and Family history.
I would then follow this up with a general examination looking for signs of anemia or other conditions that can present with anemia. Then I would perform a targeted abdominal (PR exam, hepato-spleno-megaly, masses) and cardiovascular examination.
Investigations would include:
- FBC (Hb, WBC, blood film, reticulocyte count)
AND coagulation studies
Once anemia is confirmed and the RBC morphology is determines, focussed investigations can be aimed at the most likely causes for the anemia.
This includes:
- Iron studies (serum iron, ferritin, TIBC & transferrin)
MECHANISMS of ANEMIA
a) Bone marrow failure - e.g. aplastic anaemia, red cell aplasia
b) Decreased Erythropoeitin - e.g. Chronic Kidney Disease
a) Nuclear maturation defects - e.g. B12 or folate deficiency, OR Myelodysplasias- very active bone marrow but a low number of circulating blood cells due to poor maturation and early death
b) Cytoplasmic maturation defects - e.g. iron deficiency, thalassaemia
a) Inherited defects - e.g. spherocytosis, G6PD deficiency, sickle-cell anaemia
b) Acquired defects - e.g. Autoimmune haemolysis, malaria, DIC, TTP= Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura
In a 63-year old male with a recent change in bowel habit, you need to exclude CR Ca, but other DDx may include inflammatory bowel disease, diverticulitis or infective colitis (campylobacter, salmonella, C.Difficle).
I’d start with a history that includes questions on:
On examination I’d assess:
Investigations would include:
• FBC (+/- iron studies, folate and B12 as appropriate – i.e. anaemia)
• UEC- electro disturbance, LFT, CRP,
Coagulation studies
I'd also consider: - Colonoscopy +/- biopsy - upper GI endoscopy - barium studies - contrast CT if the previous tests were inconclusive or necessitated further investigations
• Increasing Age (about 99% of cases in people > 40yrs) • Obesity • Inflammatory Bowel Disease • Personal or Family Hx of CRC or polyps • Lynch Syndrome • Polyposis Syndromes - smoking - alcohol consumption - diets with low fibre, high fat, high meat intake
The National Bowel Cancer Screening Program is the population based screening program in Australia for colorectal cancer.
The screening test used in the Program is an immunochemical Faecal Occult Blood Test (iFOBT) which involves taking a tiny sample of faeces which is tested in a pathology laboratory for traces of blood.
People aged 50-74 years are sent a free Home Test Kit by mail to complete at home and send back to a laboratory for analysis.
Test results are sent directly to the participant and their nominated doctor. Participants with a positive test result are advised to see their doctor to discuss the result and referral to further diagnostic testing, usually colonoscopy.
Follow-up health services after a positive test result are provided through state and territory government health services or private health services.
Neoadjuvant therapy is treatment given prior to definitive surgery to shrink a tumour making it more easily resectable. This can be in the form of chemotherapy, radiotherapy and/or hormone therapy.
Neoadjuvant or induction chemoradiotherapy is an increasingly used strategy for patients with rectal adenocarcinomas.
The only definitive indication for neoadjuvant chemoradiotherapy, supported by the results of randomized trials, is the presence of a clinical T3 or T4 tumor.
Relative indications include:
The Advantages of neoadjuvant therapy include:
•Pre-operative tumour shrinkage
•Higher chance of resection
•Sphincter preservation
•Down staging by treating local Lymph Node involvement
•Decreased risk to small bowel
•Decreases the risk of pelvic recurrence with tumours extending through the bowel wall
Disadvantages:
Metastatic disease can result haematogenously, via direct invasion, via lymphatics and transperitoneally.
Metastatic disease from a colorectal primary are most commonly found in the liver. This is because the Sueprior and Inferior Mesenteric Veins drain into the splenic vein and subsequently the hepatic portal vein.
Colorectal cancers can also spread haematogenously to the lungs, bone, pertoneum and brain.
Anorectal tumors can directly invade the prostate (ant.) and sacrum (post.) in males and directly invade the vaginal wall and bladder in women.
EXTRA
o SMN and IMN drains to para-aortic via cisterna Chyli into the thoracic duct
Treatment options include: - surgical hepatic resection - percutaneous radiofrequency ablation - selective internal radiation therapy - transarterial chemoembolisation AND - systemic management via chemotherapy
The surgical hepatic resection takes into consideration:
- PATIENT factors- such as comorbidities and their fitness for surgery
-TUMOR factors- right colon tumors from the midgut were associated with worse survival after resection than left colons of hindgut origin.
- ANATOMIC factors- Where there should be no extrahepatic metastasis,
No portal vein, hepatic artery or bile duct involvement AND
the preservation of two contiguous hepatic segments.
Chemotherapy can also be given neoadjuvantly, adjuvantly or palliatively to manage the patient.
The adenoma-carcinoma sequence refers to a stepwise pattern of mutations in a cell or group of cells than results in cancer.
It is the process by which mutational activation of oncogenes and inactivation of tumour suppressor genes result in cancer.
In CR Ca, this is the process in which benign polyps undergo dysplastic change to become malignant adenocarcinomas. And this process takes approx. 5-10years
The mutations include:
- the activation of oncogenes from proto-oncogenes for example K-RAS
AND
- Inactivation of tumor suppresor genes such as p53 and APC
Normal mucosal cells of the intestine are continuously lost into lumen due to apoptosis and exfoliation, and are continually replaced by proliferation at the crypt base.
However, loss of one normal copy or inactivation of the tumor suppressor gene APC is the “first hit”. The loss of the second gene leads to the “second hit” at which point the mucosa is at risk and adenomas may form. Other mutations such as the mutation of K-RAS to a protooncogene and inactivation of p53 can then lead to the emergence of a carcinoma.
It does not follow a linear pathway, multiple mutations can occur in different order and it is the accumulation of mutations, as opposed to the the temporal sequence of change, that is more critical
Chrons disease is is one of the two major entities of Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD), with Ulcerative Colitis (UC) being the other major entity.
It is a chronic, relapsing, immune-mediated inflammatory disorder that is transmural and can affect any part of the GIT. Most commonly the small or large bowel, and more particularly the terminal ileum (most affected site) and right colon.
It is a disorder of unknown aetiology, with incidence higher in ages between 13 to 30 and common clinical features can include:
Chrons disease may also present with systemic features, affecting the skin, joints and eyes.
The diagnosis of Crohn disease (CD) is usually established with endoscopic findings or imaging studies in a patient with a compatible clinical history.
Routine laboratory tests may be normal or they may reveal anemia, iron deficiency, elevated white blood cell count, B12 deficiency, and/or elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate or CRP. May also see a reduction in Hb and albumin due to protein losing enteropathy.
On colonoscopy, skip lesions (preserved mucosa between ulcers), transmural inflammation (thickened bowel), fat wrapping (mesenteric fat wraps around bowel due to chronic inflammation), abscess, fistulas, strictures and a cobblestone appearance may be noted.
Major findings on intestinal biopsy are focal ulcerations and acute and chronic inflammation. These findings are usually confirmatory rather than diagnostic. The focality of the inflammation differs from the diffuse pattern seen typically in ulcerative colitis. Granulomas may also be noted and if appropriate infections are ruled out it is diagnostic of chrons, however, not all patients with Chrons will have Granulomas (only 30% do)
Imaging studies are most useful to evaluate the upper gastrointestinal tract and allow documentation of the length and location of strictures in areas not accessible by colonoscopy. A CT can evaluate the small bowel, as well as extraintestinal complications, such as intraabdominal abscesses. MRI and endoscopic US can also show inflammatory findings.
Diverticulosis, can be symptomatic or asymptomatic, and is the presence of sac like protusions of the colonic wall known as diverticula that develop at well defined points of weakness, usually where the vasa recta penetrate the circular muscle layer of the colon.
They are thought to be related to increased intraluminal pressure, which may be the result of low volume stool.
Colonic diverticula are most common in the sigmoid colon and to a lesser extent the descending colon but it can affect the whole colon.
The prevalence of diverticulosis is age-dependent, increasing from less than 20% at age 40 to 60% by age 60.
Diverticular Disease – is symptomatic diverticulosis, which can present as painless bleeding, altered bowel habit, or painful inflammation (diverticulitis). Bleeds more common on right sided (wall is thinner, bigger diverticula leads to more vessel damage) and diverticulitis more common L sided.
The aetiology is thought to involve both genetic and environmental factors.
Non modifiable risk factors include increasing age and being female. Modifiable RF include: - obesity - low fibre diet - alcohol and caffeine - NSAIDs and steroids,
How does it present clinically?
Diverticulitis is the inflammation of one or more diverticulum.
It can be acute or chronic AND uncomplicated or complicated. They become complicated by:
- abscess formation
- fistulation
- perforation
- haemorrhage
AND bowel obstruction from chronic inflammatory strictures.
The clinical presentation of diverticulitis may include:
• Acute onset continuous LIF pain
• Nausea/ vomiting/ change in bowel habits (increased frequency and pellets)
• Fever
• Tachycardia
• LIF tenderness to obvious local peritonitis
• There may be a palpable mass in the LIF
• Leucocytosis
If it is complicated it can present with:
- peritonitis, sepsis and pneumoperitoneum if it is perforated
- swinging fever if theres an abscess formation
- haematochezia and hypovolemia if it haemorrhages
- severe constipation, colicky abdo pain and hyperresonant bowel sounds if it causes obstruction
- pneumaturia, severe uti or passage of faeces if it has led to a colovesical fistula
- purulent vaginal discharge if there is an entero-vaginal fistula
OR diarrhea if there is an colocolonic fistula.
EXTRA
Ix:
- Pathology:
o Leucocytosis
Mx:
Complicated=
bowel rest, intravenous fluids and intravenous antibiotic therapy= triple therapy= amoxycillin, gentamycin, metronidazole.
Consider surgery for perforation and uncontrolled abscess.
Recent studies have shown with anything up to a Hinchey III, a laparoscopic wash-out is a safe procedure, avoiding the need for a laparotomy and stoma formation.
Major complications that can result from diverticulitis include:
In one sense, Hemorrhoids are normal vascular structures in the submucosal layer of the anal canal. They arise from a channel of arteriovenous connective tissues that drains into the superior, middle or inferior haemorrhoidal veins. There are three prominent cushions; LL, RA, RP (3, 7, 11 O’ clock).
The condition most of us call hemorrhoids (or piles) develops when those veins become swollen and distended,and they become symptomatic.
Haemorrhoids are classified into external (lined with modified squamous and many somatic pain receptors- very painful on thrombosis), internal (composed of columnar and visceral innervation- not sensitive to pain, temp and touch) and mixed.
External haemorrhoids are distal to the dentate line, internals are proximal to the dentate line and mixed are located proximal and distal.
There is no widely used classification for external haemorrhoids. Internal are graded according to the degree of prolapse.
Grade I – visualized on anoscopy and may bulge into the lumen but do not prolapse below the dentate line
Grade II- hemorrhoids prolapse out of the anal canal with defecation or with straining but reduce spontaneously
Grade III hemorrhoids prolapse out of the anal canal with defecation or straining, and require manual reduction
Grade IV hemorrhoids are irreducible and may strangulate
Symptomatic patients usually seek treatment for:
First degree haemorrhoids can have Conservative treatment which involves:
Symptomatic grade I or II internal haemorrhoids refractory to six to eight weeks of medical treatment OR grade III internal haemarrhoids can be referred to a colorectal surgeon for rubber band ligation.
(Involves placing an elastic band above the haemorrhoid neck to cause veno-occlusion and haemorrhoid subsides and displaces the elastic band which is then passed. ). DO NOT TREAT FOR EXTERNAL
Can also try injection sclerotherapy or infrared coagulation to shrink the haemorrhoid but band ligation is less likely to require repeat treatment. DO NOT TREAT FOR EXTERNAL
Surgical haemorrhoidectomy can be performed that havent responded well to other treatment measures. Or if the other treatment measures were contraindicated. Or if there is a grade IV haemorrhoid that requires semiurgent treatment.
The haemorrhoidal masses plus the overlying mucosa and some skin are excised.
Haemorrhoidal Artery Ligation Operation (HALO) is another option
o The artery supplying each haemorrhoid is located with ultrasound and then encircled with a stitch to cut off blood supply, via the insensitive lower rectum.
o Over the following days the haemorrhoids shrink and symptoms abate.
o This procedure has less tissue excision, less post-operative discomfort and similar recurrence rates to the standard procedure
Thrombosed haemorrhoids:
- Most resolve within 2-3 days, therefore supportive care for that period i.e. analgesia
Surgery is considered curative in ulcerative colitis. Surgery is required in about 20% of patients with ulcerative colitis.
The main indications for surgery include:
Surgical Options include:
o Subtotal colectomy with ileostomy
o Proctocolectomy with permanent ileostomy
o Restorative Proctocolectomy (ileo-anal pouch, Parks’ pouch)
Surgery is not considered curative in Crohn’s disease. Up to 70% of patients with Crohn’s disease will eventually need surgery, of whom 50% will need further surgery within 5 years.
Common procedures used to treat Chrons include bowel resection, strictureplasty, and endoscopic balloon dilatation. The choice of procedures depends upon the indication for operative intervention and the location(s) of the disease (small bowel versus colorectal).
• The main indications for surgery:
- Perforation-patients with a free perforation of the small bowel or colon should undergo immediate surgical resection of the perforated segment.
Inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) is comprised of two major disorders: ulcerative colitis and Crohn disease.
Indication for a major emergency surgery include:
- Fulminant colitis=
o Subgroup of patients with severe ulcerative colitis
o PC: >10stools per day, continuous bleeding, abdominal pain, distension, acute, severe toxic symptoms including fever and anorexia
What is the likely diagnosis?
The most likely diagnosis would be a perianal abscess.
This is because the presentation aligns with the clinical features of a perianal abscess and this includes:
- a warm, fluctuant mass near the anal margin that presents with perianal pain particularly when sitting or walking
Other differentials I would consider include:
What is the likely diagnosis?
What aetiological factors are associated with this condition?
The most likely diagnosis is perianal abscess.
The majority of anorectal abscesses begin as acute purulent infections of the anal glands, known as cryptoglandular infections.
There are between 6 -14 glands that lie in the intersphincteric space (the plane between the internal and external anal sphincters), which drain into tiny pits near the dentate line called anal crypts.
These narrow ducts can easily become obstructed when the crypts are occluded by:
From the intersphincteric plane, the infection can stay as a intersphincter abscess OR spread in 1 or more of 3 directions:
EXTRA
Mx
- Urgent surgical incision and drainage with incision as close to anal verge as possible to minimise length of a potential fistula.
same as 95
Ulcerative colitis is a chronic inflammatory condition confined to the mucosal layer of the colon.
Inflammatory changes are continuous and extend from the rectum for a variable distance towards the caecum.
The aetiology of the condition is unknown but is thought to encompass genetic, environmental and immune factors.
The diagnosis is made by endoscopic and histological features of colitis, and exclusion of infectious causes by stool examination.
Risk factors include:
Clinical signs and symptoms include: o Diarrhoea o Blood and mucous in stool o Tenesmus o Abdominal pain and tenderness o Fever o Malaise o Weight loss o Anaemia o Dehydration
Can also present with extra-intestinal manifestations that include arthropathy, as well as eye, skin and biliary tract disorders.
EXTRA Features present on scope include: - Site: o Anal verge with continuous proximal extension into the colon o Distal ileum due to backwash
o Chronic:
Featureless colon
• Smooth wall with loss of haustral folds
• Barium enema “lead-pipe” appearance
Severity:
Mild – Patients with mild clinical disease have four or fewer stools per day with or without blood, no signs of systemic toxicity, and a normal erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR). There is no severe pain, profuse bleeding, fever, and weight loss in mild disease.
Moderate – Patients with moderate clinical disease have frequent loose, bloody stools (>4 per day), mild anemia not requiring blood transfusions, and abdominal pain that is not severe. Patients have minimal signs of systemic toxicity, including a low-grade fever
Severe – Patients with a severe clinical presentation typically have frequent loose, bloody stools (≥6 per day) with severe cramps and evidence of systemic toxicity as demonstrated by a fever (temperature ≥37.5°C), tachycardia (HR ≥90 beats/minute), anemia (hemoglobin <10.5 g/dL), or an elevated ESR (≥30 mm/hour). Patients may have rapid weight loss. DO NOT ENDOSCOPE A SEVERE CASE. USE SIGMOIDOSCOPE INSTEAD.
Mx:
start of with 5-ASA rectal preparation dose and oral preparation
If ineffective, add rectal corticosteroid therapy
If unresponsive to therapy thus far add immunomodulatory drugs such as aztha-thio-prine or mercaptopurine. Methotrexate only considered if pt cant tolerate.
If pt still doesnt respond for at least 3 months then infliximab is added