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GASTRO INTESTINAL FISTULA

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Title: GASTRO INTESTINAL FISTULA


1
GASTRO INTESTINAL FISTULA
2
Introduction
3
  • A fistula is an abnormal transmural communication
    between two epithelised surfaces
  • When it involves gut on on or both sides it is a
    gastrointestinal fistula
  • Leads to volume,electrolyte and nutritional
    defecits
  • Sepsis malnutrition and electrolyte disturbances
    are the principal causes of death
  • Overall mortality is 6-20
  • Malignancy accounts for 5-30 of thers deaths

4
Classification
5
Internal /external
  • Internal-communicate with other portions of GIT
    or other organs
  • External-with the skin and drainage of enteric
    contents to skin or vagina

6
Anatomic classification
  • Internal/external anatomic course
  • Suggests etiology
  • Prognosticates spontaneous closure
  • Assists planning operative timing and approach

7
Physiologic classification
  • Based on output
  • Low(lt200ml/24 hrs)
  • Moderate(200-500ml/24 hrs)
  • High(gt500ml/24 hrs)
  • Prognosticates mortalities

8
Etiologic classification
  • Based on underlying disease process
  • Prognosticates spontaneous closure prognosticates
    mortality

9
Etiology
  • Spontaneous (15-25)of EC fistulas
  • Iatrogenic (75-80)

10
Spontaneous
  • Radiation, IBD, diverticular disease,
    appendicitis, ischemic bowel, indwelling tubes,
    perforation of duodenal ulcer, malignancies, TB,
    actinomycosis
  • Radiation ,recurrent cancer and IBD fistulas
    often require surgical closure

11
Iatrogenic
  • Cancer operations, operations for IBD, operations
    for adhesions

12
Anatomy of fistula
  • Predicts chance of closure

13
Oral and pharyngeal fistulas
  • Spontaneous advanced head and neck cancer
  • Fistulas resulting from surgical treatment(more
    common now)
  • Non operative treatment usually will result in
    spontaneous closure

14
Oesophageal fistulas
  • Cervical
  • Post operative leaks of cervical anastomosis
  • Undetected or inadequate repair
  • Usually close spontaneously
  • Occurring in chest
  • Leak,tumor,instrumentation,postemetic
    perforations
  • Empyema mediastinitis and sepsis
  • Usually mandates operative intervention

15
Gastric fistulas
  • Post operative in 85-90cases
  • Gastric resection for ca, peptic ulcer Sx,
    bariatric Sx,ischeamia, cancer and radiation
  • Avg time from diagnosis to closure40 days
  • Mortality 15-25
  • Outputgt200 increases to 40
  • Associated sepsis-60
  • 30-50spontaneous closure rates

16
Duodenal fistulas
  • 5-85 post operative
  • spontaneous closure rates vary from 30-80
  • Mortality 28
  • When spontaneous closure occurs mean time is
    30-40

17
Small intestinal fistulas
  • Most common type of GI fistulas
  • 70-90 post operative
  • Disruption of anastomosis,unrecognised
    injury,inadverent suturing,less than adequate
    prepration,less adequate blood supply,per-op-hypot
    ension,tension at sutures,abscess adjacent to
    anastomosis,poor nutritional status
  • Spontaneous closure rates of ilieal(32) and
    jejunal (higher)

18
Pouch fistulas
  • Follows total procto colectomy with iliealpouch
    and pouch anal anastomoses
  • Poor blood supply
  • Crohns pathology

19
Colonic fistulas
  • Diverticulitis, cancer, IBD, Pancreatitis,
    appendicitis, radiation therapy, post operative
  • Low output
  • Post op has spontaneous closure rates of 80-90
  • Post appendicectomy- most close spontaneously

20
Internal fistulas
  • Crohns disease and diverticulitis account for
    most internal fistulas
  • Crohns (enteroenteric,enterovesical,enterocolonic,
    colovaginal0
  • Diverticulitis(colovesical in males and
    colovaginal in females)
  • Malabsorption,intractable diarrhea,infections,obst
    ruction,short bowel syndrome

21
Prevention
  • Guidelines to be followed per operatively

22
  • Tension free anastomosis in well perfused bowel
  • Accurately plased sutures/stapling to prevent
    unrecognised intra op leak
  • Perform careful sharp adhesiolysis in bright
    light
  • Resection with end to end anastomosis of small
    bowel defects gt half diameter
  • Administer pre op oral bowel preprationalong with
    luminal and systemic antibiotics

23
  • Careful hemostasis
  • Place soft drains and tubes
  • Avoid perioperative hypotension steroid therapy
    and malnutrition
  • Fresh anastomosis be covered withfat/omentum
  • The greater omentum should be laid back to
    position

24
  • Dead space should be covered with live tissue or
    drained with suction drain
  • Drains should be kept away from anastomosis
  • Pre op nutritional prepration is important
  • Whenever in dobut proximal diverting ostomies
    will help

25
Pathophysiology
26
  • Physiologic classification based on output
  • Fluid elecdtrolytes and trace mineral loses occur
  • More in proximal high output and less in distal
    low output fistulas
  • Predicts mortality,assists in preventing and
    treating metabolic defects
  • No correlation between static measurement of
    spontaneous fistula output and closure
  • Chance of spontaneous closure is three times more
    in low outpt than high output fistulas(CST)
  • Anatomic and etiologic factors are more imp
    predictors of closure

27
Low output
  • lt200ml/24hrs
  • K,Cl,Mg
  • 1-1.2REE
  • Protien 1-1.5gm/kg/day
  • RDAwater soluble vitamins
  • 2-5RDA of vitC
  • Vit-k 10 mg/wk

28
Moderate output
  • 200-500ml/24hrs
  • Na,K,Cl,Hco3,Zn
  • 1.2-1.3-REE
  • Protien 1.2-1.8 gm/kg/day
  • 2RDAwater soluble vitamins
  • 5-10RDA of vitC
  • Vit-k 10 mg/wk

29
High output
  • gt500ml/24hrs
  • Na,K,Cl,Hco3,Mg,Zn,Cu
  • 1.2-1.5-REE
  • Protien 1.5-2.5 gm/kg/day
  • 2RDAwater soluble vitamins
  • 5-10RDA of vitC
  • Vit-k 10 mg/wk

30
Fluid and electrolyte imbalances
  • Abnormalities in SE ofgt48 hrs duration
  • K,Na,Mg,Posp,Zn
  • Fluid lost is metabolically expensive(enzymatic
    protiens and critical electrolytes)

31
Malnutrition
  • Most severe and refractory in high output
    fistulas
  • Lack of adequate intake
  • Hypercatabolism associated with sepsis
  • Loss of protien rich energy requiring secretions
    from fistula
  • Control of sepsis is an early singular goal in
    nutritional stabilisation

32
Sepsis
  • Most common complication
  • Most common cause of death
  • Ct,MRI or indium scans should be used liberally
    to localize sepsis

33
Natural history
  • Factors that predicts incidence of spontaneous
    closure and the time it takes

34
  • Likely to close
  • Oropharyngeal ,oesophageal,duodenal
    stump,pancreatobiliary jejunal and colonic
  • Well nourished
  • Sepsis absent
  • Appenticitis ,diverticulitis,post op
  • Healthy boweland adjacent tissue,small
    leak,quiescent disease,no abscess
  • Unlikely to close
  • Gastric, ligament of teitz,ilieal
  • Poorly nouriashed
  • Present
  • Cancer FB,Radiation
  • Total anastomotic disruption,abscess,distal
    obstruction,active disease

35
  • Tract gt2cm length
  • Defectlt1cm size in bowel
  • Transferringt200mg/dl
  • lt2cm
  • gt1cm
  • lt200mg/dl
  • Epithelisation of tract
  • FB

36
Time for spontaneous closure
  • Pharyngeal and oesophageal-15-25days
  • Duodenal 21days
  • Colonic 30-40 days
  • Small bowel especially ilieal-40-60 days if they
    heal
  • Of fistulas closing spontamneously91close in
    first month
  • Remaining 9 in next two months
  • On an avg 38 of all fistula close on TPN alone
    in 50(-14 days)

37
Diagnosis,evaluation and management
  • Ultimate aim is closure of fistula and restoring
    intestinal continuity

38
Five phases of management
  • Stabilisation (24-48hrs)
  • Investigation (after 7-10 days)
  • Decision (7-10 days-4-6 wks)
  • Definitive therapy (when spontaneous closure is
    unlikely or after 4-6 wks)
  • Healing (5-10 days after closure)

39
Stabilisation
  • Rehydration
  • Correction of anaemia
  • Drainage of sepsis
  • Electrolyte replenetion
  • Oncotic pr restoration
  • Control of fistula drainage
  • Local skin care

40
Recognition
  • 5-6 days after operation
  • Wound abscess appears which is drained resulting
    in enteric contents appearing on dressing

41
Resuscitation
  • Crystalloid 3-4l
  • Anaemia correction (pcv 35)
  • Serum albumin to atleast 3mg/dl
  • Exogenous albumin is helpful

42
Local control
  • Wound care assumes high priority
  • Place red rubber catheters on low continuous
    suction next to fistulous tracts
  • Karya powder ,ilieostomy seal,glycerine ion
    exchange resins
  • Stoma adhesive (most effective)
  • An enterostomal therapist should be involved

43
Nutritional management(central role)
  • TPN with bowel rest
  • Dramatically decreases the output of fistula and
    simplifies fluid and electrolyte management
  • Feeding rates 1.3-1.5 BEE
  • Protien is more imp than calories
  • Weight gain is not the priority
  • Restoration of N balance is imp

44
  • 1.2-2g of protien/kg/day
  • Fluids 30ml/kg or 1500ml/m2
  • Fistula loses must be added to it
  • 500-800ml/day for each deg of fever
  • Water sol vit-twice rda
  • Vit c 5-10 times rda
  • Monitor serum mg biweekly
  • 10mg/day of elemental zinc (high output)

45
Role of enteral feeding
  • Give atleast a part of nutritional needs
    enterally
  • Restore hepatic protien synthesis,gut mucosal
    integrity and immunological competence
  • Lipid based enteral formulas with oligopeptides
  • Atleast 4 feet of functional bowel should be
    there proximal or distal to bowel

46
Antibiotics
  • Only if sepsis is present
  • Coliforms,bacteroids,enterococcus and strep
  • CT to r/o any abscess and percutaneous drainage
  • Still sepsis not controlled-operative therapy

47
Nasogastric tubes
  • Little evidence that its helpful unless intestine
    is obstructed
  • Unless fistula is high NG tube can be removed
    without much increase in drainage
  • Long term NG tube-impaired cough,serous otitis
    media,Pharyngitis,esophageal stricture

48
Decreasing volume of secretion
  • Does no improve closure rates
  • Decrease time for spontaneous closure
  • Proton pump inhibitors
  • Somatostatin (can achieve upto 55reduction in
    fistula output)
  • Long acting analouge SMS201-995 100-600mic gm
    /day in 4 divided doses)

49
Investigations
  • Fistulogram
  • CT

50
Fistulogram
  • To define anatomy and patho physiology
  • After 7-10 days
  • Water soluble contrast media is injected into
    fistulous tract
  • Aim is to define those charecteristics of fistula
    which determine whether spontaneous closure is
    likely
  • An entire Gi contrast study may also be combined
    with it

51
  • Is the bowel in continuity/totally disrupted
  • End fistula/lateral bowel fistula
  • Is there an associated abscess cavity/size/does
    fistula drain into it
  • Adjacent bowel-normal/strictured or inflamed
  • Distal obstruction
  • Etiology
  • Length of track
  • Size of bowel wall defect

52
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53
CT
  • In a septic patient to identify abscess
  • Evaluation of a reccurent tumor

54
Decision
  • When to shift to surgical management

55
  • No signs of imminent closure after 4-5 wks of
    sepsis free nutritional support
  • Uncontrolled sepsis at any time
  • Anatomical features pleclude closure
  • Early operative intervention is indicated in
    transplant patients and malignant fistulas

56
General surgical considerations
57
  • Meticulous skin care and control of fistula
    drainage should make sure that operation is
    carried on a healthy abdominal wall
  • Abdominal wall should be re evaluted loculations
    drained cellulitis treated
  • Fistula drainage should be cultured
  • Enteric tube feeds should be stopped 2 days prior
    to surgery
  • Mechanical bowel preparation given
  • Enteric and iv antibiotics given
  • Wash abd wall with antibacterial solutions
  • Coagulation profile and nutritional status
    optimized

58
  • New incision
  • Any abscesses present should be drained through
    separate stab incisions
  • Dissection should proceed from ligament of treitz
    to rectum and all adhesions freed
  • Sharp dissection with knife is preferred
  • Resection along with excision of fistulous tract
    and end to end anastomosis gives best results

59
  • Anastomosis carried in a clean field away from
    previous abscess cavities
  • Omentum should be placed back in anatomic
    position covering anastomosis
  • A secure abdominal wall closure is important
  • If difficult plastic surgeons are incorporated
  • Prosthetic reconstructions contraindicated(recurre
    nt fistula and infection)
  • Myocutaneous flaps preffered
  • A gastrostomy for decompression and feeding
    jejunostomy placed

60
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61
Duodenal fistulas
  • An exception to rule of resection and end to end
    anastomosis
  • Duodenal repair reinforced with omental or
    jejunal patch
  • Gastrojejunostomy
  • Duodenostomy for decompression
  • Gastrostomy and feeding jejunostomy

62
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63
Post op healing
  • Continuing nutritional support is important
  • Antibiotics should be given
  • Provide appropriate proteins and calories
    parentrally
  • Early enteral nutrition is beneficial
  • But should be supplemented by parental till
    atleast 1500 k cal can be taken eternally
  • It is often difficult to persuade these persons
    to eat

64
Complications
  • Reccurent fistula(10)
  • Post op mortality due to sepsis
  • Short bowel syndrome
  • Oesophageal stricture
  • Post partum cramping abdominal pain

65
Conclusion
  • Enterocutaneous fistula is a common and
    embarrassing complication after bowel surgeries
  • Many can be avoided by proper surgical techniques
  • Once it occurs depending on natural history many
    heal conservatively
  • One technically superior and complete operation
    is better for patient and surgeon than many
    incomplete and inferior operations

66
References
  • Maingots abdominal operations 10th edition
  • Current surgical therapy 7th edition
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