Title: Gastroenterology for the Boards - Part I
1Gastroenterology for the Boards - Part I
- Adib Chaaya, MD
- ACP, ACG, ASGE
- 11/19/2008
2Lips
3Lips
- Impetigo
- Honey crust
- Group A strep
- Azithro / Clarithro
4Lips
5Lips /Peutz-Jeghers Syndrome
- Associated with benign harmatoma
- Polyps of the intestine
- Complicated with cancers (mainly small bowel),
and cancers of the lung, breast, uterus and ovary
6Tongue
7Tongue
8Tongue / Geographic Tongue
- Temporary loss of the papillae
- No treatment needed
9Mouth Ulcers
10Mouth Ulcers
- Painful
- Aphthous ulcers (Celiac, IBD)
- Behcets Disease
- Herpes
- Pemphigus vulgaris
- Painless
- SLE
- AIDS
- Reiters Syndrome
11Esophagus
- 66 y/o M p/w dysphagia for solid food initially
that gradually progressed to dysphagia to solids. - What is the first test to order?
12Esophagus
- Barrium swallow showed a stricture of the
esophagus - What is your next step?
13Esophagus/ Dysphagia
14Esophagus/ Dysphagia
- Dysphagia
- Weight loss think Cancer
- Intermittent web, ring
- Solid and liquid neuromuscular, diffuse
esophageal spasm, scleroderma, achalasia - Chronic GERD peptic stricture
15Risk factors for Esophageal Ca
- Smoking (SCC)
- Alcohol (excessive ingestion)- (SCC)
- Barretts esophagus
- Achalasia
16Esophagus /Benign Stricture
- 34 y/o M p/w Dysphagia. Work up showed benign
peptic stricture treated with dilatation and a
PPI. - He improved a lot and has no more dysphagia.
- How long would you continue the use of the PPI?
17Esophagus
- Achalasia
- Lack of peristalsis
- Incomplete relaxation of LES
- Dg on esophageal manometry
- Pneumatic dilation or surgical myotomy
- Diffuse Esoph Spasms
- Simultaneous contractions with intermittent
normal peristalsis - Nitrate, calcium channel blocker
- Nutcracker Esophagus
- High amplitude peristaltic contractions
- Hypertensive LES
- High LES pressure
- Normal LES relaxation
- Ineffective motility
- With scleroderma
- Weak peristalsis
- Low LES
18Esophagus
- 35 y/o F has dysphagia for solids and liquids.
Barium swallow showed dilated esophagus with bird
beak appearance. - What is you next best test
- 24 h PH monitoring
- EGD
- Motility studies
- Trial of PPI
19Achalasia vs pseudoachalasia
- Cancer of the fundus can invade around the
esophagus and cause symptoms similar to
achalasia. - Biopsies of the lower esophagus must be done to
rule out malignancy.
20When to do motility studies?
- Achalasia
- Esophageal spasm
- Scleroderma
21Esophagus
- 25 y/o F p/w couple of month history of severe
heartburn. - What do you do?
- EGD
- PH monometry
- Trial of PPI
- Clinical monitoring
22Esophagus/ GERD
- Lifestyle modification
- Weight loss
- Stop smoking
- Elevate head of bed
- Allow enough time between dinner and sleeping
23Esophagus/ GERD
- H2Receptor blocker
- PPI
- Most rapid and complete symptom relief
- Faster mucosal healing
- Endoscopy
- Screen for Barretts in long standing symptoms
- If alarm symptoms
- Dysphagia
- Anemia/Bleeding
- Weight loss
24Esophagus/ GERD
- Antireflux surgery
- Same efficacy as PPI
- Before surgery esophageal manometry is necessary
- pHmetry
- To confirm the diagnosis in non erosive GERD
- Evaluate patients not responding to therapy
- Evaluate extraesophageal manifestations of GERD
25Esophagus/ GERD
- GERD is the most common cause of non cardiac
chest pain - The diagnosis is confirmed by 24h pHmetry or
successful trial of PPI (usually high dose and
for long term)
26Esophagus / Barretts
- 63 y/o M with Barretts esophagus is found to
have NO dysplasia . Started on PPI. - What is your next step?
- EGD in 1 year
- Esophagectomy
- EGD in 3 years.
- NPO/ TPN and monitoring
27Esophagus / Barretts
- Barretts occurs in patients with early age at
onset and long standing heartburn - Adenocarcinoma is now as frequent as squamous
cell carcinoma - Barretts is present in up to 10 of patients
with GERD - Screening for Barretts is appropriate in
- Older patients (gt50)
- Long-standing GERD symptoms (gt5 years)
- Especially white men
28Management of Barretts
- No dysplasia PPI EGD Q2-3 years with biopsies
to r/o dysplasia - Low grade dysplasia PPI EGD Q6-12 months with
biopsies to r/o high grade dysplasia. - High grade dysplasia esophagectomy
29Esophagus
- 27 y/o F with history of GERD p/w throat pain and
odynophagia she takes doxyclcline for acne. - What is your differential diagnosis?
- How do you confirm it?
30- What is your differential diagnosis?
- Pill induced esophagitis
- How do you confirm it?
- EGD shows esophagitis with a solitary
small ulcer in the lower esophagus..
31Esophagus/ Odynophagia
32Esophagus/ Odynophagia
- Pill esophagitis always on the board
- HIV patient with odynophagia
- Candida
- HSV
- CMV
- Idiopathic ulcer
- Severe esophagitis secondary to GERD can cause
odynophagia
33Differential diagnosis for Odynophagia
- Monilia
- white lesion
- Bx/brushing shows hyphae
- Candia is the most common cause
- Treatment fluconazole
34Differential diagnosis for Odynophagia
- HSV
- Many small ulcers
- Bx multinucleated giant cells
- Tt acyclovir
35Differential diagnosis for Odynophagia
- CMV
- 1-2 ulcers
- Bx CMV inclusion bodies
- Tt gancyclivir
36Esophagus
- 45 y/o p/w chest pain. Was having for 2 days
retching and vomiting. - X ray showes Left pleural effusion. Pleural tap
showed high amylase. - What is your next step?
- Gastrographine study
- CPK
- EDG
- CT scan
37Esophagus / Boerhaave syndrome
- Mimics acute MI
- Mediastinal emphysema can develop
- Diagnosed by swallowing gastrographine (for the
Boards) - Treatment
- Esophageal and gastric suction
- Antibiotics
- Surgical drainage
- Repair of laceration
38Stomach / PUD
- What are the 2 most common causes of PUD?
- NSAID
- H.Pylori
- Steroids
- Idiopathic
39Stomach / PUD
- H.Pylori is responsible of
- 50 to 80 of duodenal ulcers
- 40 to 60 of gastric ulcers
- 80 of gastric cancers
- 90 of gastric lymphomas (if MALTgt treat H
pylori) - The lifelong incidence of ulcer disease in those
infected with H.Pylori is only 20
40Stomach / PUD
- Gastric ulcers should be biopsied to R/O
malignancy, as opposed to duodenal ulcers. - H.Pylori should be checked, usually on biopsy, if
not possible serology is appropriate - Detection of H.Pylori
- Endoscopic
- Culture
- Histology
- Urease testing
- Non Endoscopic
- Antibody tests
- Urea breath test
- Fecal antigen test
41Stomach / PUD
- Treatment regimens
- PPI/Amox/Clarithromycin
- PPI/Flagyl/Clarithromycin
- PPI/Peptobismol/Flagyl/Tetracycline
- 14 days better than 10 days
42Stomach / PUD
- Risk factors for NSAID induced GI complications
- Advanced age (gt75)
- Pre-existing ulcer disease
- Multiple NSAIDs or high dose NSAIDs
- Concomitant steroid therapy or anticoagulant
therapy - Comorbid diseases
43Stomach / PUD
- Eradicating H.Pylori in NSAID users is still
controversial - But if NSAID induced gastropathy with H.Pylori,
eradication is indicated - NSAID gastropathy is a dose related phenomenon
- COX-2 selective NSAID result in fewer GI ulcers
44Stomach / GI prophylaxis
- When indicated to give GI prophylaxis
- Ventilator for gt 48 hours
- Coagulopathy
45Stomach / H pylori
- 41 y/o patient with history of duodenal ulcer
treated for H pylori gastritis, but returns with
the same symptoms - Which of the following would best indicate
continous infection with H pylori? - IgG serology for H pylori
- Duodenal aspirate for H pylori
- Breath urease test /stool Ag for H pylori
46MALT / ZE
- 70 to 80 of MALT will regress when H.Pylori is
eradicated - Think about ZE when
- Recurrent ulcers on treatment
- Chronic diarrhea
- Other endocrine disorders (MEN)
47Stomach
- 46 y/o with type I diabetes presents for N/V,
early satiety, vague epigastric pain for the past
4 months. His condition will improve with - PPI
- Low fat diet, small meals, control of DM, and
Reglan - Eradication of H.Pylori if present
48Stomach /Gastroparesis
- Causes
- Drugs
- Systemic disease (DM, Scleroderma..)
- Idiopathic, post viral
- Diagnosis
- Gastric Emptying Scan
- Treatment
- Prokinetics
- Surgery
- Nutritional support
49Stomach
- 51 y/o M h/o severe CAD has diffuse abdominal
pain for 3 hours after eating any kind of food. - The pain decreases with decreasing amount of food
eaten. - What is you diagnosis?
- What is you next step?
50Stomach / Abdominal Angina
- What is you diagnosis? gtabdominal angina
- What is you next step? gt mesenteric angiogam
51Acute Diarrhea
- 25 y/o female presents with 2 day hx of crampy
abdominal pain and bloody diarrhea - What is your differential?
- What if she is 75 y/o and has CAD and PVD?
- How do you manage this patient? Would you start
abx?
52Acute Diarrhea
- The most common causes of acute bloody diarrhea
- Infectious dysentery
- IBD
- Ischemic colitis
53Acute Bloody Diarrhea
- Common causes of infectious dysentery
- Campylobacter, Salmonella
- Shigella, E.Coli (entero-invasive AND
entero-hemorrhagic) - Yersinia, Entameba histolitica, Aeromonas,
Plesiomonas - Seafood induced dysentery
- Vibrio parahemolyticus (mainly watery but can be
bloody / patient in general with liver diseases) - Plesiomonas shigelloides (AKA shigella)
- Campylobacter jejuni
- Clostridium Difficile
54Acute Diarrhea in HIV
- HIV with non bloody diarrhea
- Cryptosporidium
- Isospora Belli
- Cyclospora
- Microsporidia
- Giardia
- MAI
55Chronic Diarrhea
- 47 y/o obese female nurse presents for chronic
diarrhea for the past 4 months. Stool studies and
colonoscopy were normal. Stool Na 30, K 40. - What is the fecal osmotic gap in her?
- Would a stool pH be helpful in this case?
- What is your differential?
56Chronic Diarrhea
- Fecal osmotic gap
- 280 2 x (NaK)
- If gt50? osmotic diarrhea
- Iflt50? secretory diarrhea
- With laxative abuse, the stools are acid (low
pH), they will turn red with alkalinization
57Chronic Diarrhea
- Causes of osmotic diarrhea (gapgt50)
- Lactose intolerance
- Laxative abuse
- Intestinal malabsorption (celiac disease)
- With fasting ? less than 500g of stools
58Chronic Diarrhea
- Causes of secretory diarrhea (gaplt50)
- Enterotoxin mediated infectious diarrhea
- Hormone mediated (gastrin, VIP, serotonin,
calcitonin) - Secreting villous adenoma
- Microscopic colitis
- With fasting ? more than 500g of stools
59Chronic Diarrhea
- Inflammatory diarrhea
- Neutrophils in the stools, colonic ulcerations
- Causes
- IBD
- Radiation colitis
- Enteroinvasive infections
60Chronic Diarrhea
- Large volume
- Think about a proximal origin (small bowel..)
- Small volume
- Distal source (colonic..)
- Always look at the medications
- Endocrine causes DM, Hyperthyroidism
- C.diff and Giardia can give chronic diarrhea
61Chronic Diarrhea/ Short Bowel Syndrome
- 45 y/o male lost 150 cm of ileum after an MVA and
extensive abdominal surgery. - He presents with constant diarrhea.
- How would you manage this patient?
62Chronic Diarrhea/ Short Bowel Syndrome
- If resection is lt 100 cm, cholestyramine helps
because the diarrhea is caused by colonic
irritation by bile salts (bile salt diarrhea) - If resection is gt 100 cm, the bile salt pool is
depleted and cholestyramine will NOT help. - Memorize
- RESECTION lt 100cm ? CHOLESTYRAMINE
63Chronic Diarrhea/ Fat Malabsorption
- Qualitative test for fat malabsorption
- Sudan stain in the stools (looks for fat cells)
- Quantitative test for fat malabsorption
- 24 hour stool fat
- 24 hour fecal collection following ingestion of
100 gm fat diet for 3 days - Fecal fat gt 7 gm/d is diagnostic of fat
malabsorption.
64Chronic Diarrhea/ Fat Malabsorption
- What is the differential diagnosis?
- Pancreatic insufficiency
- Small bowel disease
65Fat Malabsorption / Small Bowel Disease
- Small bowel disease
- Check D-Xylose test
- 25 gm po
- check blood xylose levels in 1 hour if lt 25mg/ml
gt malabsorbtion due to small bowel disease - Check also 5 hour urine xylose if lt 5 gm
gtmalabsorbtion - If D-Xylose test normal gt pancreatic disease
- If abnormal gt check breath test or stool
cultures to r/o bacterial overgrowth, and do a
small bowel biopsies (whipple, amyloidosis,
crohns, crypto, giardia, tropical sprue)
66Fat Malabsorption / Pancreatic Insufficiency
- For pancreatic insufficiency
- Check abdominal radiography (look for
calcifications) - Enzyme secretion lt10 of the normal
67Chronic Diarrhea
- 42 y/o male with iron deficiency anemia and
chronic diarrhea. GI work-up including EGD,
colonoscopy, capsule endoscopy is negative. - Whats your diagnosis?
- Whats the next step?
- Whats the gold standard for the diagnosis?
- What is the skin manifestation associated with
this condition?
68Some additional info???
69Chronic Diarrhea / Celiac disease
- Celiac sprue is caused by sensitivity to gluten
and is characterized by malabsorption and
diarrhea - Antibodies to Gliadin, Endomysium and tissue
transglutaminase are used for the diagnosis - Small bowel biopsy is the gold standard for the
diagnosis gt blunting and flattening of villi,
elongated crypts and increase cellularity of the
lamina propria - Complications include lymphoma, ulcerative
jejunoileitis - Dermatitis herpetiformis is the associated skin
condition - Tropical sprue is infectious in source and is
identical to celiac sprue, Klebsiella and E.coli
are incriminated.
70Chronic Diarrhea / Tropical Sprue
- Tropical sprue is infectious in source and is
clinically identical to celiac sprue, Klebsiella
and E.coli are incriminated. - Residents of certain tropical area (India,
Southeast Asia, Cuba, Porto Rico, Haiti and
Dominican Republic). - Watery, non bloody diarrhea.
- In about 2-3 months , jejunal malabsorbtion
results in folate deficiency, which causes
anorexia - In 6 months vitB12 deficiency also happens
- Grosso-modo malabsorbtion of fat/folate /vit B12
71Thank you !!!!