History
- Abdominal pain
- Localization – epigastric
- Relation to food
- Episodic
- Vomiting – persistent daily vomiting – GOO
- Anorexia, nausea, early satiety after meal
- F/O anemia- fatigue, weakness, pallor
- Bleeding manifestations – bleeding PUD
- black terry stool
- Bloody stool
- Blood vomiting
- Drugs- NSAIDs and aspirin
- Smoking
Management
Aim:
- Relieve symptoms
- Induce healing
- Prevent recurrence
H.pylori eradication :
- CAM+PPI → CAP for 10-14 days
NSAIDs
- Should be stopped
- If long term NSAIDs needed, co-prescribed with PPI
- For low dose aspirin, PPI not needed
General measures
- Cigarette smoking, aspirin, NSAIDs- should be stopped
- Alcohol- moderation
Maintenance treatment
- After successful HP eradication – continuous maintenance treatment not needed
- Fir minority- lowest effective dose of PPI should be used
Surgical treatment : Indication
- Emergency
Perforation, hemorrhage
- Elective
GOO, persistent ulcer despite adequate medical therapy
Complications of gastric resection or vagotomy
- Dumping
- Early- within 30 minutes after meal→ diarrhea, hypotension
→ Tx: avoid large meal with high CHO content
- Late: 1-3 hours after meal → reactive hypoglycemia – nause, tremor, sweating
→ Tx: eating more food
- Chemical (bile reflux) gastropathy : Tx: UDCA, Roux en Y loop
- Diarrhoea and maldigestion: Tx: small, dry meal with low refined CHO; anti-diarrheal
- Weight loss
- Anaemia- IDA
- Metabolic bone disease- Ca & vit -D → osteoporosis, osteomalacia
- Gastric cancer
Complications of PUD
- Perforation
- GOO
- Bleeding
Perforation
- DU>GU, anterior wall
- Clinical features
- Sudden, severe epigastric pain spreading to be generalised
- Shoulder tip pain- diaphragm irritation
- Shallow respiration- limitation of diaphragmatic movement
- Shock
- Board like rigidity
- Bowel sound – absent
- Liver dullness- reduced
- Disorientation, stupor
- Investigation
- CXR erect posture
- Water soluble contrast study
- Management
- Resuscitations
- Surgery
- Mortality rate – 25%
Gastric outlet obstruction
C/F
- Nausea, vomiting, abdominal distention
- Wasting, dehydration
- Succussion splash- 4 hour or more after last meal or drink
- Visible gastric peristalsis
Investigation
- Stomach has been emptied by wide bore NG tube
- Endoscopy of UGIT
Treatment
- Correction of dehydration- in severe case, at least 4L of isotonic saline and 80 mmol of potassium – in first 24 hours
- PPI:
- Heal ulcer
- Reduce pyloric edema
- May overcome need for surgery
- Endoscopic Balloon dilatation of benign stenosis
- Surgery
- Partial gastrectomy
- Gastroenterostomy with/without vagotomy
- if vagotomy not done- long term PPI to prevent stomal ulceration
SAQ. A 30 year old smoker male came with recurrent localized upper abdominal pain that aggravate with empty stomach. His repeated USG of abdomen and a CT abdomen came normal
- What are the methods you will do to diagnose this case as a H. Pylori related PUD?
Test | Advantages | Disadvantages |
Non-invasive: SUF | ||
Serology |
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C-Urea breath test |
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Fecal antigen test |
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Invasive (antral biopsy with): RHC | ||
Rapid urease test |
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Histology |
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Microbiological Culture |
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- Write down 2 extra gastric disorders where H. Pylori test is indicated?
Extra gastric disorders:
- Idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura
- Unexplained iron deficiency anemia
- Unexplained Vitamin B12 deficiency
- Write down 4 side effects of H. Pylori eradication therapy?
- Diarrhea: 30%-50% of patients; usually mild, but Clostridium difficile associated diarrhea can occur
- Flushing, and vomiting when taken with alcohol (metronidazole)
- Nausea, vomiting
- Abdominal cramps
- Headache
- Rash