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Deficiencies with Short Bowel Syndrome



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Deficiencies with Short Bowel Syndrome


Essential fatty acids Eczemoid dermatitis,20:3/20:4 fatty acid ratio in serum
Vitamin A night blindness, impaired dark field adaptation
Vitamin E in vitro platelet hyperaggregation and H2 O2 -induced red blood cell hemolysis; signs and symptoms suggestive of subacute combined degeneration (posterolateral columns) in the presence of a normal serum B12 level
Biotin scaly dermatitis, alopecia [dermis]
Thiamine Wernicke’s syndrome (encephalopathy, orthostatic hypotension), refractory lactic acidosis, cardiac failure (different?)
Cobalamin (B12 ) weakness, paresthesia, diarrhea, dementia, megaloblastic anemia, subacute combined degeneration
Zinc nasolabial and perineal acrodermatitis, alopecia, decreased T cell function, decreased alkaline phosphatase, dysgeusia

Excess: nausea, vomiting, fever / chronic (immune dysfunction and hypochromic anemia from secondary copper deficiency)
Chromium glucose intolerance, peripheral neuropathy
Copper neutropenia, anemia, scorbutic bone lesions, ceruloplasmin, kinky hair, impaired central nervous system development

Excess: hepatic toxicity and chronic (same as Wilson’s disease)
Selenium myalgias, cardiomyopathy, glutathione peroxidase and serum selenium
Molybdenum tachycardia, tachypnea, central scotomas, irritability, uric acid


Surgery
Pre-op evaluation

Trauma/Burns

Organ Transplantation
Cardiac Pre-Op Evaluation/Clearance


  • [ACP guidelines 1] [ACP guidelines 2]



General


Pre-Operative Cardiovascular

  • use of perioperative B-blockers recommended for patients with CV risk factors or known disease; however, its use is probably not as helpful in low-risk patients / risk of postoperative cardiovascular complications does not appear influenced by stable HTN, elevated cholesterol, obesity, cigarette smoking or BBB

Post-Operative Fever



  • atalectesis – occurs early – low temp

  • wound infection (Abx, drainage)

    • early: Streptococcus (common), Clostridium (uncommon)

    • late: staphylococcus / includes IV site infections

Note: 85% of postoperative S. epidermidis or MRSE (so vancomycin)

  • intra-abdominal sepsis/abscess – 5-7 days (get CT abdomen)


Pre-Operative DVT prophylaxis

1/07 current recommendation is to stop Lovenox either night before surgery (12 hrs or some now are saying full 24 hrs before to allow anticoagulation effect to fully wear off)

DVT prophylaxis (in general)


      • reduces risk of DVT by 50% and PE 60%

      • relative risk increase of severe bleeding episodes 1.3


Post-Operative DVT prophylaxis

many types of surgery requires DVT post-op prophylaxis

Current recommendation for elective surgery for abdominal cancer is 4 weeks Lovenox


Preoperative Endocarditis Prophylaxis (see other)
Fluids
Note: can get tachycardia with volume overload as well as volume depletion

Note: FFP and PRBC’s stay in blood compartment – thus, can have more lasting effects on fragile heart or lungs
Orthostatics: increase of > 15 HR or > 15 mm Hg (less if diastolic BP)
Other
Air in body cavity (iatrogenically caused)

Prevertebral emphysema [pic]

Trauma/Burns
Trauma
Airway

Breathing

Circulation
IV access: 2 large-bore (Q = l/r4 / volume status: check urine output

O2: give oxygen to increase O2 sat and dissolved O2

Plain Films: chest (1st), cervical, pelvis

Labs: CBC, H/H, UA, drug screen, amylase?
must keep spine immobilized (can r/o cervical spine trauma in awake/alert patient)

thoracic spine / cord transection / – rectal exam (feel for prostate/rectal tone)


Causes of internal hemorrhage

  • spleen (1st), liver, kidney, mesentery, pancreas, Jejunum more likely to rupture

  • bladder (then spleen, liver) most commonly injured intra-abdominal organ from blunt trauma

diagnostic peritoneal lavage (DPL)

decompress stomach and bladder

open laparotomy if high RBC (over 10,000)


r/o with CT abdomen – triple contrast (oral, rectal, IV) to r/o ureteral injury, colon

if high-prostrate or frank blood in urine  don’t put a Foley / get retrograde urethrogram


Chest Trauma
In-depth exam / upright CXR (if possible) / ABG, pulse oximetry / ECG
Blunt cardiac injury

Myocardial contusion (10% with shock or arrhythmias)

Widened mediastinum (10% with aortic rupture)

Pulmonary contusion

Within 12 hrs of injury – worsens for 48 hrs – then gets better – or progresses to ARDS
Tip: r/o esophageal rupture with barium contrast when suspecting oral-pleural communication because water-soluble contrast creates an ARDS-like picture
Eye Trauma
1 million cases/yr / get optho consult within 24 hrs with acid/base burns, decreased visual acuity, severe conjunctival swelling, corneal clouding

Foreign body (25% of eye trauma)  consult with any intraocular foreign body (even without physical exam findings) / Wood’s lamp (fluorescein dye given now and serially every day) / antibiotics


  • Fe, steel, Cu  inflammatory reaction

  • Glass, lead, stone  decreased inflammatory reaction

  • Vegetable  purulent endopthalmitis

DO NOT examine a ruptured globe / patch and refer to optho STAT

eyelid laceration can be repaired after ruling out lid margin and lacrimal apparatus involvement
Burns
Rule of 9’s / palm = 1%

Get CO-Hgb levels



Fluids: 2-4 ml/kg per % of involved surface area

give ½ of total in first 8 hrs, next ½ in next 16 hrs (based from time of injury)


Lacerations
Basic laceration repair [video]
Arterial Lines

Placement of arterial lines [video]



Organ Transplantation
Liver

Lung

Renal

Heart

Bone Marrow (see below)
Types of Immunosuppressants
OKT3 (antibodies) decreases T-cell numbers

ALG (antibodies?) decreases T-cell numbers

Steroids moves lymphocytes into RES and decreases Il-2 production

Radiation

Azathioprine (Immuran) decreases DNA synthesis

Cyclosporine (Sandimmune) blocks IL-2 / decreases T-cell numbers


Types of Rejection
Hyperacute rejection (mins to hours)

vasculitis, thrombosis, necrosis – antibodies to MHC, ABO blood groups


Acute rejection (months)

Repeated attacks


Chronic rejection

Eventual fibrosis


Problems
Neutropenia (common)

Cystitis (with Cytoxan)

Oral mucositis, alopecia (common)

Venoocclusive disease of liver (from hypercoagulable state; peak incidence ~day 16)



Bone marrow transplantation (BMT)
used for AML and others / immunosuppressive agents then used to prevent graft versus host disease (GVHD) of skin, liver, GI tract, eye, ~kidney / timeline of pulmonary complications after BMT [diagram] / syngeneic (identical twins) are less likely to cause GVHD than allogeneic transplants (however they are also less likely to cure malignancy because of lack of “tumor-versus-host” effect)
Problems
Gonadal dysfunction: both men and women

Total body irradiation: cataract formation, thyroid dysfunction

Cognitive dysfunction: reasons not entirely clear

Neutropenic Fever


  • Neutropenia: neutrophil count < 500 cells/mm3 or < 1000 cells/mm3 with predicted decrease to < 500 cells/mm3

  • Fever: single oral ≥ 38.3 C (101 F) or ≥ 38.0 (100.4 F) for ≥ 1 hour

  • Nadir of WBCs 10-14 days after chemotherapy / risk of infection increases with duration/severity of neutropenia (>7-10 days)

  • 5-10% of cancer patients die from neutropenia-associated infections

  • elderly and immunosuppressed may not mount febrile response: cellulitis may not be obvious, pneumonia without infiltrate on CXR, meningitis without typical CSF findings, UTI without pyuria, etc.

  • necrotizing enterocolitis (typhlitis): cecum > large bowel/ileum / may result in bowel perforation or infarction



Treatment:

    • remove (non-tunneled) lines/catheters; talk to ID about more permanent/tunneled lines in case there is a need to attempt to treat through it)

      • S. aureus and S. epidermidis (coagulase negative) are most common (more likely to be able to treat through line infection with coagulase negative Staph; most other organisms (fungus, gram negative, etc.) or if patient is septic/hemodynamically compromised, line will almost certainly require removal

  • pip/tazo or cefepime

  • consider adding cipro or tobramycin for double coverage of Pseudomonas (e.g. if pneumonia suspected)

  • add vancomycin if suspect gram positive or (+) lines

  • if PCN allergic  tobra/cipro/metro

  • if fever persists 3-5 days, can add amphotericin B and/or vancomycin empirically


G-CSF or GM-CSF can be used to decrease neutropenia

  1. if pt has history of febrile neutropenia with previous round of chemotherapy

  2. if pt has 40% of becoming neutropenic

give before pt becomes neutropenic (takes 3-5 days to start working)

GCSF has been shown to reduces hospitalization and duration of neutropenia following chemotherapy (no overall change in mortality demonstrated as of time of this notation 8/04)

Note: use of G-CSF once patient already neutropenic controversial 8/04
Erythropoietin can be used to increase red blood cell count but it takes weeks to work, and will probably not work if patients own erythropoietin levels already > 100 mU/mL

Emergency Medicine (not in other places)


Frostbite

Rapid rewarming in bath 37-40 / give analgesics / can lower temperature if too painful

No medications proven to improve outcome as of 1/07

Usu. best to defer decision about amputation until viable tissue margins become demarcated

Long term complications: neuronal injury with abnormal sympathetic tone, cutaneous carcinomas, nail deformities, epiphyseal damage (in children)
Methemoglobinemia (see other)
Environmental / poisonings / ingestions / etc

Other Topics



Evidence Based Medicine
RRR (relative risk reduction)

ARR (absolute risk reduction)

NNT (number needed to treat) = 1/ARR
Randomization using volunteers eliminates lead time, selection, and length bias (overdiagnosis)

Does not eliminate generalizability error



  • Trials using volunteers  efficacy studies

  • Population-based subjects  effectiveness studies


Disclaimer:
The information on this site is intended for educational purposes only. The information provided on this site is not to be used in the provision of health care to any individuals.



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