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Short bowel syndrome

From Surgopaedia

The malabsorption and malnutrition that occur with <180cm of small bowel in adults

Aetiology

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  • Resectional
    • Single massive bowel resection (75%)
      • Intestinal ischaemia
      • Midgut volvulus
      • Traumatic SMA injury
      • Necrotizing enterocolitis
    • Multiple resections (25%)
      • Usually Crohn disease
  • Non-resectional
    • Enterocyte failure
      • Autoimmune
      • Microvillous inclusion
      • Tufting enteropathy
    • Dysmotility
    • Bariatric procedures
    • Intestinal-intestinal fistula

Pathophysiology

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  • Intestinal failure - inadequate bowel function to maintain nutrition and hydration, including macro- and micro-nutrients, electrolytes and fluid volumes
  • Phases:
    • Acute hypersecretory phase - 3-4 weeks
      • Malabsorptive and osmotic (and sometimes bile salt) diarrhoea due to lack of absorption of fluid and electrolytes and macronutrients
    • Adaptation - 1-2 years
      • Requires enteral nutrition
      • This is where the structural and functional changes below occur
    • Late
      • Plateaued adaptations
  • Adaptive hyperplasia - the bowel's adaptive capacity after resection
    • Stimulated by nutrients within the intestinal lumen
    • Structural adaptation
      • Dilation and elongation of the remnant bowel via muscle hyperplasia
      • Villus lengthening and increase in microvilli
      • Increase in enterocyte number
      • Crypt cell proliferation
      • Angiogenesis for improved perfusion
      • Slowed transit time
    • Functional
      • Increased expression of transporter proteins and exchangers
      • Increased production digestive enzymes
      • Improved digestion from enterocytes
  • Requirement for parenteral nutrition is influenced by length, location and health of the remaining intestine, but commonly:
    • Measure from DJ flexure.
    • >180cm: no PN
    • 60-180cm: PN for less than 1 year
    • <50-60cm: permanent PN
    • Interestingly, UTD doesn't list any such guidelines, merely that it is highly dependent on function of the remaining bowel
  • Bowel anatomy factors:
    • Jejuno-colic anastomosis - most common anatomy - prognosis depends on length of jejunum remaining
    • Jejuno-ileocolic anastomosis (retention of some ileum and ICV - best prognosis
    • End-jejunostomy - worst prognosis
    • Proximal bowel resection is tolerated better than distal - the ileum can adapt and restore absorptive capacity better than the jejunum
    • Presence of at least half the colon is functionally equivalent to having an extra 50cm of small bowel


Presentation

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  • Typical problems
    • Diarrhoea
    • Fluid and electrolyte deficiency
    • Malnutrition
      • Especially iron, magnesium, zinc, copper and vitamins
      • Resection of the distal two-thirds of ileum and ICV commonly leads to B12 and bile salt deficiencies, along with diarrhoea and anaemia
  • Other complications
    • Gallstones - increased incidence caused by disruption of enterohepatic circulation
    • Nephrolithiasis - caused by hyperoxaliuria
    • Rapid transit
    • Bacterial overgrowth
    • TPN complications (liver disease)
    • Peptic ulcer disease
    • Metabolic bone disease
    • Catheter complications

Early phase management

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  • Replace fluid and electrolytes
    • Volume losses may be >5L/day - need fluid balance
  • TPN promptly as required
  • Commence enteral diet as soon able to tolerate it, via feeding tube
    • Debate over best initial diet
    • Initially, high-carbohydrate high-protein diet maximises absorption
    • Avoid milk products
    • Begin at iso-osmolar concentration, which can be increased later
    • Provide nutrients in simplest forms - elemental or polymeric diet
    • Provide fat-soluble vitamins and zinc, magnesium and calcium
  • Restore intestinal continuity as soon as possible

Adaptation phase management

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  • Transition to oral diet as soon as able to tolerate it
    • High in complex carbohydrates and modest fat/oxalate
    • Isotonic rehydration solutions like St Mark's, to maintain a urine output of at least 1L/day
  • Control diarrhoea
    • Can be caused by hypergastrinaemia and gastric hypersecretion, which is triggered by massive small bowel resection - manage with PPI
    • Ileal resection - bile salt diarrhoea - cholestyramine
    • Anti-motility agents such as loperamide - judiciously
    • Octreotide also seems to reduce diarrhoea in the early phase of short bowel syndrome, although there is an unresolved question of whether it inhibits gut adaptation
  • Probability of weaning TPN is <6% if not done within two years of last intestinal resection
  • There are also experimental drugs for promoting mucosal growth - GLP-1 analogues like liraglutide - UTD recommends use only if unable to be weaned from TPN, as current case numbers very low for evidence base

Late phase management

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  • Medical
    • TPN/fluids/micronutrients as required at steady state
      • B12
      • Fat-soluble vitamins
      • Calcium, magnesium, zinc, selenium
    • Teduglutide (GLP-2 analogue) - if unable to wean from TPN despite aggressive therapy - initiates and maintains small bowel adaptive response to resection and improves nutrient absorption
    • Prevent and treat bone disease and other complications
  • Surgical strategies - limited success
    • Preserve existing bowel length and restore continuity
    • Delay intestinal transit time
      • Construction of various valves and sphincters
      • Anti-peristaltic segments - moderate success
      • Abandoned techniques:
        • Colonic interposition
        • Recirculating loops of bowel
        • Retrograde electrical pacing
    • Increase absorptive area
      • Bianchi procedure - intestinal tapering and lengthening procedure - serial transverse enteroplasty - possibly gets good results in well-selected patients- 90% show improved nutrition, and can lengthen by up to 55% in some patients - but high-risk of complications. Need a distended gut for this to work, which is not commonly seen in adults. Increase length but more importantly slow transit. Starkey has never seen it.
    • Intestinal transplantation
      • Standard of care for patients in whom intestinal rehabilitation has failed and are at risk of life-threatening TPN complications (impending liver failure, thrombosis of more than two major access veins, frequent severe line infections, dehydration)
      • One year survival of 77%; 5 year survival 58%, even in modern times. Lots of perioperative mortality but then ongoing attrition.
      • Can be done in combination with liver - 5 year survival 54%
      • No role for transplantation in the acute setting - wait for extent of disease to become clear
      • Recognised by USA medicare system in 2000 - progressive uptake since then. Most of the initial indications were related to complications of home TPN, 'failure of TPN', see above.
      • There are about 5000 people worldwide, as of June 2023, who have had a transplant at a recognised centre, based on registrary data, and only 100-200 per year nowadays. 13 Australians transplanted as of June 2023.


Prognosis

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  • Long-term outcome determined by age and underlying intestinal disease