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Gastric outlet obstruction

From Surgopaedia

Aetiology

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  • Previously mostly benign, but with the improved treatment of PUD, now 50-80% malignant
  • Malignancy
    • 35% gastric CA
      • Adenocarcinoma 90%
    • 20% pancreatic CA
    • Gastric lymphoma
      • Most common of GIT lymphomas
      • Treat with CTX alone
    • Gallbladder CA with local extension
    • Duodenal CA - primary or mets
    • Gastric carcinoid
    • GIST
      • Interstitial cells of Cajal
  • Benign
    • Intramural
      • PUD - rare complication (<5%)
        • Acutely - inflammatory swelling, accompanied by duodenal peristaltic dysfunction
        • Chronically - scarring at gastric outlet
        • Manage with medical therapy (PPIs, avoid risk factors), then endoscopic pneumatic dilation, then surgical (truncal vagotomy)
      • Crohn's - 5% show gastroduodenal involvement
        • Proximal Crohns = nonspecific gastritis type symptoms
      • Pyloric stenosis
      • Caustic injury due to poison ingestion
        • Occurs due to fibrosis, 6-12 weeks post injury
        • Incidence 5-10% after caustic ingestion
      • Gastric TB
      • Gastric volvulus - seen in older adults, generally related to hernia (greatest risk type III)
        • Borchardt's triad - sudden epigastric pain, intractible retching/vomiting, inability to pass NGT
        • True surgical emergency
        • CT - GOO with abnormal location of gastric outlet, non-passage of enteric contrast material, gastric wall thickening, adjacent fluid or fat stranding
        • CR - NGT coiled in gastric body, which is located in chest
        • Upper endoscopy can be both diagnostic and therapeutic
      • Post-surgical complications
    • Intraluminal
      • Bouveret syndrome - pyloric impaction of a gallstone
      • Large gastric polyps
      • Bezoars
      • PEG migration
    • External compression
      • Acute/chronic pancreatitis - 1-5% show GOO
        • Can occur with peripancreatic fibrosis or giant pseudocyst
      • Annular pancreas
    • Dysmotility

Pathophysiology

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  • Often see hypokalaemic, hypochloraemic metabolic alkalosis
    • Loss of gastric juice rich in hydrogen, chloride and potassium
    • Hypovolaemia causes ADH activation which causes hyponatraemia
    • Hypovolaemia and hyponatraemia activates RAAS
    • Kidney tries to correct hyponatraemia by exchanging sodium for hydrogen and potassium ions (under stimulation of RAAS), causing paradoxical aciduria and worsening alkalosis/hypokalaemia
    • Hypokalaemia is due to gastric and renal losses as well as intracellular shift to maintain membrane polarity

Clinical manifestations

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  • Nausea/vomiting - with undigested foodstuffs from days previously noted
    • No bile staining in vomit
  • Epigastric pain - particularly post-prandial, and relieved by vomiting
  • Weight loss
  • Early satiety
  • Abdo distension
  • Examination
    • Succussion splash
      • Listen to abdomen while shaking patient from side to side
      • Pathologic if heard >3 hours post meal
    • Virchow's node/sister mary joseph node

Investigation

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  • Electrolyte abnormalities as above
  • Plain film - enlarged gastric bubble
  • Barium swallow - can show a complete obstruction, if no contrast in small bowel

Management

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  • Not a surgical emergency - aim to resuscitate, diagnose then treat
  • NBM + IVF
    • Normal saline + potassium good for treating hypokalaemic, hypochloraemic metabolic alkalosis
  • NGT
  • Electrolyte replenishing
  • PPI
  • Endoscopy - rule out malignancy and assess for H. pylori infection
  • Consider TPN + nutritional assessment
  • Further management depends on cause

Gastric outlet obstruction secondary to PUD

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  • Results from chronic inflammation and scar formation
  • Medical treatment
    • As above, with endoscopy and H. pylori testing
    • May be able to be treated conservatively, with oedema improving over time
  • Endoscopic treatment
    • Endoscopic dilation +/- stenting is the mainstay of therapy
    • Novel techniques - US-guided gastric bypass and POEM
  • Surgical treatment
    • Indications:
      • Obstruction refractory to endoscopic treatment
    • Gold standard operation is vagotomy and antrectomy
    • Other procedures
      • Bilroth II
      • Vagotomy with either Jaboulay gastroduodenostomy or gastrojejunostomy

Gastric resection

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  • May be able to just do a wedge resection
  • Malignancy - if aiming for cure - oncologic gastric resection with wide margin
    • Distal stomach - needs a distal gastrectomy with a 6cm margin of normal gastric tissue
    • Billroth II technique preferred (decreased likelihood of obstructino with recurrence at anastamosis)