Small bowel and nutrition
Appearance
See separate topic under 'small bowel' - which is more focused on the surgical aspect of things
Physiology
[edit | edit source]- Majority of fluid and electrolytes are reabsorbed in the ileum
- Only site of absorption of B12 and bile salts
- >90% of water and salt in colon is reabsorbed
Effects of bowel resection
[edit | edit source]- Up to 50% of small bowel can removed or bypassed.
- Resection of proximal jejunum - no significant alteration in fluid and electrolyte absorption, as ileum and colon can pick up the slack entirely
- Resection of ileum
- Clinically generally leads to diarrhoea and deficiencies
- B12 malabsorption - macrocytic anaemia and peripheral neuropathy
- Bile salt malabsorption - steatorrhoea, oxalate renal stones, gallstones
- Loss of fat-soluble vitamins ADEK - poor wound healing, impaired calcium homeostasis, coagulopathy
- Accelerated intestinal transit which leads to gradual undernutrition
- Depletion of bile salt pool cannot be replaced by synthesis in absence of ileum
- Loss of bile salts into colon also affects colonic mucosa, causing an additional reduction in level of absorptive capacity
- Loss of 100cm of ileum causes steatorrhoea, which may necessitate the administration of oral cholestyramine. Sometimes restriction of oral fat intake will be necessary. Regular B12 IV will be necessary.
- May need parenteral nutrition if <50cm small bowel remains
- Need a high carbohydrate/low oxalate diet
- May adapt over time to rely on artificial nutrition less
- Clinically generally leads to diarrhoea and deficiencies
- Resection of >2m of small bowel and colon +/- end jejunostomy
- Short gut syndrome - very challenging
- See separate topic on 'short gut syndrome' under 'small bowel'
- Adaptation does not occur
- Net absorbers
- >100cm of residual jejunum and they absorb more water and sodium from diet than passes through the stoma
- Can usually be managed without supplemental IV fluids
- Net secretors
- <100cm of residual jejunum and lose more water and sodium from their stoma than they take by mouth
- Require supplemental IV fluids
- Daily jej output may be >4 litres
- Sodium content of jej losses will be about 90mmol/L. If hypotonic solutions e.g. water are drunk, sodium will be lost across bowel lumen through diffusion
- Treatment - restrict hypotonic fluids to 1L per day, take glucose and saline replacement solutions
- Complications of short bowel syndrome:
- Peptic ulceration (related to gastric hypersecretion)
- Cholelithiasis
- Hyperoxaluria (increased absorption of oxalate in colon predisposes to kidney stones)
- Syndrome of slurred speech, ataxia, altered affect - due to fermentation of malabsorbed carbohydrates in colon - treat with low carbohydrate diet
- Metabolic consequences arise with <150cm of small bowel - 'short gut syndrome'