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Basics

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Author:

Rashid F.Kysia


Description!!navigator!!

Etiology!!navigator!!

Diagnosis

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Signs and Symptoms!!navigator!!

History

  • Sudden onset of intense pain
  • Consider risk factors including:
    • Hypovolemic/low flow states
    • CHF
    • Cardiac arrhythmias
    • Valvular pathology
    • Atherosclerosis
    • Abdominal malignancies

Physical Exam

Abdominal pain out of proportion to physical exam during the acute phase of illness

Essential Workup!!navigator!!

Maintain a high index of suspicion in patients >50 yr old with unexplained abdominal pain

Diagnostic Tests & Interpretation!!navigator!!

Lab

  • Often nonspecific and nondiagnostic
  • CBC:
    • Elevated WBC count (90% >15,000)
  • Chemistry panel:
  • Amylase:
    • Elevated amylase found in 50% of cases
  • Creatine phosphokinase (CPK) may be elevated
  • D-dimer:
    • Sensitivity as high as 96%, poor specificity
  • Lactate:
    • Elevated in 86% of patients, poor specificity
    • Indicative of advanced tissue damage, may not be elevated early in ischemic course
    • High levels may correlate with mortality

Imaging

  • Flat and upright abdominal radiographs:
    • Often obtained to rule out acute obstruction or perforation
    • Frequently normal
    • Late findings:
      • Thumbprinting from bowel wall edema and hemorrhage
      • Pneumatosis intestinalis: Air in bowel wall from tissue necrosis
      • Pneumobilia is a late finding associated with poor outcomes
  • Abdominal CT scan:
    • Can detect bowel wall edema, pneumatosis
    • Newer helical and multidetector CT (MDCT) scanners can directly visualize mesenteric vascular anatomy and localize sites of occlusion
    • MDCT angiography is more frequently the imaging modality of choice
  • MRI:
    • Excellent images of mesenteric vasculature especially with MR angiography
    • Acquisition time and availability limits utility
  • Angiography:
    • Historically the gold stand ard diagnostic modality, now being replaced by MDCT
    • Allows for direct visualization of emboli and administration of vasodilating or fibrinolytic agents
    • Invasive, time-consuming, and potentially nephrotoxic
  • Doppler US:
    • Can detect decreased blood flow in SMA but more helpful in chronic mesenteric ischemia
    • For optimal results the patient should be NPO for 8 hr, limiting the utility of this study in the ED

Differential Diagnosis!!navigator!!

Treatment

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Prehospital!!navigator!!

Initiate fluid replacement for dehydrated or hypotensive patients

Initial Stabilization/Therapy!!navigator!!

ED Treatment/Procedures!!navigator!!

Medication!!navigator!!

Follow-Up

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Disposition!!navigator!!

Admission Criteria

Admit all patients with mesenteric ischemia

Discharge Criteria

None

Follow-up Recommendations!!navigator!!

Surgical consultation

Pearls and Pitfalls

  • Aggressive pursuit of diagnosis is mand atory
  • Mortality rises to 80% when the diagnosis is made >24 hr after symptom onset
  • Early surgical evaluation for emergent operative intervention is mand atory

Additional Reading

See Also (Topic, Algorithm, Electronic Media Element)

Abdominal Pain

Codes

ICD9

ICD10

SNOMED