Inflammatory Bowel Disease

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IBD Basics - Tale of Two Guts

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IBD: Chronic gut inflammation. Crohn's (CD) vs Ulcerative Colitis (UC).

FeatureCrohn's Disease (CD)Ulcerative Colitis (UC)
LocationAny GIT (mouth-anus); skip lesionsColon only; continuous from rectum
DepthTransmuralMucosa & Submucosa
GrossCobblestone, strictures, fistulae, "creeping fat"Pseudopolyps, "lead-pipe" colon, ulcers
MicroNon-caseating granulomas (~50%)Crypt abscesses, ↓goblet cells
SmokingWorsensProtective
SurgeryPalliative, ↑recurrenceCurative (proctocolectomy)

📌 CD: Skip lesions, Transmural, Right side (ileum), Inflammation anywhere, No cure (surgery), Granulomas. (STRING) 📌 UC: Colon only, Limited depth, Abscesses (crypt), Pseudopolyps, Surgery curative. (CLAPS)

Crohn's Surgery - Patch & Proceed

  • Core Principle: "Patch & Proceed" - address acute complications, conserve maximal bowel length.
  • Indications:
    • Failure of maximal medical therapy
    • Complications:
      • Fibrotic strictures (obstruction)
      • Fistulae (enterocutaneous, enteroenteric, enterovesical)
      • Abscess (intra-abdominal, pelvic)
      • Perforation, massive hemorrhage, dysplasia/cancer
  • Surgical Options:
    • Strictureplasty: For fibrotic strictures (e.g., Heineke-Mikulicz for <7cm, Finney for 10-15cm). Avoids resection.
    • Limited Resection: For diseased segment only (e.g., ileocecal resection). Side-to-side anastomosis preferred.
    • Drainage of abscesses, seton for complex fistulae.

⭐ Post-operative recurrence is common in Crohn's disease, often at the neoterminal ileum proximal to an anastomosis.

UC Surgery - Colon's Last Stand

  • Indications for Surgery:
    • Failure of maximal medical therapy (MMT).
    • Dysplasia or colorectal cancer (CRC) on surveillance.
    • Acute severe colitis (e.g., toxic megacolon, perforation, massive hemorrhage) refractory to medical Rx.
    • Chronic, debilitating symptoms.
  • Key Surgical Procedures:
    • Total Proctocolectomy (TPC) + End Ileostomy: Curative; removes colon & rectum. Permanent stoma.
    • Restorative Proctocolectomy + Ileal Pouch-Anal Anastomosis (IPAA / J-pouch): Preferred elective. Sphincter-sparing. Often 2-3 stages.
      • Complications: Pouchitis, cuffitis, anastomotic leak/stricture, ↓ female fertility.
    • Subtotal Colectomy + End Ileostomy & Rectal Stump: Emergency (acute severe colitis); allows future IPAA.

⭐ Pouchitis, inflammation of the ileal pouch, is the most common long-term complication after IPAA, affecting 15-50% of patients.

J-pouch surgery diagram

IBD Complications & Special Cases - Gut Wrenching Woes

  • Post-Surgical Complications:
    • Anastomotic Leak: Early sign - sepsis. High mortality.
    • Pouchitis (post-IPAA for UC): Inflammation of ileal pouch. Rx: Antibiotics (metronidazole, ciprofloxacin).
    • Strictures: Anastomotic or de novo. Endoscopic dilatation or surgery.
  • Stoma Management & Issues:
    • High-output stoma: >1.5L/day. Risk: Dehydration, electrolyte imbalance.
    • Complications: Retraction, prolapse, parastomal hernia, skin irritation.
  • Specific Challenges:
    • Short Bowel Syndrome (SBS): <200cm of remaining small bowel. Leads to malabsorption. Short bowel syndrome intestinal and villi changes
    • Perianal Disease (Crohn's): Fistulas, abscesses, fissures. Often complex.
    • Nutritional Deficiencies: Common. Monitor Fe, B12, Vit D, Zinc.

⭐ Pouchitis is the most common long-term complication after Ileal Pouch-Anal Anastomosis (IPAA) for Ulcerative Colitis, occurring in up to 50% of patients within 10 years post-surgery.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Crohn's Disease (CD): Surgery for complications (strictures, fistulae); strictureplasty is bowel-sparing. Anastomotic recurrence is high.
  • Ulcerative Colitis (UC): Total Proctocolectomy with Ileal Pouch-Anal Anastomosis (IPAA) is curative. Toxic megacolon needs emergency colectomy.
  • Cancer risk (CRC) elevated in long-standing colitis, especially UC, necessitating surveillance.
  • Skip lesions and transmural inflammation characterize CD; continuous mucosal inflammation for UC.
  • IPAA is generally contraindicated in CD due to high risk of pouchitis, fistula, and failure.
  • Perianal disease (fistulae, abscesses) is a common and challenging manifestation of CD.
  • Medical management is primary; surgery for failed medical therapy or complications like obstruction, perforation, or uncontrolled bleeding in both CD and UC.

Practice Questions: Inflammatory Bowel Disease

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Flashcards: Inflammatory Bowel Disease

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_____ sign is pain created by compressing appendix between abdominal wall and iliacus, seen in chronic appendicitis

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