General Surgery Flashcards

1
Q

Surgical complications

Immediate(intra-op/<24hrs)/early(<30days)/late(>30days)

A

Immediate (intra-op / within 24hrs);

  • Anaesthetic complications
  • Bleeding - 1° / reactionary
  • Basal collapse / atelectasis

Early (within 30 days);

  • Bleeding - 2°
  • Infection
  • Urinary retention
  • Immobility - DVT, sores
  • Paralytic ileus
  • Pain
  • Basal collapse / atelectasis

Late (>30 days)

  • Infection
  • Failure / Recurrence
  • Scarring
  • Herniation
  • Adhesions
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2
Q

Post-op infection

Risk factors

(preop/intraop/postop)

A
  • Pre-op
    • Age
    • Comorbidities (DM)
    • Pre-exist infection (appendix perf)
    • Pt colonisation (MRSA)
    • Immunosuppression
  • Intra-op
    • Op classification (emerg / elective)
    • Duration;
    • Technical aspects (pre-op abx)
  • Post-op
    • Contamination of the wound
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3
Q

Causes of post op hypoxia/SOB

lung/systemic/exac

A
  • Lung related
    • PE / DVT
    • Pneumothorax
  • Systemic
    • Infection - sepsis or LRTI
    • Resp depression - Pain or opiates
  • Exacerbation of pre-existing condition
    • COPD
    • HF & Fluid overload
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4
Q

Causes of post op fever (7Cs)

Persistent, >38°, >24hrs post surgery

A

Persistent, >38°, >24hrs post surgery

Infection / fever (7Cs)

  • Cut - infection / wound dehiscence
  • Chest - pneumonia
  • Collection (subphrenic, pelvic; anastomotic leak)
  • Catheter - UTI
  • Cannula - superficial thrombophlebitis
  • Central line / CVP
  • Calves (DVT)
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5
Q

What types of healing do you know

primary/secondary/tertiary

A

Primary intention:

  • Most surgical wounds
  • Excision and closure (sutures / staples) - edges approximated
  • Minimizes scarring

Secondary intention: e.g. pressure ulcers

  • Wound left open, granulation from bottom up
  • When wound edges cannot be approximated
  • Can pack wound with gauze or use drainage system.
  • Broader scar, slower healing process

Tertiary intention (combination of 1° & 2°):

  • Purposely left open and closed at a later date
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6
Q

Definition of Wound dehiscence

A

Definition: Surgical complication in which wound RUPTURES along surgical suture.

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7
Q

Causesof poor wound healing

local/systemic

A
  • Local:
    • limited moisture
    • mechanical factors
    • ischaemia
    • foreign bodies-drains
    • oedema
    • infection
  • systemic
    • metabolic
      • DM
      • mineral deficiencies (bit C)
    • Drugs:
      • steroids
      • chemotherapy
    • Tissue health
      • radiotherapy
    • underlying disease
      • tissue hypoxia e.g. PVD
      • Renal failure
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8
Q

Definition of a hernia

A

A protrusion of a viscus or part of a viscus through a defect in its walls into an abnormal position

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9
Q

List three complications of a hernia

A

Incarceration, strangulation, bowel obstruction

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10
Q

define incarceratoin of a hernia

A

An irreducible hernia

Often painful

Can lead to strangulation

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11
Q

define strangulated hernia

A

Impaired blood supply to the hernial contents

Surgical emergency - risk of perforation

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12
Q

definition of incisional hernia

and risk factprs; pre-op/op/postop

A

Extrusion of peritoneum and abdominal contents through a weak scar on the abdominal wall, representing a partial wound dehiscence where the skin remains intact.’

  • pre-op:
    • age
    • immunocompromise: steroids, renal failure, DM
    • Obesity
    • Malignancy
    • Abdominal distension (obstruction/ascites)
  • Operative:
    • poor wound closure:
      • too small bites
      • inapropriate suture material
    • placing drains through wounds
    • site
    • length of wound
  • Post-op:
    • wound heamatoma
    • wound infection
    • early mobilization
    • post-op atelectasis
    • chest infection (raised intra-abdo pressure)
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13
Q

What’s the difference between indirect and direct inguinal hernias?

A

Direct:

  • Weak point in abdominal wall (Hesselbach’s triangle)
  • Medial to inferior epigastric vessels (surgical landmark)

Indirect (>2/3 inguinal hernias)

  • Patent processus vaginalis
  • Lateral to inferior epigastric vessels
  • Via deep ring
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14
Q

Inguinal hernias Hasselhoff’s triangle

A

Laterally: inferior epigastric artery

Medically: lateral boder of rectus abdominis

Inferiorly: base induinal ligament

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15
Q

Inguinal canal contents

male vs female

A

Male

  • Spermatic cord
  • Ilioinguinal nerve

Female

  • Round ligament (-> gubernaculum in labia maj),
  • genital branch of the genitofemoral nerve
  • Ilioinguinal nerve
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16
Q

contents of spermatic cord

A
  • Three arteries:
    • Testicular (from aorta)
    • Cremasteric (from inf epigastric)
    • Artery to the vas (from inf vesical)
  • Three veins:
    • Pampiniform venous plexus (R-> IVC; L -> L renal vein)
    • Cremasteric vein;
    • Vein of the vas
  • Two nerves:
    • Genital branch of the genitofemoral nerve -> cremaster
    • SNS & PNS from T10 & 11
    • (Iliioinguinal nerve - runs on the spermatic cord after entering canal via the anterior wall)
  • Three coverings (fascia):
    • External spermatic - from ext. oblique aponeurosis
    • Cremasteric - from int oblique aponeurosis
    • Internal spermatic - from the transversalis fascia
  • Three other things:
    • Lymphatics;
    • Vas deferens
    • Obliterated processus vaginalis
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17
Q

2 nerves involved in inguinal hernias

route + supply?

A
  • Ilioinguinal nerve (L1)
    • Enters inguinal canal directly, not through the deep ring
    • Exits through superficial ring
    • Supplies skin at root of penis & scrotum / labia majora, and skin of upper inner thigh
  • Genital branch of GF nerve (L1,2)
    • Supplies cremaster muscle
    • Scrotal skin / labia majora
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18
Q

How woulld you distinguish inguinal from femoral hernias

A
  • Inguinal hernias
    • SUPERIOR to the PT
    • Cough impulse toward the groin
  • Femoral hernias
    • INFERIOR to the PT
    • Cough impulse down
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19
Q

Clinically how would you distinguish indirect and direct inguinal hernias?

A

Reduce the hernia then put pressure at the deep inguinal ring (midway between pubic tubercle and anterior superior iliac spine). Allegedly, if it remains reduced it’s indirect

One study had 56% of direct hernia wrongly classified as indirect on clinical examination by cons surgeons –> SURGERY or IMAGING is definitive

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20
Q

What is a fistula

A

An abnormal connection between two epithelial surfaces Eg: Colo-vesical, colo-colic, entero-colic, mucous fistula, vascular, Cholecystoenteric (Mirizzi synd), anal

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21
Q

What are some causes of fistulae (4)

A
  1. Malignancy
  2. Diverticular disease
  3. Crohn’s
  4. Abscess
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22
Q

What is the management of a fistula:

SNAP

A

S - sepsis (ABC; S6)

N - nutrition

A - anatomy (imaging)

P - planning (op)

They will heal provided there is no underlying inflammatory bowel disease and no distal obstruction, so conservative measures may be the best option

Where there is skin involvement, protect the overlying skin, often using a well fitted stoma bag- skin damage is difficult to treat

A high output fistula may be rendered more easily managed by the use of octreotide, this will tend to reduce the volume of pancreatic secretions.

Nutritional complications are common especially with high fistula (e.g. high jejunal or duodenal) these may necessitate the use of TPN to provide nutritional support together with the concomitant use of octreotide to reduce volume and protect skin.

When managing perianal fistulae surgeons should avoid probing the fistula where acute inflammation is present, this almost always worsens outcomes.

When perianal fistulae occur secondary to Crohn’s disease the best management option is often to drain acute sepsis and maintain that drainage through the judicious use of setons whilst medical management is implemented.

Always attempt to delineate the fistula anatomy, for abscesses and fistulae that have an intra abdominal source the use of barium and CT studies should show a track. For perianal fistulae surgeons should recall Goodsall’s rule in relation to internal and external openings

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23
Q

What is a sinus

A

Blind ended tract between an epithelial surface and a cavity lined with granulation tissue

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24
Q
A
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25
Q

What does this barium swallow show

A

Distal oesophageal malignancy

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26
Q

RF for the two types of oesophageal malignancy

A
  • Adenocarcinoma (Cauc; M>F)
    • Barrett’s oesophagus
    • GORD
    • Alcohol & smoking (more SCC)
    • Obesity & prior radiation
  • SCC
    • Alcohol & smoking
    • Dietary nitrosamines - pickled food, BBQ
    • Achalasia, coeliac, Plummer-Vinson (Paterson-Kelly)
    • HPV
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27
Q

Management of oesophageal malignancy

(early and advanced disease)

A
  • Early disease (curative intent)
    • Surgical resection +/- neoadjuvant CT
    • +/- Radiotherapy for SCC
  • Advanced stage (palliative mx)
    • Dilatations, stenting
    • Tumour ablation (laser or Ar beam)
    • CT & RT
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28
Q

What do you see?

What for?

Name surgeries?

A
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29
Q

indications for oesophagectomy (4)

A
  • Malignancy
    • Carcinoma (early) - middle (sub-carinal) and distal third
    • Barrett’s with high grade dysplasia
  • Neuromotor dysfunction
    • Achalasia, oesophageal spasm / dysmotility
  • Trauma / irritation
    • Caustic injury / burn
    • Acute perforation
    • Recurrent reflux / hiatal hernia
  • Narrowing
    • Stricture
    • Scleroderma
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30
Q

Pancrestits: (summarised)

types/cause/comp

A
  • Types; Acute and chronic
  • Causes
    • I GET SMASHED
    • Alcohol and gallstones mainly
  • Complications
    • Of the pancreatitis
      • Acute - recurrence, chronic disease, sepsis, necrosis
      • Chronic - pseudocyst formation, haemorrhage, pain
    • Of the cause
      • Alcohol - affects multiple systems
      • Gallstones - biliary disease
31
Q

Biliary tree anatomy (and site of gallstones)

A

*

32
Q

Biliary disease; gallstones (summarised)

  • Imaging -
  • Signs and symptoms:
  • Mx:
A
  • Imaging - CT and USS; not radiopaque
  • Signs and symptoms: RUQ pain + Courvoisier’s law - pancreatic ca vs gallstones
  • Mx:
    • Conservative, medical, surgical
    • Cholecystectomy - open (5%) or laparoscopic
    • MCRP / ERCP - if suspect stone in CBD
    • Percutaneous cholecystostomy
33
Q

Complications of gallstones disease:

of stones

Of intervention

A

gallstones comp:

  • Pancreatitis
  • Cholecystitis
  • Ascending cholangitis;
    • Charcot’s triad - Fever + RUQ pain+ Jaundice
      • confusion & shock -> Reynold’s pentad
  • Empyema

Of interventions

  • Cholecystectomy - General & specific
    • Damage to local structures
      • CBD, hepatic artery, hepatic duct
  • ERCP
    • Perforation (duodenum)
    • Pancreatitis
  • Percutaneous cholecystostomy
    • Surgical complications
34
Q

lable the colonic resections

A
35
Q

What procedure is this?

indications and signs

A

Hartmans

indications: perforated diverticulus/obstruction
signs: midline scar + end colostomy LIF/Scar (if reversed) + anus intact

36
Q

What procedure is this

indications

signs

A

anterior resection of the sigmoid

indication: elective sigmoid malignancy
signs: midline/laparoscopic scars (+/- ileostomy/scar in RIF)

37
Q

What is this procedure

indications

signs

A

abdominoperineal resection of the rectume

indications: low lying <2-5cm sigmoid/rectal malignancy
signs: miline/lap scar + end colostomy + anus overswen

38
Q
  • R hemicolectomy
    • Indication - caecal / asc colon ca
    • Signs - midline / laparoscopic scars
  • L hemicolectomy
    • Indication -
    • Signs -
  • Subtotal colectomy
    • Indication -
    • Signs -
  • Total colectomy (Panproctocolectomy)
    • Indication -
    • Signs -
A
  • R hemicolectomy
    • Indication - caecal / asc colon ca
    • Signs - midline / laparoscopic scars
  • L hemicolectomy
    • Indication - desc colon ca
    • Signs - midline / laparoscopic scars; +/- loop ileostomy
  • Subtotal colectomy
    • Indication - UC, toxic megacolon
    • Signs - midline scar; end ileostomy; +/- mucous fistula; anus intact
  • Total colectomy (Panproctocolectomy)
    • Indication - Toxic megacolon (non-acute; completion); ischaemic bowel; AFP (malignancy risk; monitoring)
    • Signs - midline scar; end ileostomy; anus oversewn
39
Q

Stomas assessment

A
40
Q

Stoma indications

A
41
Q

Ileostomy

  • Site:
  • Appearance:
  • Lumens:
    • Single -
    • Double -
  • Output:
  • Indication
    • Temporary :
    • Permanent (end ileostomy):
      • *
A

Ileostomy

  • Site: Usually right iliac fossa
  • Appearance: Spout of bowel protrudes ~3cm (irritant small bowel contents)
  • Lumens:
    • Single - end ileostomy
    • Double - defunctioning loop ileostomy
  • Output: Liquid faeces, alkaline pH
  • Indication
    • Temporary (defunctioning loop ileostomy):
      • Protect distal anastomosis - Sub-total colectomy, anterior sigmoid resection, Hartmann’s reversal
      • Bowel rest in Crohn’s
    • Permanent (end ileostomy):
      • Panproctocolectomy (excision of colon & rectum), unless pouch reconstruction (IPAA)
      • UC (toxic megacolon), FAP, ischaemic bowel
42
Q

what is this (2 wordS)

A

end ileostomy

43
Q

What is this

(2 words)

A

loop ileostomy

44
Q

Colostomy

  • Site:
  • Appearance:
  • Output:
  • Lumens:
    • Double -
        • Single -
  • Indication
    • Temporary:
        • Permanent:
          *
A

Colostomy

  • Site: Usually LIF
  • Appearance: Bowel mucosa lies flush with the skin
  • Output: Solid faecal content
  • Lumens:
    • Double - defunctioning loop colostomy
      • Transverse colostomy (RUQ) - ca rectum that is likely to obstruct
    • Single - end colostomy
  • Indication
    • Temporary:
      • Hartmann’s (rectum still intact) - sigmoid ca, diverticulitis, IBD involving colon
    • Permanent:
      • AP resection (anus sewed over)
45
Q

What do you see

(2 words)

A

end colostomy

46
Q

what do you see (2 words/on the R what is also seen)

A

loop colostomy

loop colostomy -with plastic bridge

47
Q

Complications of stomas

(stomas/around/systemic)

A
  • stoma itself:
    • prolapse
    • retraction
    • obstruction
    • stenosis
  • around the stoma
    • parastomal herniation
    • dermatitis
  • systemic:
    • high output electrolyte imbalance & dehydration
    • psychological
48
Q

What stoma complication do you see?

A

parastomal herniation

49
Q

what stoma complication do you see?

A

ileostomy prolapse

50
Q

What stoma complication do you see?

A

dermatitis

51
Q

signs and diagnosis

A
  • stoma in LIF
    • flush to skin
    • single lumen
    • no bag- cannot comment on output
  • midline scar:
    • well healed

end colostomy and midline laparotomy scar

  • differential:
    • hartmann’s procedure
    • abdominoperineal excision of the rectum (APER)

NOT an anterior resection of the sigmoit: AR does not bring out colostomy

MAY being out a defunctioning proximal stoma, more likely ileostomy

52
Q

signs and diagnosis

A
  • stoma in the RIF
    • spouted
    • single lumen
    • no bag - cannot comment on output
  • laparoscopic port sites on L of abdomen
  • Drain
  • Differential:
    • subtotal colectomy
    • panproctocolectomy
53
Q

signs and differntial

A
  • stoma LIF: healed
  • Stoma: RIF: healed
  • Midline scar: well healed
  • Differential:
    • Reveral of hartmann’s procedure:
      • desc colon connected to rectal stump
      • +/- defunctioning loop ileostomy
    • reversed loop colostomy with healed loop ileostomy:
      • post -obstruction but unlikely
54
Q

signs and diagnosis

A
  • laparoscopic scars
  • stoma: RIF
    • healed-could have been end or defunctioning

differential diagnosis:

  • anterior resection of the sigmoid, defunctioned and reversed
  • panproctocolectomy with ileal pouch anal anastomosis (IPAA)
55
Q

Indications for Panproctocolectomy with IPAA

A
  • IBD- UC
  • NOT CROHN’s
    • disease would RECURR!!! in pouch and likely fistula between pouch and surrounding structures
56
Q

four cardinal features of bowel obstruction

A
  1. abdo pain
  2. absolute constipation
  3. distension
  4. vomiting
57
Q

bowel obstruction

  • causes:
    • *
    • *
  • *
  • management
    • conservative
        • surgical
        • *
A

bowel obstruction

  • causes:
    • small bowel:
      • adhesions, hernias, ileus
    • large bowel
      • volvulus, malignancy
  • complications
    • perforations
  • management
    • conservative
      • drip and suck
    • surgical
      • defunctioning
      • 1 surgery - adhesionlysis
      • volvulus decompression
58
Q

Aproach to small bowel obstruction; 1 liner

classification (2)

A
  • Surgical emergency + call for help + ABC assessment
  • classification:
    • non-mechanical:
      • post surgical ileus
      • metabolic
        • hypokalaemia
        • uraemia
        • hyperglycaemia
        • hypothyroidism
    • Mechanical:
      • lumen
        • gallstones
        • meconium
        • intussusception
        • fb
        • faecal impaction
      • In the wall: (mural)
        • strictures
        • IBD
        • diverticulitis
        • cancer
      • outside the wall:
        • adhesions
        • hernias
        • volvulus
        • cancer
59
Q

Large bowel obsturction

causes

luminal/mural/extramural

A
  • `luminal:
    • `faecal impaction
  • mural:
    • `strictures
    • IBD
    • diverticulitis
    • cancer
  • extramural:
    • `(adhesions)
    • hernias
    • volvulus
    • cancer\

VSHiT

Volvulus Strictures Hernias Inflammatory Bowel Disease (Crohn’s, UC) Tumours

60
Q

SBO management

conservative

medical

surgical

A
  • Conservative:
    • IV fluids
    • NG ryles tube
    • urinary catheterisation for fluid balance
  • medical:
    • iv antibiotics
    • anti-emetics
    • analgesia
    • gastrograffin
    • correct metabolic causes
  • surgical:
    • adhesiolysis
    • hernia repair

SBO in VIRGIN abdo is indicated for diagnostic laparoscopy (pos band adhesion)

61
Q

define:

  • Diverticulosis;
  • Diverticular disease;
  • Diverticulitis;
A
  • Diverticulosis; presence of diverticuli
  • diverticular disease; presence of symptomatic diverticuli (recurrent abdominal pain)
  • Diverticulitis;acute inflammation +/- perforation
62
Q

Management of diverticular disease

cons

+

surgical

A
  • Cons:
    • abx - anaerobic and GN cover
  • Surgical:
    • Harmann’s
63
Q

complications of diverticular disease

A
  • of the disease;
  • infection
    • perf; sepsis and peritonitis
    • haemorrhage
    • abscess
    • fistulae
    • strictures
  • of intervention:
    • conservative-failure
    • surgical - risks of surgery
64
Q

Describe the scar

A
  • 20-30 cm oblique incision over the R flank
  • staples are still in situ
    • indicating surgery was recent and certainly less than 10-14 days old
  • the wound looks clean and dry with no disharge, pus or erythema
  • This incision would be consistent with recent urolophocal surgery, perhaps a nephrectomy
65
Q

classifications and indications for nephrectomy:

simple

radical

partial

nephrourectomy

A
  • Simple nephrectomy - removal of kidney; oblique scar/laparoscopic ports
    • indications:
      • non functioning - hydronephrosis, malignancy, pyelonephritis
      • PKD - infection/h’gge into cyst
      • donation of kidney
      • to allow room for transplanted kidney
  • Radical nephrectomy - removal of kidney, perinephric fat and adrenal
    • paramedian scar with superior abdomen horizontal incision
    • indications; renal malignancy
  • partial nephrectomy - removal of part of kidney only
    • indications:
      • solitary kidney/renal impairment
  • Nephrouretectomy - removal of kidney and ureter
    • indication:
      • TCC
66
Q

Nephrectomy

complications

gen/spec

A
  • General surgical complications
    • e.g. pain bleeding, scarring, infection, recurrence, VTE
  • Specific complications:
    • urinary leak
    • damage to local structures:
      • nerves
      • arteries & veins
      • lymphatics
      • viscera
67
Q

Describe the scars

A

Laparoscopic donor nephrectomy
Pfannenstiel incision for removal

68
Q

What is this?

A

Nephrostomy: artificial opening between skin and kidney at the level of the renal pelvis, alowing urinary drainage

(lowe level = urostomy)

69
Q

Indications for nephrostomy

A
  1. hydronephrosis
  2. pyonephrosis
  3. stricture
  4. fistula
  5. stone: staghorn calculus
  6. obstructing malignancy- ovarian and colon
70
Q

Say what you see

A

I note a well healed midline scar

there is a stoma, spouted in the RIF which looks pink and hgealthy

there is liquid output into a tapped bag

There may be an element of parastomal herniation but the stoma itself is not protruded or restracted

This would be consistent with urological surgery, perhaps an upper tract diversion, specifically an ileal conduit following cystectomy

71
Q

What is an upper tract diversion (ileal conduit)

A

ureters joined to isolated segment of small bowel

brought out to right anterior abdominal wall

72
Q

what is an upper tract diversion with reconstructed neobladder

A

small bowel pouch made into new ‘bladder’ and joined to urethra

73
Q

upper tract diversion indications

A

bladder cancer requiring cystectomy

neurogenic bladder (threaten renal function)

severe radiation injury to the bladder

intractable incontinence in females

chronic pelvic pain syndromes

neobladder vs consuit; pt and bowel dependent