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Tuesday, December 5 (Ellen)

This document summarizes several pathologies of the small and large intestine. It discusses developmental anomalies, acquired conditions like megacolon, vascular disorders including ischemic bowel disease, hemorrhoids, diarrheal diseases, infectious enterocolitis, malabsorption syndromes, and inflammatory bowel diseases. Specific conditions covered include Hirschsprung disease, Chagas disease, celiac disease, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, colonic diverticulosis, and bowel obstructions.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
64 views5 pages

Tuesday, December 5 (Ellen)

This document summarizes several pathologies of the small and large intestine. It discusses developmental anomalies, acquired conditions like megacolon, vascular disorders including ischemic bowel disease, hemorrhoids, diarrheal diseases, infectious enterocolitis, malabsorption syndromes, and inflammatory bowel diseases. Specific conditions covered include Hirschsprung disease, Chagas disease, celiac disease, Crohn's disease, ulcerative colitis, colonic diverticulosis, and bowel obstructions.

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Small and Large Intestine Pathology – December 5, 2006

Developmental Anomalies
Small Intestine:
~ 1) atresia (Stenosis) – either complete failure of development of the intestinal
lumen or narrowing. Only involved one segment of the bowel
~ 2) duplication – well formed structures, may or may not communicate with lumen
of SI
~ 3) Meckel diverticulum – failed involution of omphalomesenteric duct, get blind-
ended tubular protrusion
~ 4) Omphalocele – intestines herniated into this congenital defect membranous sac
Large Intestine
~ 1) malrotation of developing bowel – predisposed to volvulus
~ 2) Hirschsprung disease – congenital megacolon

Hirschsprung Disease: Congenital Megacolon


~ distention of colon
~ happens when caudal neural crest cells stops before it reaches the anus in embryo
development
~ functional obstruction and progressive distention of parts of colon

Acquired Megacolon
~ can result from:
~ 1) chagas diseases – from protozoans
~ 2) organic bowel obstruction
~ 3) toxic megacolon
~ 4) functional psychosomatic disorder

Vascular Disorders

Ischemic Bowel Disease


~ ischemic from obstruction of 1 of 3 major trunks of descending aorta after T12
~ leads to hypoxia  infarction  necrosis  fibrosis

Ischemic Bowel Disease


~ transmural  major mesenteric
~ mucosal/mural  usually local anatomical problem or hypoperfusion
~ predisposing conditions for all 3 ischemic forms
~ 1) arterial thrombosis
~ 2) arterial embolism
~ 3) venous thrombosis
~ 4) nonocclusive ischemia
~ 5) miscellaneous

Hemorrhoids
~ variceal dilation in anal/perianal submucosal venous plexus
~ internal hemorrhoid – covered by rectal mucosa above anorectal line in superior and
middle hemorrhoidal veins
~ external hemorrhoid – below anorectal line, cover by anal mucosa dilation of inferior
hemorrhoidal plexus
~ internal and external bleed easily
~ internal can prolapse and get strangled by anal sphincter

Diarrheal Diseases
~ biggest problem = dehydration

Diarrhea and Dysentery


~ diarrhea: increase stool mass, stool frequency, and fluidity
~ see pain, urgency, perianal discomfort, and incontinence
~ dysentery: low-volume, bloody diarrhea
~ diarrheal disorders are categorized as follows:
~ 1) secretory diarrhea: same osmolarity as plasma, lasts even though fasting
~ 2) osmotic diarrhea: xs fluid that your body doesn’t really like
~ 3) exudative diseases: infection
~ 4) malabsorption: xs fat (steatorrhea) and not absorbing nutrients
~ 5) deranged motility: not pushing bolus properly, some move/some don’t

Infectious Enterocolitis
~ microbial origin
~ rotavirus, calciviruses, and enterotoxigenic E. coli
~ major cause of chronic or recurrent infectious enterocolitis

Viral Gastroenteritis
~ virus destroys microvilli and decreases absorption
~ osmotic diarrhea
~ villi repopulated with immature enterocytes and preservation of crypt secretory cells
~ have net water and electrolyte secretion

Bacterial Enterocolitis
~ mechanisms underlying bacterial diarrheal illnesses
~ 1) take preformed toxin
~ 2) take toxigenic organism
~ 3) enteroinvasive  destroy mucosal cells
~ all 3 need: adherence, elaborate enterotoxin, need to invade

Protozoal Infection
~ Entamoeba histolytica
~ causes dysentery
~ invade crypts of colonic glands  go into submucosa and therefore can move
elsewhere
~ fecal oral spread
~ Giardia lamblia
~ in SI mucosa, no invasion
~ mucousy diarrhea
~ get through feces-contaminated water
~ Cryptosporidiosis
~ emergent cause
~ fatal complication of AIDS
~ waterborne contamination

Malabsorption Syndromes
~ suboptimal absorption – fat, vitamine, protein, electrolytes, carbs, mineral, water
~ results in at disturbing at least one of:
~ 1) intraluminal digestion of proteins, cars, fats
~ 2) terminal digestion: hydrolysis of carbs, peptides at SI brush border
~ 3) transepithelial transport: nutrients, fluid, electrolytes across intestinal
~ M/C: pancreatic insufficiency, celiac disease, Crohn’s disease
~ osmotic diarrhea and steatorrhea
~ lactose intolerance – class example of defective mucosal cell absorption
~ abetalipoproteinemia – unable to export lipid b/c of autosomal recessive disorder
~ Gluten-sensitive enteropathy – reduction in SI absorptive surface area
~ celiac disease: gluten sensitivity
~ strong genetic susceptibility
~ early exposure of immature immune system to high gliadin levels
~ total flattening of mucosal villi
~ Tropical sprue: resemble celiac disease but occurs exclusively in tropics
~ Whipple disease: rare, systemic infection
~ mainly affects intestine, CNS, joints
~ cause: gram +ve Tropheryma whippelii
~ consequences:
~ 1) hematopoietic system
~ 2) MSK system
~ 3) endocrine system
~ 4) skin
~ 5) nervous system

IBD
~ Crohn ds (CD) and ulcerative colitis (UC)
~ called idiopathic IBD b/c they share many symptoms
~ CD – affects any part of GI tract but mainly SI and colon
~ show noncaseating granulomatous inflammation
~ UC – nongranulomatous disease only in colon
~ pathogenesis:
~ 1) genetic predisposition?
~ 2) immunologic factors – T cells
~ 3) microbial factors – may provide antigenic trigger
~ IBD – heterogeneous group of diseases with exaggerated and destructive mucosal
immune response
~ inflammation is final common pathway
~ see neutophils initially and mononuclear cells later
~ inflammation causes:
~ 1) impaired integrity of mucosal epithelial barrier
~ 2) loss of surface epithelial cell absorptive function
~ 3) activation of crypt epithelial cell secretion
~ bloody diarrhea

Crohn Disease
~ any level of alimentary tract
~ extraintestinal complications of immune origin
~ systemic inflammatory disease with predominant GI involvement
~ worldwide distribution

Ulcerative Colitis
~ ulceroinflammatory disease affecting colon
~ limited to mucosa and submucosa except in most severe cases
~ begin in rectum and goes proximally
~ systemic disorder

Colonic Diverticulosis
~ diverticulum is a blind pouch leading off alimentary tract
~ it is lined by mucosa and communicates with lumen of gut
~ prototype: Meckel diverticulum
~ acquired diverticula – anywhere in alimentary tract (but m/c colon)  diverticular
disease (Aka diverticulosis)
~ potential sites for herniations – where nerves and arterial vasa recta enter the inner
circular muscle coat of the colon
~ 2 factors in genesis:
~ 1) exaggerated peristaltic contractions with increased intraluminal pressure
~ 2) focal defects to normal muscual colonic wall

Bowel Obstruction
~ 1) Hernias
~ weakness or defect in peritoneal cavity wall
~ protrusion causes hernial sac
~ inguinal, femoral canals, umbilicus, surgical scars
~ if viscera that protrude and get trapped it can lead to permanent trapping
(incarceration) and strangulation (infarction of trapped)
~ 2) Adhesions
~ surgery, infection, and endometriosis localized/general peritoneal inflammation
(peritonitis)
~ adhesions might develop b/w bowel segments during healing process
~ fibrous bridges can create closed loops where intestines may slide and become
trapped (internal herniation)
~ 3) Intussusception
~ telescoping proximal segment of bowel into distal segment
~ can be a tumour that becomes trapped by peristaltic wave and pulls its attachment
into distal segment
~ 4) Volvulus
~ twisting of a loop of bowel or other structure
~ constricts venous outflow
~ affects small bowel

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