Nur 322 Gi Disorders
Nur 322 Gi Disorders
Nur 322 Gi Disorders
CES IN
INGESTION
GASTROESOPHAGEAL REFLUX DISEASE
• Fundoplication (wrapping of
a portion of the gastric
fundus around the sphincter
area of the esophagus).
Fundoplication may be
performed by laparoscopy
ACHALASIA
• absent or ineffective peristalsis of the
distal esophagus, accompanied by
failure of the esophageal sphincter to
relax in response to swallowing.
Narrowing of the esophagus just
above the stomach results in a
gradually increasing dilation of the
esophagus in the upper chest.
Achalasia may progress slowly and
occurs most often in people 40 years
of age or older.
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
Nsg. Interventions:
encourage pt. to drink fluids with meals and use the valsalva maneuver
(bearing down with a closed glottis) while swallowing to help push the
food
advise soft diet
elevate head during sleeping to prevent regurgitation
after esophageal surgery, monitor for signs of esophageal perforation as
evidenced by chest pain, shock, dyspnea and fever
HIATAL HERNIA
• The esophagus enters the abdomen through an opening
in the diaphragm and empties at its lower end into the
upper part of the stomach.
• the opening in the diaphragm through which the
esophagus passes becomes enlarged, and part of the
upper stomach tends to move up into the lower portion
of the thorax. Hiatal hernia occurs more often in
women than men.
Two types of hiatal hernias
• Gastrojejunostomy or
gastric resection may be
necessary to treat pyloric
obstruction, a narrowing
of the pyloric orifice.
GASTRIC AND DUODENAL ULCERS
• A peptic ulcer is an excavation (hollowed-out area) that
forms in the mucosal wall of the stomach, in the pylorus
(opening between stomach and duodenum), in the
duodenum (first part of small intestine), or in the esophagus.
A peptic ulcer is frequently referred to as a gastric,
duodenal, or esophageal ulcer, depending on its location, or
as peptic ulcer disease. Erosion of a circumscribed area of
mucous membrane is the cause
Pathophysiology
Autodigestion
Erosion
Painless
Ulceration Pain
N/V
Bleeding
GASTRIC ULCERS
• A duodenal
ulcer is a break
in the mucosa of
the duodenum
Risk factors and causes
• The first-line
management of upper GI
bleeding is endoscopy
and endotherapy.
• The goal of endoscopic hemostasis is to coagulate or thrombose the bleeding
vessel. Several techniques are used, including
• thermal (heat) probe
• multipolar and bipolar electrocoagulation probe
• argon plasma coagulation (APC)
• neodymium:yttrium-aluminum-garnet (nd:yag) laser.
• Multipolar electrocoagulation and thermal probe are the two most commonly used
procedures. The heat probe coagulates tissue by directly applying a heating element
to the bleeding site. The APC is a noncontact coagulation that delivers monopolar
current to tissue.
• For variceal bleeding, other strategies include variceal ligation, injection
sclerotherapy, and balloon tamponade
Surgical management