Transcript GI-
Gastrointestinal
Problems
Claire Nowlan MD
Peptic Ulcers
Ulceration of either the gastric or
duodenal mucosa
Risk factors for Peptic Ulcers
H. Pylori (cause of 70%-90% of ulcers)
NSAIDs (Steroids and Bisphosphonates)
Alcohol
Smoking
Ages 30-50
Stress
Medical conditions
– Hyperparathyroidism
– Zollinger Ellison Syndrome
– Renal Dialysis
Etiology
Imbalence of Aggressive/protective factors
H. Pylori produces urease
– urea > ammonia and CO2
– This invokes immune response and starts
inflammation cascade
– infection increases with age and poor
socioeconomic conditions
– only 20% of infected develop disease
Etiology
NSAIDs
– reduced mucosal prostaglandin
production, resulting in impaired
prostaglandin dependent mucosal defense
and repair mechanisms
Inflammation cascade
Stimulus
disturbance of cell membranes
Phospholipids
catalyzed by cox-2
Arachidonic acid
Leukotrienes
prostaglandins
Complications
Depends on depth of ulcer
More common in the elderly
– Perforation
– Hemorrhage - more serious if patient on
anticoagulants
– Pyloric stenosis
– Carcinomatous transformation
Signs and Symptoms
Variable
Red flags - vomiting, bloody or tarry
stools, new ab pains in an elderly
person, signs of blood loss (pale,
lightheaded, orthostatic hypotension)
Lab findings
Serology or 13C 14C urea breath tests for
H. Pylori
Barium swallow
Endoscopy
Medical treatment
Eradication of H. Pylori usually cures ulcer
Regiments – 7 to 14 days of:
– PPI (Omeprazole/Lansoprazole/Pantoprazole)
– PLUS 2 antibiotics
(Clarithromycin/Metronidazole/Amoxicillin/Tetracyc
line)
– PLUS/MINUS Pepto-Bismol
Stop NSAIDs
Dental Management
If active, untreated disease - refer
If possible, NSAIDs should be avoided in
patients with
– Previous GI bleeding
– Previous peptic ulcers
– Age > 75 years
Avoid longer courses of NSAIDs in
– Age 60 - 75
– Patients on steroids
May use COX-2 selective inhibitors or
preventive medication in above patients
Cyclo-oxygenase-2 (COX-2)
inhibitors
Vioxx/Celebrex(not in patients with
Sulfa allergy)/Mobicox
Similar efficacy to older NSAIDs
Early trials suggested decreased
endoscopic ulceration
Recent trials show little if any efficacy
(1.8% rate of ulcers vs. 1.3%)
No difference in dyspepsia
Medications to prevent NSAID
associated peptic ulcers
Misoprostol 200ug TID
– Don’t use in fertile women
PPIs
– Omeprazole 20 mg od
– Lansoprazole 30 mg od
– Pantoprazole 40 mg od
Irritable bowel
Affects up to 30% of the population
Symptoms include
•
•
•
•
diarrhea
constipation
abdominal pain
bloating
Difficult to control symptoms
Treatment includes dietary changes, stress
management, medications
Pseudomembranous colitis
A severe colitis that results from broad
spectrum antibiotics killing healthy gut
bacteria and allowing C. difficile to flourish
(already present in 2% asymptomatic people,
up to 50% of the elderly)
C. difficile binds to intestinal mucosa and
alters cell permeability
Worst antibiotic – Clindamycin, amoxil and
cephalosporins to a lesser extent
Symptoms usually develop 1 week later, can
be as long as 8 weeks
Pseudomembranous colitis
Symptoms - Watery profuse diarrhea and low
grade fever, if severe - bloody diarrhea,
fever, abdominal pain and death
Diagnosis – enterotoxin A/B found in the stool
sample
Medical Management
• Stopping the antibiotic cures up to 25% of patients
• Flagyl or Vancomycin for 7 to 10 days
• Hand washing
Pseudomembranous colitis
Dental management
– Use broad spectrum antibiotics wisely
especially in elderly patients or those with
a previous history
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
(IBD)
Inflammatory disease of the GI tract
Unknown origin
Patient experiences diarrhea,
abdominal pain
Peak age of onset 20 to 40 years
Systemic findings –arthritis, iritis,
uveitis, skin manifestations
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
(IBD)
Ulcerative Colitis
Limited to the large
intestine
Limited to mucosa
Continuous lesions
Remissions/
exacerbations
common
Rectal bleeding
common
Crohn’s Disease
Affects any portion
of the bowel
Transmural
Segmental
Usually slowly
progressive
Fever, weight loss
common
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
(IBD)
Ulcerative Colitis
Complications
hemorrhage, toxic
megacolon, anemia,
volume depletion,
electrolyte
imbalance,
malignancy
Crohn’s Disease
Complications
anemia,
malabsorption,
fistulae, stricture,
abscess
Operations more
common
Inflammatory Bowel Disease
(IBD) - lab findings
May see anemia, malabsorptions
causing low B12, folate, iron, albumin,
and increased ESR
Really diagnosed with
colonoscopy/biopsy
Medical management
Supportive therapy
– Nutritional supplementation, bowel rest, replacing
fluid and electrolytes
Antiinflammatory drugs
• Sulfasalazine
• 5 ASA
• Steroids
Immunosupressives/Antibiotics
Surgery – curative in UC
Dental management - IBD
Precautions if on steroids
Immunosupressants cause pancytopenia in
5% of patients, increase risk of lymphoma
and oral infections
Methotrexate can cause hypersensitivity
pneumonia and hepatic fibrosis
Cyclosporin can cause renal damage
Sulfsalazine associated with pulmonary,
nephrotic damage
Dental management - IBD
Analgesics acetaminophen plus
– NSAIDs OK
– opioids fine, unless during acute severe
exacerbation - can cause toxic megacolon
Only urgent care during exacerbation