Internal Medicine

(Wang) #1

0521779407-18 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 8:1


1262 Radiation Enteritis and Colitis

RADIATION ENTERITIS AND COLITIS


ALVARO D. DAVILA, MD


history & physical
History of Exposure
■Radiation injury depends on type and quantity of radiation energy
delivered
■SI unit for measuring a dose of radiation: gray (Gy); one gray (Gy)
equals 1 joule of energy deposited in 1 kg of tissue; 1 Gy=100 rads
■Small intestine most vulnerable to radiation injury
➣Risk factors for radiation enteritis:
➣lack of mobility of the distal ileum and cecum, previous abdom-
inal surgery, atherosclerotic vascular disease, lean body habitus,
chemotherapy and other drugs
➣Minimal tolerance dose is 45 Gy
■Colon relatively radioresistant but incidence of colonic radiation
injury greatest
➣Risk factors for radiation colitis:
➣high radiation doses for pelvic tumors, relative immobility of
rectum and sigmoid colon; Minimal tolerance dose is 45 Gy for
colon and 55 Gy for rectum

Signs and Symptoms
■Acute injury to the small intestine and colon frequent, dose depen-
dent and usually transient
■Chronic radiation enteritis appears far less frequently (average inci-
dence of 6%)
➣Onset of symptoms variable and latent (usually 1–2 yr, up to
20 yr after treatment)
➣Chronic bowel injury from ischemia and progressive fibrosis/
atrophy, leading to stricture, obstruction, bacterial overgrowth,
ulceration, fistulization, recurrent infection, and perforation
➣Chronic radiation colitis/proctitis from 5–15% of patients after
pelvic irradiation for prostate, cervical, uterine, bladder, and tes-
ticular cancer
■Early symptoms and signs (acute injury, reversible)
➣Small intestinal injury: nausea, vomiting, abdominal cramping,
and watery diarrhea
➣Colonic and/or rectal injury: tenesmus, diarrhea, mucorrhea,
and rarely hematochezia
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