0521779407-10 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 6, 2007 17:44
874 Irritable Bowel Syndrome Ischemic Bowel Disease
follow-up
■Reevaluate 3–6 weeks after initiation of therapy to assess response
■More extensive evaluation (symptom-dependent) is considered in
patients who have had a change or progression of symptoms, or in
those who do not respond
complications and prognosis
■Good with normal life span
Ischemic Bowel Disease...............................
JOHN P. CELLO, MD
history & physical
■Variable manifestations ranging from intestinal angina to necrotic
bowel; classically, pain out of proportion to the physical finding; must
always consider ischemic bowel when a patient at risk for ischemia
(age >50, arrhythmia, CHF, diabetes, known coronary artery or gen-
eral atherosclerosis) has new onset of abdominal pain with or with-
out hematochezia
■Presentation depends upon sit blood flow, collateral circulation
present and rapidity of restoration of normal perfusion.
■Large bowel:
➣Transient loss of flow and good collateral circulation (usually
a “low flow state” from diminished cardiac output) – minimal
abdominal pain and some hematochezia; may be recurrent for
weeks
➣Abrupt loss of perfusion (e.g. embolus or acute thrombosis) long
lasting ischemia with poor collaterals
moderately severe abdominal pain and hematochezia
■Total loss of perfusion – “dead bowel” – severe abdominal pain with
cardiovascular collapse and sepsis; a surgical emergency
■Small Bowel:
➣Transient loss of flow and good collaterals – usually stressed
byfood intake – “intestinal angina” – classically “fear of eating”
No classic physical or laboratory findings – weight loss common
■Abrupt loss of perfusion, long lasting with poor collaterals –
➣severe abdominal pain out of proportion to physical exam
findings; may actually have normal abdominal exam yet patient
looks and acts sick – believe him/her and proceed with rapid
evaluation