| Literature DB >> 26820988 |
J V T Tilsed1, A Casamassima2, H Kurihara3, D Mariani4, I Martinez5, J Pereira6, L Ponchietti7, A Shamiyeh8, F Al-Ayoubi9, L A B Barco10, M Ceolin3, A J G D'Almeida11, S Hilario12, A L Olavarria13, M M Ozmen14, L F Pinheiro15, M Poeze16, G Triantos17, F T Fuentes18, S U Sierra19, K Soreide20,21, H Yanar22.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Acute mesenteric ischaemia (AMI) accounts for about 1:1000 acute hospital admissions. Untreated, AMI will cause mesenteric infarction, intestinal necrosis, an overwhelming inflammatory response and death. Early intervention can halt and reverse this process leading to a full recovery, but the diagnosis of AMI is difficult and failure to recognize AMI before intestinal necrosis has developed is responsible for the high mortality of the disease. Early diagnosis and prompt treatment are the goals of modern therapy, but there are no randomized controlled trials to guide treatment and the published literature contains a high ratio of reviews to original data. Much of that data comes from case reports and often small, retrospective series with no clearly defined treatment criteria.Entities:
Keywords: Acute mesenteric ischaemia; Clinical management; Diagnosis; Guidelines
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26820988 PMCID: PMC4830881 DOI: 10.1007/s00068-016-0634-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Trauma Emerg Surg ISSN: 1863-9933 Impact factor: 3.693
Classification system used to determine strength of evidence
| Level of evidence | Definition |
|---|---|
| IA | Evidence from meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials |
| IB | Evidence from at least one randomized controlled trial |
| IIA | Evidence from at least one controlled study without randomization |
| IIB | Evidence from at least one other type of quasi-experimental study |
| III | Evidence from non-experimental descriptive studies such as comparative studies, correlation studies and case controlled-studies |
| IV | Evidence from expert committee reports or opinions or clinical experience of respected authorities or both |
Characteristics and risk factors associated with AMI
| Associated comorbidities | Onset of pain | Associated symptoms | Related procedures | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EAMI | Heart disease (atrial fibrillation, rheumatic, myocardial infarction, prosthetic valve, ventricular aneurism, Chagas’ disease) | Acute | Diarrhoea, vomiting | Angiography |
| TAMI | Arteriosclerosis, hypertension, diabetes, hyperlipidemia, dehydration, antiphospholipid syndrome, estrogens | Acute, may be recurrent | Sitophobia, postprandial pain | Vascular surgery (bypass) |
| VAMI | Hypercoagulable disorders, sickle cell disease, right sided heart failure, DVT, malignancies, hepatitis, pancreatitis, sepsis hepato-splenomegaly, cirrhosis | Gradual | Vague complaints | Recent abdominal surgery |
| NOMI | Shock, hypovolemia, hypotension, digitalis, diuretics, beta-blockers, alpha-adrenergics, enteral nutrition, critical care support | Either acute or gradual |
Radiological features associated with AMI
| Characteristic | EAMI–TAMI | VAMI | NOMI |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bowel wall | Thinning (“paper thin wall”), no change, or thickening with reperfusion | Thickening | No change or thickening with reperfusion |
| Attenuation of bowel wall on unenhanced CT | Not characteristic | Low with oedema; high with haemorrhage | Not characteristic |
| Enhancement of bowel wall on contrast-enhanced CT | Diminished, absent, target appearance or high with reperfusion | Diminished, absent, target appearance, or increased | Diminished, absent, heterogeneous in distribution |
| Bowel dilatation | Not apparent | Moderate to prominent | Not apparent |
| Mesenteric vessels | Defect or defects in arteries, arterial occlusion, SMA >SMV in diameter | Defect or defects in veins, venous engorgement | No defect, arterial constriction |
| Mesentery | Not hazy until mesenteric infarction occurs | Hazy with ascites | Not hazy until mesenteric infarction occurs |
Modified from Furukawa et al. [83]
SMA superior mesenteric artery, SMV superior mesenteric vein