| Literature DB >> 31168315 |
Fausto Catena1, Belinda De Simone1, Federico Coccolini2, Salomone Di Saverio3, Massimo Sartelli4, Luca Ansaloni2.
Abstract
Small and large bowel obstructions are responsible for approximately 15% of hospital admissions for acute abdominal pain in the USA and ~ 20% of cases needing acute surgical care. Starting from the analysis of a common clinical problem, we want to guide primary care physicians in the initial management of a patient presenting with acute abdominal pain associated with intestinal obstruction.Entities:
Keywords: Bowel obstructions; Emergency surgery; Primary care physician education; WSES guidelines
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31168315 PMCID: PMC6489175 DOI: 10.1186/s13017-019-0240-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: World J Emerg Surg ISSN: 1749-7922 Impact factor: 5.469
Causes of bowel obstruction in adults
| Small bowel obstruction cause | Percentages of cases | Large bowel obstruction cause | Percentages of cases |
|---|---|---|---|
| Adhesions | 55–75 | Cancer | 60 |
| Hernias | 15–25 | Volvulus | 15–20 |
| Malignancies | 5–10 | Diverticular | 10 |
| Others* | 15 | Others* | 10 |
Others*: carcinomatosis, endometriosis, inflammatory bowel disease stenosis, intussusception, ischemic stenosis, radiation stenosis, postanastomotic stenosis, gallstones, foreign bodies, bezoars
Fig. 1Management strategy of bowel obstruction (for about 90% of causes)
Fig. 2ASBO caused by single band adhesion: CT scan evidence
Key clinical points
| - |
Procedures for the evaluation and treatment of bowel obstruction
| Advantages | Disadvantages | |
|---|---|---|
| Plain abdominal X-ray | Availability | No etiologic diagnosis |
| Computed tomography scan | Etiologic diagnosis | Ionizing radiations exposure |
| Endoscopy (large bowel obstruction only) | Endoscopic treatment | Perforation risk |
| Conservative treatment | Fast recovery | Failure, complications, recurrence |
| Surgery | Etiologic treatment | Complications, stoma risk, recurrence |