Gastric and Duodenal Ulcer
Gastric and Duodenal Ulcer
Gastric and Duodenal Ulcer
ulcer disease
Ulcer disease
ulcer is a defect of gastric or duodenal mucosa which
interfere over lamina muscularis mucosae, submucosa or
penetrates across whole gastric or duodenal wall
rise of ulcer is conditioned by presence of acid gastric
content
frequent disease, men are afected 3-4x more than women
Pathogenesis:
multifactorial
dysbalance between protective and aggressive factors
- Protective f.: saliva, food, alcalic duodenal fluid, mucus -
mucine, fast regeneration of gastric epithelial cells, well
perfused gastric mucosa
- Aggressive f.: HCl, pepsin, bile acids (reflux), helicobacter
pylori, drugs (analgetics, aspirin, korticoids), nicotine,
alcohol
Classification:
Acute ulcer (ulcus acutum)
smooth non-elevated borders and smooth base
major bleeding into upper GIT
Chronic ulcer (ulcus chronicum)
rushed and elevated boders, inflammation with
hypertrophic and fibrotic proliferation is present
the most frequent form of ulcer disease
Ulcus chronicum mediogastricum
Ulcus chronicum ventriculi et duodeni
Ulcus chronicum praepyloricum
Ulcus chronicum duodeni
Symptoms of gastric ulcer disease:
epigastric pain after meal or during meal
upper dyspeptic syndrome loss of appetite, nauzea,
vomiting, flatulence
vomiting brings relief
reduced nutrition
loss of weight
Symptoms of duodenal ulcer disease:
epigastric pain 2 hours after meal or on a empty
stomach or during night
pyrosis
good nutrition
obstipation
seasonal dependence (spring, autumn)
Complications:
Bleeding - chronic (minor, cause anaemia)
- acute (major, form affected vessel)
Perforation - mostly bulbus duodeni, anterior gastric wall
- acute violent pain
- bleeding can be present
Penetration - of the ulcer deeply through whole wall into
neighbor organ (pancreas, liver)
Stenosis - narrow of the lumen caused by scar, oedema or
inflammatory infiltration after healing of the ulcer
- rise only at pyloric localization
- vomiting of huge volume of gastric content
Zeman, M. et al., Speciln chirurgie, ISBN 80-7262-260-9, 2004
A penetration B perforation
C bleeding D - stenosis
Therapy:
Conservative
regular lifestyle
prohibition of the smoking and alcohol
diet (proteins, milk and milky products)
pharmacology (antagonists of H2 receptors, antacids,
anticholinergics
Surgical
BI, BII resection
proximal selective vagotomy
vagotomy with pyloroplastic
suture of perforated or haemorrhagic ulcer
Stomach resections:
Billroth I (BI) gastro-duodenoanastomosis end-to-end
Billroth II (BII) gastro-jejunoanastomosis end-to-side
with blind closure of duodenum
Proximal selective vagotomy denervation of parietal
gastric cells
Zeman, M. et al., Speciln chirurgie, ISBN 80-7262-260-9, 2004
Billroth I
Billroth II
Zeman, M. et al., Speciln chirurgie, ISBN 80-7262-260-9, 2004
Zeman, M. et al., Speciln chirurgie, ISBN 80-7262-260-9, 2004
Gastro-enteroanastomosis on
Roux Y crankle
Zeman, M. et al., Speciln chirurgie, ISBN 80-7262-260-9, 2004
Vagotomy
Complications after stomach resection:
Early dehiscence, stenosis of anastomosis, bleeding,
pancreatitis, obstructive icterus, affection of neighbour
tissues
Late - days, weeks
- early dumping syndrome
- late dumping syndrome
- incoming crankle syndrome
- outcoming crankle syndrome
- ulcer in anastomosis or in outcoming crankle
Early dumping syndrome:
group of symptoms approved shortly after meal
appears after BII resection
vasomotoric sy. - face redness, fall of blood pressure,
dizziness
GI sy. - vomiting, diarrhoea
Th.: diet, no sugar, low quantities of food, change BII to
BI resection
Late dumping syndrome:
hypoglycaemia (sugar is not enough digested)
appears after BII resection
weakness, perspiration, dizziness, tremor cca 3h after
meal
Th.: no sugar, change BII to BI resection
Incoming crankle syndrome:
stasis of the content at incoming crankle increase
intraluminal pressure
appears after BII resection
Th.: diet, change BII to BI resection
Outcoming crankle syndrome:
chronic or acute closure of outcoming crankle
appears after BII resection
vomiting after meal, convulsive pain
Th.: change BII to BI resection
Haemorrhagic mediogastric ulcer
Chronic gastric ulcer
Pylorostenosis and gastrectasia
Duodenal ulcer
Stress ulcers
Benign stomach tumors
rise from all layers of stomach wall
often asymptomatic
Polypus, Leiomyoma, Lipoma, Fibroma, Neurofibroma,
Neurinoma, Hemangioma, Karcinoids, Lymfoma
Diagnostic: endoscopy, X ray
Therapy: local excision, stomach resection
Symptoms:
long-time asymptomatic
feeling of full stomach, odour from mouth, tiredness,
anaemia, occasional vomiting, loss of appetite, loss of
weight
Diagnosis:
gastrofibroscopy biopsy - histology
X-ray, USG, CT - metastasis
Wirchows nodule enlargement of left supraclavicular
nodule
Stomach cancer
Stomach cancer
Etiopathogenesis:
Praecancerosis: adenomatous polypus, chronic atrofic
gastritis, foveolar hyperplasia (Mntrier disease), stub
of the stomach after BII resection
Division:
Macroscopic: exofytic polypoid form, diskyform
ulcerous form, diffused infiltrating form
Histopathologic: adenocarcinoma, papilar, tubular,
gelatinous cancer, round cell cancer, flagstone cell
cancer, etc.
Therapy:
Currative total gastrectomy, sub-total gastrectomy
Paliative gastrostomy, jejunostomy
Stomach cancer
Zeman, M. et al., Speciln chirurgie, ISBN 80-7262-260-9, 2004
Gastric cancer
Gastric stub cancer after B II
resection
Schwanoma fundi vetriculi
Than you for your attention!!!