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Gastrointestinal (GI) Perforation

GI perforation is a full-thickness defect in the GI tract, allowing gas / fluid / intestinal content to leak into the peritoneal cavity

Oesophageal Perforation

Aetiology

Important causes: [Ref]

  • Iatrogenic (e.g. upper GI endoscopic procedures, instrumentation, surgery) – most common
  • Boerhaave syndrome (spontaneous rupture following forceful vomiting / retching)
  • Malignancy
  • Trauma
  • Foreign body
    • Ingestion of button batteries in children is an important cause of oesophageal rupture that can develop if not treated promptly

Clinical Features

Typical presentation: [Ref]

  • Sudden onset of severe pain in the neck / chest / abdomen (depending on the site of perforation)
  • Dysphagia, odynophagia
  • Features of sepsis

 

Boerhaave syndrome can present with a triad (Mackler’s triad) of:

  • Vomiting and/or retching
  • Severe retrosternal chest pain (often radiates to the back)
  • Subcutaneous / mediastinal emphysema (palpable crepitus in the neck region or crackling sound on chest auscultation)

 

Notably, perforations rarely manifest with signs of GI bleeding (e.g. haematemesis, melena) [Ref]

Investigation and Diagnosis

1st line: CT with oral contrast [Ref]

 

2nd line tests: [Ref]

  • Contrast esophagography  (e.g. Gastrograffin)
  • Plain chest and neck radiographs – to detect subcutaneous emphysema and pneumomediastinum

Management

Initial management: [Ref1][Ref2]

  • Ensure the airway is not compromised
  • Make the patient NBM
  • Fluid resuscitation
  • Broad-spectrum IV antibiotics
  • Gastric decompression (via NG tube)

 

Definitive management: [Ref1][Ref2]

  • 1st line is generally endoscopic intervention (techniques include clips, metal stents, vacuum therapy)
  • Surgical intervention is necessary for unstable patients / large perforation / uncontained perforation

Bowel Perforation

Aetiology

Main causes in adults, by anatomical site: [Ref]

Anatomical site Causes
Small intestine
  • Duodenal peptic ulcer disease
  • Bowel obstruction (→ ischaemia and necrosis)
  • Mesenteric ischaemia
Large intestine
  • Diverticulitis
  • Appendicitis
  • Bowel obstruction
  • Malignancy
  • Ischaemic colitis
  • Ulcerative colitis (causes toxic megacolon)
  • Iatrogenic injury (e.g. colonoscopy, surgery)

In premature infants, necrotising enterocolitis is the leading cause [Ref]

 

In children: [Ref]

  • Appendicitis is the leading cause
  • Other important causes include foreign body ingestion & Meckel diverticulum

 

Iatrogenic causes:

  • Endoscopic procedures (while the risk is very low, it remains a serious complication, it is routinely communicated to patients while gaining consent)
  • Radiological interventions
  • Surgical intervention
  • Feeding tube / catheter insertion

Clinical Features

This article does not cover the cause-specific clinical features of bowel perforation (covered in articles of their own); instead, it outlines the common clinical presentation shared across all types of bowel perforation

The typical disease progression of bowel perforation is as following: [Ref]

  1. Early localised peritonitis
    • Sharp, localised abdominal pain near the site of perforation
    • Localised tenderness and guarding
  2. Generalised peritonitis (bowel content and bacterial spread throughout the peritoneal cavity)
    • Severe, diffuse abdominal pain
    • Widespread guarding and abdominal rigidity
    • Rebound tenderness
    • Percussion tenderness
    • Patients tends to lie very still (as any movement irritates the peritoneum and causes more pain)
    • Patients are often very systemically unwell
  3. Sepsis and shock

Bowel perforation is a potentially life-threatening surgical emergency. This is because the bowel is NOT sterile; intestinal content contains a vast number of bacteria and other microorganisms. When perforation occurs, these bacteria gain direct access to the highly vascularised peritoneal cavity, leading to rapid and severe infection.

Investigation and Diagnosis

Pneumoperitoneum (free intraperitoneal air) is the diagnostic hallmark of bowel perforation.

 

1st line: CT with contrast [Ref1][Ref2]

  • Confirmatory test for perforation (very high sensitivity) PLUS allows for assessment of complications & surgical planning
  • Typical findings: extraluminal gasextravasation of contrast, discontinuity of bowel wall

 

Alternative investigations (only if the patient is unstable or CT is not readily available): [Ref1][Ref2]

  • Erect chest X-ray showing:
    • free air under the diaphragm (most commonly seen as a radiolucent crescent between the diaphragm and the liver on the right side)
  • Abdominal X-ray showing:
    • Rigler’s sign (double wall sign) – visualisation of both sides of the bowel wall
    • Falciform ligament sign – air outlining the falciform ligament
    • Football sign – a large oval collection of free air outlining the peritoneal cavity (most often seen in infants)

Colonoscopy is contraindicated if bowel perforation is suspected. Instrumentation of the bowel may worsen a perforation.

Management

Initial management: [Ref1][Ref2]

  • Make patient NBM
  • Sepsis 6 (importantly fluid resuscitation and broad-spectrum antibiotics)
  • Analgesia and antiemetics
  • Urgent surgical consultation

 

Patients with diffuse peritonitis / sepsis would generally require urgent explorative laparotomy with midline incision (or laparoscopically in stable patients) [Ref1][Ref2]

 

An explorative laparotomy typically involves: [Ref1][Ref2]

  • Identification of the perforation site + assessment of bowel viability
  • Peritoneal lavage to clear contamination
  • If the perforation is small + adjacent bowel is viable → primary closure (usually via direct suturing)
  • If the perforation is large / adjacent bowel is non-viable → resection of the affected bowel segment
    • Stable patients → resection + primary anastomosis
    • Unstable patients / severe contamination → resection + defunctioning stoma (e.g. end ileostomy or Hartmann’s procedure) (click to see rationale)

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