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MEDSURG | Lower GI Primer

MEDSURG | Lower GI Primer

Season 2 Published 4 months ago
Description

🔥 Med-Surg Crash Review: Lower GI Problems

1️⃣ Acute Infectious Diarrhea

Main cause: Infectious agents (bacteria/viruses/parasites), often from contaminated food/water 🌎🍲. Big danger: Severe dehydration + electrolyte loss → hypovolemia & metabolic acidosis. C. diff = HIGH priority (hospital-acquired, spore-forming).

Nursing Must-Knows

  • Assess: I&O, electrolytes, H&H, skin turgor, VS, stool frequency.
  • Intervene: IV fluids (NS/LR), oral electrolytes (Pedialyte).
  • Infection control: Soap + water only, contact precautions, bleach cleaning.
  • Avoid antidiarrheals ❌ (except certain traveler’s diarrhea). Red Flags: Sunken eyes, hypotension, tachycardia.

2️⃣ Acute Abdominal Pain & Peritonitis

Often caused by inflammation, perforation, obstruction, or bleeding. Peritonitis = life-threatening!

Priority Signs 🚨

  • Shock: Low BP, tachycardia, cool skin, ↓ urine.
  • Peritonitis: Board-like rigidity, rebound tenderness, fever.

Nursing Actions

  • ABCs + high-flow O₂
  • Two large-bore IVs + rapid fluids
  • NPO
  • Pain control after MD eval
  • Prepare for imaging or surgery

Quick Cue: Don’t apply heat to the abdomen (may worsen inflammation).

3️⃣ Inflammatory Bowel Disease (UC & Crohn’s)

Chronic, autoimmune, inflammatory flares.

UC vs Crohn’s 🔍

  • UC: Continuous colon inflammation → bleeding risk + toxic megacolon
  • Crohn’s: “Skip lesions,” transmural → fistulas, strictures, malabsorption

Medications

  • 5-ASAs: reduce inflammation (best for UC)
  • Steroids: for flares only
  • Immunomodulators/Biologics: maintain remission; test for TB/Hep B/C first

Nursing Focus

  • Monitor stool, H&H, electrolytes
  • NPO + IV fluids during severe flares
  • Skin care for diarrhea
  • Diet: high-calorie, high-protein, low-residue
  • B12 deficiency common in Crohn’s

Emergency: Toxic megacolon → fever, tachycardia, abdominal distention.

4️⃣ Bowel Obstruction (SBO & LBO)

Contents can’t pass → fluid backs up → massive fluid loss → hypovolemic shock

Mechanical vs Paralytic Ileus

  • Mechanical: adhesions, tumors, hernias
  • Non-mechanical: post-op, inflammation, meds (opioids)

Priority Signs

  • Strangulation: sudden severe pain, fever, rigidity
  • SBO: rapid vomiting (bile/projectile) → metabolic alkalosis
  • LBO: distention, constipation → metabolic acidosis

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