Typhoid11

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TYPHOID Surgical Complicatio ns *DR. MANSOOR KHAN 28 th Oct, 2009 * Resident Surgical “C”, KTH, Peshawar

Transcript of Typhoid11

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TYPHOIDSurgicalComplications

*DR. MANSOOR KHAN

28th Oct, 2009

* Resident Surgical “C”, KTH, Peshawar

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TYPHOID

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Salmonella a formidable

killer!

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“Potentially fatal, multi-systemic illness caused primarily by

Salmonella typhi and paratyphi”

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Typhoid---ancient Greek Typhos, smoke or cloud that was believed to

cause disease or madness

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S. typhi, a major human pathogen for thousands of years, thriving in conditions of poor sanitation, crowding, and social chaos

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430–426 B.C.

Killed 1/3 of the population of Athens, including their leader

Pericles. The power shifted from Athens to Sparta. 2006 study

detected DNA sequences similar salmonella

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Antonius MusaA Roman physician who achieved

fame by treating the emperor Augustus with cold baths when he contracted typhoid

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Thomas Willis (1621-1675)

The first description of epidemic Typhoid in 1659

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Carl Joseph Eberth (1835-1926)

Discoverer of the typhoid bacillus in 1880

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Georges Fernand Isidor Widal (1862-1929)

Demonstrated specific agglutinins in the blood of Typhoid patient in 1896----

“The Widal Reaction”

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History of typhoid epidemics

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DISTRIBUTION

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Infects roughly 21.6 million people each

year

* International Estimate

Ramsden AE, Mota LJ, Münter S, Shorte SL, Holden DW. The SPI-2 type III secretion system restricts motility of Salmonella-containing vacuoles. Cell

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Kills 200,000 people each year

* International Estimate

Ramsden AE, Mota LJ, Münter S, Shorte SL, Holden DW. The SPI-2 type III secretion system restricts motility of Salmonella-containing vacuoles. Cell

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62% of these occurring in Asia and 35% in

Africa

* International Estimate

* Taylor TE, Strickland GT. Malaria. In: Strickland GT, ed. Hunter’s Tropical Medicine and Emerging Infectious Diseases. 8th ed. Philadelphia: WB Saunders, 2000:614-43.

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Highest in Pakistan & India in Asian countries

(451.7 per 100,000)

* WHO Estimate

* Bull World Health Organ vol.86 no.4 Genebra Apr. 2008

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Best prevention Scrub of them off your handsBest prevention Scrub them off your hands

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Bacteria are better scientists than we are

War of survival—they are

working out very hard

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RISK FACTORS

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S. typhi are able to survive a stomach pH as low as 1.5.

Antacids, (H2 blockers), PPI’s, gastrectomy, facilitate

S typhi infection

TYPHOID FEVER RISK FACTORS

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Contaminated food,House hold with Cases,

Inadequate hand washing, , drinking unpurified water, and living without a toilet

TYPHOID FEVER RISK FACTORS

Environmental/behavioral risk factors

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PRESENTATION

Incubation period

is 7-14 days

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FIRST WEEK TEMPERATURE PATTERN

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Diffuse abdominal pain, Inflamed Peyer patches narrow the

lumen--Constipation. Dry cough, dull frontal

headache, delirium, increasingly Stupor &

malaise

FIRST WEEK OTHER SYMPTOMS

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Rose spots, blanching, truncal,

maculopapules usually 1-4 cm wide, < 5 in

number; these generally resolve within 2-5 days

(bacterial emboli to the dermis)

FIRST WEEK OTHER SYMPTOMS

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Distended abdomen, Soft splenomegaly, Relative bradycardia & dicrotic pulse

(double beat, the second beat weaker than the first)

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Patient may descend into the typhoid state---apathy,

confusion, and even psychosis

THIRD WEEK TYPHOID STATE

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Necrotic Peyer patches, bowel perforation,

Peritonitis, intestinal hemorrhage

may cause death

THIRD WEEK Week of complications

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Fever, mental state, and abdominal distension slowly

improve over a few days, complications may still occur

in surviving untreated individuals

FOURTH WEEK WEEK OF CONVALESCENCE

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COMPLICATIONS

Immunity, antacids, vaccination,

previous exposure, virulence,

inoculum, choice of antibiotics

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Bilateral Salmonella typhi breast abscess

unmarried 35-year-old female without any predisposing conditions

Singh S, Pandya Y, Rathod J, Trivedi S. Bilateral breast abscess: A rare complication of enteric fever. Indian J Med Microbiol [serial online] 2009 [cited 2009 Oct 16];27:69-70. Available from: http://www.ijmm.org/text.asp?2009/27/1/69/45176

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MAJOR SURGICAL COMPLICATIONS

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Morbidity 55.4%mortality 28.5 %

INTESTINAL PERFORATIONS

5% of people with typhoid fever experience this complication

DS00538 April 10, 2008© 1998-2009 Mayo Foundation for Medical Education and Research (MFMER).

Typhoid enteric perforation, Dr Y. Akgun *, B. Bac, S. Boylu, N. Aban, I. Tacyildiz, British Journal of Surgery Volume 82 Issue 11, Pages 1512 - 1515Published Online: 8 Dec 2005

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Ileum especially distal ileum, jejunum usually does not perforate in typhoid,usually happens in the third week

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MECHANISM OF INTESTINAL PERFORATION

Intestinal peyer’s patches

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2 or 3 weeks hx of disease, with suddenly worsening

of pain & general conditions,

Tenderness starts in his right lower quadrant, spreads and eventually becomes generalized, Guarding ,

(seldom the board-like rigidity)

Erect film, shows gas Under diaphragm (50% positive)lateral decubitus film, shows gas

under his abdominal wall

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The bradycardia and leucopenia of typhoid may occasionally mask the tachycardia and leucocytosis

of peritonitis

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If peritonitis seems to be localized, signs confined to only part abdomen, general

condition is good, patient not deteriorating, consider non-operative

treatment.

CONSERVATIVE SURGICALVS

If signs of generalized peritonitis, do a laparotomy

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“Suck and drip”

Resuscitation, antibiotics, pass a NG-tube, Monitor abdominal tenderness, pulse,

temperature, white blood count.

If any of these rise, suspect that peritonitis is extending, so take an erect

X-ray film of his abdomen

CONSERVATIVE MANAGEMENT

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MDR-area

MDR+NAR-area

MEDICATION TREATMENT WHO RECOMMENDATIONS

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Do not forget to cover anaerobes and gram negative bacteria along

with salmonella

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Operate as early as possible,

Do as much as necessory & as little as possible

SURGICAL MANAGEMENT

PREPARATIONAdequately resuscitate,

Maintain good urine output, passnasogastric tube down,

Start chemotherapy.

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*Agbakwuru EA, Adesunkanmi AR, Fadiora SO, Olayinka OS, Aderonmu AO, Ogundoyin OO et alA review of typhoid perforation in a rural African hospital. West African Journal of Medicine 2003; 22(1):22-25. (13 kb) Abstract only

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CLOSE THE ABDOMEN

Completely

Without drains

Drains are counter productive

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POSTOPERATIVELY

Fever usually subsides in 4 or 5 days

Nourish patient as early as possible

ICU care and monitoring

Continue chemotherapy 14days

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John Hunter

(1728-1793)

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INTESTINAL HEMORRHAGE

Occurs in 10-20

per cent of the cases

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Intestinal bleeding is often marked by a sudden drop in blood

pressure and shock, followed by the appearance of blood in stoolH

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replace the blood loses. Bleeding usually stops

spontaneously

Only operate if bleeding is persistent, or alarmingly

INTESTINAL HEMORRHAGE

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Surgery Intestinal Hemorrhage

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TYPHOID CHOLECYSTITIS

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Occurs in 1-2% of cases

*According to Indian study 8%

More common in children

Antibiotic resistance & virulence of bacteria

*M.L. Kulkarni, SJ. Rego, Department of Pediatrics, J.J.M. Medical College, Davangere 577 004.

Acute Acalculous CholecystitisTYPHOID

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Acute Acalculous CholecystitisTYPHOID

*Thickened gall bladder wall, sonographic Murphy's sign,

pericholicystic collection in the absence of gall stones

*Subha Rao SD, LewinS, Shetty B, et al. Acute acalculous cholecystitis in typhoid fever. Indian Pediatr 1992, 29: 1431-1435.

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Acute Acalculous CholecystitisTYPHOID

Unlike other AACs, antibiotic therapy is the

recommended treatment for Typhoid AAC

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Chronic Cholecystitis (Carriers)TYPHOID

Excretes bacteria in stools

for more > 1 year1-4% of

non-treated infected patients

become chronic carriers

Patients with cholelithiasis, biliary anomalies, females,

Salmonella can be cultured

from stools, duodenal

aspirate, gall stones

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Mary Mallon (September 23, 1869 – November 11, 1938)

Forcibly quarantined twice, she infected 47 people,

three of whom died. She died in quarantine.

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Chronic CholecystitisTYPHOID

Biliary anomalies, stones--requires

cholecystectomy + antibiotics

4-6 weeks antibiotic treatment

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Typhoid Enteric Perforation: Prognostic Factors an Experience with 76 PatientsJ Ayub Med Coll AbottabadJan - Mar 2000;12(1):49-52.Department of Surgery, Khyber Teaching hospital, Peshawar

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Arkadiy Stavrovskiy, Typhoid. 1932Oil on canvas

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OIL ON CANVAS

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Ty21a—Oral live attenuated vaccine

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Vi-CPS— parenteral vaccine

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Good food handling & water sewage treatment can eliminate typhoid

Prompt anntibiotic

therapy can save many

lives—take it a serious job

Severe vomiting,

diarrhoea & abdominal

distension--- complicated,

admit them & give IV

antibiotics and support

Prognosis of complications

depends on the time-lapse

b/w onset & treatment

take home messagekiller

salmonellaformidable

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