Small bowel obstruction: Difference between revisions

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==Background==
==Background==
*Small bowel obstruction without history of surgery or hernia is malignancy until proven otherwise
*Mechanical obstruction of the small intestine preventing normal passage of intestinal contents
*"Never let the sun rise or set on a small bowel obstruction"
*Adhesions from prior surgery are the most common cause (60-75% of all SBO)
*Second most common cause: incarcerated [[hernia]] (~15%)
*Other causes: malignancy, [[Crohn's disease]], [[intussusception]], volvulus, gallstone ileus, foreign body, stricture
*Closed-loop obstruction: segment of bowel obstructed at two points → rapid progression to strangulation and ischemia
*SBO accounts for ~15% of ED visits for acute abdominal pain
*Mortality: <5% for simple SBO; up to 25% for strangulated SBO


===Causes===
===Classification===
*Adhesions (history of previous abdominal surgeries +LR 3.86 and -LR 0.19)
*Partial: some gas/fluid passes through → flatus may be present
*Hernia
*Complete: no passage of gas or stool
**Port hernias can occur after laparoscopic surgery
*Simple: obstruction without vascular compromise
*Malignancy
*Strangulated: obstruction with compromised blood supply → ischemia → necrosis → perforation
*Intraluminal strictures
**Crohn's disease
**Radiation therapy
**Mesenteric ischemia
*Intussusception (due to lymphoma as lead point)
*Foreign body (bezoars)
*Trauma (duodenal hematoma)
*Gallstone ileus
*Small bowel volvulus (3-6% of causes of SBO)<ref>Roline CE and Reardon RF.  Disorders of the Small Intestine.  Rosen's.  Edition 8.  Chapter 92.  2014.  1216-1224.</ref>


==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==
*Abdominal pain
*Crampy, intermittent abdominal pain (colicky; occurs in waves)
**Colicky
*Nausea and vomiting (the more proximal the obstruction, the earlier and more prominent the vomiting)
**Periumbilical or diffuse
*Obstipation (absence of flatus and stool) — complete obstruction
**Paroxysms of pain occur q5min
*Abdominal distension (more prominent with distal obstruction)
*Vomiting
*High-pitched, hyperactive bowel sounds → late: absent bowel sounds (ileus from ischemia)
**More common in proximal than distal obstruction
*Prior surgical history — ask about ALL prior abdominal/pelvic operations
**Bilious (proximal) or feculent (distal ileal)
*Tachycardia, dehydration from third-spacing and vomiting
***Abdominal pain relieved with vomiting positively predictive +LR (4.50-2.82) -LR (0.78-0.35)
 
*Abdominal distention
===Signs of Strangulation (Surgical Emergency)===
**Seen more in distal than proximal obstruction
*Constant, severe pain (no longer colicky)
**+LR (16.8-5.64) -LR (0.43-0.34)
*Fever
*Inability to pass flatus
*Peritoneal signs (rebound, guarding)
**May pass flatus/stool initially
*Tachycardia, hypotension
***Takes 12-24hrs for colon to empty
*Leukocytosis with left shift
***History of constipation +LR 8.8 and -LR 0.59
*Elevated lactate
*Dehydration
*No single clinical or lab finding reliably rules out strangulation
*Anorexia
*Ischemia (increased intraluminal pressure initially leads to venous obstruction, progresses to frank arterial ischemia)
**Fever
**Leukocytosis
*Abnormal Bowel sounds
**Studies suggest that auscultating bowel sounds is not clinically useful to differentiate between normal and pathologic<ref>Felder S, Margel D, Murrell Z, et al. Usefulness of Bowel Sound Auscultation: A Prospective Evaluation. J Surg. 2014; 71(5):768–773.</ref>


==Differential Diagnosis==
==Differential Diagnosis==
{{Abdominal Pain DDX Diffuse}}
*[[Large bowel obstruction]]
*Paralytic [[ileus]] (postoperative, metabolic, medication-related)
*[[Mesenteric ischemia]]
*[[Volvulus]]
*[[Incarcerated hernia]]
*[[Appendicitis]]
*[[Pancreatitis]]
*Pseudo-obstruction (Ogilvie syndrome — large bowel)
*[[Crohn's disease]] flare
 
{{Abdominal pain DDX}}


==Evaluation==
==Evaluation==
===Labs===
===Labs===
[[File:Peds_SBO.JPG|thumb|Peds SBO]]
*BMP: electrolytes (hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis from vomiting), BUN/Cr (dehydration), bicarbonate
*CBC
*CBC: leukocytosis (consider strangulation if WBC >15,000)
**WBC >20K suggests bowel gangrene, abscess, or peritonitis
*Lactate: elevated suggests bowel ischemia (but normal lactate does NOT exclude strangulation)
**WBC >40K suggests mesenteric vascular occlusion
*Lipase: rule out [[pancreatitis]]
*Chemistry - degree of dehydration, evidence of ischemia (acidosis)
*Type and screen if surgery likely
*Lactate - sensitive (90-100%), though not specific marker of strangulation


===Imaging===
===Imaging===
*'''Xray'''
====Abdominal X-ray====
**[[Acute Abdominal Series]]
*Sensitivity ~60-70% for SBO
**Upright chest film: rule out free air
*Findings: dilated small bowel loops (> 3 cm), air-fluid levels on upright, absence of colonic gas
**Upright abdominal film: air-fluid levels:
*Three film series (supine, upright, CXR): may show free air if perforated
**Supine abdominal film: width of bowel loops most visible (estimate of amount of distention)
*Normal X-ray does NOT exclude SBO
**String of pearls sign (small pockets of gas along the small bowel that are trapped between the valvulae conniventes) is virtually diagnostic<ref>Maglinte DDT, Reyes BL, Harmon BH, et al. Reliability and role of plain film radiography and CT in the diagnosis of small-bowel obstruction. AJR 1996; 167:1451-1455</ref>
 
**Small bowel diameter ≥3cm is associated with obstruction
====CT Abdomen/Pelvis with IV Contrast (Test of Choice)====
***Sen 75% Spec 66% +LR 1.6 -LR 0.43
*Sensitivity 90-95% for SBO
***Air in colon or rectum makes complete obstruction less likely (esp if symptoms >24hr)
*Identifies:
***If patient does not tolerate upright position left lateral decub abdominal film can substitute
**Transition point (dilated proximal → decompressed distal bowel)
*'''CT A/P with IV contrast'''[[File:SBO.gif|thumbnail|Ultrasound shows dilated loops of bowel steep precipice and tumbling feces<ref>http://www.thepocusatlas.com/bowel/</ref>]]
**Cause of obstruction (adhesion, hernia, mass, volvulus)
[[File:SBO_Cai_Maurelus.gif|thumbnail|Ultrasound shows dilated, non-compressible loops of bowel with characteristic to-and-fro motion of bowel contents<ref>http://www.thepocusatlas.com/bowel/</ref>]]
**Signs of strangulation: bowel wall thickening, mesenteric haziness/fluid, decreased/absent bowel wall enhancement, pneumatosis intestinalis, portal venous gas
**Consider if plain films are non-diagnostic
*Oral contrast NOT needed (pooled intraluminal fluid serves as natural contrast)
**Can show closed-loop obstruction, evidence of ischemia
*Small bowel feces sign: particulate material in dilated SB (distal/complete obstruction)
**Per American College of Radiology PO contrast is no longer indicated
***Modern CT Scanner (0.75mm slices): Sen 96%, Spec 100%, +LR infinity -LR 0.04
***Historical CT scanner meta-analysis: Sen 87%  Spec 81%,  +LR 3.6  -LR 0.18
*[[Ultrasound: Abdomen|Ultrasound for SBO]]
**Sen 97%, Spec 90%, +LR 9.5, -LR 0.04 (four studies, 2 done by EM residents and 2 by radiology residents)
*'''MRI for SBO''' - Sen 92%, Spec 89% +LR 6.7 -LR 0.11


==Management==
==Management==
===Volume Resuscitation===
===Initial Resuscitation===
*IV fluid resuscitation with [[electrolyte repletion]]
*NPO
*Assessment of need for operative vs nonoperative management
*Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation (NS or LR) — patients are often significantly volume depleted
 
*Electrolyte correction (K, Mg replacement)
===Nonoperative Management===
*NG tube decompression: for persistent vomiting, significant distension
*Sometimes successful in patients with partial SBO (must rule-out strangulation first)
*Pain control: IV opioids as needed; ketorolac
*If increasing pain, distention, or peristent high NGT output, consider surgery
*Antiemetics: ondansetron 4 mg IV
 
====NG tube====
*14 French
**Intermittent low wall suction
*Nasogastric fluid losses can be replaced with NS + KCL (30-40 meq)
 
====Contrast====
*Both diagnostic and therapeutic (draws water into the bowel stimulating peristalsis)
*Associated with decreased hospital stay, more rapid resolution of symptoms
*Repeat CT scan may be helpful to detect early signs of bowel ischemia
**Repeat plain films are not helpful (only detect perforation)
 
====Gastrografin PO====
*Alternative to operative management if early obstructive process
*Gastrografin through NG or OG decreases bowel wall edema and increases bowel motility<ref>Assalia A, Schein M, Kopelman D, et al. Therapeutic effect of oral Gastrografin in adhesive, partial small-bowel obstruction: A prospective randomized trial. Surgery 1994; 115: 433-437.</ref>
**Diagnostic and therapeutic<ref>Chen SC, Lin FY, Lee PH, et al. Water-soluble contrast study predicts the need for early surgery in adhesive small bowel obstruction. Br J Surg 1998; 85: 1692-1694.</ref>
**100 cc of gastrografin through NG tube
**Transit may be observed through serial radiographs
***Contrast within the large bowel within 24 hrs suggest partial SBO
***Contrast failing to reach large bowel within 24-48 hrs suggests complete obstruction, requiring laparotomy
**Therapeutic, may reduce necessary operative rate by ~75%<ref>Choi HK et al. Therapeutic Value of Gastrografin in Adhesive Small Bowel Obstruction After Unsuccessful Conservative Treatment: A Prospective Randomized Trial. Annals of Surgery. 2002;236(1).</ref>
*Avoid barium as it becomes inspissated in bowel, causing complete obstruction<ref>Choi HK et al. Therapeutic Value of Gastrografin in Adhesive Small Bowel Obstruction After Unsuccessful Conservative Treatment: A Prospective Randomized Trial. Annals of Surgery. 2002;236(1).</ref>
**If perforation occurs with barium, leakage can be lethal
**Gastrografin is water-soluble and relatively safer if perforation occurs
**Be aware that anaphylactoid reactions and serious aspirations have occurred rarely with Gastrografin, however<ref>Skucas J. Anaphylactoid reactions with gastrointestinal contrast media. AJR Am J Roentgenol 1997; 168: 962-964.</ref>


===Operative Management===
===Nonoperative Management (Adhesive SBO without Strangulation)===
*25% of patients admitted for SBO require surgery. Surgery is indicated for patients withh:
*Trial of nonoperative management for partial, adhesive SBO without signs of strangulation
*Complete SBO
*NG decompression + IV fluids + bowel rest
*Closed-loop obstruction (incarcerated hernia, small bowel volvulus)
*Water-soluble contrast challenge (Gastrografin):
*[[Fever]], leukocytosis, peritonitis
**100 mL PO/via NGT
**If contrast reaches colon by 24 hours → predicts resolution with nonoperative management (sensitivity ~97%)<ref>Abbas S, et al. Water-soluble contrast in management of adhesive small bowel obstruction. ''Cochrane Database Syst Rev''. 2007;(3):CD005598. PMID 17636810</ref>
**May also have therapeutic effect (osmotic — draws fluid into lumen, stimulates peristalsis)
*~70-80% of adhesive SBO resolves with conservative management
*Failure of nonoperative trial: no improvement in 24-72 hours → surgery


===[[Antibiotics]]===
===Surgical Management===
*Not typically indicated, unless evidence of concurrent ischemia or infection
*Indications for emergent surgery:
*See [[Peritonitis#Management|peritonitis antibiotics]]
**Complete obstruction
**Signs of strangulation/peritonitis
**Incarcerated/strangulated hernia
**Closed-loop obstruction on CT
**Hemodynamic instability not responding to resuscitation
**Failure of nonoperative management
*Surgical consult early for all cases (even if initially managed conservatively)


==Disposition==
==Disposition==
*Admit
*Admit all patients with SBO
 
*Surgical consultation in ED for all patients
==Prognosis==
*ICU if septic, hemodynamically unstable, or peritonitic
*In the context of advancing malignancy with widespread peritoneal metastases, bowel obstruction is common and often indicates a poor prognosis
*Serial abdominal exams every 4-8 hours
*A less interventional and more comfort based approach to treatment may be appropriate
*Repeat imaging if clinical deterioration
*See [[Malignant bowel obstruction]] for details


==See Also==
==See Also==
*[[Malignant bowel obstruction]]
*[[Large bowel obstruction]]
*[[Small Bowel Obstruction (SBO)]]
*[[Ileus]]
*[[Volvulus (Adults)]]
*[[Volvulus]]
*[[Volvulus (Peds)]]
*[[Incarcerated hernia]]
*[[Mesenteric ischemia]]
*[[Abdominal pain]]


==References==
==References==
<references/>
<references/>
*Maung AA, et al. Evaluation and management of small-bowel obstruction: an Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma practice management guideline. ''J Trauma Acute Care Surg''. 2012;73(5 Suppl 4):S362-369. PMID 23114494
*Defined by ten Broek RP, et al. Bologna guidelines for diagnosis and management of adhesive small bowel obstruction. ''World J Emerg Surg''. 2018;13:24. PMID 29946347
*Taylor MR, Lalani N. Adult small bowel obstruction. ''Acad Emerg Med''. 2013;20(6):528-544. PMID 23758299


[[Category:GI]]  
[[Category:GI]]
[[Category:Surgery]]
[[Category:Surgery]]

Latest revision as of 09:30, 22 March 2026

Background

  • Mechanical obstruction of the small intestine preventing normal passage of intestinal contents
  • Adhesions from prior surgery are the most common cause (60-75% of all SBO)
  • Second most common cause: incarcerated hernia (~15%)
  • Other causes: malignancy, Crohn's disease, intussusception, volvulus, gallstone ileus, foreign body, stricture
  • Closed-loop obstruction: segment of bowel obstructed at two points → rapid progression to strangulation and ischemia
  • SBO accounts for ~15% of ED visits for acute abdominal pain
  • Mortality: <5% for simple SBO; up to 25% for strangulated SBO

Classification

  • Partial: some gas/fluid passes through → flatus may be present
  • Complete: no passage of gas or stool
  • Simple: obstruction without vascular compromise
  • Strangulated: obstruction with compromised blood supply → ischemia → necrosis → perforation

Clinical Features

  • Crampy, intermittent abdominal pain (colicky; occurs in waves)
  • Nausea and vomiting (the more proximal the obstruction, the earlier and more prominent the vomiting)
  • Obstipation (absence of flatus and stool) — complete obstruction
  • Abdominal distension (more prominent with distal obstruction)
  • High-pitched, hyperactive bowel sounds → late: absent bowel sounds (ileus from ischemia)
  • Prior surgical history — ask about ALL prior abdominal/pelvic operations
  • Tachycardia, dehydration from third-spacing and vomiting

Signs of Strangulation (Surgical Emergency)

  • Constant, severe pain (no longer colicky)
  • Fever
  • Peritoneal signs (rebound, guarding)
  • Tachycardia, hypotension
  • Leukocytosis with left shift
  • Elevated lactate
  • No single clinical or lab finding reliably rules out strangulation

Differential Diagnosis

Template:Abdominal pain DDX

Evaluation

Labs

  • BMP: electrolytes (hypokalemia, metabolic alkalosis from vomiting), BUN/Cr (dehydration), bicarbonate
  • CBC: leukocytosis (consider strangulation if WBC >15,000)
  • Lactate: elevated suggests bowel ischemia (but normal lactate does NOT exclude strangulation)
  • Lipase: rule out pancreatitis
  • Type and screen if surgery likely

Imaging

Abdominal X-ray

  • Sensitivity ~60-70% for SBO
  • Findings: dilated small bowel loops (> 3 cm), air-fluid levels on upright, absence of colonic gas
  • Three film series (supine, upright, CXR): may show free air if perforated
  • Normal X-ray does NOT exclude SBO

CT Abdomen/Pelvis with IV Contrast (Test of Choice)

  • Sensitivity 90-95% for SBO
  • Identifies:
    • Transition point (dilated proximal → decompressed distal bowel)
    • Cause of obstruction (adhesion, hernia, mass, volvulus)
    • Signs of strangulation: bowel wall thickening, mesenteric haziness/fluid, decreased/absent bowel wall enhancement, pneumatosis intestinalis, portal venous gas
  • Oral contrast NOT needed (pooled intraluminal fluid serves as natural contrast)
  • Small bowel feces sign: particulate material in dilated SB (distal/complete obstruction)

Management

Initial Resuscitation

  • NPO
  • Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation (NS or LR) — patients are often significantly volume depleted
  • Electrolyte correction (K, Mg replacement)
  • NG tube decompression: for persistent vomiting, significant distension
  • Pain control: IV opioids as needed; ketorolac
  • Antiemetics: ondansetron 4 mg IV

Nonoperative Management (Adhesive SBO without Strangulation)

  • Trial of nonoperative management for partial, adhesive SBO without signs of strangulation
  • NG decompression + IV fluids + bowel rest
  • Water-soluble contrast challenge (Gastrografin):
    • 100 mL PO/via NGT
    • If contrast reaches colon by 24 hours → predicts resolution with nonoperative management (sensitivity ~97%)[1]
    • May also have therapeutic effect (osmotic — draws fluid into lumen, stimulates peristalsis)
  • ~70-80% of adhesive SBO resolves with conservative management
  • Failure of nonoperative trial: no improvement in 24-72 hours → surgery

Surgical Management

  • Indications for emergent surgery:
    • Complete obstruction
    • Signs of strangulation/peritonitis
    • Incarcerated/strangulated hernia
    • Closed-loop obstruction on CT
    • Hemodynamic instability not responding to resuscitation
    • Failure of nonoperative management
  • Surgical consult early for all cases (even if initially managed conservatively)

Disposition

  • Admit all patients with SBO
  • Surgical consultation in ED for all patients
  • ICU if septic, hemodynamically unstable, or peritonitic
  • Serial abdominal exams every 4-8 hours
  • Repeat imaging if clinical deterioration

See Also

References

  1. Abbas S, et al. Water-soluble contrast in management of adhesive small bowel obstruction. Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2007;(3):CD005598. PMID 17636810
  • Maung AA, et al. Evaluation and management of small-bowel obstruction: an Eastern Association for the Surgery of Trauma practice management guideline. J Trauma Acute Care Surg. 2012;73(5 Suppl 4):S362-369. PMID 23114494
  • Defined by ten Broek RP, et al. Bologna guidelines for diagnosis and management of adhesive small bowel obstruction. World J Emerg Surg. 2018;13:24. PMID 29946347
  • Taylor MR, Lalani N. Adult small bowel obstruction. Acad Emerg Med. 2013;20(6):528-544. PMID 23758299