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Gastrointestinal System Study Guide

Acute pancreatitis, GI hemorrhage, hepatic failure, abdominal compartment syndrome, mesenteric ischemia, bowel obstruction/perforation, and drug-induced liver injury.

Contents

  1. GI Anatomy & Liver Function
  2. Acute Pancreatitis
  3. GI Hemorrhage
  4. Hepatic Failure
  5. Abdominal Compartment Syndrome
  6. Nutrition & Refeeding
  7. EN & TPN Contraindications
  8. Hepatic Failure Diagnostics
  9. Bowel Obstruction
  10. Bowel Perforation
  11. Gallbladder Disease
  12. Mesenteric Ischemia
  13. Abdominal Compartment Syndrome
  14. Acute Abdominal Trauma
  15. Drug-Induced Liver Injury (DILI)

GI Anatomy & Liver Function

GI Tract Overview

Liver Functions

Liver Function Tests

Pancreas Function

Acute Pancreatitis

Causes

Clinical Presentation

Diagnosis

Complications

Management

GI Hemorrhage

Upper GI Bleed (UGIB)

Lower GI Bleed (LGIB)

Initial Management

Variceal Bleeding

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Hepatic Failure

Acute vs Chronic

Clinical Manifestations

Hepatic Encephalopathy

Other Complications

Drugs Causing Acute Liver Failure

Abdominal Compartment Syndrome

Definition

Risk Factors

Organ Effects

Diagnosis & Treatment

Nutrition & Refeeding

Enteral vs Parenteral

Refeeding Syndrome

Refeeding Electrolyte Changes

Refeeding Complications

Prevention & Treatment

EN & TPN Contraindications

Enteral Nutrition (EN) Contraindications

Parenteral Nutrition (TPN) Contraindications

Why Enteral Preferred Over Parenteral

TPN Monitoring Requirements

Special Considerations

Hepatic Failure Diagnostics

Elevated Lab Values in Hepatic Failure

Decreased Lab Values in Hepatic Failure

Coagulation Impairment in Liver Failure

Clinical Implications for Critical Care

Bowel Obstruction

Understanding Bowel Obstruction

Small Bowel Obstruction (SBO)

Large Bowel Obstruction (LBO)

Diagnostic Approach

Management Principles

Bowel Perforation

Pathophysiology of Perforation

Common Causes

Clinical Presentation

Diagnostic Findings

Emergency Management

Gallbladder Disease

Gallbladder Anatomy & Function

Gallstone Formation (Cholelithiasis)

Biliary Colic vs Cholecystitis

Complications of Gallstones

Diagnosis & Treatment

Mesenteric Ischemia

Overview of Mesenteric Ischemia

Types of Acute Mesenteric Ischemia

Clinical Presentation

Diagnostic Evaluation

Management Approach

Abdominal Compartment Syndrome

Understanding Abdominal Compartment Syndrome

Risk Factors

Systemic Effects

Clinical Recognition

Diagnosis - Bladder Pressure Measurement

Management Strategy

Acute Abdominal Trauma

Mechanisms of Injury

Clinical Assessment

Diagnostic Evaluation

Management Approach

Drug-Induced Liver Injury (DILI)

Overview of Drug-Induced Hepatotoxicity

Common Hepatotoxic Medications

Other Hepatotoxic Substances

Clinical Patterns of DILI

Acetaminophen Toxicity

Management of Acetaminophen Toxicity

General DILI Management

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Here are 3 questions from our premium bank. The full rationale explains exactly why the right answer is right — and why the 3 distractors trap most test-takers.

Premium Practice Question

Platelets low, Fibrinogen low, PT/PTT high, D-Dimer high. What do these findings suggest?

  1. Thrombotic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (TTP)
  2. Disseminated Intravascular Coagulation (DIC)
  3. Idiopathic Thrombocytopenic Purpura (ITP)
  4. Heparin-Induced Thrombocytopenia (HIT)
Rationale: "Clotting and bleeding at the same time." Consumption of clotting factors leads to bleeding; fibrinolysis leads to high D-Dimer....
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Premium Practice Question

Grey Turner's (flank bruising) and Cullen's (umbilical bruising) signs indicate:

  1. Cholecystitis
  2. Hemorrhagic Pancreatitis
  3. Peptic Ulcer Disease
  4. Hepatitis
Rationale: Retroperitoneal bleeding. Major risk is hypocalcemia and ARDS....
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Premium Practice Question

Elevated Ammonia levels in liver failure cause what neurological change?

  1. Seizures
  2. Asterixis (Liver Flap) / Encephalopathy
  3. Headache
  4. Confusion with agitation
Rationale: Ammonia is neurotoxic. Treat with Lactulose to bind and excrete ammonia in stool....
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