Systematic Abdominal Examination
Always follow the sequence: Inspect → Auscultate → Percuss → Palpate (auscultation before percussion/palpation avoids altering bowel sounds).
Inspection
- Distension: generalised (ascites, obstruction, ileus) or localised (hernia, mass); ask patient to cough to reveal hernias
- Visible peristalsis: suggests bowel obstruction or pyloric stenosis; rippling movement from left to right
- Scars & stomas: note location — midline laparotomy, RIF (appendectomy/ileostomy), LIF (colostomy), RUQ (cholecystectomy)
- Hernias: umbilical, inguinal (reducible/irreducible), femoral (higher incarceration risk), incisional
- Skin changes: caput medusae (portal hypertension), Grey Turner's sign (flank bruising — haemorrhagic pancreatitis), Cullen's sign (peri-umbilical bruising)
- Other: abdominal striae, dilated veins, visible pulsation (aortic aneurysm)
Auscultation
- Present (normal): 5–34 sounds per minute; gurgling, clicking
- Absent: no sounds after 2 minutes — paralytic ileus, peritonitis, post-anaesthesia
- Hyperactive: loud, high-pitched, frequent — early obstruction, gastroenteritis, post-meal
- Borborygmi: prolonged loud gurgling; hunger or early obstruction
- Bruit: systolic bruit over aorta/renal arteries — vascular disease; listen before palpation
Percussion
- Tympanic (resonant): normal gas-filled bowel; hyperresonant over distended bowel
- Dull: fluid (ascites — shifting dullness, fluid thrill), solid organ, mass
- Liver span: percuss from right nipple downward — normal 6–12 cm
- Splenic dullness: Traube's space (left 6th–10th rib, anterior axillary line) — dullness suggests splenomegaly
Palpation
- Light palpation first: assess for guarding, tenderness, superficial masses; watch patient's face
- Deep palpation: organomegaly, deep masses
- Rebound tenderness (Blumberg): pain worse on release than pressure — peritonism; gentle test
- Guarding: involuntary rigidity — peritoneal irritation; "board-like" rigidity in perforation
- Murphy's sign: press under right costal margin; ask patient to inhale — acute cholecystitis causes inspiratory arrest (positive)
- McBurney's point: 1/3 of the way from ASIS to umbilicus (RIF) — tenderness indicates appendicitis
- Rovsing's sign: pressure in LIF causes pain in RIF — positive in appendicitis
- Psoas sign: pain on right hip extension — retrocaecal appendicitis
- Obturator sign: pain on internal rotation of flexed right hip — pelvic appendicitis
Bristol Stool Chart & Colour Assessment
| Type | Description | Clinical Significance |
|---|---|---|
| Type 1 | Separate hard lumps | Severe constipation |
| Type 2 | Lumpy sausage | Mild constipation |
| Type 3 | Sausage with cracks | Normal |
| Type 4 | Smooth, soft sausage | Ideal stool |
| Type 5 | Soft blobs, defined edges | Lacking fibre |
| Type 6 | Fluffy pieces, mushy | Mild diarrhoea |
| Type 7 | Entirely liquid | Severe diarrhoea |
Stool Colour
| Colour | Cause | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Black/tarry (melaena) | Upper GI bleed (>100 mL) — digested blood | Urgent — endoscopy |
| Bright red (haematochezia) | Lower GI bleed — haemorrhoids, colitis, malignancy | Assess volume; colonoscopy |
| Pale/clay/white | Biliary obstruction — absence of bilirubin in stool | LFTs, ultrasound |
| Silver/putty | Ampullary cancer (melaena + pale stool combined) | Urgent GI referral |
| Dark green | Bile salts — malabsorption, rapid transit | Investigate if persistent |
| Red — food related | Beetroot, red food dye | Dietary history first |
SOCRATES Pain Assessment & Organ Correlation
SOCRATES Framework
- Site — where exactly? Point with one finger
- Onset — sudden (perforation, vascular) vs gradual (inflammatory)?
- Character — colicky (obstruction, renal colic), burning (GORD/PUD), constant dull (inflammation)
- Radiation — shoulder tip (diaphragmatic irritation), back (pancreatitis/AAA), loin to groin (ureteric colic)
- Associations — nausea, vomiting, fever, change in bowels
- Time course — constant vs intermittent; hours/days/weeks
- Exacerbating/relieving — food, posture, movement, defaecation
- Severity — 0–10 VAS/NRS scale
Location to Organ Correlation
| Region | Likely Organs | Key Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| RUQ | Liver, gallbladder, duodenum, right kidney | Cholecystitis, hepatitis, biliary colic |
| Epigastric | Stomach, pancreas, aorta, duodenum | PUD, pancreatitis, GORD, AAA |
| LUQ | Spleen, stomach, left kidney, pancreatic tail | Splenomegaly, gastric ulcer |
| RIF | Appendix, caecum, right ovary/tube | Appendicitis, Crohn's, ovarian cyst |
| Central/periumbilical | Small bowel, aorta, mesentery | Small bowel obstruction, early appendicitis, mesenteric ischaemia |
| LIF | Sigmoid colon, left ovary/tube | Diverticulitis, IBS, constipation, ovarian pathology |
| Suprapubic | Bladder, uterus, rectum | UTI, uterine pathology, rectal pathology |
| Loin/flank | Kidneys, ureters, psoas | Renal colic, pyelonephritis, psoas abscess |
GI Investigations Reference
Endoscopic
- OGD (upper endoscopy): oesophagus, stomach, duodenum — 6 h fast; diagnoses PUD, oesophagitis, varices, malignancy
- Colonoscopy: entire colon + terminal ileum — bowel prep required; diagnoses CRC, IBD, polyps
- Flexible sigmoidoscopy: rectum to splenic flexure; no full prep needed
- ERCP: biliary & pancreatic ducts — diagnosis + therapeutic (stone extraction, stenting)
Stool Tests
- Faecal calprotectin: elevated in IBD (>200 mcg/g); helps differentiate IBD from IBS
- H. pylori stool antigen: active infection; use 2 weeks off PPIs for accuracy
- C. difficile toxin: if recent antibiotics + diarrhoea
- Faecal occult blood (FOB): CRC screening
Imaging
- AXR: bowel obstruction (dilated loops, air-fluid levels), free air under diaphragm (perforation)
- Ultrasound abdomen: gallstones, liver lesions, ascites, biliary dilation; no radiation
- CT abdomen/pelvis: gold standard for acute abdomen; CT pneumocolon for CRC staging
- MRI abdomen: liver characterisation, MR cholangiopancreatography (MRCP) for biliary tree
Bloods
- LFTs: ALT/AST (hepatocellular), ALP/GGT/bilirubin (cholestatic)
- Amylase/lipase: pancreatitis (lipase more specific, stays elevated longer)
- CEA, CA19-9: CRC and pancreatic cancer tumour markers
- H. pylori CLO test: rapid urease test during endoscopy biopsy
GORD — Assessment & Management
Retrograde passage of gastric contents into the oesophagus causing symptoms or mucosal damage. Highly prevalent in GCC populations.
Clinical Features
- Heartburn (retrosternal burning, worse after meals/lying flat)
- Regurgitation of acid or food
- Dysphagia — alarm symptom requiring urgent endoscopy
- Extraoesophageal: chronic cough, laryngitis, dental erosion, asthma exacerbation
Nursing Management
- Head of bed elevation 30°: raise bed head (not just pillows) to use gravity
- PPI therapy: omeprazole/pantoprazole 20–40 mg once daily before breakfast; 4–8 week course for erosive oesophagitis
- Antacids: Gaviscon for breakthrough symptoms; alginate layer protects oesophagus
- Refer for endoscopy: alarm symptoms, age >50 with new symptoms, failed treatment
GCC-Specific Lifestyle Advice
- Avoid spicy foods (chilli, hot sauces) — common in Gulf cuisines — trigger acid secretion
- Reduce fatty foods (fried dishes, ghee-heavy meals) — delay gastric emptying
- Limit dates & date syrup (high sugar) — can exacerbate GORD particularly in large quantities
- Reduce tea & coffee — very common beverages; caffeine relaxes lower oesophageal sphincter
- Avoid large evening meals — especially important during Ramadan (large Iftar may worsen nocturnal GORD)
- No eating within 3 hours of lying down; weight management given high obesity prevalence
- Smoking cessation — smoking reduces LOS pressure
Peptic Ulcer Disease (PUD)
Mucosal break >5 mm in stomach (gastric ulcer) or proximal duodenum (duodenal ulcer). Two main causes: H. pylori and NSAIDs/aspirin.
H. pylori Eradication — Triple Therapy
- Bismuth quadruple therapy used if clarithromycin resistance suspected (bismuth + PPI + metronidazole + tetracycline)
- Document penicillin allergy — substitute metronidazole for amoxicillin if allergic
- Encourage full course completion despite symptom improvement
NSAID-Induced Ulcers
- Risk greatest with non-selective NSAIDs (ibuprofen, diclofenac, naproxen)
- PPI prophylaxis co-prescribed for patients on chronic NSAIDs (especially if >65 years, previous PUD, on anticoagulants)
- Consider COX-2 selective inhibitor if NSAID essential
- Advise taking NSAIDs with food and plenty of water
Complications
- Bleeding: most common — melaena, haematemesis, haemodynamic instability
- Perforation: sudden severe epigastric pain, "peritonitic abdomen", free air on AXR/CT — surgical emergency
- Gastric outlet obstruction: recurrent vomiting of undigested food, weight loss, succussion splash
- Malignant transformation: gastric ulcers require biopsy; duodenal ulcers rarely malignant
Upper GI Bleed — Emergency Management
Immediate Nursing Actions (ABCDE approach)
- IV access ×2 (16G or larger) — both antecubital fossae
- Bloods: FBC, U&E, LFTs, coagulation, crossmatch 4–6 units
- IV fluid resuscitation: 500 mL 0.9% NaCl stat if haemodynamically unstable
- Nil by mouth — anticipate urgent endoscopy
- IV PPI: omeprazole 80 mg bolus then 8 mg/hr infusion (reduces rebleeding)
- Urinary catheter — monitor hourly urine output (>0.5 mL/kg/hr target)
- Continuous monitoring: SpO2, HR, BP, GCS, RR every 15 min
- Notify senior clinician, gastroenterology, and endoscopy team
- Blood transfusion: target Hb >70 g/L (80 g/L in cardiac disease); avoid over-transfusion — worsens portal hypertension
Rockford Score (Blatchford Score)
Calculated from Hb, urea, SBP, HR, presence of melaena, syncope, liver disease, cardiac failure. Score ≥1 indicates need for endoscopic intervention. Higher score = higher risk of rebleeding or death.
Sources of Upper GI Bleed
| Cause | Features | Management |
|---|---|---|
| Peptic ulcer (most common ~40%) | Epigastric pain, NSAID/H.pylori history | Endoscopic haemostasis, PPI infusion |
| Oesophageal varices (~10%) | Liver disease, portal HTN signs | Terlipressin, prophylactic antibiotics, band ligation |
| Mallory-Weiss tear | Forceful vomiting precedes bleed | Usually self-limiting; endoscopy if severe |
| Oesophagitis/erosions | GORD symptoms, alcohol history | PPI, treat underlying cause |
| Malignancy | Weight loss, dysphagia, anaemia | Endoscopy, oncology referral |
Acute Pancreatitis
Acute inflammatory process of pancreas. Most common causes: gallstones (40%) and alcohol (35%). In GCC — gallstones predominate; alcohol less common (cultural/religious). Also: hypertriglyceridaemia, ERCP, drugs, idiopathic.
Diagnosis
- Severe epigastric pain radiating to back ("belt-like"), nausea, vomiting
- Serum lipase >3× upper limit of normal (or amylase); lipase preferred (more specific, elevated longer)
- CT abdomen (with IV contrast) — Balthazar grade; diagnoses necrosis
- USS: identify gallstones (all patients), CBD dilation
Severity Scoring
Ranson Criteria (at 48 h):
- Age >55, WBC >16×10⁹/L, glucose >11 mmol/L, LDH >350, AST >250 (on admission)
- At 48 h: Hct fall >10%, BUN rise >1.8, Ca²⁺ <2.0, PaO₂ <8 kPa, base deficit >4, fluid sequestration >6 L
- Score ≥3: severe pancreatitis
Glasgow-Imrie Score (at 48 h):
- PaO₂ <8 kPa, Age >55, Neutrophils >15, Calcium <2.0, Renal (urea >16), Enzymes (LDH >600/AST >200), Albumin <32, Sugar (glucose >10)
- Mnemonic: PANCREAS
- Score ≥3 = severe
Nursing Management
- Fluid resuscitation: aggressive IV crystalloid (Hartmann's or 0.9% NaCl) 250–500 mL/hr initially; monitor urine output (target >0.5 mL/kg/hr)
- Analgesia: IV morphine or hydromorphone (IM pethidine avoided — no evidence of benefit); regular reassessment
- Nil by mouth: only while nauseated and vomiting; transition to early enteral nutrition (nasojejunal if needed) within 24–48 hours — reduces infection and mortality in severe pancreatitis
- NG tube: if vomiting is persistent; not routinely required
- Monitor: vital signs hourly, strict fluid balance, blood glucose (may require insulin), Ca²⁺, FBC, CRP daily
- ERCP: indicated within 72 hours if gallstone pancreatitis + cholangitis or persistent biliary obstruction (jaundice, rising bilirubin)
- Antibiotics: only if infected necrosis suspected (fever + CT features); not routine
H. pylori — GCC Epidemiology & Management
Helicobacter pylori is a gram-negative spiral bacterium colonising gastric mucosa. GCC prevalence: approximately 20–30% in adults — lower than many Middle Eastern countries but higher than Western Europe. Transmission: faecal-oral; linked to overcrowding and shared water sources.
Diagnostic Tests
| Test | Use | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Urea breath test (UBT) | Active infection; post-treatment confirmation | Stop PPIs 2 weeks, antibiotics 4 weeks prior |
| Stool antigen test | Active infection; post-treatment (≥4 weeks after) | Monoclonal preferred; stop PPIs 2 weeks prior |
| Serology (IgG) | Population studies; not for post-treatment confirmation | Stays positive for years after eradication |
| CLO test (biopsy) | Endoscopy biopsy from antrum; rapid urease test | Most accurate during endoscopy |
| Histology | Gold standard; also shows gastritis, atrophy, metaplasia | 2 biopsies from antrum + 2 from body |
After Eradication
- Confirm eradication with UBT or stool antigen 4–6 weeks post-therapy (off PPIs for ≥2 weeks)
- If first-line fails — second-line: bismuth quadruple or levofloxacin-based therapy
- Gastric ulcers: repeat OGD 6–8 weeks to confirm healing and exclude malignancy
Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS)
Functional GI disorder — no structural abnormality. Rome IV criteria: recurrent abdominal pain ≥1 day/week for ≥3 months, associated with ≥2 of: related to defaecation, change in stool frequency, change in stool form.
Subtypes
- IBS-C Constipation-predominant — Bristol types 1–2 >25% of time
- IBS-D Diarrhoea-predominant — Bristol types 6–7 >25% of time
- IBS-M Mixed — both constipation and diarrhoea
- IBS-U Unclassified
Red Flags (exclude before diagnosing IBS)
- Age >50, rectal bleeding, unexplained weight loss, nocturnal symptoms, family history CRC/IBD, iron deficiency anaemia
- Raised CRP/faecal calprotectin — suggests organic disease
Management
Dietary
- Low FODMAP diet: restrict Fermentable Oligosaccharides, Disaccharides, Monosaccharides, Polyols — effective in 50–70%; requires dietitian support for reintroduction phase
- Regular meals; avoid large fatty meals
- Reduce gas-forming foods (beans, onions, carbonated drinks)
- Soluble fibre (ispaghula husk) — preferred over insoluble bran (may worsen symptoms)
Pharmacological
- Antispasmodics: mebeverine 135 mg TDS, hyoscine butylbromide (Buscopan) — for cramping/pain
- Loperamide: IBS-D — reduces frequency and urgency
- Osmotic laxatives: IBS-C — macrogol (polyethylene glycol)
- Low-dose amitriptyline: 10–30 mg nocte — centrally acting; reduces visceral hypersensitivity
- CBT/gut-directed hypnotherapy: for psychological component
Inflammatory Bowel Disease (IBD)
Crohn's Disease
- Distribution: any part of GI tract (mouth to anus); most commonly terminal ileum + colon
- Pattern: transmural inflammation, skip lesions (areas of normal bowel between diseased areas)
- Endoscopy features: cobblestone mucosa, aphthous ulcers, deep fissures, strictures
- Radiology: string sign on barium follow-through (strictured terminal ileum)
- Complications: fistulae (enterocutaneous, perianal), abscess, strictures, bowel obstruction, malabsorption, vitamin B12/D deficiency, extra-intestinal manifestations
- Symptoms: diarrhoea (non-bloody), abdominal pain (RIF), weight loss, perianal disease, malaise
Ulcerative Colitis
- Distribution: rectum and extends proximally; continuous involvement (no skip lesions)
- Pattern: mucosal inflammation only (not transmural)
- Endoscopy features: diffuse erythema, loss of vascular pattern, friability, pseudopolyps in chronic disease
- Mayo Score: stool frequency, rectal bleeding, endoscopy findings, physician assessment (0–12; ≥10 = severe)
- Symptoms: bloody diarrhoea, urgency, tenesmus, mucus PR, crampy abdominal pain
- Complication: toxic megacolon (emergency — avoid colonoscopy), colorectal cancer risk (after 8–10 years), PSC association
| Feature | Crohn's Disease | Ulcerative Colitis |
|---|---|---|
| Extent | Entire GI tract | Colon only (rectum→proximal) |
| Depth | Transmural | Mucosal/submucosal |
| Pattern | Skip lesions | Continuous |
| Bleeding | Less common | Prominent (bloody diarrhoea) |
| Fistulae | Common (perianal) | Rare |
| Smoking | Worsens disease | Protective (?) |
| Surgery curative? | No (recurs) | Yes (colectomy) |
IBD Treatment Ladder
- Mild UC: 5-ASA (mesalazine) oral + topical rectal; sulfasalazine
- Moderate UC/Crohn's: oral corticosteroids (prednisolone 40 mg tapering); azathioprine/6-MP as steroid-sparing
- Severe/refractory: IV hydrocortisone in hospital; ciclosporin for acute severe UC
- Biologics: anti-TNF (infliximab IV, adalimumab SC), vedolizumab (gut-selective), ustekinumab — for moderate-severe disease refractory to steroids/immunomodulators
- Surgery: colectomy (curative in UC — ileal pouch-anal anastomosis "J-pouch"); resection in Crohn's for complications
Diverticular Disease & Diverticulitis
Outpouchings (diverticula) of colonic mucosa through muscular wall at weak points (where vessels penetrate). Predominantly left-sided (sigmoid colon) in Western/GCC populations. Strongly linked to low-fibre diet and constipation.
Diverticulitis (Infected/Inflamed Diverticulum)
- Left iliac fossa pain (steady, not colicky), fever, raised CRP/WBC, nausea
- CT abdomen/pelvis is diagnostic — shows pericolic fat stranding, diverticula, complications
- Hinchey classification grades perforation/abscess severity
Management
- Uncomplicated (Hinchey I–II): antibiotics (co-amoxiclav 625 mg TDS PO or IV if severe), analgesia, clear fluids → soft diet as tolerated; most resolve conservatively
- Complicated (abscess): CT-guided drainage, IV antibiotics
- Perforation/peritonitis (Hinchey III–IV): emergency surgery (Hartmann's procedure — sigmoid colectomy + end colostomy)
- Preventive: high-fibre diet, adequate hydration — patients often need education on fibre sources in GCC diet
Colorectal Cancer (CRC)
Rising incidence in GCC — linked to adoption of westernised diet (high fat, low fibre, processed food), obesity, T2DM, physical inactivity. Now among top 5 cancers in many Gulf states.
Symptoms (2-Week Wait Referral)
- Change in bowel habit (>6 weeks) — looser/more frequent stools
- Rectal bleeding (without obvious benign cause in >40 years)
- Unexplained weight loss, fatigue (iron deficiency anaemia)
- Palpable abdominal or rectal mass
- Bowel obstruction (acute presentation)
Staging — TNM
| Stage | Description | 5-year Survival |
|---|---|---|
| I | Confined to bowel wall (T1-T2 N0 M0) | ~90% |
| II | Through bowel wall, no nodes (T3-T4 N0 M0) | ~70-80% |
| III | Regional lymph node involvement (any T N1-2 M0) | ~50-70% |
| IV | Distant metastasis (any T any N M1) | ~10-15% |
MDT Management
- Surgery: right/left hemicolectomy, anterior resection, abdomino-perineal resection (low rectal) — may result in stoma
- Neoadjuvant radiotherapy: rectal cancer — downstage before surgery
- Adjuvant chemotherapy: CAPOX or FOLFOX — stage III and high-risk stage II
- Nurse navigator role: stoma education pre-op, MDT coordination, support through treatment
Screening
- Colonoscopy every 10 years from age 50 (or earlier if family history)
- Faecal occult blood test (FOBT) / faecal immunochemical test (FIT) as primary screening tool in national programmes
- Polypectomy during colonoscopy reduces CRC incidence by ~80%
Bowel Obstruction
Mechanical Obstruction
- Physical blockage — lumen, wall or external compression
- Causes: adhesions (most common post-surgery), hernias, malignancy (GCC: CRC rising), volvulus, intussusception, gallstone ileus
- Features: colicky pain, distension, nausea, vomiting (faeculant in late obstruction), absolute constipation (no flatus)
- AXR: dilated loops (>6 cm small bowel, >9 cm large bowel), air-fluid levels; no gas beyond obstruction
Functional Ileus (Pseudo-obstruction)
- No mechanical obstruction — failure of peristalsis
- Causes: post-operative, sepsis, metabolic (hypokalaemia, hyponatraemia), drugs (opioids, anticholinergics)
- Ogilvie syndrome: acute colonic pseudo-obstruction — massive caecal dilation; perforation risk if >12 cm
- Management: treat underlying cause, ambulation, neostigmine (if no mechanical obstruction confirmed)
Nursing Management
- Nasogastric decompression: NG tube free drainage + regular aspiration; reduces vomiting and aspiration risk; measure and document output
- IV fluids: replace NG losses with 0.9% NaCl + KCl; strict fluid balance
- Nil by mouth: until obstruction resolved or operative intervention
- Surgical consult: strangulated hernia or signs of ischaemia (fever, peritonism, WBC rise) → emergency laparotomy
- Monitor: urine output, electrolytes (hypokalaemia worsens ileus), lactate (ischaemia marker), vital signs
Upper GI Endoscopy (OGD) — Nursing Care
Pre-procedure
- Consent: ensure written informed consent obtained by endoscopist; explain procedure, risks (perforation rare 1:10,000, bleeding, aspiration), sedation options
- Fasting: nil by mouth 6 hours for food, 2 hours for clear fluids (check local policy)
- Medications: confirm regular medications taken; anticoagulants — discuss with team (warfarin may need bridging, DOACs usually omit morning dose)
- IV access: 18–20G IV cannula — required for sedation or emergency
- Sedation choice: throat spray (lidocaine 10% — topical anaesthesia) alone, or IV sedation with midazolam 2–5 mg (titrated) ± fentanyl; flumazenil reversal available
- Allergy check: latex, lidocaine, sedation agents; document
- Baseline obs: HR, BP, SpO2, RR, GCS; weight for sedation dosing
During Procedure
- Position: left lateral (recovery position); pillow between knees for comfort
- Mouthguard: protect teeth and endoscope; bite block in place throughout
- Monitoring: continuous SpO2, HR; BP every 5 minutes; ECG if cardiac history
- Suction: Yankauer on standby — aspiration risk especially with sedation; be alert for vomiting
- Supplemental oxygen: via nasal cannula 2 L/min routinely when sedated
- Nurse role: patient reassurance, airway monitoring, specimen labelling (biopsies), documentation of findings
Post-procedure Recovery
- Monitor until gag reflex returns (if throat spray used) — typically 30–45 min
- If sedated: recover until patient awake, orientated, GCS 15, SpO2 ≥95%; minimum 1 hour
- Nil by mouth 30 minutes after throat spray (aspiration risk)
- First oral intake: small sips of water; check swallowing before advancing diet
- Throat soreness and mild bloating from air — normal; advise patient in advance
- Discharge criteria: awake, orientated, stable obs, tolerating fluids, escort present (if sedated); not to drive for 24 hours post sedation
- Give written aftercare advice and results
Colonoscopy — Nursing Care
Bowel Preparation
| Prep Agent | Regimen | Key Instructions |
|---|---|---|
| MoviPrep (PEG + electrolytes) | 2 L evening before + 1 L morning of (split dose preferred) | Stay near toilet; clear fluid diet 24 h before; stop iron supplements 1 week prior |
| Picolax (sodium picosulfate) | 1 sachet afternoon before, 1 sachet morning of | High fluid intake essential (≥2 L clear fluids per sachet); avoid in renal impairment |
| Plenvu | 1 L evening, 500 mL morning; smaller volume | Useful for patients finding large volumes difficult; follow with extra clear fluids |
Dietary Restrictions
- 2 days before: low-residue diet (white bread, pasta, chicken, fish, eggs; avoid high-fibre, seeds, nuts, skins, red meat)
- Day before: clear fluids only (water, clear juice without pulp, broth, jelly — avoid red/purple coloured liquids)
- Morning of procedure: nil by mouth (or clear fluids 2 h before as per protocol)
During & After Colonoscopy
- Position: begin left lateral; repositioning may be needed (prone, supine) as scope advances to caecum
- Sedation: IV midazolam ± fentanyl or pethidine; Entonox in some centres
- Scope technique awareness: nurse assists with abdominal pressure when requested by endoscopist to prevent looping
- Post-procedure: recover as for OGD; wind pain is normal — air insufflation used during procedure; may pass flatus loudly — reassure patient this is expected
- First meal after recovery: light diet; observe for polypectomy site bleeding
Stoma Care for GCC Nurses
Types of Stoma
| Type | Location | Effluent |
|---|---|---|
| Ileostomy | RIF (right iliac fossa) | Liquid/semi-liquid, high volume (500–1500 mL/day), green-brown |
| Colostomy | LIF (left iliac fossa) — usually sigmoid | Formed/semi-formed stool |
| Urostomy (ileal conduit) | RIF — urine diverted via ileal segment | Urine; bag drains continuously; night bag recommended |
| Loop stoma | Temporary — two openings in one loop | Functioning + mucous fistula |
Stoma Assessment
- Colour: healthy = red/pink/moist; pale/dark/dusky = ischaemia — urgent review
- Output: document volume, colour, consistency per shift; ileostomy >1500 mL/24h = high output
- Peristomal skin: should be intact; erythema, excoriation, rash requires skin barrier products
- Stoma height: should protrude 1–2 cm (ileostomy); flush/retracted = leakage risk
- Prolapse, hernia: document size; hernia common long-term complication
Pouch Change Technique
- Wash hands; prepare equipment (flange/baseplate, bag, barrier cream, stoma measuring guide, scissors, wipes)
- Remove old pouch gently — push skin away rather than pulling appliance
- Clean peristomal skin with warm water; pat dry (soap may interfere with adhesion)
- Measure stoma with guide; cut flange 2–3 mm larger than stoma to prevent mucosal compression
- Apply skin barrier/protective film if skin sore; allow to dry
- Warm flange (body heat for 30 sec) to improve adhesion; apply centrally, smooth from centre outward
- Attach bag, ensure closure clip secure; document output and skin condition
GCC-Specific Stoma Considerations
- Halal pouching products: confirm with patient that adhesives and materials are acceptable; some products contain porcine-derived components — many manufacturers now offer porcine-free alternatives; check SPC/manufacturer
- Showering vs bathing: stoma may be showered over; bathing is generally safe though soaking may loosen adhesive; advise on timing of pouch changes relative to bathing
- Prayer positions (Salah): prostration (sujood) places pressure on abdomen — ensure pouch is secure and emptied before prayer; consider convex or flatter flange; Islamic scholars generally rule that stoma does not invalidate prayer (consult with hospital Imam for patient support)
- Dietary adjustments: traditional GCC foods — rice dishes, legumes (chickpeas, lentils) increase gas; patients should eat slowly, chew thoroughly; onions, carbonated drinks increase gas output
- Hydration: ileostomy patients at high risk of dehydration in hot GCC climate — minimum 2 L fluid/day; oral rehydration solutions (St. Mark's solution) if high output
- Ramadan: fasting may reduce output; medication timing with ileostomy — oral drug absorption may be reduced; advise patient to discuss with gastroenterology team before Ramadan
GCC Gastroenterology — Epidemiological Context
Rising Conditions
- Colorectal cancer: incidence rising significantly — linked to rapid dietary westernisation, high prevalence of obesity (35–40% in GCC adults) and T2DM, low physical activity, low fibre intake; presenting at younger ages than Western counterparts
- NAFLD/NASH: extremely prevalent — parallels GCC obesity and T2DM epidemic; rates estimated 30–40% in general adult population; leading cause of liver cirrhosis progression alongside hepatitis B/C; see Liver Failure guide for details
- GORD & PUD: highly prevalent; spicy/fatty traditional foods, high H. pylori rates in some groups, use of traditional herbal remedies that may irritate gastric mucosa
Comparative Context
- H. pylori rates: 20–30% in GCC adults — moderate compared to 50–80% in parts of South/Southeast Asia and Africa; lower gastric cancer rate than East Asia where H. pylori + dietary factors (high salt) combine
- IBD: historically low in GCC but incidence increasing — likely related to westernisation of diet, reduced childhood infections (hygiene hypothesis), changing gut microbiome
- Hepatitis B/C: Hep C endemic in some GCC subpopulations (Egypt origin — highest global prevalence historically); Hep B more prevalent than Western Europe; GCC nationals generally lower rates
- Gallstone disease: high rate linked to obesity and metabolic syndrome; cholecystitis and choledocholithiasis common in GCC hospitals
Ramadan Fasting Effects on GI Health
Ramadan fasting involves complete abstinence from food and fluid from dawn (Fajr) to sunset (Maghrib) — typically 12–18 hours depending on location and season. GI nurses must understand implications for patients with GI conditions.
GORD During Ramadan
- Prolonged fasting → increased basal acid secretion
- Large Iftar meal rapidly consumed → increased gastric pressure, LOS relaxation
- Lying down shortly after Iftar worsens nocturnal reflux
- Advice: eat Iftar slowly, avoid large volumes in one sitting, maintain 2–3 hours before lying down, continue PPI (take at Iftar time)
- Suhoor meal (pre-dawn) helps maintain acid suppression
Peptic Ulcer Disease
- Extended fasting increases acid production without food buffering
- PPIs: take at Iftar and/or Suhoor (double dosing if twice daily needed)
- Active PUD — patient may require medical exemption from fasting; discuss with gastroenterologist
- Medication timing: triple therapy regimens during Ramadan — complex; requires careful pharmacist counselling
Constipation
- Common during Ramadan — reduced fluid intake, less physical activity, change in dietary pattern
- Advise: adequate fluid intake at Iftar through Suhoor, include fruits (prunes, figs — culturally appropriate), increase physical activity in the evening
- Laxatives: osmotic laxatives can be taken at Suhoor; suppositories generally do not break fast per Islamic ruling but confirm with patient's religious authority
IBD During Ramadan
- Mild IBD: many patients fast without significant flare
- Active moderate-severe IBD: advise against fasting; medical exemption appropriate
- Biologics: infliximab infusions can be timed to avoid fasting hours; adalimumab SC injection — needle breakage of skin is generally accepted as not breaking the fast per majority of scholars
- Nutritional supplements: Ensure/Fortisip (liquid nutrition) — confirm halal certification
Common GCC Dietary Issues Relevant to GI Health
Dietary Patterns
- High refined carbohydrates: processed white rice (staple), white bread, sugary desserts — low fibre, rapid absorption → constipation, metabolic syndrome, NAFLD
- Low fibre intake: traditional GCC diet historically lower in fruit/vegetables than Mediterranean; rapid urbanisation reduced use of traditional high-fibre foods (harees, lentil dishes)
- Excess ghee/fat: clarified butter used extensively in cooking — high saturated fat → NAFLD, GORD trigger, cholesterol gallstones
- Dehydration risk: hot arid climate (summer >45°C), outdoor workers particularly at risk; inadequate fluid intake worsens constipation, increases kidney stone risk, can trigger ileus post-operatively
Nursing Education Points
- Encourage soluble fibre sources culturally acceptable to GCC patients: dates (in moderation), lentils, chickpeas, oats, barley (traditional)
- Water intake minimum 2 L/day; increase to 3 L in summer — communicate clearly given heat
- Mediterranean-style diet evidence for NAFLD — olive oil, fish, legumes; culturally many GCC populations have access to these
- Reduce fast food — rapidly growing fast food culture in GCC particularly among younger generations
- Tea after meals common — tannins may reduce iron absorption (relevant in IBD patients with iron deficiency)
- Expat workers: dietary variety, potential vitamin D deficiency (counterintuitive given sun exposure due to indoor work/modest dress), low fibre diets
Self-Assessment Quiz — Gastroenterology Nursing
10 questions covering GI assessment, upper and lower GI conditions, endoscopy and GCC context. Select answers then submit to see your score.
Q1. When performing abdominal auscultation before palpation, the primary reason is:
Q2. A patient passes a single episode of black, tarry, foul-smelling stool. The MOST likely cause is:
Q3. A patient with upper GI bleed arrives in A&E. After calling for help, your FIRST nursing priorities include (select BEST answer):
Q4. Which statement CORRECTLY differentiates Crohn's disease from ulcerative colitis?
Q5. For colonoscopy bowel preparation, the patient should be advised to follow a low-residue diet for:
Q6. A patient with acute pancreatitis has a Glasgow-Imrie score of 4 at 48 hours. This indicates:
Q7. An ileostomy is typically located in which abdominal quadrant and produces what type of output?
Q8. Murphy's sign is used to assess for which condition?
Q9. During Ramadan, a patient with GORD asks about PPI timing. The BEST advice is:
Q10. A post-colonoscopy patient calls the ward 2 days after a polypectomy reporting fresh rectal bleeding. You should advise: