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==Background==
==Background==
*Well-recognized complication of gastric bypass
*Short bowel syndrome (SBS) is a malabsorptive condition resulting from the loss of functional small intestinal length or absorptive capacity, typically defined as '''< 200 cm of remaining small bowel''' in adults (normal length 275–850 cm)<ref name="statpearls">Short Bowel Syndrome. In: ''StatPearls''. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2023. PMID 30860742.</ref>
*Rapid post-prandial gastric emptying, release of gastric hormones, splanchnic vasodilation
*Results in intestinal failure when the remaining bowel cannot sustain nutritional, fluid, and electrolyte needs without parenteral support
*Hyperinsulinemic and hypoglycemic state
*Etiologies in adults:
**Crohn's disease (most common cause requiring repeated resections)
**Mesenteric ischemia / mesenteric vascular occlusion
**Radiation enteritis
**Volvulus
**Trauma (penetrating abdominal trauma with bowel loss)
**Surgical complications / adhesive small bowel obstruction requiring resection
**Malignancy
*Etiologies in children:
**Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) — most common neonatal cause
**Intestinal atresia / congenital malformations
**Midgut volvulus
**Gastroschisis
*Anatomy determines clinical consequences:<ref name="bering">Bering J, DiBaise JK. Short bowel syndrome: complications and management. ''Nutr Clin Pract''. 2023;38(S1):S46-S58. PMID 37115034.</ref>
**Jejunum-colon anastomosis (colon in continuity): Better prognosis; colon absorbs water, electrolytes, and short-chain fatty acids from bacterial carbohydrate fermentation; at risk for [[D-lactic acidosis|D-lactic acidosis]] and oxalate kidney stones
**End-jejunostomy (no colon in continuity): Higher fluid/electrolyte losses; greater dependence on parenteral nutrition; at risk for dehydration and sodium depletion
**Ileal resection: Loss of vitamin B12 absorption (terminal ileum) and bile salt reabsorption → bile salt diarrhea and fat malabsorption
**Ileocecal valve loss: Increases bacterial overgrowth and accelerates transit
*Bowel length thresholds for parenteral nutrition dependence:<ref name="statpearls"/>
**> 180 cm: Generally no PN needed
**90–180 cm: PN usually needed for < 1 year
**< 90 cm: Prolonged or lifelong PN likely
**< 60 cm: Almost always requires lifelong PN or transplant consideration
*Intestinal adaptation occurs over 1–2 years after resection: villous hyperplasia, crypt deepening, bowel dilation → gradual improvement in absorptive capacity


==Clinical Features==
==Clinical Features==
*[[Nausea/vomiting]], bloating, [[abdominal pain|abdominal cramps]], [[diarrhea]], diaphoresis
===Chronic / Baseline Symptoms===
**Early dumping= symptoms 30-60min after a meal
*Diarrhea / steatorrhea — high-volume, watery; may be > 2 L/day with end-jejunostomy
**Late dumping= symptoms 1-3 hours after a meal
*Malnutrition and weight loss
*Dehydration and electrolyte derangements (hyponatremia, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, hypocalcemia)
*Fatigue, weakness
*Abdominal distension, bloating, cramping
*Peripheral edema (hypoalbuminemia)
 
===Complications Presenting to the ED===
*Severe dehydration / electrolyte crisis:<ref name="bering"/>
**Hyponatremia, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia (often refractory — Mg must be corrected before K will correct)
**Metabolic acidosis (bicarbonate losses from high-output stoma/diarrhea) or metabolic alkalosis (dehydration, acid loss from vomiting)
**Hypocalcemia (from vitamin D malabsorption and hypomagnesemia)
*Central line complications (most SBS patients have long-term central venous catheters for parenteral nutrition):
**Catheter-related bloodstream infection (CRBSI): Most common life-threatening complication of PN; presents with fever, chills, rigors temporally related to PN infusion<ref name="bering"/>
**Central line thrombosis / occlusion
**Catheter malposition, fracture, air embolism
*[[D-lactic acidosis]]: Anion gap metabolic acidosis + encephalopathy (confusion, ataxia, slurred speech) after high-carbohydrate meals; occurs in patients with colon in continuity
*Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO): Bloating, diarrhea worsening, abdominal pain, malodorous gas; may cause fever and elevated WBC
*Intestinal failure–associated liver disease (IFALD): Jaundice, hepatomegaly, elevated LFTs; related to chronic PN use
*Cholelithiasis: SBS patients (especially < 180 cm with absent ileocecal valve) have increased risk of calcium bilirubinate gallstones → [[Cholecystitis|cholecystitis]], [[Choledocholithiasis|choledocholithiasis]]
*Oxalate nephrolithiasis / nephropathy: Hyperoxaluria occurs when unabsorbed fatty acids bind calcium, leaving oxalate free for colonic absorption → calcium oxalate [[Renal stone|kidney stones]]
*Metabolic bone disease: Osteoporosis/osteomalacia from vitamin D and calcium malabsorption → pathologic fractures
*Nutritional deficiency emergencies:
**Vitamin B12 deficiency: Megaloblastic anemia, subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord (from terminal ileum loss)
**Thiamine deficiency: [[Wernicke encephalopathy]]
**Vitamin K deficiency: Coagulopathy
**Iron deficiency anemia
**Zinc deficiency: Dermatitis, alopecia, impaired wound healing
*Bowel obstruction: From adhesions related to prior surgeries


==Differential Diagnosis==
==Differential Diagnosis==
{{Abdominal Pain DDX Diffuse}}
*[[Sepsis]]
*[[D-lactic acidosis]]
*[[Small Bowel Obstruction]]
*[[Mesenteric Ischemia]]
*[[Cholecystitis]] / [[Choledocholithiasis]]
*[[Nephrolithiasis]]
*[[Wernicke encephalopathy]]
*[[Adrenal Insufficiency]] (chronic steroid use, malnutrition)
*Inflammatory bowel disease flare ([[Crohn's Disease]])
*[[Dumping syndrome]] (if history of gastric bypass; this is a separate condition)
*Clostridium difficile infection
*Medication-related diarrhea


==Evaluation==
==Evaluation==
*See [[Abdominal Pain]]
===Workup===
*Diagnosis of exclusion
*BMP/CMP: Electrolytes (Na, K, Mg, Ca, Phos — all frequently abnormal), BUN/creatinine (dehydration/renal injury), bicarbonate (acidosis), glucose, liver enzymes, albumin
*Magnesium level: Often critically low; must be corrected before hypokalemia will respond to potassium replacement
*CBC: Anemia (B12 deficiency → macrocytic; iron deficiency → microcytic), leukocytosis if infection
*Lactate: Evaluate for sepsis, mesenteric ischemia; remember standard assay measures only L-lactate (see [[D-lactic acidosis]])
*Blood cultures (peripheral AND through central line if present): If fever, suspicion for CRBSI — draw paired cultures before antibiotics
*Coagulation studies: PT/INR (vitamin K deficiency → elevated INR)
*Urinalysis: Oxalate crystals, infection
*VBG/ABG: Acid-base status
*LFTs: Evaluate for IFALD, biliary disease
*Vitamin levels (if clinically indicated): B12, folate, 25-OH vitamin D, thiamine, zinc — may not be immediately available but should be sent
*Imaging:
**Abdominal XR: If concern for obstruction
**CT abdomen/pelvis: Obstruction, abscess, mesenteric ischemia, cholecystitis
**Ultrasound: Right upper quadrant for gallbladder/biliary evaluation
**CXR: If concern for line malposition, pneumothorax, aspiration
 
===Diagnosis===
*SBS itself is a known condition — the ED role is to identify the acute complication bringing the patient in
*Key diagnostic patterns in SBS patients:
{| class="wikitable"
|-
! Presentation !! Likely Complication
|-
| Fever + rigors during or after PN infusion || '''CRBSI''' — draw blood cultures (line and peripheral)
|-
| AGMA + normal L-lactate + encephalopathy after carbs || '''[[D-lactic acidosis]]''' — send D-lactate level
|-
| Refractory hypokalemia despite IV K replacement || '''Hypomagnesemia''' — check and replace Mg first
|-
| Elevated INR + easy bruising, no anticoagulant use || '''Vitamin K deficiency''' — give IV vitamin K
|-
| Flank pain + hematuria || '''Oxalate nephrolithiasis''' — CT KUB
|-
| Ataxia, confusion, ophthalmoplegia || '''[[Wernicke encephalopathy]]''' — give IV thiamine empirically
|-
| Macrocytic anemia + neurologic symptoms || '''B12 deficiency''' — send B12 level, IM cyanocobalamin
|-
| High-output stoma with hypotension, tachycardia || '''Dehydration/electrolyte crisis''' — aggressive IV resuscitation
|}


==Management==
==Management==
*Dietary Modifications
===Dehydration / Electrolyte Crisis===
**Avoid highly concentrated foods
*Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation: Normal saline initially; avoid hypotonic fluids (SBS patients often have chronic sodium depletion)
**Separate eating and drinking
*Electrolyte repletion:
*[[Octreotide]]
**Magnesium FIRST — IV magnesium sulfate 2–4 g over 1–2 hours; hypokalemia and hypocalcemia are often refractory until Mg is corrected<ref name="bering"/>
**Positive case reports
**Potassium: IV KCl; monitor closely with serial BMPs
**Calcium: IV calcium gluconate if symptomatic or severe; send vitamin D level
**Phosphorus: Replete if low (especially if refeeding)
*Oral rehydration solution (ORS): SBS patients benefit from glucose-sodium ORS (WHO formulation) rather than plain water, which can worsen sodium depletion
*Monitor urine output — target > 0.5 mL/kg/hr
 
===Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infection===
*Draw blood cultures from the line AND a peripheral site before antibiotics
*Empiric IV antibiotics: Vancomycin + gram-negative coverage (cefepime or piperacillin-tazobactam); adjust based on cultures<ref name="bering"/>
*'''Do NOT routinely remove the line''' unless: hemodynamic instability/septic shock, tunnel infection, persistent bacteremia > 72 hours on appropriate antibiotics, or fungemia
*These patients have limited venous access — line preservation is critical when possible; consult the patient's PN team or vascular access specialist
 
===D-Lactic Acidosis===
*NPO / fasting (eliminate carbohydrate substrate)
*IV sodium bicarbonate for significant acidosis
*IV thiamine 100 mg empirically
*Enteral antibiotics (metronidazole, oral vancomycin)
*See [[D-lactic acidosis]] for full management
 
===Nutritional Deficiency Emergencies===
*Vitamin K deficiency (elevated INR): IV vitamin K 10 mg; FFP or PCC if actively bleeding
*Wernicke encephalopathy: IV thiamine 500 mg TID × 3 days (high-dose protocol)
*B12 deficiency: IM cyanocobalamin 1,000 mcg
*Iron deficiency: IV iron infusion (in consultation with GI/hematology)
 
===General Principles===
*Contact the patient's GI/nutrition/intestinal rehabilitation team early — these patients often have complex management plans and established relationships with specialists
*'''Do not discontinue or modify parenteral nutrition''' without specialist guidance
*Loperamide / codeine phosphate: May be used to reduce stoma/stool output (often part of home regimen)
*PPI / H2 blocker: Reduce gastric hypersecretion that occurs in SBS (especially in the first 6–12 months)


==Disposition==
==Disposition==
*Home if other diagnoses excluded and able to tolerate oral intake
*Admit:
**Suspected CRBSI / sepsis
**Severe dehydration requiring IV repletion > 24 hours
**Significant electrolyte derangements (symptomatic hyponatremia, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia)
**D-lactic acidosis with encephalopathy
**Bowel obstruction
**Symptomatic nephrolithiasis requiring urologic intervention
**Severe nutritional deficiency emergencies (Wernicke, severe B12 deficiency with neurologic involvement)
*ICU admission:
**Septic shock from CRBSI
**Severe metabolic derangement with hemodynamic instability
**Altered mental status (D-lactic acidosis, Wernicke, severe electrolyte abnormality)
*Discharge with close follow-up:
**Mild dehydration responding to oral/IV rehydration in the ED
**Mild electrolyte abnormalities corrected in the ED with reliable outpatient follow-up
**Ensure the patient's GI/nutrition team is contacted and aware of the ED visit
**Provide ORS instructions and dietary counseling


==See Also==
==See Also==
[[Gastric bypass surgery]]
*[[D-lactic acidosis]]
*[[Dumping syndrome]]
*[[Wernicke encephalopathy]]
*[[Renal stone]]
*[[Small Bowel Obstruction]]
*[[Crohn's Disease]]


==External Links==
==External Links==
*[https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK536935/ Short Bowel Syndrome - StatPearls]
*[https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37115034/ Short bowel syndrome: complications and management - Nutr Clin Pract 2023]
*[https://www.cghjournal.org/article/S1542-3565(22)00561-4/fulltext AGA Clinical Practice Update on Management of SBS - Clin Gastroenterol Hepatol 2022]
*[https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/27324885/ Management and complications of SBS: an updated review - Curr Gastroenterol Rep 2016]


==References==
==References==
O'Brien M. Acute Abdominal Pain In: Tintinalli's Emergency Medicine. 7th ed. McGraw-Hill. 2011:Chapter 74
<references/>
<references/>


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

Revisión actual - 09:30 22 mar 2026

Background

  • Short bowel syndrome (SBS) is a malabsorptive condition resulting from the loss of functional small intestinal length or absorptive capacity, typically defined as < 200 cm of remaining small bowel in adults (normal length 275–850 cm)[1]
  • Results in intestinal failure when the remaining bowel cannot sustain nutritional, fluid, and electrolyte needs without parenteral support
  • Etiologies in adults:
    • Crohn's disease (most common cause requiring repeated resections)
    • Mesenteric ischemia / mesenteric vascular occlusion
    • Radiation enteritis
    • Volvulus
    • Trauma (penetrating abdominal trauma with bowel loss)
    • Surgical complications / adhesive small bowel obstruction requiring resection
    • Malignancy
  • Etiologies in children:
    • Necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC) — most common neonatal cause
    • Intestinal atresia / congenital malformations
    • Midgut volvulus
    • Gastroschisis
  • Anatomy determines clinical consequences:[2]
    • Jejunum-colon anastomosis (colon in continuity): Better prognosis; colon absorbs water, electrolytes, and short-chain fatty acids from bacterial carbohydrate fermentation; at risk for D-lactic acidosis and oxalate kidney stones
    • End-jejunostomy (no colon in continuity): Higher fluid/electrolyte losses; greater dependence on parenteral nutrition; at risk for dehydration and sodium depletion
    • Ileal resection: Loss of vitamin B12 absorption (terminal ileum) and bile salt reabsorption → bile salt diarrhea and fat malabsorption
    • Ileocecal valve loss: Increases bacterial overgrowth and accelerates transit
  • Bowel length thresholds for parenteral nutrition dependence:[1]
    • > 180 cm: Generally no PN needed
    • 90–180 cm: PN usually needed for < 1 year
    • < 90 cm: Prolonged or lifelong PN likely
    • < 60 cm: Almost always requires lifelong PN or transplant consideration
  • Intestinal adaptation occurs over 1–2 years after resection: villous hyperplasia, crypt deepening, bowel dilation → gradual improvement in absorptive capacity

Clinical Features

Chronic / Baseline Symptoms

  • Diarrhea / steatorrhea — high-volume, watery; may be > 2 L/day with end-jejunostomy
  • Malnutrition and weight loss
  • Dehydration and electrolyte derangements (hyponatremia, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia, hypocalcemia)
  • Fatigue, weakness
  • Abdominal distension, bloating, cramping
  • Peripheral edema (hypoalbuminemia)

Complications Presenting to the ED

  • Severe dehydration / electrolyte crisis:[2]
    • Hyponatremia, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia (often refractory — Mg must be corrected before K will correct)
    • Metabolic acidosis (bicarbonate losses from high-output stoma/diarrhea) or metabolic alkalosis (dehydration, acid loss from vomiting)
    • Hypocalcemia (from vitamin D malabsorption and hypomagnesemia)
  • Central line complications (most SBS patients have long-term central venous catheters for parenteral nutrition):
    • Catheter-related bloodstream infection (CRBSI): Most common life-threatening complication of PN; presents with fever, chills, rigors temporally related to PN infusion[2]
    • Central line thrombosis / occlusion
    • Catheter malposition, fracture, air embolism
  • D-lactic acidosis: Anion gap metabolic acidosis + encephalopathy (confusion, ataxia, slurred speech) after high-carbohydrate meals; occurs in patients with colon in continuity
  • Small intestinal bacterial overgrowth (SIBO): Bloating, diarrhea worsening, abdominal pain, malodorous gas; may cause fever and elevated WBC
  • Intestinal failure–associated liver disease (IFALD): Jaundice, hepatomegaly, elevated LFTs; related to chronic PN use
  • Cholelithiasis: SBS patients (especially < 180 cm with absent ileocecal valve) have increased risk of calcium bilirubinate gallstones → cholecystitis, choledocholithiasis
  • Oxalate nephrolithiasis / nephropathy: Hyperoxaluria occurs when unabsorbed fatty acids bind calcium, leaving oxalate free for colonic absorption → calcium oxalate kidney stones
  • Metabolic bone disease: Osteoporosis/osteomalacia from vitamin D and calcium malabsorption → pathologic fractures
  • Nutritional deficiency emergencies:
    • Vitamin B12 deficiency: Megaloblastic anemia, subacute combined degeneration of the spinal cord (from terminal ileum loss)
    • Thiamine deficiency: Wernicke encephalopathy
    • Vitamin K deficiency: Coagulopathy
    • Iron deficiency anemia
    • Zinc deficiency: Dermatitis, alopecia, impaired wound healing
  • Bowel obstruction: From adhesions related to prior surgeries

Differential Diagnosis

Evaluation

Workup

  • BMP/CMP: Electrolytes (Na, K, Mg, Ca, Phos — all frequently abnormal), BUN/creatinine (dehydration/renal injury), bicarbonate (acidosis), glucose, liver enzymes, albumin
  • Magnesium level: Often critically low; must be corrected before hypokalemia will respond to potassium replacement
  • CBC: Anemia (B12 deficiency → macrocytic; iron deficiency → microcytic), leukocytosis if infection
  • Lactate: Evaluate for sepsis, mesenteric ischemia; remember standard assay measures only L-lactate (see D-lactic acidosis)
  • Blood cultures (peripheral AND through central line if present): If fever, suspicion for CRBSI — draw paired cultures before antibiotics
  • Coagulation studies: PT/INR (vitamin K deficiency → elevated INR)
  • Urinalysis: Oxalate crystals, infection
  • VBG/ABG: Acid-base status
  • LFTs: Evaluate for IFALD, biliary disease
  • Vitamin levels (if clinically indicated): B12, folate, 25-OH vitamin D, thiamine, zinc — may not be immediately available but should be sent
  • Imaging:
    • Abdominal XR: If concern for obstruction
    • CT abdomen/pelvis: Obstruction, abscess, mesenteric ischemia, cholecystitis
    • Ultrasound: Right upper quadrant for gallbladder/biliary evaluation
    • CXR: If concern for line malposition, pneumothorax, aspiration

Diagnosis

  • SBS itself is a known condition — the ED role is to identify the acute complication bringing the patient in
  • Key diagnostic patterns in SBS patients:
Presentation Likely Complication
Fever + rigors during or after PN infusion CRBSI — draw blood cultures (line and peripheral)
AGMA + normal L-lactate + encephalopathy after carbs D-lactic acidosis — send D-lactate level
Refractory hypokalemia despite IV K replacement Hypomagnesemia — check and replace Mg first
Elevated INR + easy bruising, no anticoagulant use Vitamin K deficiency — give IV vitamin K
Flank pain + hematuria Oxalate nephrolithiasis — CT KUB
Ataxia, confusion, ophthalmoplegia Wernicke encephalopathy — give IV thiamine empirically
Macrocytic anemia + neurologic symptoms B12 deficiency — send B12 level, IM cyanocobalamin
High-output stoma with hypotension, tachycardia Dehydration/electrolyte crisis — aggressive IV resuscitation

Management

Dehydration / Electrolyte Crisis

  • Aggressive IV fluid resuscitation: Normal saline initially; avoid hypotonic fluids (SBS patients often have chronic sodium depletion)
  • Electrolyte repletion:
    • Magnesium FIRST — IV magnesium sulfate 2–4 g over 1–2 hours; hypokalemia and hypocalcemia are often refractory until Mg is corrected[2]
    • Potassium: IV KCl; monitor closely with serial BMPs
    • Calcium: IV calcium gluconate if symptomatic or severe; send vitamin D level
    • Phosphorus: Replete if low (especially if refeeding)
  • Oral rehydration solution (ORS): SBS patients benefit from glucose-sodium ORS (WHO formulation) rather than plain water, which can worsen sodium depletion
  • Monitor urine output — target > 0.5 mL/kg/hr

Catheter-Related Bloodstream Infection

  • Draw blood cultures from the line AND a peripheral site before antibiotics
  • Empiric IV antibiotics: Vancomycin + gram-negative coverage (cefepime or piperacillin-tazobactam); adjust based on cultures[2]
  • Do NOT routinely remove the line unless: hemodynamic instability/septic shock, tunnel infection, persistent bacteremia > 72 hours on appropriate antibiotics, or fungemia
  • These patients have limited venous access — line preservation is critical when possible; consult the patient's PN team or vascular access specialist

D-Lactic Acidosis

  • NPO / fasting (eliminate carbohydrate substrate)
  • IV sodium bicarbonate for significant acidosis
  • IV thiamine 100 mg empirically
  • Enteral antibiotics (metronidazole, oral vancomycin)
  • See D-lactic acidosis for full management

Nutritional Deficiency Emergencies

  • Vitamin K deficiency (elevated INR): IV vitamin K 10 mg; FFP or PCC if actively bleeding
  • Wernicke encephalopathy: IV thiamine 500 mg TID × 3 days (high-dose protocol)
  • B12 deficiency: IM cyanocobalamin 1,000 mcg
  • Iron deficiency: IV iron infusion (in consultation with GI/hematology)

General Principles

  • Contact the patient's GI/nutrition/intestinal rehabilitation team early — these patients often have complex management plans and established relationships with specialists
  • Do not discontinue or modify parenteral nutrition without specialist guidance
  • Loperamide / codeine phosphate: May be used to reduce stoma/stool output (often part of home regimen)
  • PPI / H2 blocker: Reduce gastric hypersecretion that occurs in SBS (especially in the first 6–12 months)

Disposition

  • Admit:
    • Suspected CRBSI / sepsis
    • Severe dehydration requiring IV repletion > 24 hours
    • Significant electrolyte derangements (symptomatic hyponatremia, hypokalemia, hypomagnesemia)
    • D-lactic acidosis with encephalopathy
    • Bowel obstruction
    • Symptomatic nephrolithiasis requiring urologic intervention
    • Severe nutritional deficiency emergencies (Wernicke, severe B12 deficiency with neurologic involvement)
  • ICU admission:
    • Septic shock from CRBSI
    • Severe metabolic derangement with hemodynamic instability
    • Altered mental status (D-lactic acidosis, Wernicke, severe electrolyte abnormality)
  • Discharge with close follow-up:
    • Mild dehydration responding to oral/IV rehydration in the ED
    • Mild electrolyte abnormalities corrected in the ED with reliable outpatient follow-up
    • Ensure the patient's GI/nutrition team is contacted and aware of the ED visit
    • Provide ORS instructions and dietary counseling

See Also

External Links

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 Short Bowel Syndrome. In: StatPearls. Treasure Island (FL): StatPearls Publishing; 2023. PMID 30860742.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Bering J, DiBaise JK. Short bowel syndrome: complications and management. Nutr Clin Pract. 2023;38(S1):S46-S58. PMID 37115034.