Sudden decrease in the blood supply to the bowel, resulting in bowel ischaemia and, if not promptly treated, death
Aetiology
- Most commonly caused by an embolus/thrombosis (usually embolus from AF) sticking in a narrowed (from atherosclerosis) super mesenteric artery
- Chronic - cramps, like angina of the guts
- Acute - small bowel gets infarcted, colon lives (due to marginal artery)
Clinical presentation
- Generalised abdominal pain out of proportion to clinical findings
Investigations
- Bloods - ↑ lactate, CRP may be normal, WCC may be slightly ↑
- CT angiography is the gold standard - shows arterial blockage due to emboli or thrombus
Management
- Surgery
- If bowel non-viable - resection
- If bowel viable - SMA embolectomy