CLINICAL
SHORT BOWEL SYNDROME
Rebecca Gasche Specialist Dietitian, Countess of Chester Hospital NHS Trust Rebecca has a keen interest and specialises in gastroenterology dietetics. She currently works in the community setting in the Chester area, running clinics and group sessions to manage a wide range of gastroenterology conditions.
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Short bowel syndrome (SBS), where a patient is left with a shortened length of bowel following surgery, is a rare but serious condition. It can leave patients with chronic malabsorption and carries a number of nutritional consequences.1 It is important that healthcare professionals understand the causes, complications and management of SBS, so that the correct advice is provided for this patient group. To understand SBS we should first understand the bowel itself. The bowel consists of the large and small intestine. The large bowel (colon) consists of the caecum, ascending colon, transverse colon, descending colon, sigmoid colon and rectum, and its functions include: the absorption of water, electrolytes, short-chain fatty acids, moving colonic contents towards the rectum and eventually, defaecation.2 The small intestine consists of the duodenum, jejunum and ileum. The average length of the small intestine is 6.9m, with a surface area of 200-500m, due to the addition of mucosal folds, villi and microvilli.3 Its main functions are to complete digestion of food and absorb fluid, electrolytes and nutrients. 90% of fluid from oral and exocrine secretions is absorbed in the small intestine.2 WHAT IS SBS?
SBS can be defined as the inability to maintain protein-energy, fluid, electrolyte, or micronutrient balances, when on a normal diet, as a result of said occurrences4 and is classified if a patient has less than 200cm left of their small intestine.5 Conditions which may lead to SBS include: • Crohn’s disease (a form of inflammatory bowel disease); • volvulus (twisting of the intestine, which cuts off blood flow); • intestinal ischemia (lack of flow to blood vessels in the intestine); 24
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• birth defects, including: necrotizing enterocolitis (NEC – inflammation/ infection that damages bowel tissue in premature infants), intestinal atresia (where the intestines have not been formed correctly), gastroschisis (intestines develop outside of the body); • surgeries/treatments, such as surgery to remove cancer, radiotherapy, bariatric surgery complications, or traumatic injury.1 SBS may result in patients having anastomosis (where the parts of the intestine are reconnected after the diseased portion is removed), or a stoma (where the end of the intestine is brought to the abdomen to allow waste products into the stoma bag attached). The surgeries that result in <200cm small bowel and, therefore, SBS, are jejunocolonic anastomosis (where the jejunum is reconnected to the colon – see Figure 1), end jejunostomy (jejunum is brought to the abdomen and a stoma is formed – see Figure 2) and jejunoileal anastomosis (parts of the jejunum and ileum are removed and the intestines reconnected – see Figure 3).5 COMPLICATIONS OF SBS
The main nutritional consequence of SBS is the ability to maintain fluid and electrolyte balances. For patients with parts of the jejunum and ileum removed, digestive and absorption function is significantly reduced, and