STOMACCANCEREDITED
STOMACCANCEREDITED
STOMACCANCEREDITED
ETIOLOGY:
Diet:
H. Pylori infection
- H. Pylori is a gram- negative bacterium that causes chronic inflammation in the stomach and
duodenum and is a common contagious cause of ulcers worldwide.
-Invades the lining of the stomach producing a cytotoxin and can lead to ulcer formation.
Pernicious anemia
- People who have had stomach surgery, pernicious anemia, or achlorhydria have a higher
risk of stomach cancer. Pernicious anemia is a severe decrease in red blood cells caused
when the stomach is not able to properly absorb vitamin B12.
- Certain cells in the stomach lining normally make a substance called intrinsic
factor (IF) that we need to absorb vitamin B12 from foods. People without enough IF may
end up with a vitamin B12 deficiency, which affects the body’s ability to make new red blood
cells and can cause other problems as well. This condition is called pernicious anemia. Along
with anemia (too few red blood cells), people with this disease have an increased risk of
stomach cancer.
Smoking
Achlorhydria (absence of hydrochloric acid in gastric secretions)
- Hydrochloric acid in the gastric juice breaks down the food and the digestive enzymes split
up the proteins.
- It also kills bacteria protecting your body from harmful microbes which can enter your body
in food.
Gastric ulcers
- Gastric ulcers are open sores in the stomach that bacteria can easily infect.
- It causes mutations in the DNA and damages the cells of the stomach lining
- Prolonged inflammation can lead to chronic inflammation of the stomach and even stomach
cancer.
Clinical Manifestations
Often spread to adjacent organs before any distressing symptoms occur.
The clinical manifestations can include unexplained weight loss, early satiety,
indigestion, abdominal discomfort or pain, and signs and symptoms of anemia
The person appears pale and weak and complains of fatigue, weakness, dizziness, and, in
extreme cases, shortness of breath.
The stool may be positive for occult blood.
Supraclavicular lymph nodes that are hard and enlarged suggest metastasis via the
thoracic duct.
Medical Management
There is no successful treatment for gastric carcinoma except removal of the tumor.
o If the tumor can be removed while it is still localized to the stomach, the patient may
be cured.
o If the tumor has spread beyond the area that can be excised, cure is less likely.
Surgical Therapy
The surgical intervention used in the treatment of stomach cancer may be the same
surgical procedures used for PUD.
When the lesion is located in the fundus, a total gastrectomy with esophagojejunostomy
is performed
Lesions located in the antrum or the pyloric region are generally treated by either a
Billroth I or Billroth II
1. Pylorus is removed and the distal stomach is anastomosed directly to the duodenum)
2. Procedure partial gastrectomy (removal of the stomach) is performed and the cut end of
the stomach is closed.
When metastasis has occurred to adjacent organs, such as the spleen, ovaries, or bowel,
the surgical procedure is modified and extended as necessary.
Adjuvant Therapy
Chemotherapy
Radiation therapy
The patient with a tumor that is deemed resectable undergoes an open surgical procedure
to resect the tumor and appropriate lymph nodes.
The patient with an unresectable tumor and advanced disease undergoes chemotherapy.
A total gastrectomy may be performed for a resectable cancer in the midportion or body
of the stomach. (The entire stomach is removed along with the duodenum, the lower
portion of the esophagus, supporting mesentery, and lymph nodes)
Reconstruction of the GI tract is performed by anastomosing the end of the jejunum to
the end of the esophagus, a procedure called an esophagojejunostomy
A radical subtotal gastrectomy is performed for a resectable tumor in the middle and
distal portions of the stomach.
A proximal subtotal gastrectomy may be performed for a resectable tumor located in the
proximal portion of the stomach
A total gastrectomy or an esophagogastrectomy is usually performed in place of this
procedure to achieve a more extensive resection.
Common problems of advanced gastric cancer that often require surgery include
pyloric obstruction, bleeding, and severe pain.
Gastric perforation is an emergency situation requiring surgical intervention
Pallative
A gastric resection may be the most effective palliative procedure for advanced gastric
cancer.
Palliative procedures such as gastric or esophageal bypass, gastrostomy, or jejunostomy
may temporarily alleviate symptoms
Palliative rather than radical surgery may be performed if there is metastasis to other vital
organs
If surgical treatment does not offer cure, treatment with chemotherapy may offer further
control of the disease or palliation.
Commonly use single-agent chemotherapeutic medications
Gastric Surgery:
Performed on patients with peptic ulcers who have life threatening hemorrhage, obstruction,
perforation or penetration or whose condition does not respond to medication.
Indicated for patients with gastric cancer or trauma.
Vagotomy:
Is the surgical cutting of the vagus nerve to reduce acid secretion in the stomach.
Purpose: The vagus nerve trunk splits into branches that go to different parts of the stomach. Stimulation
from these branches causes the stomach to produce acid. Too much stomach acid leads to ulcers that may
eventually bleed and create an emergency.
Pyloroplasty:
A surgical procedure in which the pylorus valve at the lower portion of the stomach is cut and resutured,
relaxing and widening its muscular opening (pyloric sphincter) into the duodenum (first part of the small
intestine)
The pylorus is a thick, muscular area. When it thickens, food cannot pass through.
Cause: Unknown, but genetic and environmental factors might play a role.
Partial Gastrectomy:
A partial gastrectomy is a surgical procedure that is performed to remove a portion of the
stomach to treat stomach cancer and benign stomach tumors.
When a partial gastrectomy is used as a treatment for stomach cancer, it is performed by a
surgical oncologist (a surgeon who specializes in treating cancer)
Total Gastrectomy:
Doctors remove the entire stomach, surrounding lymph nodes and fatty tissue. Next, the surgical
team connects the esophagus to the intestines.
A surgeon may create a new “stomach,” or pouch, by folding over a portion of the intestines, to
allow for more effective digestion.
Nursing Management:
Assess the family’s knowledge of preoperative and post-operative surgical routines and rationale
for surgery:
o Assess for the presence of bowel sounds
o Palpate the abdomen to detect masses and tenderness
After surgery:
o Assess for complications secondary to surgical intervention such as:
- Hemorrhage
- Infection
- Abdominal distention
- Atelectasis
- Impaired nutritional status
Hemorrhage
Dietary deficiencies
Bile reflux
Dumping syndrome
Reducing Anxiety
The nurse encourages the patient to verbalize fears and concerns and answers the
patient’s and family’s questions.
If the patient has an acute obstruction, a perforated bowel, or an active GI hemorrhage,
adequate psychological preparation may not be possible.
The nurse helps the patient express fears, concerns, and grief about the diagnosis.
It is important to answer the patient’s questions honestly and to encourage the patient to
participate in treatment decisions
Recognize mood swings and defense mechanisms
Project an empathetic attitude and spends time with the patient.
Bile Reflux
Bile reflux gastritis and esophagitis may occur with the removal of the pylorus, which
acts as a barrier to the reflux of duodenal contents.
o Burning epigastric pain and vomiting of bilious material manifest this condition.
o Eating or vomiting does not relieve the situation.
Agents that bind with bile acid
Dumping Syndrome:
As an unpleasant set of vasomotor and GI symptoms that sometimes occur in patients who have
had gastric surgery or a form of vagotomy.
Foods high in carbohydrates and electrolytes must be diluted in the jejunum before absorption
can take place, but the passage of food from the stomach remnant into the jejunum is too rapid
to allow this to happen.
The hypertonic intestinal contents draw extracellular fluid from the circulating blood volume
into the jejunum to dilute the high concentration of electrolytes and sugars.
The ingestion of fluid at mealtime also causes the stomach contents to empty rapidly into the
jejunum
Sensation of fullness
Weakness
Faintness
Dizziness
Palpitations
Diaphoresis
Cramping pain
Diarrhea
Anorexia may also be a result of the dumping syndrome because the person may be reluctant to
eat.
- It is partially the result of rapid gastric emptying, which prevents adequate mixing with
pancreatic and biliary secretions. In mild cases, reducing the intake of fat and administering
an antimotility medication (eg, loperamide [Imodium]) may control steatorrhea.
Other dietary deficiencies that the nurse should be aware of include malabsorption of
organic iron, which may require supplementation with oral or parenteral iron, and a low
serum level of vitamin B12, which may require supplementation by the intramuscular route.
Total gastrectomy results in lack of intrinsic factor, a gastric secretion required for the
absorption of vitamin B12 from the GI tract. Unless this vitamin is supplied by parenteral
injection after gastrectomy, the patient inevitably suffers vitamin B12 deficiency, which
eventually leads to a condition identical to pernicious anemia.
NG lavage
Administration of blood and blood products along with hemodynamic monitoring
Duodenal Tumor
Tumors of the duodenum are uncommon and are usually benign and asymptomatic.
Malignant tumors are more likely to cause specific signs and symptoms leading to
diagnosis.
The relative rarity of tumors of the duodenum and the nonspecific nature of their
manifestations complicate their diagnosis and treatment.
Clinical Manifestations
Duodenal tumors often present insidiously with vague, nonspecific symptoms.
Malignant tumors
Sustained weight loss and are malnourished at diagnosis.
Bleeding and pain are common.
Perforation of the bowel occurs in approximately