CHAPTER 23 Surgical problems
Bile
Bile may appear in vomitus or in aspirates from gastric tubes. Bilious vomiting should always be considered as potentially serious, especially in a previously well baby when an acute volvulus should be suspected and ruled out.
Generally speaking, the presence of bile that has made its way into the stomach (and is seen in vomitus or gastric tube aspirates) indicates that the gut is obstructed. This obstruction may be complete or partial, and may be anatomical or functional (i.e. with a still patent lumen).
For anatomical causes of obstruction see pages 131–3.
Functional gut obstruction can occur in babies in the following circumstances:
Sometimes bile is seen in aspirates when the feeding tube sits at or has passed through the pylorus — this can be confirmed on an abdominal X-ray. In an otherwise well baby, this can be fixed by pulling the tube back so that its tip lies in the body of the stomach.
Determining cause
Significant causes of bile vomiting or bile-stained aspirates need to be distinguished from benign causes (such as a malplaced nasogastric tube or gut immotility due to immaturity) by examining the baby, and doing an abdominal X-ray and a full blood count (FBC) and film examination (and taking a blood culture and starting antibiotics if there is any suspicion of infection).
Gastrointestinal perforation
Extremely preterm infants are prone to gastrointestinal perforation, which can occur in isolation or, more commonly, in association with necrotising enterocolitis (NEC; see below). If intestinal perforation is found, it does not automatically follow that NEC is present. It can be difficult to distinguish the two conditions pre-operatively, and risk factors are similar.
The management of infants with gastrointestinal perforation should include:
Necrotising enterocolitis (NEC)
This inflammatory disorder of the bowel has multifactorial causes. The extremely preterm infant is at greater risk.
There is a wide spectrum of clinical features in NEC. Signs can include feeding intolerance, vomiting, lethargy, temperature instability, abdominal distension, diarrhoea with or without frank blood, abdominal wall erythema and shock.
The Bell criteria are often used to classify the severity of the illness:
In general terms, large-bowel NEC is a much more benign illness than small-bowel NEC.
The characteristic radiographic findings are pneumatosis intestinalis and portal venous gas. Pneumatosis intestinalis represents gas in the submucous layer produced by intestinal bacteria.

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