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What is Chronic
Intestinal Pseudo-Obstruction?
C.I.P.S. is a disorder of the
digestive system (also known as a motility disorder) that effects the
movement of contents through the intestinal tract. Although it usually
affects the small intestine and large bowel, some people experience
difficulties linked to their oesophagus and/or stomach. The expression
‘pseudo-obstruction’ is used to describe the disorder because patients
have symptoms usually associated with an obstruction somewhere in the
digestive tract and yet no physical obstruction is present.
Although it is rare, it can be life threatening and can often affect
infants. Children/Adults with intestinal pseudo-obstruction are not able
to eat normally because of symptoms that may include pain, abdominal
distension, nausea, high volume vomiting, diarrhoea or severe
constipation. This can result in becoming under nourished because the
body is unable to absorb sufficient nutrients, or because eating is
restricted to avoid unpleasant symptoms after food. Pseudo-Obstruction
causes severe pain requiring opioid analgesics often on a daily basis.
In many cases extra nutrition is needed and this can take the form of
nutritional supplements or taking nutritional ‘feeds’ directly in the
stomach, or into a vein. As a last resort Total
Parental Nutrition – TPN
(the slow infusion of a solution of nutrients into a vein through a
surgically implanted catheter) is considered, although complications
associated with the long term use of TPN include infection and liver
failure, which can be difficult and life threatening sometimes
necessitating small bowel and liver transplantation
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