Intestinal ischemia (is-KEE-me-uh) refers to a range of conditions that happen when blood flow to the intestines slows or stops. Ischemia can be due to a fully or partly blocked blood vessel, most often an artery. Or low blood pressure may lead to less blood flow. Intestinal ischemia can affect the small intestine, the large intestine or both.
Less blood flow means that too little oxygen goes to the cells in the system through which food travels, called the digestive system. Intestinal ischemia is a serious condition that can cause pain. It can make it hard for the intestines to work well.
In severe cases, loss of blood flow to the intestines can cause lifelong damage to the intestines. And it may lead to death.
There are treatments for intestinal ischemia. Getting medical help early improves the chances of recovery.
Symptoms of intestinal ischemia can come on quickly. When this happens, the condition is called acute intestinal ischemia. When symptoms come on slowly, the condition is called chronic intestinal ischemia. Symptoms may differ from person to person. But certain symptoms suggest a diagnosis of intestinal ischemia.
Symptoms of acute intestinal ischemia most often include:
Symptoms of chronic intestinal ischemia can include:
Seek medical care right away if you have sudden, severe belly pain. Pain that feels so bad that you can't sit still or find a position that feels OK is a medical emergency.
If you have other symptoms that worry you, make an appointment with your healthcare professional.
Intestinal ischemia happens when the blood flow through the major blood vessels that send blood to and from the intestines slows or stops. The condition has many possible causes. Causes may include:
Intestinal ischemia often is split into groups. Colon ischemia, also called ischemic colitis, affects the large intestine. Other types of ischemia affect the small intestine. These are acute mesenteric ischemia, chronic mesenteric ischemia and ischemia due to mesenteric venous thrombosis.
This type of intestinal ischemia is the most common. It happens when blood flow to part of the colon slows or gets blocked. The cause of less blood flow to the colon isn't always clear. But conditions that can raise the risk of colon ischemia include:
Mesenteric ischemia happens when narrowed or blocked arteries restrict blood flow to the small intestine. This can cause lifelong damage to the small intestine.
Acute mesenteric ischemia is the result of a sudden loss of blood flow to the small intestine. It may be due to:
A blood clot, also called an embolus, that comes loose in the heart and travels through the blood to block an artery. It most often blocks the superior mesenteric artery, which sends oxygen-rich blood to the intestines.
This is the most common cause of acute mesenteric artery ischemia. Congestive heart failure, a heart attack or an irregular heartbeat, called an arrhythmia, can bring it on.
Slowed blood flow from low blood pressure. Low blood pressure may be due to shock, heart failure, certain medicines or ongoing kidney failure, called chronic kidney failure. Slowed blood flow is more common in people who have other serious illnesses and fatty deposits on an artery wall, called atherosclerosis.
This type of acute mesenteric ischemia often is called nonocclusive ischemia. This means it's not due to a blockage in the artery.
Chronic mesenteric ischemia is due to the buildup of fatty deposits on an artery wall, called atherosclerosis. The disease process most often is slow. It's also called intestinal angina because it's due to less blood flow to the intestines after eating.
You may not need treatment until at least two of the three major arteries that send blood to your intestines become very narrow or blocked all the way.
A possible dangerous complication of chronic mesenteric ischemia is having a blood clot within a narrowed artery. This can cause a sudden blockage, which can cause acute mesenteric ischemia.
This type of ischemia happens when blood can't leave the small intestine. This can be due to a blood clot in a vein that drains blood from the intestines. Veins carry blood back to the heart after the oxygen is removed. When the vein is blocked, blood backs up in the intestines, causing swelling and bleeding.
This may result from:
Factors that may increase your risk of intestinal ischemia include:
Complications of intestinal ischemia can include:
Other health conditions, such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, also called COPD, can make intestinal ischemia worse. Emphysema, a type of COPD, and other smoking-related lung diseases increase this risk.
Sometimes, intestinal ischemia can be fatal.
If your healthcare professional suspects intestinal ischemia after a physical exam, you may have several diagnostic tests based on your symptoms. Tests may include:
Imaging tests. Imaging tests let your healthcare professional see your internal organs and rule out other causes for your symptoms. Imaging tests may include an X-ray, an ultrasound, a CT scan or an MRI.
To look at the blood flow in your veins and arteries, your health professional may use an angiogram using a certain type of CT scan or MRI.
Use of dye that tracks blood flow through the arteries. During this test, called angiography, a long, thin tube called a catheter goes into an artery in your groin or arm. A dye injected through the catheter flows to your intestinal arteries.
The dye moving through the arteries lets narrowed areas or blockages show up on X-rays. Angiography also lets a healthcare professional treat a blockage in an artery. The health professional can remove a clot, put in medicine or use special tools to widen an artery.
Treatment of intestinal ischemia involves restoring the blood supply to the digestive tract. Choices vary depending on the cause of the condition and how bad it is.
Your healthcare professional may suggest antibiotics to treat or prevent infections. Other medical conditions, such as congestive heart failure or an irregular heartbeat, also must be treated.
You'll likely need to stop taking medicines that narrow your blood vessels. These include hormone medicines and some medicines to treat migraine and heart conditions. Most often, colon ischemia heals on its own.
For severe colon damage, you may need surgery to remove the dead tissue. You also may need surgery to bypass a blockage in one of your intestinal arteries. If you have angiography to diagnose the condition, it may be possible to widen a narrowed artery during the procedure.
Angioplasty uses a balloon inflated at the end of a catheter to press in the fatty deposits. The balloon also stretches the artery, making a wider path for the blood to flow.
Your healthcare professional may put a springlike metallic tube, called a stent, into your artery to help keep it open. Your health professional also can remove a blood clot or dissolve it with medicine.
You might need surgery to remove a blood clot, to bypass an artery blockage, or to repair or remove a damaged part of the intestine. Treatment also may include antibiotics and medicines to prevent clots, dissolve clots or widen blood vessels.
If you have angiography to diagnose the condition, it may be possible to widen a narrowed artery or remove a blood clot during the procedure. Your healthcare professional also may put in a metal tube, called a stent, to help keep the narrowed artery open.
Treatment aims to restore blood flow to your intestine. Your surgeon can bypass the blocked arteries or widen narrowed arteries with angioplasty or by placing a stent in the artery.
If your intestine shows no damage, you won't need repair. But you'll likely need to take medicine that keeps your blood from clotting, called anticoagulant medicine, for about 3 to 6 months.
You might need a procedure to remove a clot. If parts of your intestine show signs of damage, you might need surgery to remove the damaged section. If tests show you have a blood-clotting disorder, you may need to take medicines called anticoagulants for the rest of your life.
Seek medical care right away if you have severe belly pain that makes you so uncomfortable that you can't sit still.
Maybe your belly pain isn't too bad and you know when it will start, such as soon after you eat. Then make an appointment with your healthcare professional. You may be sent to a doctor who specializes in digestive issues, called a gastroenterologist, or to a vascular surgeon.
Here's some information to help you get ready for your appointment.
When you make the appointment, ask if there's anything you need to do before your appointment, such as not eat before certain tests. Also, ask a friend or family member to go with you, if possible, to help you remember the information you get.
Make a list of:
For intestinal ischemia, some questions to ask include:
Be sure to ask all the questions you have.
Your healthcare professional may ask: